Sun River Energy, Inc. v. Nelson et al
Filing
152
ORDER denying 91 Plaintiff's Motion to Enforce Settlement Agreement and for Sanctions, by Magistrate Judge Michael E. Hegarty on 9/7/2011. (mehcd)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLORADO
Civil Action No. 11-cv-00198-MSK-MEH
SUN RIVER ENERGY, INC.,
Plaintiff,
v.
ERIK S. NELSON,
STEVE STEPHENS, and
CORAL CAPITAL PARTNERS, INC.,
Defendants.
ORDER ON MOTION TO ENFORCE
Before the Court is Plaintiff’s Motion to Enforce Settlement Agreement and for Sanctions
[filed July 1, 2011; docket #91]. The matter has been referred to this Court for disposition [docket
#92]. The motion is fully briefed and the Court held an evidentiary hearing on the motion on August
22, 2011. Thereafter, the Court permitted post-hearing briefs to be filed by the parties on or before
August 31, 2011. Considering the entire record herein and for the reasons that follow, the motion
is denied.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiff initiated this lawsuit in Denver County District Court on January 10, 2011. (Docket
#1-1 at 2-9.) Defendants removed the case to this District on January 26, 2011, pursuant to diversity
jurisdiction. (See docket #1.) The dispute arises from a contract-based business relationship in
which Defendant Coral Capital accepted 150,000 shares of restricted common stock of Plaintiff as
payment, in lieu of cash, for certain services rendered. (Docket #35 at 2-3.) Plaintiff and Defendant
Coral Capital entered into the contract on October 15, 2007; Plaintiff terminated the contract on
April 24, 2008, effective April 30, 2008. (Id. at 2.) The 150,000 shares were issued on or about
August 7, 2008, to Defendants Erik Nelson, the president of Coral Capital, and Steve Stephens, an
employee of Coral Capital, in equal parts. (Id. at 2, 3.) Plaintiff alleges that Coral Capital failed to
full perform its obligations under the October 15, 2007 contract, that consideration was not fully
paid for the shares issued to Nelson and Stephens, and that Nelson and Stephens have forfeited their
right to the shares based upon conduct concerning use and disclosure of material non-public
information regarding Plaintiff. (See id. at 3.)
Plaintiff asserts that Defendants used material non-public information regarding Plaintiff to
sell approximately 75,000 shares of Plaintiff’s stock. (Docket #17 at 2.) Plaintiff explains that
Defendants were under the obligations of confidentiality agreements concerning the material nonpublic information. (Id.) Plaintiff commenced this action after Defendants sold the 75,000 shares,
when Defendants requested the removal of restrictive legends from the shares. (Id.)
Plaintiff brings five claims: 1) no duty to register transferred shares pursuant to Colo. Rev.
Stat. § 4-8-401, as to Defendants Nelson and Stephens; 2) declaratory judgment pursuant to Colo.
Rev. Stat. § 13-51-101 (regarding no duty to register or remove the restrictive legend from the
shares, that Defendants have no right to the shares and must return the shares to Plaintiff, and that
Defendants are obligated to pay Plaintiff’s costs and fees); 3) breach of contract claim against
Defendants Coral Capital and Nelson; 4) breach of fiduciary duty by Defendants Coral Capital and
Nelson; and 5) injunctive relief precluding Defendants from selling the shares at issue. (See docket
#35.)
Defendants answered Plaintiff’s complaint on February 22, 2011, and asserted eight
counterclaims: 1) breach of contract; 2) violation of Colo. Rev. Stat. § 4-8-401 (regarding the
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registration of the transfer of Defendants’ shares fee of any restrictive legend); 3) conversion; 4)
civil theft; 5) tortious interference; 6) common law fraud; 7) breach of fiduciary duty to
shareholders; and 8) declaratory judgment that Plaintiff must remove the restrictive legend and
register the transfer of the shares at issue. (See docket #11.)
On May 24, 2011, this Court held a Settlement Conference in this matter. (Docket #77.)
Although the case did not settle at that time, negotiations proceeded among the parties, and they
informed the Court that they came to an agreement on May 31, 2011. (Docket #84.) However, on
June 30, 2011, the Plaintiff filed a “notice” informing the Court that “Defendants have withdrawn
from a previously agreed-upon settlement.” (Docket #89.) The following day, the Plaintiff filed the
present Motion to Enforce Settlement Agreement. (Docket #91.) Plaintiff seeks an order enforcing
an agreement allegedly reached on May 27, 2011, as set forth in an email sent from defense counsel,
Gabriel McFarland, to Plaintiff’s counsel, Steve Csajaghy:
1.
Defendants will return the Sun River (“SR”) shares they currently own.
2.
SR will issue 40,000 free trading SR shares to Stephens, which may be freely traded
upon execution of the settlement agreement, subject to paragraph 3.
3.
Stephens will not sell or otherwise transfer more than 7,000 shares per week, or
2,000 shares in any particular day.
4.
Plaintiff’s claims against Stephens and Stephens’ counterclaims will be dismissed
with prejudice and the same will execute a mutual release.
5.
Plaintiff’s claims against Nelson and Nelson’s counterclaims will be dismissed
without prejudice.
6.
We will more formally memorialize the settlement in writing, which will be executed
as soon as possible but not later than June 3, 2011.
(May 27, 2011 Email, docket #91-5.) According to Plaintiff, the only term originally under
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continuing negotiation was Paragraph 3, but asserts that it exchanged four (4) drafts of a written
agreement with the Defendants articulating that term as: “Stephens would be limited to selling 500
shares per day for the first twenty (200) trading days during which the public securities markets are
open following his receipt of shares, and that following that initial 20-day period, he would be
limited to selling 1,000 shares of Sun River stock per day.” (Motion at 3-4, docket #91.) Plaintiff
contends that, by their silence, Defendants agreed to this term, and all material terms as set forth
above. Id.
Defendants counter that, to date, Plaintiff still does not agree to its proposed Paragraph 3 and,
thus, a meeting of the minds on the material terms has not occurred. (Response at 2, docket #99.)
Defendants assert that their “counterclaims are in large part directed to obtaining full and
unrestricted trading rights in their stock” and, thus, any silence on their part during the ongoing
negotiations did “not constitute acquiescence by Defendants, who clearly took explicit issue with
this critical contract term prior to execution of the agreement.” (Id. at 4.) Defendants argue that
Plaintiff cites no support for its notion that Defendants’ silence during the exchange of drafts
constitutes agreement, because such notion runs contrary to fundamental contract law. (Id.)
The Court held an evidentiary hearing on the motion on August 22, 2011, and granted the
parties permission to file post-hearing briefs summing up the evidence and their positions. Plaintiff
contends that, by Mr. McFarland and Defendant Nelson’s testimony, it is clear that Defendants
improperly backed out of a settlement due merely to “buyer’s remorse.” Defendants, by contrast,
rely on Nelson’s testimony that he did not understand or believe that a settlement had been reached
due to the continuing exchange of draft agreements. Considering all evidence and the entire record
herein, the Court is now prepared to rule on the motion.
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DISCUSSION
The Tenth Circuit has determined that a trial court has the power to enforce summarily a
settlement agreement entered into by the litigants while the litigation is pending before it. Shoels
v. Klebold, 375 F.3d 1054, 1060 (10th Cir. 2004).1 In doing so, “issues involving the formation and
construction of a purported settlement agreement are resolved by applying state contract law.” Id.
(citation omitted). A settlement agreement is a contract which will be construed using ordinary
principles of contract interpretation. Anthony v. United States, 987 F.2d 670, 673 (10th Cir. 1993).
Under Colorado law, “a settlement agreement can be governed by and found enforceable
under common law contract principles.” Yaekle v. Andrews, 195 P.3d 1101, 1107 (Colo. 2008). A
court may enforce a settlement agreement only if it constitutes an enforceable contract. H.W.
Houston Constr. Co. v. District Court, 632 P.2d 563, 565 (Colo. 1981). Thus, a meeting of the
minds as to the material terms and conditions of settlement is essential to the agreement’s
enforceability. Pring v. Udall, 31 P.2d 1113, 1116 (Colo. 1934). The essential elements of a
contract must include “mutual assent to an exchange, between competent parties, with regard to a
certain subject matter, for legal consideration.” Industrial Prods. Int'l v. Emo Trans, Inc., 962 P.2d
983, 988 (Colo. App. 1997) (citation omitted). An offer is a manifestation by one party of a
willingness to enter into a bargain, and an acceptance is a manifestation of assent to the terms of the
offer. Id. (citing Restatement (Second) of Contracts §§ 24, 32 (1979)).
Several years ago the magistrate judges of this Court uniformly began reducing to writing
1
Judge Krieger has found that a federal court lacks jurisdiction over the enforcement of a
settlement agreement for which the parties do not dispute the formation of a contract. See Rocky
Mountain Mortgage Specialists, Inc. v. First American Real Estate Info. Servs., Inc., Civil Action
No. 07-cv-00815-MSK-MEH, 2008 WL 4293316, *2 (D. Colo. Sept. 16, 2008). In this case,
however, Defendants dispute the formation of the settlement agreement.
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settlement agreements reached during judicial settlement conferences (many of which were
traditionally entered orally on the record at the successful conclusion of the conference), in response
to the requirements set forth in National Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh v. Price, 78 P.3d 1138
(Colo. App. 2003). In that case, the Colorado Court of Appeals, applying Colo. Rev. Stat. § 13-22308(1), found that an agreement reached during mediation can be an enforceable court order only
if, quoting from the statute, it is “reduced to writing and approved by the parties and their attorneys,
if any.”2 In an abundance of caution, the undersigned and other magistrate judges began utilizing
written settlement agreements at the conferences.
Recently, however, the Colorado Supreme Court commented on the Price decision, finding
that Section 308 did not abrogate the common law of contracts in the context of mediation
proceedings and, contrary to the Price holding, “did not mandate a single method that must be
followed for the formation of a binding agreement [in] mediation . . . .” Yaekle, 195 P.3d at 1108.3
In Yaekle, the parties had signed a “basic terms of settlement” document provided by the mediator.
Before a more comprehensive agreement was signed, the parties began renegotiating terms,
ultimately reducing their negotiations to a proposed agreement. At the end of that renegotiation, the
plaintiff refused to sign. Utilizing common law contractual principles, the court found not only that
the “basic terms of settlement” were binding (a proposition with which neither party disagreed), but
also that the renegotiated terms constituted a binding contract. Although the plaintiff had not signed
2
The statute has not been applied in federal matters involving settlement agreements;
however, the decisions addressing the statute discuss and apply Colorado common law of contracts
in the mediation context and are helpful for that purpose.
3
The court noted that the “traditional tenets of common law contracts and settlement, which
are sensitive to the requirements of justice, stand in stark contrast to those formulaic requirements
imposed by an exclusive reading of section 308.” Id. at 1107.
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any document containing the new terms, he had orally authorized his attorney to agree to them,
which the Supreme Court found sufficient. Id. at 1111 (“Yaekle accepted the offer, as clearly shown
through his counsel’s representations to the court.”).4
Here, unlike in Yaekle, there was no written agreement signed by any of the parties at any
time. Defendants’ representation to the Court that the parties had come to an agreement was made
before the terms of the agreement were expressed in any writing – here, a May 27, 2011 email from
defense counsel to Plaintiff’s counsel setting forth the understood terms. (See dockets #91-4 and
#91-5.)5 But, even the May 27, 2011 written terms included mutual “caveats,” or conditions that
each counsel needed to confer with his clients regarding the “number of shares traded per week/per
day, etc.” by Defendant Stephens. (Docket #91-5.) Certainly, such “caveats” reflect no meeting of
the minds on at least one of the material terms on May 27, 2011.
Plaintiff argues that Defendants eventually agreed to a number of shares to be sold/traded
by Stephens (which was proposed in their first draft agreement on June 1, 2011) when Defendants
failed to change or dispute the number in subsequent exchanges of the proposal. In fact, subsequent
emails between counsel reflect that the parties were still exchanging drafts of the settlement
agreement to the point when the Defendants proposed new settlement terms and the Plaintiff notified
the Court of Defendants’ alleged “withdrawal” from settlement on June 30, 2011. See June 30, 2011
email from Steve Csajaghy to Gabe McFarland, docket #91-1, and June 29, 2011 email from
4
The court also recognized that, in some instances, “the final and fully executed [settlement]
agreement may be the only admissible evidence of a contract, and thus a court's determination as
to whether or not a contract has been established at common law is determined from the one
document alone.” Id. at 1110.
5
The exhibits presented at the August 22, 2011 hearing have not been filed on the Court’s
docket; therefore, the Court will refer to the exhibits as they appear on the docket attached to the
briefing in this matter.
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McFarland to Csajaghy, docket #91-11. In fact, on June 16, 2011, McFarland sent to Csajaghy a
“revised” version of the June 1, 2011 draft agreement in which McFarland added language in certain
portions of the draft, including Paragraph 2 concerning “Consideration” and in other paragraphs.
See docket #91-6. McFarland did not change the proposed number of shares Stephens would be
allowed to sell, as proposed in Paragraph 4 concerning “Stephens’ Agreement Regarding Future Sale
of Shares in Sun River,” but added language to Paragraph 4 which apparently would have preserved
certain of Stephens’ rights in the event Plaintiff announced a breach by Stephens in the number of
shares sold. See id. Thereafter, in McFarland’s June 29, 2011 email, he not only continues to
negotiate the “Consideration” and other portions of the agreement, but also disputes certain portions
of Paragraph 4 that were apparently deleted by Plaintiff in the previous draft. See docket #91-11.
Of note is the following deleted language in Paragraph 4 concerning Stephens’ ability to
demonstrate no breach of Paragraph 4 of the agreement:
In the event that Stephens demonstrates that he has not committed any such breach,
he shall be entitled to immediately sell all or any portion of the new Stephens shares.
Docket #91-11 at 8. With respect to this and other deleted language, McFarland informed Csajaghy
that “either the provisions I marked on the attached must remain in the agreement or we do not have
a deal.” Id. at 1.
Thus, despite Plaintiff’s argument to the contrary, there was no meeting of the minds
regarding the material settlement term set forth in Paragraph 4. Although Plaintiff now couches the
settlement term as a simple “number of shares sold per day/per week,” the Court construes the term
as set forth in the entire paragraph, including the “breach” and damages portion of the agreed term.
Contrary to Plaintiff’s anticipated argument that such “breach” language is simply corollary to the
actual number of shares sold per day/week, the Court finds that the language deleted by Plaintiff
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concerning Stephens’ ability to demonstrate no breach relates directly to the shares to be sold and
is just as material to the entirety of Paragraph 4 as is the actual number of shares to be sold. It is
clear by McFarland’s email and notes on the draft agreement that Stephens would not agree to
Paragraph 4 without Plaintiff’s agreement to retain the language deleted by Plaintiff. Accordingly,
there was never a meeting of the minds on the material term concerning Stephens’ future sales of
shares in Sun River.
Moreover, despite Plaintiff’s protestations, one of the “material terms” set forth in the May
27, 2011 email was that the parties “will more formally memorialize the settlement agreement in
writing, which will be executed as soon as possible but not later than June 3, 2011.” Docket #91-5.
While Defendants argue that no such writing materialized on or before June 3, 2011 and, thus, no
agreement exists, the Court is not concerned so much with the deadline, but with the fact that both
parties agreed to a “formal writing.” In fact, the parties’ actions in exchanging drafts of the
agreement demonstrates their intent in this regard. However, the agreement was never reduced fully
to a writing, since drafts were still being exchanged when negotiations broke down on June 30,
2011. Further, there is no indication in any email or other communication that the parties “came to
a deal” on the written drafts.
Plaintiff cites Colorado caselaw concerning oral agreements that need not be reduced to
writing, but cites no law demonstrating that silence on a specific term during negotiations of the
entire agreement constitutes agreement or acquiescence of that term. The Court agrees with
Defendants that such notion contradicts common sense and basic contract law. Instead, silence with
respect to an agreement seems to constitute acquiescence only in limited and specific circumstances.
See, e.g., Jones v. Dressel, 582 P.2d 1057, 1059 (Colo. App. 1978) (a contract with a minor who
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assents at majority or who is silent for a “considerable length of time” may be valid); see also
Convers v. Lee, 511 P.2d 506, 507 (Colo. App. 1973) (no agreement reached for total amount due
based merely on silence of payee of the challenged invoice).
The Tenth Circuit has cited the Restatement in adjudicating a matter under New Mexico law
for the proposition that “silence operates as an acceptance ‘where because of previous dealings or
otherwise, it is reasonable that the offeree should notify the offeror if he does not intend to accept.’”
Shively v. Santa Fe Preparatory Sch., Inc., 21 F. App’x 875, 877 (10th Cir. 2001) (finding that,
based on conduct during the previous seven years, the school district had a duty to tell plaintiff that
it did not accept her counteroffer limiting its right not to reemploy her at the point at which the
district took the benefits of her teaching services under that contract) (citing Restatement (Second)
of Contracts § 69(1)(c) (1981)). However, there is no indication that Colorado has adopted this
restatement nor the proposition underlying it.
CONCLUSION
After considering the evidence offered, the Court concludes there was no meeting of the
minds on a material term of the settlement agreement in this matter. Accordingly, for the reasons
stated above, the Court hereby ORDERS that Plaintiff’s Motion to Enforce Settlement Agreement
and for Sanctions [filed July 1, 2011; docket #91] is denied. The litigation of this matter will
proceed as scheduled.
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Dated at Denver, Colorado, this 7th day of September, 2011.
BY THE COURT:
Michael E. Hegarty
United States Magistrate Judge
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