Carolyn R. Morse and Elaine v. Greer, Individually and in Their Capacity as Members of Rosendahl Investments, L.L.C., and Rosendahl Investments, L.L.C. v. Nels M. Rosendahl, Individually and in His Capacity as a Member of Rosendahl Investments, L.L.C. ( 2016 )


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  •                    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 15-0912
    Filed June 15, 2016
    CAROLYN R. MORSE and ELAINE V. GREER,
    individually and in their capacity as members
    of Rosendahl Investments, L.L.C., and
    ROSENDAHL INVESTMENTS, L.L.C.,
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    vs.
    NELS M. ROSENDAHL, individually and
    in his capacity as a member of
    Rosendahl Investments, L.L.C.,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Jeanie K. Vaudt,
    Judge.
    Defendant    appeals    the   district   court   decision   granting   specific
    performance to plaintiffs in their breach of contract action and denying his
    counterclaim. REVERSED IN PART AND AFFIRMED IN PART.
    Lawrence B. Cutler of Craig, Smith & Cutler, L.L.P., Eldora, for appellant.
    David A. Morse of Law Offices of David A. Morse, Des Moines, for
    appellees.
    Considered by Tabor, P.J., and Bower and McDonald, JJ.
    2
    BOWER, Judge.
    Defendant Nels Rosendahl appeals the district court decision granting
    specific performance to plaintiffs Carolyn Morse and Elaine Greer in their breach
    of contract action and denying his counterclaim. We reverse the decision of the
    district court granting Carolyn and Elaine specific performance on their request to
    have Nels transfer his interest in the parties’ limited liability company for no
    consideration. We affirm the court’s denial of Nels’s counterclaim for dissolution
    of the company based upon oppression by Carolyn and Elaine.
    I.     Background Facts & Proceedings
    Nels, Carolyn, and Elaine are siblings. In 2003 they inherited property
    from their parents.    The siblings decided to create Rosendahl Investments,
    L.L.C., with their inherited property. Carolyn and Elaine each invested $342,041.
    Nels invested $262,041, after keeping $80,000 from his inheritance. Carolyn and
    Elaine each had a 36.46% ownership interest, while Nels had a 27.08%
    ownership interest. Carolyn was the managing member of the company.
    Nels became dissatisfied with the company, in particular due to what he
    perceived as self-dealing by Carolyn.1 On February 6, 2007, Nels sent Carolyn
    and Elaine an email stating, “I have been thinking about this LLC stuff. I never
    wanted to be in it.” Elaine responded with an email, “So he’s saying he wants
    out? How do we proceed?” Nels emailed back, “Yes I want out. I hope you
    remember I didn’t want in to begin with.” Carolyn sent an email directing Nels to
    1
    Although Rosendahl Investments provided all of the capital to purchase Jesse’s
    Place, a strip mall in Urbandale, Carolyn gave her husband, Michael Morse, and his
    business partner a forty percent interest in Jesse’s Place because they did not take a
    commission on the sale. Also, Carolyn gave Michael and his partner a contract to
    provide management services for Jesse’s Place.
    3
    the Operating Agreement for Rosendahl Investments.         No further action was
    taken by any of the parties at that time.
    Nels filed a lawsuit against Carolyn and her husband. In recognition of a
    settlement reached in that action, on May 21, 2011, the siblings amended the
    terms of the Operating Agreement. They agreed Carolyn would remain as the
    manager and Michael could provide property management services, given full
    disclosure of the terms of his services were offered.      They also agreed the
    company’s investment portfolio would be managed by a third-party account
    manager rather than by Carolyn.
    On July 16, 2011, Nels sent an email to Carolyn complaining about the
    investment in Jesse’s Place and the amount of payments to Michael in
    management fees. Nels stated, “I really want to get away from this mess!” On
    September 7, 2011, he sent Carolyn an email stating, “I have been waiting for
    you to have some kind of motion trying to get me out. Clearly you were not
    sincere.” Carolyn responded, “As far as sincerity, I sent you a note that asked for
    you to work with me on coming up with a way to get you out of the company as
    you have said you wanted to do, but have never formally asked for, per our
    agreement.” Again, no further action was taken at that time on Nels’s request.
    On June 9, 2012, Nels sent an email to Carolyn and Elaine disagreeing
    with a proposed investment in a hog confinement facility. He stated:
    So rather than have legal issues again why don’t we take
    advantage of the 10,000 an acre price and get me out.
    You won’t have to deal with me anymore.
    Let’s find a way to make it happen. I’ll take 99 ac[res] by
    John and give you cash or a note to cover my end of the Jesse
    Place fiasco.
    4
    According to the accountant it’s the only way this works.
    You don’t have the cash and you can use some extra when I’m out.
    Let’s find the number that works.
    Carolyn responded they were only investigating whether or not to invest in
    a hog confinement facility. Nels sent Carolyn an email on June 11, 2012, again
    stating he did not believe they should invest in a hog confinement facility. He
    also stated, “Anyway I’m tired of putting up with all the drama. I have a number
    from the accountant. It’s time for me to go my own way. I’ll take my land back
    and give you the cash.” He also sent Carolyn a text message stating, “I don’t
    want to be involved anymore. This is another loser.”
    On August 28, 2012, Carolyn and Elaine sent Nels a letter stating they
    considered his emails and texts as an intent to withdraw from Rosendahl
    Investments. They stated under the terms of the Operating Agreement their
    purchase price for Nels’s shares was the value of his capital account, which at
    that time was zero. Carolyn and Elaine stated, “[A]ll our shares do have some
    value which may not be reflected in the capital accounts based upon the long-
    term nature of the company holdings.” They made an alternative offer to pay
    Nels $150,000 for his share in the company. The letter stated if Nels did not
    accept the alternative offer to purchase his shares for $150,000 by
    September 11, 2012, then the buyout terms of the Operating Agreement would
    apply.
    Carolyn sent Nels an email on September 7, 2012, asking whether he
    wanted to proceed with their offer or use the calculations described in the
    Operating Agreement. Nels responded on September 9, 2012, stating, “I do not
    want your offer! The offer you presented is not consistent with the operating
    5
    agreement.” He stated he believed the offer presented by Carolyn and Elaine
    was too low and was not a legitimate offer. Nels stated he had hired an attorney
    who was having an independent accountant look over the matter.
    On January 15, 2013, Carolyn and Elaine filed an action against Nels,
    claiming he had withdrawn from the company. Carolyn and Elaine asked for
    specific performance of the terms of the Operating Agreement, namely, an order
    compelling Nels to transfer his interest in the company to them.
    Nels’s answer denied giving notice of intent to withdraw from the company
    and stated Carolyn and Elaine did not have the right to his interest in the
    company. He raised the affirmative defense of unconscionability. Nels later filed
    a motion seeking to amend his answer to raise a counterclaim seeking
    dissolution of Rosendahl Investments.        Nels also filed a motion for summary
    judgment claiming the plaintiffs had not produced any evidence he withdrew from
    the company.
    Immediately prior to the trial on January 22, 2015, the court granted the
    motion to amend Nels’s answer to add the counterclaim for dissolution of the
    company. The court denied the motion for summary judgment, finding there
    were genuine issues of material fact.
    During the hearing, Carolyn and Elaine testified they interpreted Nels’s
    email from June 9, 2012, as his notice of intent to withdraw from the company.
    Carolyn stated, “It’s the totality of the language of Nels consistently asking to get
    out of the company.”     Nels testified he never intended to withdraw from the
    company. He stated he was attempting to negotiate a sale of his share of the
    6
    company with his sisters. Nels stated he believed the offer of $150,000 was too
    low based on the assets held by the company.
    The district court issued a decision on April 30, 2015, finding, “The email
    Carolyn and Elaine received from Nels on June 9, 2012, manifests his notice to
    Carolyn and Elaine that he was withdrawing from [Rosendahl Investments] within
    the meaning of the Agreement.” The court found Carolyn and Elaine responded
    to Nels in compliance with the terms of the Operating Agreement. The court
    found Nels refused the offer to purchase his interest in the company for
    $150,000. The court determined under the terms of the Operating Agreement,
    when Nels withdrew from the company, Carolyn and Elaine could purchase his
    share of the company for the value of his capital account, which was zero dollars.
    The court found, “The company has no obligation to pay him anything for his
    shares under this option.” The court concluded Carolyn and Elaine were entitled
    to specific performance of the Agreement and Nels was required to transfer his
    interest in the company to them. The court determined the Operating Agreement
    was not unconscionable, oppressive, fraudulent, or illegal.    The court denied
    Nels’s counterclaim seeking dissolution of the company.        Nels appeals the
    decision of the district court.
    II.     Standard of Review
    Specific performance is a form of equitable relief, and, therefore, our
    review is de novo. Passehl Estate v. Passehl, 
    712 N.W.2d 408
    , 414 (Iowa 2006).
    Also, the counterclaim alleging oppression by the other members of the company
    was tried in equity. See Lange v. Lange, 
    520 N.W.2d 113
    , 115 (Iowa 1994). In
    equity, we give weight to the district court’s factual findings, especially
    7
    concerning the credibility of witnesses, but are not bound by those findings. Iowa
    R. App. P. 6.904(3)(g); Smith v. Iowa State Univ., 
    851 N.W.2d 1
    , 19 (Iowa 2014).
    III.      Notice of Withdrawal
    Nels claims his email of June 9, 2012, did not constitute a notice of
    withdrawal under the terms of the Operating Agreement for Rosendahl
    Investments. He states he did not intend to withdraw from the company and his
    email could not be considered as notice of withdrawal. Nels claims he was
    attempting to sell his interest in the company to Carolyn and Elaine, which was
    permitted in the Operating Agreement.
    Rosendahl Investments is a limited liability company subject to the
    Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act (RULLCA).          See Iowa Code
    § 489.106 (2013). Under the RULLCA,
    A person is disassociated as a member from a limited
    liability company when any of the following applies:
    1. The company has notice of the person’s express will to
    withdraw as a member, but, if the person specified a withdrawal
    date later than the date the company had notice, on that later date.
    
    Id. § 489.602.
    A company’s operating agreement may specify “the time or the
    events upon the happening of which a member may disassociate.”                 
    Id. § 489.604(1).
    The Operating Agreement for Rosendahl Investments provides:
    9.1    Events of Withdrawal. A Member ceases to be a
    Member of the Company and shall be deemed a “Withdrawing
    Member,” and each Member not so withdrawing shall be deemed a
    “Non-Withdrawing Member,” upon the occurrence of any of the
    following events (an “Event of Withdrawal”):
    (a)    A Member withdraws from the Company by giving
    ninety (90) days prior written notice of such Member’s withdrawal to
    the other Members; provided, however, such withdrawal by a
    Member shall constitute a breach of this Agreement and such
    8
    Member shall be liable to the Company for any damages sustained
    by the Company as a result of such withdrawal, including but not
    limited to expenses related to reorganizing the Company if the
    withdrawal causes the Company to cease to be a limited liability
    company under the Act, and the Company may offset such
    damages against any amount otherwise distributable to such
    Member pursuant to Article VI of this Agreement.
    Under section 9.4 of the Operating Agreement, upon the withdrawal of a
    member, the remaining members, “in their sole discretion,” could decide whether
    the withdrawing member would continue to receive distributions or whether the
    remaining members would purchase the withdrawing member’s share of the
    company for “the value of such Member’s Capital Account.” The value of a
    member’s Capital Account, as defined in section 6.2, is based upon the
    member’s contribution and share of net profits, decreased by net losses and
    distributions. Thus, the value of a member’s Capital Account was based upon
    the company’s profits and losses, not the value of the net assets held by the
    company.
    A person may withdraw from a limited liability company by giving notice to
    the company of the person’s “express will to withdraw as a member.” Iowa Code
    § 489.602(1). The Operating Agreement for Rosendahl Investments states there
    must be written notice of withdrawal and the notice must be given to the other
    members of the company. Carolyn and Elaine testified they interpreted Nels’s
    email from June 9, 2012, as his written notice of intent to withdraw from the
    company.2
    2
    Nels’s follow-up email and text from June 11, 2012, were to Carolyn alone, and so
    could not be considered as a notice of withdrawal because they were not sent to all of
    the other members of the company.
    9
    Setting aside the issue of whether an email could constitute written notice
    for purposes of the Operating Agreement, the text of Nels’s email of June 9,
    2012, does not indicate an intent to withdraw from the company. If Nels had
    intended to withdraw, then it was apparent under the terms of the Operating
    Agreement the remaining members could obtain his shares for the value of his
    Capital Account. There is no indication he was willing to transfer his interest
    under this scenario. To the contrary, he was clearly suggesting a sale of his
    interest in the company. Nels offered to accept ninety-nine acres of land and in
    exchange he would provide the company with cash or a note for the difference in
    value between his interest and the value of the land. He stated, “Let’s find the
    number that works.”
    If he was intending to withdraw, and thus accepting the valuation of his
    interest as the value of his Capital Account, there would be no purpose in
    attempting to negotiate a sales price for his interest. We also note Nels had
    made many statements in the past, which were similar to those expressed in the
    June 9, 2012 email, and these statements were never interpreted by the parties
    as an expression of Nels’s intent to withdraw from the company.
    Section 8.2 of the Operating Agreement provides:
    Permitted Transfers. Any Member may make a voluntary Transfer,
    or a Transfer as a result of death or dissolution, of all or any portion
    of the Units owned or held by such Member to the following
    Persons without obtaining the prior consent of a Manager and the
    non-transferring Members as required by section 8.1: (i) to the
    Company; (ii) to any existing Member; . . . .
    This section would permit Nels to sell his interest in the company for an amount
    different than the value of his Capital Account. A sale under section 8.2 would
    10
    make sense from Nels’s standpoint because the company had net assets of
    about $2.25 million on December 29, 2013, but had little net profits. At the time,
    Carolyn and Elaine claimed he had withdrawn from the company his Capital
    Account had a value of zero dollars.
    On our de novo review, we find when Nels’s email from June 9, 2012, is
    read as a whole, rather than considering a few phrases alone, it cannot
    reasonably be viewed as written notice of his withdrawal from the company. We
    disagree with the district court’s conclusion Nels’s rejection of the offer from
    Carolyn and Elaine to purchase his interest in the company for $150,000 was an
    acceptance his interest could be purchased for zero dollars, based on our finding
    the basic premise for their offer, that Nels had voluntarily withdrawn from the
    company, is not supported by the evidence.
    We reverse the district court’s decision finding Nels voluntarily withdrew
    from the company and Carolyn and Elaine were entitled to specific performance
    of the Operating Agreement permitting them to obtain Nels’s interest in the
    company for no consideration. Because we have denied the claim for specific
    performance, we do not address Nels’s affirmative defense the terms of the
    Operating Agreement were unconscionable.
    IV.    Summary Judgment
    Nels claims the district court should have granted his motion for summary
    judgment.    “The denial of a motion for summary judgment is no longer
    appealable once the matter proceeds to a trial on the merits.”         Lindsay v.
    Cottingham & Butler Ins. Servs., Inc., 
    763 N.W.2d 568
    , 572 (Iowa 2009). “After a
    trial on the merits, the denial of the motion for summary judgment merges with
    11
    the trial on the merits.” 
    Id. We do
    not consider Nels’s claims concerning the
    denial of the motion for summary judgment.
    V.     Oppressive Conduct
    Nels claims the district court should have granted his counterclaim,
    asserting the company engaged in oppressive conduct and asking for dissolution
    of the company. On the application of a member of a limited liability company,
    the company may be dissolved when the managers or those members in control
    of the company, “[h]ave acted or are acting in a manner that is oppressive and
    was, is, or will be directly harmful to the applicant.”               Iowa Code
    § 489.701(1)(e)(2). The district court found, “Dissolution as requested by Nels in
    his counterclaim is not supported by this record.”
    In Baur v. Baur Farms, Inc., 
    832 N.W.2d 663
    , 670 (Iowa 2013), the Iowa
    Supreme    Court discussed      the term “oppressive” as used          in   section
    490.1430(2)(b) of the Iowa Business Corporations Act, which provides for
    dissolution of a corporation based upon “illegal, oppressive, or fraudulent” action
    by directors of a corporation. The court noted, “Some courts have declined to
    enforce transfer price restrictions determined by formulas producing transfer
    prices so small in relation to the true value of the shares as to make the
    restrictions unconscionable or oppressive.” 
    Baur, 832 N.W.2d at 671
    . The court
    determined under the Iowa Business Corporations Act, “every shareholder may
    reasonably expect to share proportionally in a corporation’s gains,” and “[w]hen
    this reasonable expectation is frustrated, a shareholder-oppression claim may
    arise.” 
    Id. at 673.
    The supreme court concluded, “majority shareholders act
    oppressively when, having the corporate financial resources to do so, they fail to
    12
    satisfy the reasonable expectations of a minority shareholder by paying no return
    on shareholder equity while declining the minority shareholder’s repeated offers
    to sell shares for fair value.” 
    Id. On the
    record presented in this case, we determine dissolution of the
    company is not warranted at this time. While Nels has repeatedly stated he
    wanted to sell his interest in the company, he did not make a specific offer until
    his email of June 9, 2012.        The evidence does not show a situation where
    Carolyn and Elaine have declined Nels’s repeated offers to sell his interest for
    fair value. See 
    id. At this
    juncture, we find the conduct of Carolyn and Elaine
    could not be considered oppressive.
    We reverse the decision of the district court granting Carolyn and Elaine
    specific performance on their request to have Nels transfer his interest in the
    company for no consideration.          We affirm the court’s denial of Nels’s
    counterclaim for dissolution of the company based upon oppression by Carolyn
    and Elaine. Costs of this appeal are assessed one-half to plaintiffs and one-half
    to defendant.
    REVERSED IN PART AND AFFIRMED IN PART.