Birbara v. Locke ( 1996 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion











    United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    ____________________

    No. 96-1530

    CHARLES A. BIRBARA and DAVID G. MASSAD,

    Plaintiffs, Appellees,
    v.

    GORDON LOCKE ET AL.,
    Defendants, Appellants,

    and

    TECHNOLOGY FINANCE GROUP, INC.,
    Defendant.


    ____________________
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
    [Hon. Nathaniel M. Gorton, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________

    Before
    Boudin, Circuit Judge, _____________

    Aldrich, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________
    and Lynch, Circuit Judge. _____________
    ____________________

    Alexander D. Widell, with whom Eugene R. Scheiman and Baer, Marks ____________________ __________________ ___________
    & Upham LLP were on brief, for appellants. ___________

    Roy A. Bourgeois, with whom Amato J. Bocchino and Bourgeois, __________________ ___________________ __________
    Dresser & White were on brief, for appellees. _______________


    ____________________

    November 7, 1996
    ____________________


















    LYNCH, Circuit Judge. Two sophisticated investors LYNCH, Circuit Judge. _____________

    bought computer-lease tax shelters. The 1986 revisions to

    the Tax Code undercut the economic rationale for such tax

    shelters. As a result, the seller of the shelters,

    Technology Finance Group ("TFG"), later became insolvent and

    violated its investment contracts. A public company,

    Creative Resources, Inc. ("CRI"), acquired control of TFG,

    poured in money and attempted, unsuccessfully, to salvage the

    company. The two investors, plaintiffs here, sued TFG, its

    new parent and two individuals, officers of the parent, inter _____

    alia, for TFG's breach of contract on a corporate veil ____

    piercing theory. The investors obtained a jury verdict of

    $250,000.1 We reverse and vacate the verdict, finding the

    evidence insufficient to meet the strict standards

    Massachusetts has set for piercing the corporate veil.

    Facts _____

    In 1986, plaintiffs Charles Birbara and David

    Massad each purchased a one-half ownership interest in a

    commercial computer from a subsidiary of TFG, a Delaware

    corporation that leased commercial equipment as tax shelters.

    In addition, Massad purchased a second computer from the TFG

    affiliate. These computers were subject to existing "user


    ____________________

    1. With interest, this resulted in an award of $427,945.21.
    The court and jury rejected fraud, conversion and deceptive
    trade practices claims against the defendants. TFG has not
    appealed from the verdict against it.

    -2- 2













    leases" with companies that had actual possession of the

    computers, as well as to the right of a TFG subsidiary to

    sell the computers when the leases expired. TFG was required

    to pay plaintiffs the proceeds of these sales, less certain

    fees. Following the enactment of the Tax Reform Act of 1986,

    TFG became unable to market its equipment leases and

    consequently could not generate adequate operating capital.

    In an effort to return the company to firm financial footing,

    Jerry Minsky, TFG's then-president and CEO, who is not a

    party to this suit, decided that TFG would not pay investors

    the proceeds from the sales of their equipment but rather

    would retain these funds, thereby violating the investment

    contracts.

    TFG continued to face financial problems. In 1989,

    CRI, a public Nevada corporation which owned several other

    businesses, acquired complete ownership of TFF, Inc., a

    Delaware corporation which owned all of TFG's outstanding

    common stock. CRI began taking steps to ameliorate TFG's

    financial problems. Gordon Locke and Dennis Williamson,

    members of the CRI Board of Directors' Executive Committee

    and CRI's only preferred shareholders, together invested

    $250,000 in CRI. CRI, in turn, made interest bearing loans

    to TFG, which were properly documented in the accounts of

    both companies. Locke and Williamson became executive vice

    presidents of TFG, for which Williamson received an annual



    -3- 3













    salary of $206,250 and a monthly automobile allowance, and

    for which Locke received an annual salary of $187,500 and a

    monthly automobile allowance. In addition, TFG's by-laws

    were amended to curtail the power of the CEO, Minsky.

    CRI was careful to observe all the corporate

    formalities with respect to TFG. The two companies had

    different boards of directors and separate board meetings.

    Although, consistent with good accounting practice, CRI and

    TFG eventually had consolidated financial statements, each

    kept its own financial records.

    The new management of TFG decided to continue

    Minsky's policy of violating contracts with TFG investors by

    reselling equipment leases without paying investors the

    proceeds, believing that this was the only way to continue to

    improve TFG's financial health as well as to avoid favoring

    investors whose equipment had not been sold before TFG was

    acquired by CRI. CRI, however, did begin the process of

    offering to all of the investors whose contracts were

    violated a settlement package which included cash, notes, and

    CRI stock.

    One of TFG's numerous creditors took steps to

    attach a TFG bank account in Connecticut. TFG transferred

    funds out of this account into a TFG account in a Canadian







    -4- 4













    bank in order to meet the payroll for TFG employees.2 For

    several months in 1990, Locke ran TFG's payroll out of his

    personal attorney operating account in New York and was

    reimbursed with funds transferred out of the TFG Canadian

    account. Eventually, in January 1991, CRI sold TFG. TFG

    owed CRI over one million dollars; this debt was forgiven at

    the time TFG was sold.

    Neither of the plaintiffs in this case ever had any

    direct dealings with CRI, Locke or Williamson. Both

    plaintiffs had a number of other tax shelter investments, and

    relied on David Levinson, their financial advisor, as to this

    investment. Indeed, Massad never even read the initial

    offering memorandum. Levinson first became aware of TFG's

    financial difficulties in February 1990, after calling TFG in

    preparation for a meeting with Birbara. On February 20,

    Levinson spoke to Locke, who told him that he was sure that

    plaintiffs' computers had been sold. Although Locke was not

    familiar with plaintiffs' machines, he indicated that all of

    the computers had been sold, and that he would try to

    determine exactly what had happened to plaintiffs' machines.




    ____________________

    2. In both of his depositions taken before trial, Locke
    testified that it was his best recollection that the funds
    were transferred out of TFG's Connecticut account into a CRI
    account in Canada. However, at trial he testified that his
    recollection had been incorrect and bank statements were
    produced to substantiate his trial testimony.

    -5- 5













    Levinson conveyed this information to plaintiffs,

    and in the next few days spoke to Locke or Williamson several

    times in an effort to find out more. Levinson knew he was

    speaking with Locke and Williamson in their capacities as TFG

    officers and was not confused about the various corporate

    relationships. On February 27, 1990, Williamson informed

    Levinson that the computer owned by plaintiffs jointly had

    been sold by prior management in October 1989, and the next

    day, Levinson was told that Massad's computer had also been

    sold in October 1989 by prior management.

    CRI, however, had taken control of TFG prior to the

    sale of the two computers, and thus the new management had

    been involved in these sales. Moreover, the bill of sale

    for Massad's computer dates from late February 1990, after

    Levinson's calls. Defendants contend that Massad's computer

    was actually sold in November 1989 by the company in

    possession (which later reimbursed TFG), and that the

    February bill of sale was simply an accounting between TFG

    and that other company. Defendants assert that this was a

    common industry practice. The jury would have been warranted

    in disbelieving defendants' claim that Massad's computer had

    been sold in November 1989.

    Levinson's telephone calls prompted Locke in early

    March to send each of the plaintiffs the settlement form

    letter on CRI stationery that he was in the process of



    -6- 6













    sending out to all TFG investors. The letter provided in

    relevant part:

    Early last year this company acquired all
    the stock of Technology Finance Group,
    Inc. ("TFG") from which you purchased [an
    interest] in equipment as indicated in
    the attached Schedule A. At the end of
    June, 1989 management changed. This
    Company, and its subsidiary TFG, is now
    operated by new management. We, the new
    management have reviewed TFG's books and
    records and concluded, to the best of our
    knowledge, in relation to the equipment
    owned by you, that TFG owes you
    Additional Rent . . . . Regrettably,
    over the past 5 years, prior management
    of TFG has not remitted sums to owners of
    equipment to a total amount of
    approximately $7 Million. Further, we
    concluded, upon review of the financial
    statements of the Company . . . that TFG
    does not have the financial resources to
    repay these funds.

    . . . .

    Your concern and disappointment at the
    position in which you have been placed is
    extremely understandable. However, it is
    most important that you understand that
    the management responsible for the
    decisions not to pay you have resigned
    and that new management is concerned to
    provide you with the maximum economic
    benefit possible under the circumstances.

    The jury would have been warranted in finding that

    the statement that former management was responsible for the

    sales of plaintiffs' computers was not true. However,

    despite the misrepresentation, plaintiffs were not confused

    about the relationship between the corporate entities, nor

    did they take any action in reliance on the new management



    -7- 7













    language in the letter. Although the majority of TFG's

    investors accepted the standard settlement package,

    plaintiffs declined to do so.

    Procedural History __________________

    Plaintiffs, who are Massachusetts residents, filed

    this diversity suit in the District of Massachusetts in 1990,

    alleging breach of contract, common law fraud, conversion,

    interference with contractual obligations, and violation of

    the Massachusetts deceptive trade practices statute, Mass.

    Gen. L. ch. 93A, 2. Aware of TFG's precarious financial

    condition, the plaintiffs brought suit not only against TFG,

    but also against CRI, Locke, and Williamson.

    At the close of the evidence, the trial judge

    entered a directed verdict against the plaintiffs on the

    fraud claim concerning the computer they owned jointly. The

    defendants then moved, pursuant to Rule 50(a), for judgment

    as a matter of law on various grounds, including a lack of

    personal jurisdiction. The district court denied the motion,

    ruling that the personal jurisdiction issue had been waived,

    but even if it had not, that the jury could find the

    defendants had sufficient contacts with Massachusetts for a

    proper exercise of personal jurisdiction. The jury found for

    the defendants on the remaining fraud and interference with

    contractual relations claims, but for the plaintiffs on the





    -8- 8













    breach of contract claim. The trial judge reserved decision

    on the Massachusetts deceptive trade practices claim.

    After the verdict, defendants again moved for

    judgment as a matter of law, pursuant to Rule 50(b). The

    trial court denied the motion. At the same time, it ruled

    that the defendants had not violated the Massachusetts

    deceptive trade practices statute, finding that the decision

    to breach the contract with the plaintiffs was a valid

    business judgment rather than an attempt on the part of the

    defendants to line their pockets.

    Personal Jurisdiction _____________________

    The defendants question whether there is personal

    jurisdiction over them under the Massachusetts long arm

    statute, Mass. Gen. L. ch. 233A, 3, and the United States

    Constitution. The district court found that all three

    defendants had waived their objections to personal

    jurisdiction and that in any event, the jury could find that

    the defendants had sufficient contacts with Massachusetts for

    a proper exercise of jurisdiction. The trial judge was

    plainly correct that CRI waived any objection to

    jurisdiction: at the final pre-trial conference, defense

    counsel conceded there was no jurisdictional issue with

    respect to CRI. Because parties are, as a general matter,

    bound by the representations, concessions, and stipulations

    of their attorneys, United States v. Woburn City Athletic _____________ _____________________



    -9- 9













    Club, 928 F.2d 1, 6 (1st Cir. 1991), this express waiver is ____

    dispositive on the issue of the trial court's jurisdiction

    over CRI.

    The matters of waiver and personal jurisdiction

    over the two individual defendants are far closer. Because

    we find that plaintiffs did not submit evidence sufficient to

    sustain their verdict on the merits, we pretermit resolution

    of the jurisdictional issue. See Norton v. Mathews, 427 U.S. ___ ______ _______

    524, 530-31, 96 S. Ct. 2771, 1773-76A, 49 L. Ed. 2d 672 (1976)

    (where merits can be easily resolved in favor of the party

    challenging jurisdiction, resolution of complex and

    theoretical jurisdictional issue may be avoided); Menorah _______

    Ins. Co., Ltd. v. INX Reinsurance Corp., 72 F.3d 218, 223 n.9 ______________ _____________________

    (1st Cir. 1995).

    Piercing the Veil _________________

    TFG admittedly violated its contract with

    plaintiffs, has not appealed and is liable to plaintiffs.

    TFG is insolvent and plaintiffs, as TFG's putative creditors,

    seek to have CRI, the corporate parent, and Locke and

    Williamson, individuals who were officers of both TFG and

    CRI, satisfy TFG's contractual obligations. Although

    corporate and individual defendants present slightly

    different questions, Pepsi Cola Metropolitan Co. v. Checkers, ___________________________ _________

    Inc., 754 F.2d 10, 15-16 (1st Cir. 1985), the analyses are ____





    -10- 10













    sufficiently similar to warrant discussing them together,3

    only distinguishing the two categories when necessary.

    Neither party disputes that Massachusetts law

    controls in this diversity action. Our review is de novo.

    We will only reverse if the evidence, when viewed in the

    light most favorable to the verdict, would allow a reasonable

    factfinder to come to only one conclusion -- that the moving

    party was entitled to a judgment in its favor. Conway v. ______

    Electro Switch Corp., 825 F.2d 593, 598 (1st Cir. 1987). ____________________

    Plaintiffs seek to make the corporate parent and

    two of its officers liable for the damages owed for breach of

    contract by a subsidiary.4 Specifically, CRI acquired 100%

    ____________________

    3. The leading Massachusetts case on piercing the corporate
    veil, My Bread Baking Co. v. Cumberland Farms, Inc., 233 _____________________ _______________________
    N.E.2d 748 (Mass. 1968), notes in dicta that a "corporation _____
    or a person controlling a corporation and directing, or
    participating actively in its operations may become subject
    to civil or criminal liability on principles of agency or of
    causation," My Bread, 233 N.E.2d at 751 (citation omitted), _________
    and this court has applied the same analysis to individual
    defendant shareholders as it has to defendant corporations.
    Pepsi Cola, 754 F.2d at 15-16. However, commentators have __________
    noted that courts have evinced a "greater willingness to
    reach the assets of corporate as opposed to personal
    shareholders." Easterbrook & Fischel, The Economic Structure ______________________
    of Corporate Law 56 & n.9 (1991); Hackney & Benson, _________________
    Shareholder Liability for Inadequate Capital, 43 U. Pitt. L. _____________________________________________
    Rev. 837, 873 (1982) (collecting cases); Hamilton, The ___
    Corporate Entity, 49 Tex. L. Rev. 979, 992 (1971). ________________

    4. That CRI acquired ownership of TFF, Inc. and thus of TFG
    in 1989 while plaintiffs entered in their contracts with TFG
    several years earlier in 1986 does not defeat plaintiffs'
    claim, because the actions leading to the breach of contract
    occurred in 1989 and 1990, after CRI had made the
    acquisition. Thus, this case does not involve an effort to
    hold a later parent responsible for the pre-parenthood

    -11- 11













    of the stock of TFF, Inc., which in turn owned all of the

    common stock of TFG (but not its preferred stock). Thus, CRI

    was the parent once removed.

    To start, CRI is a publicly traded, not a closely

    held corporation. Caselaw and precedent elsewhere draw

    distinctions between close and public corporations, and the

    cases where courts have allowed creditors to reach the assets

    of shareholders have almost always involved close

    corporations. Easterbrook & Fischel, The Economic Structure _______________________

    of Corporate Law 55-56 & n.8 (1991) (explaining that a __________________

    "manager's incentive to undertake overly risky projects is

    greater in close corporations"). Massachusetts apparently

    has not yet addressed the issue of piercing the corporate

    veil of a public corporation. The key Massachusetts cases on

    piercing the corporate veil have all involved close, family-

    owned defendant corporations. In this silence, we will

    assume, dubitante, that Massachusetts would apply the same

    standards in deciding whether to pierce the corporate veil

    when the defendant is a public corporation as it has when the

    defendant is a close corporation.

    Further, this case concerns injured creditors of

    the subsidiary seeking to impose contract obligations on the

    ____________________

    activities of its new corporate child. See, e.g., C.M. Corp. _________ __________
    v. Oberer Dev. Co., 631 F.2d 536, 539 (7th Cir. 1980) _________________
    (parent's acquisition of subsidiary after breach of warranty
    renders analysis of relationship between two corporations
    irrelevant).

    -12- 12













    parent and its officers. Several courts and commentators

    have suggested that it should be more difficult to pierce the

    veil in a contract case than in a tort case. See, e.g., _________

    Edwards v. Minogram Indus., 730 F.2d 977, 980-984 (5th Cir. _______ _______________

    1984) (en banc); Blumberg, The Law of Corporate Groups: _______________________________

    Substantive Law 17.01, 17.06, at 349-51, 359-60 (1987) ________________

    ("[T]he underlying facts and policies in contract are often

    very different from those in tort . . . ."); Easterbrook &

    Fischel, supra, at 58 ("Courts are more willing to disregard _____

    the corporate veil in tort than in contract cases."); Douglas

    & Shanks, Insulation from Liability Through Subsidiary _________________________________________________

    Corporations, 39 Yale L.J. 193, 210-11 (1929). We have found ____________

    no Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court case applying the

    veil piercing doctrine in a contract case. The Appeals Court

    cases that do so have not addressed the question of whether

    it is more difficult to pierce the corporate veil in contract

    than in tort. E.g., Evans v. Multicon Const. Corp., 574 ____ _____ ______________________

    N.E.2d 395, 400 (Mass. App. Ct. 1991), review denied, 577 ______________

    N.E.2d 304 (Mass. 1991) (tbl.).

    We need not, however, resolve this issue, because

    we find that plaintiffs do not even meet the standard

    articulated by the Supreme Judicial Court in its seminal

    ruling on veil piercing in a tort case, My Bread Baking Co. ___________________

    v. Cumberland Farms, Inc., 233 N.E.2d 748 (Mass. 1968). As a ______________________

    preliminary matter, we note that "Massachusetts has been



    -13- 13













    somewhat more 'strict' than other jurisdictions in respecting

    the separate entities of different corporations." My Bread, ________

    233 N.E.2d at 752.

    It is true that My Bread teaches that the principle ________

    that corporations are generally to be regarded as distinct

    entities is not "of unlimited application":

    Although common ownership of the stock of
    two or more corporations together with
    common management, standing alone, will
    not give rise to liability on the part of
    one corporation for the acts of another
    corporation or its employees, additional
    facts may be such as to permit the
    conclusion that an agency or similar
    relationship exists between the entities.

    Id. at 751-52. The Supreme Judicial Court explained that it ___

    is appropriate to depart from the general principle of

    corporate separateness:

    (a) when there is active and direct
    participation by the representatives of
    one corporation, apparently exercising
    some form of pervasive control, in the
    activities of another and there is some
    fraudulent or injurious consequence of
    the intercorporate relationship, or (b)
    when there is a confused intermingling of
    activity of two or more corporations
    engaged in a common enterprise with
    substantial disregard of the separate
    nature of the corporate entities, or
    serious ambiguity about the manner and
    capacity in which the various
    corporations and their respective
    representatives are acting. In such
    circumstances, in imposing liability upon
    one or more of a group of "closely
    identified" corporations a court "need
    not consider with nicety which of them"
    ought to be held liable for the act of



    -14- 14













    one corporation "for which the plaintiff
    deserves payment."

    Id. at 752 (citation omitted). However, in setting these ___

    circumstances in context, the Supreme Judicial Court

    explained:

    Where there is common control of a group
    of separate corporations engaged in a
    single enterprise, failure (a) to make
    clear which corporation is taking action
    in a particular situation and the nature
    and extent of that action, or (b) to
    observe with care the formal barriers
    between the corporations with a proper
    segregation of their separate businesses
    records, and finances, may warrant some
    disregard of the separate entities in
    rare particular situations in order to
    prevent gross inequity.

    Id. (internal citation omitted). ___

    Since My Bread, in a variety of factual settings _________

    (albeit none exactly analogous to this case), the Supreme

    Judicial Court has repeated that under Massachusetts law, the

    corporate veil will only be pierced in rare situations.

    Spaneas v. Travelers Indem. Co., 668 N.E.2d 325, 326 (Mass. _______ ____________________

    1996) (corporate veil will only be pierced to prevent gross

    inequity); Berger v. H.P. Hood, Inc., 624 N.E.2d 947, 950 ______ ________________

    (Mass. 1993) (corporate form will be respected absent

    "compelling reason of equity" to do otherwise); Gurry v. _____

    Cumberland Farms, Inc., 550 N.E.2d 127, 134 (Mass. 1990) _______________________

    (same); Worcester Ins. Co. v. Fells Acres Day Sch., 558 ___________________ ______________________

    N.E.2d 958, 968-69 (Mass. 1990) (noting the reluctance to

    disregard the corporate form); Commonwealth v. Beneficial ____________ __________


    -15- 15













    Fin. Co., 275 N.E.2d 33, 91 (Mass. 1971) (courts will only _________

    look through the corporate veil to "accomplish . . .

    essential justice"), cert. denied, 407 U.S. 910 (1972) and ____________ ___

    407 U.S. 914 (1972); Gordon Chem. Co. v. Aetna Casualty & _________________ _________________

    Surety Co., 266 N.E.2d 653, 657 (Mass. 1971); see also United __________ ________ ______

    Elec. Workers v. 163 Pleasant St. Corp., 960 F.2d 1080, 1091 ______________ _____________________

    (1st Cir. 1992) ("Under Massachusetts common law,

    disregarding the corporate form is permissible only in rare

    situations.").

    We review the evidence in light of the two prong My __

    Bread test, starting with the second prong. Plaintiffs _____

    clearly did not meet their burden of showing by a

    preponderance of the evidence a "confused intermingling" of

    CRI's and TFG's activities with "substantial disregard of

    the separate nature of the corporate entities," or "serious

    ambiguity about the manner and capacity in which the [two]

    corporations and their respective representatives [were]

    acting." My Bread, 233 N.E.2d at 752. Defendants were ________

    extremely careful about maintaining the formal distinctions

    between CRI and TFG. The two companies had distinct boards

    of directors, had separate board meetings, and each kept

    individual financial records. There is no evidence showing

    that TFG was a sham or merely a shield behind which CRI could

    hide to escape liability for its own obligations. Beneficial __________





    -16- 16













    Fin. Co., 275 N.E.2d at 91-92; Gordon Chem. Co., 266 N.E.2d ________ ________________

    at 657.

    The primary evidence on which plaintiffs rely is

    TFG's movement of funds from a bank account in its own name

    in Connecticut into another TFG account in a Canadian bank in

    order to meet the payroll for TFG employees. For several

    months, defendant Locke ran TFG's payroll out of his own

    attorney operating account in New York because steps had been

    taken to attach TFG's Connecticut account. Locke was

    reimbursed with funds transferred out of the TFG Canadian

    account. It is undisputed that the funds disbursed by Locke

    and repaid by TFG went only to TFG employees. Plaintiffs

    were unaware of the transfers at the time and the transfers

    did not affect them. This is not the sort of "confused

    intermingling" we think the Supreme Judicial Court had in

    mind.

    Plaintiffs also argue that confused intermingling

    was evident from cash infusions into TFG by CRI, Locke and

    Williamson. However, all the money transferred from CRI to

    TFG was in the form of loans that were properly recorded in

    the financial records of both corporations. Moreover, there

    was insufficient competent evidence of transfers of money in









    -17- 17













    the other direction, that is, from TFG to CRI.5 These loans

    do not support the claim of confused intermingling.

    Plaintiffs' argument that there was serious

    confusion about the manner and capacity in which the two

    corporations and their representatives acted is similarly

    unpersuasive. There is no evidence that there was any

    confusion about on whose behalf a director was acting in any

    given instance. Locke and Williamson, in their capacities as

    directors of both CRI and TFG, did sometimes act on behalf of

    both corporations simultaneously, but that is to be expected

    when individuals serve as directors for both a parent and its

    subsidiary. It is also to be expected that when a subsidiary

    company profits, the parent company will as well. That the

    fortunes of CRI and TFG were to some extent linked does not,

    as plaintiffs suggest, militate in favor of piercing the

    corporate veil.

    Plaintiffs admitted they were not misled about the

    relationship between TFG and CRI. Indeed, Massad did not

    even know that he had invested in TFG, let alone that CRI had

    become its parent. Plaintiffs neither knew nor cared about

    the relationship between CRI and TFG, but rather relied on

    their financial advisor, Levinson, who understood the

    corporate relationship.


    ____________________

    5. The bank statements, the best evidence, show no transfers
    from TFG to CRI.

    -18- 18













    As to the first prong of the My Bread test, the _________

    evidence is only that Locke and Williamson served on the

    boards of both TFG and CRI. Mere overlapping of boards does

    not meet the test of "active and direct participation by the

    representatives of one corporation, apparently exercising

    some form of pervasive control." My Bread, 233 N.E.2d at ________

    752. Moreover, plaintiffs have failed to show any

    "fraudulent or injurious consequence of the intercorporate

    relationship." Plaintiffs argue that the settlement offers

    were misleading and fraudulent, because defendants attributed

    the decision to retain investment returns to TFG's prior

    management, when it had been the decision of the new

    management to continue the policy of violating investment

    contracts.

    Even assuming this misrepresentation might have

    supported fraud or unfair practices claims against the

    defendants (claims the jury and court here rejected), we

    think plaintiffs' argument misses the point of the corporate

    disregard doctrine. The phrase "fraudulent or injurious

    consequence" is limited in My Bread by the phrase "of the _________

    intercorporate relationship." There was no failure to "make

    clear which corporation [was] taking action" or "to observe

    with care" the corporate form. My Bread, 233 N.E.2d at 752. ________

    The Massachusetts Appeals Court has put this point well:

    "There is present in the cases which have looked through the



    -19- 19













    corporate form an element of dubious manipulation and

    contrivance, finagling, such that corporate identities are

    confused and third parties cannot be quite certain with what

    they are dealing." Evans, 574 N.E.2d at 400;6 cf. Oman Int'l _____ ___ __________

    Fin. Ltd. v. Hoiyong Gems Corp., 616 F. Supp. 351, 364 __________ ___________________

    (D.R.I. 1985) (noting that the better reasoned cases under

    Rhode Island law only pierce the corporate veil when the

    injurious consequences are a direct result of the misuse of

    the corporate form). Plaintiffs were never misled about

    which corporate entity -- CRI or TFG -- was obligated to them

    or was dealing with them. Cf. Leatherbee Mortgage Co. v. ___ ________________________

    Cohen, 638 N.E.2d 939, 940 (Mass. App. Ct. 1994); Massey's _____ ________

    Plate Glass Co. v. Quinlan, 1992 WL 141885, at *3 (Mass. ________________ _______

    Dist. Ct. 1992).




    ____________________

    6. To the extent that the earlier Massachusetts Appeals
    Court decision in Bump v. Robbins, 509 N.E.2d 12 (Mass. App. ____ _______
    Ct. 1987) could be read to the contrary, we believe it to be
    inconsistent with My Bread and effectively overruled by _________
    Evans. See MCLE-NELI, Appellate Practice 108-13 (1980); _____ ___ ___________________
    Henn, Civil Interlocutory Appellate Review Under G.L.M. ______________________________________________________
    c.231, 118 & G.L.M. c.211, 3, 81 Mass. L. Rev. 24 (1996). ________________________________
    Bump pierced the corporate veil despite the plaintiff's lack ____
    of confusion about with whom he was dealing, based on the
    particular facts and circumstances of the case and the belief
    that My Bread does not "mak[e] such confusion an absolute ________
    requirement." 509 N.E.2d at 24. Bump, which imposed ____
    liability on a parent under Mass. Gen. L. ch. 93A, also
    involved findings of a de facto merger and an undisclosed
    principal and articulated its holding by stating that the
    parent "was liable on agency principles" for the conduct of
    its subsidiary. Id. ___


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    As was said in Pepsi Cola, we believe the two prong __________

    general analysis in My Bread is exemplary and does not _________

    provide an exhaustive list of considerations. My Bread sets ________

    the standard for deciding when to pierce the corporate veil

    under Massachusetts law; Pepsi Cola elucidates some factors ___________

    that may be considered when engaging in a My Bread analysis. ________

    Pepsi Cola, 754 F.2d at 15.7 The majority of the Pepsi Cola __________ __________

    factors cut against piercing the corporate veil in this case.

    Plaintiffs largely based their case against the

    individual defendants on a theory that the two defendants ran

    TFG for their personal benefit -- that by drawing salaries

    and receiving certain benefits, the defendants were siphoning

    off corporate funds.8 But that theory is topsy-turvy:

    managers should not be put to the Hobson's choice of either

    working for free or facing personal liability. Such a rule

    would undercut, not advance, the policy reasons for the

    corporate disregard doctrine. See Evans, 574 N.E.2d at 399 ___ _____

    ____________________

    7. These factors include insufficient capitalization,
    nonobservance of corporate formalities, failure to pay
    dividends, insolvency at the time of the litigated
    transaction, siphoning off corporate funds, absence of
    functioning officers besides the dominant shareholders,
    absence of corporate records, use of the corporation to
    advance the interests of the dominant shareholders, and use
    of the corporation in promoting fraud. Pepsi Cola, 754 F.2d __________
    at 16.

    8. In contrast to the situation in Pepsi Cola, 754 F.2d at __________
    14, there was no credible evidence of subterfuge or
    channeling excessive payments; nor was there any indication
    that the benefits were not part of a legitimate benefits
    plan.

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    (benefit gained by individual defendants was a legitimate

    business purpose and so a factor pointing against veil

    piercing).

    Indeed, only one of the Pepsi Cola factors can ___________

    arguably be said to militate in favor of veil piercing here:

    when plaintiffs' computers were sold, TFG was insolvent,

    unable to pay its debts as they fell due. However,

    considering TFG's insolvency in light of policies

    Massachusetts has sought to foster provides us with a

    different perspective. Evans, 574 N.E.2d at 399. The _____

    Supreme Judicial Court has recently, in dicta, said of the _____

    corporate disregard doctrine:

    [I]t relates to the quite distinct issue
    whether the effects of liability of one
    corporate entity should be visited upon a
    related entity. Corporate distinctness
    is respected as a means of limiting
    liability and thus fostering investment
    in corporate enterprises.

    Strom v. American Honda Motor Co., 667 N.E.2d 1137, 1145-46 _____ _________________________

    (Mass. 1996).

    This case involves an attempt to impose liability

    on a new parent corporation and its officers for their

    efforts to salvage an insolvent, struggling business. TFG

    was not initially insufficiently capitalized for the purposes

    of its corporate endeavor and only became insolvent after a

    change in the tax laws. See Laborers Clean-Up Contract ___ ___________________________

    Admin. Trust Fund v. Uriarte Clean-Up Serv., Inc., 736 F.2d __________________ _____________________________



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    516, 525 (9th Cir. 1984) (distinguishing, in dicta, the _____

    propriety of veil piercing when a subsidiary was

    undercapitalized at the outset from veil piercing when a

    subsidiary began with sufficient funds but subsequently fell

    upon hard times).

    The basic contract was entered into between

    plaintiffs and TFG, and TFG became insolvent before CRI

    assumed ownership. CRI bought TFG knowing that it was

    insolvent and pumped a great deal of money into TFG to try to

    make it profitable again. That TFG may have continued to be

    undercapitalized in these circumstances does not argue for

    piercing the corporate veil. Indeed, the contrary may well

    be true. This is not a case involving a close corporation

    where the parent may "form a subsidiary with minimal

    capitalization for the purpose of engaging in risky

    activities" and where absolute limited liability would create

    "incentives to engage in a socially excessive amount of risky

    activities." Easterbrook & Fischel, supra, at 57. Nor is _____

    this a case of "financial misconduct of the subsidiary

    involving such manipulation as asset-stripping or asset-

    siphoning, which depletes the resources of the subsidiary."

    Blumberg, supra, 17.01, at 350. In sum, this is not that _____

    "rare particular situation" where disregarding the corporate

    form is necessary "to prevent gross inequity." My Bread, 233 ________

    N.E.2d at 752.



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    Accordingly, after examining the case in the light

    most favorable to the verdict, we find the evidence

    insufficient to warrant piercing TFG's corporate veil to

    reach CRI's assets or the individual defendants' assets under

    the stringent requirements set forth by Massachusetts law.

    We reverse and vacate the jury verdict.









































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