Hinkle Oil & Gas, Inc. v. Bowles Rice McDavid Graff & Love, LLP ( 2010 )


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  •                              UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 08-2275
    HINKLE OIL & GAS, INCORPORATED, an Oklahoma Corporation,
    Plaintiff - Appellant,
    v.
    BOWLES RICE MCDAVID GRAFF & LOVE, LLP, a West Virginia
    Limited Liability Partnership; CHARLES B. DOLLISON; JULIA A.
    CHINCHECK; DOES 1 – 100; MARC MONTELEONE; GERARD STOWERS,
    Defendants - Appellees.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western
    District of Virginia, at Roanoke.  Samuel G. Wilson, District
    Judge. (7:07-cv-00487-sgw-mfu)
    Argued:   October 29, 2009                 Decided:   January 5, 2010
    Before NIEMEYER and DUNCAN, Circuit Judges, and Benson E. LEGG,
    United States District Judge for the District of Maryland,
    sitting by designation.
    Affirmed by unpublished per curiam opinion.
    ARGUED: Hugo Nathan Gerstl, HUGO N. GERSTL, INC., Monterey,
    California, for Appellant.    William Delaney Bayliss, WILLIAMS
    MULLEN, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Brendan D.
    O’Toole, WILLIAMS MULLEN, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellees.
    Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
    2
    PER CURIAM:
    Hinkle Oil & Gas, Inc. (“Hinkle”) challenges the district
    court’s   grant     of   summary    judgment        in   favor   of   the   law    firm
    Bowles    Rice    McDavid   Graff     &    Love,     LLP   (“Bowles    Rice”),     and
    individual       partners   Charles       Dollison,      Marc    Monteleone,      Julia
    Chincheck, and Gerard Stowers on Hinkle’s claims for intentional
    interference with economic advantage, breach of fiduciary duty,
    and legal malpractice.             For the reasons set forth below, we
    affirm.
    I.
    A.
    Appellant Hinkle, an oil and gas well development company,
    had a sister corporation named Minerals Management Group, Inc.
    (“MMGI”).          In    1997,   MMGI        sued    Buffalo      Properties,       LLC
    (“Buffalo”) over the leasing rights to two oil and gas wells in
    Kentucky.        The litigation continued into 2004, at which point
    Buffalo sought Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.
    On June 6, 2005, the bankruptcy matter became a Chapter 7
    proceeding.       Buffalo’s eligible assets were transferred to its
    bankruptcy estate.          The assets included 19 wells in Kentucky
    (“KY wells”) and 274 wells in West Virginia (“WV wells”).                            A
    bankruptcy trustee was appointed to liquidate Buffalo’s assets
    and pay off creditors.
    3
    In early spring 2006, the trustee negotiated a plan under
    which Hinkle would buy the KY wells for $400,000 and would drop
    MMGI’s lawsuit against Buffalo.              On March 1, 2006, the trustee
    faxed Hinkle a proposed contract for the KY wells reflecting the
    $400,000 price.        Hinkle then hired attorney Julia Chincheck of
    the Bowles Rice law firm to complete the negotiations and obtain
    approval from the bankruptcy court.             Although Chincheck notified
    her     partners     about   this   matter,     none    reported   a    conflict
    relating to Hinkle or Buffalo.               Hinkle paid a $5,000 retainer
    and Chincheck began representation.
    On May 3, 2006, the trustee moved for the bankruptcy court
    to approve a proposed contract to sell the WV wells to Applied
    Mechanics Corporation (“AMC”) for $400,000.                 On May 23, 2006,
    two of Buffalo’s creditors, Mervil Perry and the Estate of Bobby
    Gillispie      (“Gillispie”),       filed    separate    objections     to   the
    proposed sale.
    That same day, the bankruptcy trustee agreed to sell the KY
    wells    to    Elk   River   Energy,   LLC    (“Elk    River”)   for   $450,000,
    abandoning the tentative plan to sell to Hinkle for $400,000.
    On May 25, 2006, the trustee moved for the bankruptcy court to
    approve this sale.
    Elk River had been recently organized by two Bowles Rice
    partners, Charles Dollison and Marc Monteleone, and a friend of
    theirs.       It is unknown whether any Bowles Rice partners knew of
    4
    the    potential     conflict      between       Elk    River      and   Hinkle    when
    Chincheck opened the Hinkle file. 1               Bowles Rice became aware of
    the conflict at least by early May when the trustee informed
    Dollison     that    his    law    partner,      Chincheck,        was   representing
    Hinkle.      According to the district court’s opinion, Dollison
    assured the trustee, “Don’t worry, I’ll take care of it.”                           J.A.
    736.
    Bowles Rice did not, however, resolve the conflict or even
    inform Hinkle that its partners were involved with Elk River.
    Hinkle only learned of the conflict through its own independent
    investigation.        At a meeting on May 25, 2006, the trustee told
    Hinkle that Buffalo had entered into a written contract to sell
    the    Kentucky     wells   to    Elk   River.         This    information     prompted
    Hinkle to investigate Elk River, and the inquiry unearthed the
    involvement of the Bowles Rice partners.                      Hinkle then confronted
    Bowles     Rice,    demanding     that   Elk     River        mitigate   the   harm   to
    Hinkle by assigning its contract to Hinkle and paying Hinkle the
    $50,000 difference.          Bowles Rice rejected this demand.                    Hinkle
    never requested that Bowles Rice return its retainer fee, and
    the firm never did.
    1
    Bowles Rice concedes that a conflict exists for purposes
    of this case.
    5
    Dollison and Monteleone then met with Gerard Stowers, who
    oversaw risk management for Bowles Rice.                Based on the group’s
    decision, Bowles Rice stopped representing Hinkle, and Elk River
    requested that the trustee withdraw his May 25, 2006, motion for
    court approval of the sale.        The trustee rejected that request.
    The   proposed    contract    of    sale   to    Elk   River   allowed   for
    “upset bids,” namely, higher bids by outside parties that would
    trigger an auction to the highest bidder.                   The sales contract
    stated, “The sale . . . allows . . . upset bids in an amount of
    $455,000[] or more . . . provided such upset bid is accompanied
    by an earnest money deposit of $25,000 in immediately available
    funds.”    J.A. 430.     On June 9, 2006, Hinkle submitted to the
    trustee and the bankruptcy court a $455,000 upset bid with the
    required   $25,000    earnest     money.        The   upset   bid   included   a
    proposed purchase agreement that, by its own terms, was subject
    to the approval of the court.           On June 12, 2006, Elk River filed
    an objection to the trustee’s May 25, 2006, motion for approval
    of its own sales contract, explaining that Hinkle had threatened
    litigation.
    On July 3, 2006, the bankruptcy court received a letter of
    intent from First South Investments offering to purchase all of
    Buffalo’s assets for $2,500,000.            On July 7, 2006, before taking
    any action on the proposed sale of the KY wells to Elk River,
    the court held a hearing on the trustee’s May 3, 2006, motion to
    6
    approve the sale of the WV wells to AMC.                     The trustee, Perry,
    and    Gillispie      were   represented      at   the    hearing.         Energy   One
    Group, Inc. (“EOG”), who had submitted an upset bid in that
    sale, and James Clowser, who was a member of Buffalo, were also
    represented.       At the hearing, the creditors and Clowser informed
    the court that “at least two entities had expressed interest in
    acquiring all of the assets of the Debtor for substantially more
    than    the   total     of   the   highest     existing     bids     for    the     West
    Virginia Oil and Gas Asset and the Kentucky Oil and Gas Asset of
    the Debtor.”       J.A. 505.
    On July 17, 2006, the court decided the motion.                         In its
    order, the court noted the mention of the higher offers.                            The
    court sustained the creditors’ objection to the WV wells sale
    and    ordered   the    trustee    to    propose    new    sale    procedures       that
    would permit credit bidding, allow prospective buyers to make
    one bid for the KY wells and WV wells combined, and provide for
    an    auction    to    choose    among    multiple       qualifying    bids.        The
    trustee soon proposed new procedures, which the court approved
    over Hinkle’s objection.
    The trustee eventually auctioned off Buffalo’s assets under
    the new procedures.             Hinkle made the highest bid for the KY
    wells at $500,000.           But the overall highest bidder was Heritage
    Financial Group, Inc. (“Heritage”), which offered $7,000,000 for
    all of Buffalo’s assets.           Elk River did not bid at all.                  After
    7
    making the purchase, Heritage transferred Buffalo’s assets to
    Mountain County Partners (“MCP”) and dissolved.
    B.
    After      losing      the    auction,       Hinkle      brought        this    action
    against Appellees Bowles Rice, Dollison, Monteleone, Chincheck,
    and     Stowers.            The     amended       complaint      alleged        intentional
    interference         with     economic     advantage         (Count      1),     breach    of
    fiduciary        duty    (Count     2),   conversion       or    misappropriation           of
    property (Count 3), and legal malpractice (Count 7). 2
    Hinkle       and      Appellees      filed      cross-motions           for     summary
    judgment.         On September 17, 2008, the district court awarded
    summary judgment to Appellees.                    The court found that Counts 1,
    2,    and    7    failed      because     Hinkle     was     unable      to     prove     that
    Appellees caused it not to obtain the KY wells.                          The court also
    said Count 3 failed because Hinkle never demanded the $5,000
    retainer, which remained in Bowles Rice’s client trust account.
    Hinkle was given ten days to file an amended complaint asserting
    claims that did not require proof of causation.                               On September
    18, 2008, Hinkle filed a motion for reconsideration, which the
    court      denied.       On    September      19,    2008,      Hinkle    filed       another
    amended complaint.            The court dismissed the amended complaint on
    2
    Hinkle abandoned Counts 4-6 of its original complaint.
    8
    October 28, 2008, finding that all the claims raised therein
    required proof of causation.          This appeal followed.
    II.
    Hinkle    challenges     the   district      court’s   grant      of    summary
    judgment, asserting error in its conclusion that Hinkle failed
    to produce sufficient evidence of causation for Counts 1, 2, and
    7. 3       Hinkle asserts that it presented sufficient evidence to
    raise a factual question as to causation because it showed that,
    had Elk River not objected to its own sale contract for the KY
    wells, Hinkle would have been the successful upset bidder. 4
    We review de novo a grant of summary judgment.                         Smith v.
    Ozmint, 
    578 F.3d 246
    , 250 (4th Cir. 2009).                  Summary judgment is
    appropriate      if   “the    pleadings,      the   discovery      and   disclosure
    materials,      and   any    affidavits    show     that   there   is    no    genuine
    issue as to any material fact and that the movant is entitled to
    3
    Hinkle does not challenge and thus waives objection to the
    district court’s grant of summary judgment on Count 3.
    4
    Hinkle concedes that its intentional interference with
    economic advantage, breach of fiduciary duty, and legal
    malpractice claims all require proof that Appellees’ conduct was
    the proximate cause of Hinkle’s failure to obtain the KY wells.
    West Virginia law defines proximate cause to mean “that cause
    which in actual sequence, unbroken by any independent cause,
    produced the wrong complained of, without which the wrong would
    not have occurred.” Spencer v. McClure, 
    618 S.E.2d 451
    , 455 (W.
    Va. 2005) (citation and internal quotations omitted).
    9
    judgment as a matter of law.”                         Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(2).                   We
    construe the evidence in the light most favorable to Hinkle and
    draw all reasonable inferences in its favor.                                   See Smith, 
    578 F.3d at 250
    .         Although      Hinkle        does   not    have       to    show      that
    Appellees’ conduct “was the sole proximate cause of the injury,”
    Spencer,       
    618 S.E.2d at 455-56
            (emphasis         omitted),      “a      mere
    possibility of causation is not sufficient” to defeat summary
    judgment, 
    id. at 456
     (citation and quotations omitted).
    Hinkle argues that Elk River’s objection caused it to lose
    in the bidding process.                 Its position hinges on an assertion of
    inevitability: had Elk River not objected, the process would
    have   proceeded          quickly       to   a   resolution         in    its    favor.          The
    record, however, does not bear this out.
    In this case, the bankruptcy court restructured the bidding
    process in a way that caused Hinkle to be unsuccessful in its
    bid.     It is clear from the court’s July 17, 2006, order that
    this restructuring occurred as a result of the July 7, 2006,
    hearing       during       which    Buffalo’s          creditors         for    the   WV     wells
    brought to the court’s attention the fact that “at least two
    entities had expressed interest in acquiring all of [Buffalo’s]
    assets    .    .     .   for   substantially           more   than       the    total      of    the
    highest existing bids.”                 J.A. 505.        Therefore, to show that Elk
    River’s objection caused Hinkle to lose the bid, Hinkle would
    have to present evidence that, absent Elk River’s objection, the
    10
    bankruptcy court would have authorized the trustee’s sale of the
    KY wells to Hinkle as the upset bidder prior to July 7, 2006,
    and would therefore not have had occasion to place the KY sales
    back into play.          However, Hinkle has not presented any evidence
    that       would    permit     it   to    assert      with   any    certainty    that     the
    bankruptcy court would have approved the sale before that date.
    Hinkle’s        upset    bid      documents      clearly     indicate     that     the
    proposed       sales    agreement         between      the   trustee    and    Hinkle     was
    subject to the bankruptcy court’s approval. 5                               Hinkle argues,
    however, that the court would have approved the sale “pro forma”
    shortly after Hinkle’s upset bid.                       This assumption contradicts
    the trustee’s testimony that “there is always a chance” that the
    court       might    reject     the      sale.        J.A.   266.      In    fact,   in   his
    deposition, the trustee agreed that “it would be speculation to
    guess whether [the sale] would [have] be[en] approved” by the
    bankruptcy court.              J.A. 262.         Hinkle’s assumption also ignores
    5
    Although Hinkle argues that the bankruptcy court’s
    approval was not legally required, the evidence in the record
    strongly supports the inference that the trustee would not have
    acted without the court’s approval. The trustee filed a motion
    with the court requesting its approval to complete the Elk River
    sale.   Also, both Elk River’s sale contract and Hinkle’s upset
    bid expressly provided that any sale of the property was
    “subject to [the] approval of the Bankruptcy Court.” J.A. 413,
    454.    Therefore, whether or not the approval was legally
    required, there is absolutely no support for the assumption that
    the trustee would have reversed course and attempted to finalize
    the Hinkle sale without the court’s approval.
    11
    the fact that, on July 3, 2006, the court received a letter of
    intent from First South Investments offering $2,500,000 for all
    of Buffalo’s assets.                It would be mere speculation to assume
    that the court would have ignored that offer and approved the
    Hinkle sale.           Furthermore, Hinkle’s assumption that the court
    would have taken a purely passive role in approving the sale is
    contradicted by the court’s proactive involvement in directing
    the   trustee      to   restructure       the   bidding       process      in   order    to
    create the potential for higher returns for Buffalo’s creditors.
    Even assuming that the bankruptcy court would have approved
    the   sale,       Hinkle      has   presented    no    evidence       to    support     the
    inference that the approval would have occurred before the July
    7, 2006, hearing that led to the bidding restructuring.                              Hinkle
    merely speculates that the “pro forma” approval of the court
    would have occurred in approximately one day.                              Hinkle cannot
    “create       a    genuine      issue     of    material       fact        through     mere
    speculation       or    the    building    of   one    inference       upon     another.”
    Beale v. Hardy, 
    769 F.2d 213
    , 214 (4th Cir. 1985); see also
    Francis v. Booz, Allen & Hamilton, Inc., 
    452 F.3d 299
    , 308 (4th
    Cir. 2006) (“Mere unsupported speculation is not sufficient to
    defeat    a   summary      judgment     motion    if    the    undisputed       evidence
    indicates that the other party should win as a matter of law.”)
    Hinkle’s unsupported assertion that, but for Elk River’s
    objection, the bankruptcy court would have approved the upset
    12
    bid   before   having   an   opportunity   to   restructure   the   bidding
    process is not sufficient to defeat Appellees’ summary judgment
    motion.
    III.
    Accordingly, for the reasons stated above, we
    AFFIRM.
    13
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 08-2275

Judges: Niemeyer, Duncan, Legg

Filed Date: 1/5/2010

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/5/2024