Impac Mortgage Holdings v. Timm ( 2020 )


Menu:
  • Impac Mortgage Holdings, Inc. v. Curtis J. Timm, et al., No. 2119, September Term 2018.
    Opinion by Nazarian, J.
    BREACH OF CONTRACT – CONTRACT INTERPRETATION – OBJECTIVE
    VIEW – EFFECT GIVEN TO EACH CLAUSE
    Under objective view of contract interpretation, clause in Articles Supplementary
    governing the number of preferred shareholder votes required to amend the Articles was
    susceptible of only one meaning and was not ambiguous. Language requiring that the
    consent of at least two-thirds of one class of preferred shareholders—as opposed to two-
    thirds of both classes counted together—was required to amend the Articles. Other
    language in the same provision requiring that the class “vot[e] separately as a class with all
    series” of preferred shareholders did not create an ambiguity.
    RULE 2-602(A)(3) MOTION TO MODIFY SUMMARY JUDGMENT – MOTION
    TO STRIKE AMENDED COMPLAINT – NO ABUSE OF DISCRETION
    Circuit court did not abuse its discretion in denying plaintiffs’ attempt to add a new count
    to complaint based on absence of evidence of shareholder consents. The plaintiffs had not
    alleged facts to support that theory of liability initially and plaintiffs’ attempt to obtain
    discovery on that theory was based on speculation.
    Circuit Court for Baltimore City
    Case No. 24-C-11-008391
    REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 2119
    September Term, 2018
    ______________________________________
    IMPAC MORTGAGE HOLDINGS, INC.
    v.
    CURTIS J. TIMM, ET AL.
    ______________________________________
    Nazarian,
    Reed,
    Zarnoch, Robert A.
    (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),
    JJ.
    ______________________________________
    Opinion by Nazarian, J.
    ______________________________________
    Filed: April 1, 2020
    * Judge Steven Gould did not participate in the
    decision to report this opinion pursuant to
    Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials Act
    (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document
    Maryland Rule 8-605.1.
    is authentic.
    Suzanne Johnson
    2020-07-20 15:04-04:00
    Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk
    Let’s not be overconfident, we still have to count
    the votes.1
    This complex litigation turns on the meaning of one complex sentence. That
    sentence defines the voting rights of two classes of preferred shareholders of Impac
    Mortgage Holdings, Inc. (“Impac”), a publicly traded real estate investment trust
    incorporated under the laws of Maryland and headquartered in Irvine, California. In 2004,
    Impac amended its charter with Articles Supplementary (the “Articles”) that created
    “Series B” and “Series C” classes of preferred stock. Impac sold the shares for $25 per
    share in two public offerings that raised $161.7 million.
    In 2009, after the real estate market tanked and the company hit hard times, Impac
    sought to buy back the Series B shares for approximately $0.29 per share and the Series C
    shares at approximately $0.28 per share. As a condition of buying back the stock, Impac
    also asked shareholders to agree to amend the Articles to, among other things, strip them
    of their right to collect dividends.
    The vote was held (although some dispute this) and just over two-thirds of the Series
    B and Series C stockholders, collectively, tendered their stock. But the two-thirds threshold
    wasn’t met for each class on its own—just under two-thirds of the Class B shareholders
    tendered their shares. The question, then, is whether the amendments were approved.
    Impac says they were, and it filed them with the United States Securities and Exchange
    1
    Attributed to Harold Washington, Mayor of Chicago, 1983–87. Mayoral Race One For
    The History Books; Will Turnout Be Headline or Footnote? Chicago Sun-Times (Feb. 28,
    2019), https://chicago.suntimes.com/2019/2/8/18368156/mayoral-race-one-for-history-
    books-will-turnout-be-headline-or-footnote.
    Commission. But about two years later, Curtis Timm, a Series B and Series C preferred
    shareholder, says that the thresholds weren’t met because Impac needed two-thirds of the
    shares in each class measured separately.
    Mr. Timm filed a six-count class action complaint (the “Complaint”) against Impac
    and individual members of its board of directors in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City.
    Three years later, Camac Fund LP (“Camac”), also a Series B and Series C preferred
    shareholder, intervened as a plaintiff. Over the course of several years and numerous sets
    of motions, the circuit court granted partial summary judgment in Mr. Timm’s and Camac’s
    favor on certain counts and in Impac’s favor on others. In the course of reaching its
    decisions, the circuit court found the voting rights language ambiguous and, based on the
    available extrinsic evidence, found that two-thirds of the shares from each separate class
    had to tender their shares for the buyback and amendments to be approved. In July 2018,
    the court declared that the 2009 amendments to the Series B Articles were not valid, and
    that the 2004 Series B Articles remained in full force and effect. Among other things, it
    ordered injunctive relief requiring Impac to hold a special election for the Series B
    shareholders to elect two new directors under a provision in the 2004 Articles. The court
    rejected Mr. Timm and Camac’s challenges to the validity of the Series C Articles
    amendments. Finally, it issued an order stating that it certified the decisions it had made to
    that point for immediate appeal under Rule 2-602(b). Impac appealed, Mr. Timm cross-
    appealed, and all of the parties agree with the circuit court that the voting rights provision
    is ambiguous. We find it unambiguous, hold that the unambiguous meaning leads to the
    same result, and affirm the judgment in all other respects.
    2
    I.      BACKGROUND
    To understand the issues in this case, we must first place them in context, which in
    turn requires us to walk through a lengthy procedural history.
    A. The Claims
    Mr. Timm filed the initial class action Complaint on December 7, 2011. On
    March 5, 2014, Camac filed its own intervenor complaint. The complaints are almost
    identical except that Camac’s omits Mr. Timm’s claim for relief in the form of punitive
    damages (Mr. Timm’s Count V).
    In Count I, Mr. Timm and Camac alleged that Impac breached the Series B Articles
    by amending them without the consent of two-thirds of Series B shareholders. They
    asserted that the voting rights provision in the Articles required a two-thirds vote of each
    class counted separately. That voting rights provision, section 6(d) of the Series B Articles,2
    is the complex sentence that lies at the heart of this case:
    So long as any shares of Series B Preferred Stock remain
    outstanding, the Corporation shall not, without the affirmative
    vote or consent of the holders of at least two-thirds of the shares
    of the Series B Preferred Stock outstanding at the time, given
    in person or by proxy, either in writing or at a meeting (voting
    separately as a class with all series of Parity Preferred that the
    Corporation may issue upon which like voting rights have been
    conferred and are exercisable), . . . (ii) amend, alter or repeal
    any of the provisions of the Charter . . . .
    Impac never disputed that fewer than two-thirds of the Series B shareholders gave their
    consent to the amendments. It argued, however, that the voting rights provision is
    2
    The counterpart provision in the Series C Articles is identical except that it substitutes
    Series C for Series B in each relevant spot.
    3
    ambiguous and, in context, means that the Articles may be amended if two-thirds of the
    Series B and Series C shareholders, tallied together, tender their shares.
    Count II also alleged a breach of the Articles, but a different breach. That count
    alleged that the Series B and Series C Articles hadn’t been amended because the language
    and terms of the 2009 offering documents made the transaction impossible—it required
    Impac to purchase the shares before the shareholders’ consents occurred or became
    effective. Count II went on to assert that because Maryland Code, § 2-509(b) of the
    Corporations and Associations Article prohibits corporations from voting shares of their
    own stock, there could have been no valid shareholder consent to the proposed
    amendments. This theory seems to posit that any consent by a preferred shareholder would
    not have been effective because it would have occurred when the shareholder no longer
    owned the stock, and any consent to amend by Impac would not have been valid because
    Impac was prohibited from voting its own shares.
    Count III was titled “Breach of Fiduciary Duty/Violation of Good Faith and Fair
    Dealing” and contained several theories of liability, all grounded in the assertion that it was
    improper for Impac and the individual defendants to propose the Series B and Series C
    repurchase as they did—i.e., as an offer to repurchase the stock at $0.28 and $0.29 per
    share, and on the condition that the shareholders agreed to amendments to the Articles that
    were against the shareholders’ interests. The Complaint alleged at least four theories of
    impropriety:
    • it characterized the 2009 tender offer and consent solicitation as a breach of
    contract for violation of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing;
    4
    • it characterized the 2009 tender offer and consent solicitation as an “illegal
    ‘vote buying’ scheme”;
    • it asserted that the individual board member defendants who were owners of
    Impac common stock had engaged in self-dealing; and
    • it alleged that Impac and the individual defendants wrongfully coerced the
    shareholders into selling their stock and consenting to the amendments by
    “threat[ening]” them that if they did not do so, their stock would become
    worthless.
    Count IV, Mr. Timm’s Count V, and Mr. Timm’s Count VI (Camac’s Count V) do
    not allege separate causes of action, but instead seek remedies in the event the 2009
    amendments to the Series B and/or Series C Articles are found invalid under any of the
    theories alleged in Counts I, II, or III. Count IV alleged that Impac breached section 3(d)
    of the Articles by purchasing Series B and Series C stock without paying the dividends
    owed for at least two quarters in 2009 before repurchasing it.3 Count IV seeks an order
    requiring Impac to pay the dividends owed.
    Count V of Mr. Timm’s Complaint asserted that Impac and the individual
    defendants acted with “malice” and seeks punitive damages.
    Count VI (Count V in Camac’s complaint) seeks injunctive relief enforcing Section
    3
    Section 3(d) of the 2004 Articles provides that Impac was not permitted to repurchase its
    common or preferred stock unless “full cumulative dividends” have been paid:
    [U]nless full cumulative dividends on the Series B Preferred
    Stock have been or contemporaneously are declared and paid
    or declared and a sum sufficient for the payment thereof is set
    apart for payment for all past dividend periods and the then
    current dividend period, . . . [no shares of] Common Stock, or
    any shares of preferred stock of the Corporation ranking junior
    to or on a parity with the Series B Preferred Stock . . . [shall]
    be redeemed, purchased or otherwise acquired for any
    consideration . . . by the Corporation. . . .
    5
    6(b) of the 2004 Series B and Series C Articles, which provides that if Impac fails to pay
    six or more quarterly dividends, a preferred shareholder may “immediately call for a
    special meeting to elect two directors to Impac’s Board” with the consent of 20% of the
    Series B and Series C shareholders.4
    B. January 2013: The Circuit Court Grants Partial Summary
    Judgment In Favor Of Impac And The Individual Defendants.
    Impac filed a motion to dismiss Mr. Timm’s Complaint on February 27, 2012. The
    circuit court held a hearing on June 28, 2012, and on January 29, 2013, entered a forty-
    page memorandum opinion and order deciding several of the claims in favor of Impac and
    the individual defendants. Because the parties relied on evidence outside of the Complaint,
    the circuit court treated the motion as a motion for summary judgment and granted
    judgment in favor of the individual defendants on all counts. As to Count I, the court denied
    Impac’s motion to dismiss, and specifically held that the voting rights language in the
    Articles was ambiguous because it could mean either that the consent of two-thirds of
    Series B shareholders was required to amend the respective Articles Supplementary or that
    the consent of two-thirds of the Series B and Series C shareholders collectively was
    4
    Section 6(b) of the 2004 Articles provides that, if Impac failed to pay dividends for six or
    more quarters (which here is undisputed), then the Series B shareholders may elect two
    board members:
    Whenever dividends on any shares of Series B Preferred stock
    . . . shall be in arrears for six or more quarterly periods . . . the
    holders of such shares . . . will be entitled to vote for the
    election of a total of two additional directors of the Corporation
    . . . at a special meeting called by the holders of record of at
    least 20% of the Series B Preferred Stock . . . .
    6
    required to amend either set of Articles. The court also found that the meaning of the
    language could not be determined without consideration of extrinsic evidence.
    As for Count II, the court held that the underlying theory—i.e., that the transaction
    was made impossible by the structure of the offer—was not supported by the language of
    the offering documents, and it granted judgment for Impac on that count.
    The court also rejected the various theories of liability underlying Count III and
    granted judgment in Impac’s favor on that count. First, the court dismissed the claim for
    breach of contract based on violation of the duty of good faith and fair dealing. Second, it
    held that the breach of fiduciary duty claim applies only to the individual defendants, not
    to Impac itself. Third, it also granted judgment in favor of the defendants on the breach of
    fiduciary duty claim because the allegations did not support “illegal vote buying” or
    impermissible coercion and because Mr. Timm had “abandoned any stand-alone self-
    dealing claim he may have alleged.”
    The court granted summary judgment in Impac’s favor on Count V, Mr. Timm’s
    claim for punitive damages, holding that the conclusory allegations that the defendants
    intended to injure Series B and Series C shareholders by stripping them of their economic
    rights were insufficient to state a claim and that they “simply seek, without a colorable
    basis in fact, to convert a garden variety breach of contract claim into a claim for punitive
    damages.” And finally, the court denied Impac’s motion to dismiss Counts IV and VI
    (Camac’s Count V), the merits of which, it found, were tied to Count I’s allegation that
    Impac did not amend the Articles validly.
    On February 27, 2013, Mr. Timm filed a motion for reconsideration of the January
    7
    2013 order, and the court denied that motion in a fourteen-page memorandum opinion on
    December 6, 2013. Mr. Timm argued that the court’s decisions on Count II and III
    improperly weighed facts, and the court rejected that argument. Mr. Timm argued that the
    circuit court erred in granting summary judgment for Impac on Count II because a genuine
    issue of material fact existed as to whether the depositary and transfer agent for the 2009
    transaction (American Stock Transfer & Trust Co. (“AmStock” or the “Depositary”))
    delivered the shareholder consents to Impac before Impac accepted the shares for
    repurchase. The court rejected that argument too, noting that Mr. Timm had not alleged
    such a theory in his Complaint. Put another way, the court found that the Complaint’s
    allegations as to the breach of the Articles in Count II were based, not on a question of fact,
    but instead on the theory that the court had rejected in the January 2013 opinion, i.e., that
    the 2009 offering documents were flawed:
    [Mr. Timm] did not argue that the Depositary did not do
    something that was contemplated by the documents. It is
    apparent that [Mr. Timm’s] theory was that the Depositary
    could not do what was necessary for the transaction to be
    effective, because what the instruments contemplated was
    impossible. That theory is based on the contents of the
    transaction documents themselves, not on the fact of whether
    the Depositary did or did not deliver the consents before Impac
    accepted the shares for purchase.
    The court also rejected Mr. Timm’s argument as to Count III that the court had weighed
    facts improperly in deciding to grant judgment for the individual defendants on the claim
    for breach of fiduciary duty based on impermissible coercion.
    8
    C. Camac Intervenes, Discovery Proceeds, And The Court Again
    Addresses The Merits.
    On June 10, 2013, Camac, a Series B and Series C stockholder that acquired the
    stock after the 2009 amendments, moved to intervene as a plaintiff. Camac’s motion to
    intervene was granted. On the same day, Impac moved for summary judgment on the
    remaining claims (Counts I, IV, and VI of Mr. Timm’s Complaint and Counts I, IV, and V
    of Camac’s Intervenor Complaint).
    On May 5, 2014, Mr. Timm sought discovery from the Depositary, AmStock, by
    filing with the circuit court an “Application for Commission to the New York State Courts
    for the Issuance of a Subpoena Duces Tecum.” The proposed subpoena sought information
    concerning AmStock’s handling of shareholder consents.5 Impac opposed the application
    5
    The subpoena sought from AmStock deposition testimony on the following topics:
    • information regarding instructions received from Impac
    or any of its agents regarding whether [AmStock] was
    alerted to the acceptance for purchase before it gave
    consent as discussed in more detail in Plaintiff’s
    complaint . . . ;
    • information regarding how votes were to be tallied for
    the above-mentioned redemption;
    • information regarding what actions triggered consent
    for the above-mentioned redemption; and
    • information regarding the votes required to approve
    amendments to the preferred stock.
    • documents exchanged with Impac and any of its agents
    regarding the redemption sequence at issue in Plaintiff’s
    complaint; how votes were to be tallied, and what
    actions triggered consent; and
    • documents regarding the votes required to approve
    amendments to the preferred stock.
    9
    and moved for a protective order, arguing that the subpoena was aimed at collecting
    discovery on Count II, on which judgment had already been granted, and that the discovery
    was aimed at a theory not alleged in the Complaint and already rejected by the court. In
    other words, the circuit court already had precluded Mr. Timm from attempting to raise a
    dispute of fact about the sequence and timing of the shareholder consents and Impac’s
    repurchase of the shares. The court agreed with Impac and entered an order on
    August 4, 2014 denying Mr. Timm’s application for a subpoena and granting Impac’s
    motion for protective order.
    On February 27, 2015, Mr. Timm and Camac filed a motion for class certification.
    The circuit court has not yet ruled on that motion.
    On March 9, 2015, Mr. Timm and Camac opposed Impac’s February 28, 2014
    motion for summary judgment and filed their own cross-motion for summary judgment on
    Count I. They argued, among other things, that the voting rights provision was
    unambiguous. They argued in the alternative that if the court found the language
    ambiguous, the extrinsic evidence weighed in favor of their interpretation. And finally,
    they argued that any remaining ambiguity should be construed against Impac as the
    “ultimate drafter” of the Articles, since the evidence demonstrated that they had been
    drafted by underwriters.
    On April 1, 2015, Mr. Timm and Camac filed a Rule 2-602(a)(3) motion for revision
    of summary judgment as to Count II. They raised a version of the theory that Mr. Timm
    had raised earlier in his motion to reconsider the court’s January 2013 ruling. Although
    Mr. Timm had been prevented from seeking discovery on that issue, some evidence
    10
    nevertheless had been produced during discovery that prompted him (and Camac) to
    attempt once again to revive the “no consents” theory: AmStock’s affidavit, in response to
    a subpoena, stating that AmStock “had no involvement with the shareholder votes.”6
    Mr. Timm and Camac also relied on the absence of evidence of any physical papers
    indicating the shareholders’ consent and the deposition testimony of Impac’s general
    counsel that he did not know where the written consents were located.
    Mr. Timm and Camac seized on this new evidence to raise a number of
    overlapping—and at times difficult-to-follow—arguments in their Rule 2-602(a)(3)
    briefing. They contended that the January 2013 ruling had assumed erroneously that the
    2009 tender offer and purchase had followed the documents, that the shareholders had
    transmitted their written, paper consents to the Depositary, and that the Depositary had
    either consented on their behalf or transmitted their consents to Impac. They argued, based
    on AmStock’s affidavit, that its apparent lack of involvement in the consent transmittal
    process proved that the court had relied erroneously on the occurrence of a process that
    was not in fact followed.7 Essentially, they argued that Mr. Timm had been “right for the
    6
    Although the court had granted Impac’s motion for protective order as to Mr. Timm’s
    initial (broader) subpoena to AmStock, Mr. Timm and Camac later served a second
    (narrower) subpoena to which Impac did not object. As Impac represented in briefing
    before the circuit court, it did not object because the subpoena “was narrowly tailored in
    light of the Protective Order” and sought only communications between AmStock and
    Impac about the counting and processing of shareholder votes (a topic relevant to Count I).
    7
    They specifically highlighted this language from the court’s January 2013 memorandum
    opinion, which appeared to assume that the transaction took place in the manner described
    in the governing documents:
    The economic interest was necessarily delivered after the
    Depositary exercised the proxy because shareholder consent
    11
    wrong reasons” in alleging that there were “no” shareholder consents to authorize the
    amendments to the Series B and Series C Articles.8 They also appeared to introduce a new
    theory of liability: that because the consents “didn’t exist,” Impac never could have
    received them, and therefore Impac’s amendment of the Articles was improper.
    Impac responded with evidence that the preferred stock had been held electronically
    (as opposed to in paper form) and, likewise, the consents and sales of the preferred stock
    in 2009 had occurred electronically, as the “book-entry” procedures in the governing
    documents contemplated. Impac did not produce evidence of electronic consents as such,
    but did submit AmStock’s daily reports to Impac memorializing the 2009 electronic tender
    transactions. Impac also submitted a supplemental affidavit from AmStock’s representative
    explaining that the phrase “had no involvement with the shareholder votes” in her initial
    affidavit meant that AmStock had not had direct communications with shareholders but
    that it nevertheless had fulfilled the role the 2009 offering documents required. Impac also
    pointed to the Maryland Uniform Electronic Transactions Act, Maryland Code (1975, 2013
    Rep. Vol.), § 21-106 of the Commercial Law Article (“CL”).
    In reply, Mr. Timm and Camac did not dispute that the tenders and sales had
    occurred electronically, but argued instead that the Articles required consent either at a
    and delivery thereof by the shareholders and Depositary were
    essentially conditions precedent to the transfer of the shares.
    8
    They also suggested that Impac’s statements in its SEC filings to the effect that it had
    received consents may constitute a “deliberate falsification” and indicated that, if the court
    were to grant its Rule 2-602(a)(3) motion, they would move to reinstate Count III and
    Mr. Timm’s Count V; they implied as well that they would assert a fraud claim, although
    no fraud was ever alleged explicitly.
    12
    meeting or in writing and that the electronic voting procedures could not satisfy that
    requirement. They reasserted the theory that the court had previously rejected, that the
    structure of the 2009 transaction made impossible any valid shareholder consent before
    Impac’s acquisition of the preferred shares. They continued to assert, at least implicitly,
    that the absence of evidence of shareholder consents in the record—either in paper or
    electronic form9—rendered Impac’s amendment of the Articles improper. And they argued
    essentially that the Depositary did not fulfill its obligations:
    Since the Depositary disavows undertaking any act as attorney-
    in-fact or proxy in respect of the consent needed to enact the
    amendments, and since Impac has never been able to produce
    any written consents from the Depositary on behalf of any
    shareholders, the Court cannot reasonably conclude that
    Impac’s tender offer and consent solicitation process resulted
    in the “vote or consent,” “in writing,” from the “Series B
    [Series C] Preferred Stock outstanding at the time,” that the
    Articles Supplementary required.”
    (brackets in original).
    On July 12, 2015, the court held a hearing on the cross-motions for summary
    judgment and the Rule 2-602(a)(3) motion for revision.
    On March 28, 2016, Mr. Timm and Camac filed an Amendment of the Complaint
    by Interlineation that attempted to add a “Count VII” for breach of the Articles. That count
    asserted a claim based on the theories asserted in the Rule 2-602(a)(3) motion. Impac
    moved to strike the Amendment.
    9
    The electronic, book-entry procedures included a requirement that consent be transmitted
    by “Agent’s Messages.” The parties did not cite, and we did not find, evidence of any
    Agent’s Messages in the record.
    13
    On December 29, 2017, the circuit court entered a memorandum opinion and order
    that: (1) granted summary judgment in Mr. Timm and Camac’s favor on Count I; (2) denied
    Mr. Timm and Camac’s Rule 2-602(a)(3) motion for revision of summary judgment as to
    Count II; and (3) granted Impac’s Motion to Strike Amended Complaint.
    In February 2018, Mr. Timm filed a motion for reconsideration of the December 29,
    2017 order, which the circuit court ultimately denied. He argued, among other things, that
    the court should reconsider summary judgment for Impac on Counts II, III, and V of his
    Complaint.10 Mr. Timm also cited 
    18 U.S.C. § 100111
     and argued that the court’s finding
    that there had been “no written consents” supported his theory that the individual
    defendants made fraudulent representations in SEC filings saying that they had received
    the requisite number of consents to amend the Series B and Series C Articles.
    In or about March 2018, at the court’s direction, the parties submitted a series of
    briefs concerning the remaining issues, including appropriate remedies and whether the
    court should certify the rulings for immediate appeal under Rule 2-602(b).
    On April 16, 2018, the court held a hearing, and on July 17, 2018, entered a
    memorandum opinion addressing the parties’ supplemental briefing and a separate
    10
    In their oppositions, Camac and Impac characterized Mr. Timm’s motions as:
    (1) challenging the court’s grant of summary judgment on Counts III and V;
    (2) challenging the court’s grant of summary judgment on Count II to the extent he
    attempted to recharacterize Count III; (3) requesting a jury trial on the issue of damages;
    and (4) making several arguments regarding the pending class certification motion.
    11
    
    18 U.S.C. § 1001
     is a federal criminal statute that prohibits false statements to the
    government and does not provide the basis for a civil cause of action. Federal Sav. and
    Loan Ins. Corp. v. Reeves, 
    816 F.2d 130
    , 138 (4th 1987).
    14
    “Judgment Order.” The Judgment Order contained the following decisions:
    • the court entered a declaratory judgment that “the purported amendments to
    the Series B Articles Supplementary filed in 2009 were not validly adopted
    because fewer than two-thirds of the series B shareholders consented” and
    that “the Series B Articles Supplementary adopted in 2004 remain in full
    force and effect” based on the court’s grant of summary judgment as to
    Count I;
    • the court entered judgment in favor of all of the individual defendants on all
    claims;
    • the court entered judgment in favor of Impac on Counts II, III, and V of
    Mr. Timm’s Complaint and on Counts II and III of Camac’s complaint;
    • the court entered a declaratory judgment that “Section 3(d) of the [2004]
    Articles Supplementary requires Impac to pay dividends on Series B shares
    for the first, second and third quarters of 2009”, which was the relief
    requested in Count IV;12 and
    • the court ordered injunctive relief that required Impac “to hold a special
    election in accordance with section 6(b) of the [2004] Articles
    Supplementary” to elect two directors by the Series B shareholders, which
    was the relief requested in Count VI (of Mr. Timm’s Complaint).13
    The court explained that the “primary issue remaining for resolution is the identity of the
    persons entitled to dividends on Series B shares.” Also outstanding are the questions of
    whether to certify a class of shareholders entitled to relief under the declaratory judgments
    and attorneys’ fees.
    Finally, the court entered an order stating that it certified all of its decisions for
    immediate appeal under Rule 2-602(b).
    Impac filed a motion to stay the order to hold a special election pending appeal,
    which the court granted. Impac and Mr. Timm timely appealed, and then both cross-
    12
    For the text of Section 3(d), see page 5, footnote 3, above.
    13
    For the text of Section 6(b), see page 6, footnote 4, above.
    15
    appealed.
    We supply additional facts as necessary below.
    II.      DISCUSSION
    Impac appeals the court’s grant of summary judgment against it on Count I. It
    identifies two questions: first, the circuit court’s consideration of extrinsic evidence in
    interpreting the language of the voting-rights provision, and second, the court’s application
    of the canon of contra proferentem.14 But we don’t reach either because we decide, as a
    threshold matter, that the circuit court erred as a matter of law in finding the language of
    the voting-rights provision ambiguous. We find it unambiguous, and that its unambiguous
    meaning compelled summary judgment in favor of Mr. Timm and Camac on Count I.
    14
    Impac identifies two Questions Presented in its appeal:
    1. In granting summary judgment against Impac on
    interpretation of the voting-rights provision, did the circuit
    court err by weighing the extrinsic evidence, failing to
    accord Impac as the non-moving party the benefit of all
    inferences, and adopting an interpretation that does not
    give meaning to the “Parity Preferred” class voting
    language?
    2. Did the circuit court err by applying contra proferentem
    against Impac as the drafter of the contract language,
    where a fact dispute existed as to whether Impac drafted
    the language?
    Camac restates the Questions Presented in Impac’s appeal as follows:
    1. Did Impac fail to introduce material and admissible
    extrinsic evidence to demonstrate that a reasonable
    investor would understand the Voting Rights Provision to
    provide for collective voting?
    2. Did the circuit court correctly apply contra proferentem
    against Impac, who drafted the ambiguous language at
    issue?
    16
    As best we can discern,15 Mr. Timm appeals the circuit court’s (1) summary
    judgment in favor of Impac on Counts II, III, and V, (2) denial of his (and Camac’s) Rule 2-
    15
    In his appellate briefs, Mr. Timm states the Questions Presented in a prose form that
    appears to cover both the questions raised by Impac in its appeal and those raised by
    Mr. Timm in his cross-appeal. Mr. Timm’s statements of the Questions Presented violate
    Maryland Rule 8-504(a)(3), which requires a brief to include “[a] statement of the
    questions presented, separately numbered, indicating the legal propositions involved and
    the questions of fact at issue expressed in the terms and circumstances of the case without
    unnecessary detail.” Although we reach the merits of Mr. Timm’s appeal as best as we can,
    parties risk dismissal of their appeal if they failed to follow the rules. Here are Mr. Timm’s
    “Questions Presented”:
    For the first five years, Impac paid their Preferred B
    Shareholders their quarterly dividends. After June 29, 2009,
    they changed the seven rights and provisions of the 2004 Form
    of Articles Supplementary for Series B. They stopped paying
    the dividends. They claimed the changes they made were
    legitimate and tried to deceive the shareholders into selling
    their shares for pennies while taking away their protective
    rights. We have proved that the illegal changes created are false
    and that there are no valid changes.
    The Appellant brief is about voting but the main issue is that
    there are no votes. The judgment in favor of the Plaintiffs
    should remain intact and the required annual dividends and
    other provisions restored.
    He states these “Questions Presented” in his reply:
    Plaintiff [i.e., Mr. Timm] explained the reasons why [the
    circuit court] should reverse [its] July 16, 2018 final rulings on
    Preferred C which hasn’t changed since 2013. [It] granted
    Impac a summary judgment which eliminated Count II
    (Preferred C), Count III (Breach of Fiduciary Duty/Violation
    of Good Faith and Fair Dealing), and Count V (Punitive
    Damages) from the case. [] On January 28, 2013, [the circuit
    court] ordered that judgment in favor of Defendants on
    Tompkinson, Ashmore, Taylor, Morrison, Abrams, Walsh,
    Filipps and Peers on all claims asserted against them. In
    reversing these judgments, Impac should be accountable for
    their actions and the dividends in arrears should be paid
    immediately.
    17
    602(a)(3) motion concerning Count II, and (3) decision to grant Impac’s motion to strike.16
    Mr. Timm’s appellate briefing focuses primarily on the fact that the court effectively
    denied him an opportunity to assert his alternate theory of liability that there were “no”
    consents to amend either the Series B or Series C Articles Supplementary. We hold that
    the circuit court did not err in granting judgment in Impac’s favor on Counts II and III or
    any of the other rulings that Mr. Timm challenges.
    A. Appellate Jurisdiction.
    But before we reach the merits, we must first address whether we have jurisdiction
    to hear this interlocutory appeal. Ordinarily, a party’s “right to seek appellate review of a
    trial court’s ruling [] must await the entry of a final judgment that disposes of all claims
    against all parties . . . .” Maryland State Bd. of Educ. v. Bradford, 
    387 Md. 353
    , 382 (2005).
    “[T]here are only three exceptions to that rule: appeals from interlocutory orders
    specifically allowed by statute, predominantly those kinds of orders enumerated in
    Maryland Code, § 12-303 of the Cts. & Jud. Proc. Article; immediate appeals permitted
    under Maryland Rule 2-602(b); and appeals from interlocutory rulings allowed under the
    common law collateral order doctrine.” Id. at 382–83. None of the parties questioned the
    circuit court’s Rule 2-602(b) certification decision in their briefs or at argument, and the
    unusual pre-class certification posture of that decision led us, in the course of preparing
    16
    Impac does not identify the circuit court’s grant of its motion to strike Mr. Timm’s
    complaint as being at issue on appeal. But we read Mr. Timm’s brief as raising that issue
    because the Rule 2-602(a)(3) motion to revise judgment as to Count II and the attempt to
    amend the Complaint to add Count VII were both based on the same substantive argument,
    namely that that there was “no” evidence of shareholder consent to the amendments.
    18
    this opinion, to order supplemental briefing on that issue.
    In that briefing, Impac and Camac argue that this case falls under two exceptions:
    an appeal of an order granting or dissolving an injunction under Maryland Code
    (2013 Repl. Vol.) § 12-303(3)(i) of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article (“CJ”) and
    an intermediate appeal certified under Maryland Rule 2-602(b).
    We hold that the circuit court’s injunction compelling an election of new directors
    authorizes appellate jurisdiction under the second exception to the final judgment rule,
    i.e., the statutory exception for granting injunctions under CJ § 12-303(3)(i). The Judgment
    Order affirmatively requires Impac to hold a special meeting to allow the Series B
    shareholders to elect two additional directors to Impac’s Board of Directors, a right
    contained in Section 6(b) of the 2004 Articles and triggered by Impac’s failure to pay
    certain Series B dividends. Not only does the injunctive relief fall within the statutory
    exception, the decision to order it depended on the circuit court determining that the 2009
    Amendments to the Articles were valid, which in turn, required the resolution of questions
    of liability under Counts I, II, and III. In other words, the injunctive relief required the
    circuit court to interpret the voting rights provision (Count I), resolve the sequencing of the
    amendment transaction (Count II, original theory), resolve the “no consents” question
    (Count II, theory raised by Rule 2-602(b)(3) motion and Motion to Strike Amended
    Complaint); and resolve the other alleged grounds for invalidation of the 2009 amendments
    (Count III). And because those determinations were the basis for the injunctive relief, we
    have the authority to review them. Bradford, 387 Md. at 386–87; USA Cartage
    Leasing, LLC v. Baer, 
    202 Md. App. 138
    , 169 (2011), aff’d 
    429 Md. 199
     (2012); County
    19
    Commn’rs for Carroll Cty. v. Forty West Builders, Inc., 
    178 Md. App. 328
    , 373 (2008).
    The circuit court acknowledged that CJ § 12-303(3)(i) authorizes judicial review of
    orders granting injunctive relief, but seemed concerned that that provision may not be
    enough because it went on to state that it certified its ruling for immediate appeal under
    Rule 2-602(b). That Rule allows an interlocutory appeal of an order “as to one or more but
    fewer than all” of the claims or “as to one or more but fewer than all” of the parties in cases
    where the court determines that there is “no just reason for delay”:
    (b) If the court expressly determines in a written order that
    there is no just reason for delay, it may direct in the order the
    entry of a final judgment:
    (1) as to one or more but fewer than all of the claims or parties.
    For these purposes, a “claim” encompasses all legal theories and remedies that arise
    “from common operative facts,” and isn’t defined simply by the separate counts or legal
    theories listed in a complaint:
    A “claim” is defined as a “substantive cause of action” that
    encompasses all rights arising from common operative facts.
    Alternative legal theories and differing prayers for relief do not
    constitute separate “claims” so long as they arise from a single
    asserted legal right.
    Waterkeeper Alliance, Inc. v. Md. Dept. of Agriculture, 
    439 Md. 262
    , 279 (2014) (cleaned
    up); County Comm’rs for St. Mary’s Cty. v. Lacer, 
    393 Md. 415
    , 426 (2006) (“Our cases
    have made it clear that the disposition of an entire count or the ruling on a particular legal
    theory does not mean, in and of itself, that an entire ‘claim’ has been disposed of.”
    (cleaned up)).
    In this case, uncertainty remains about whether one or more but fewer than all claims
    20
    or parties have been resolved. That said, we need not resolve that question definitively
    because the Series B claim is reviewable under CJ § 12-303(3)(i).17
    B. Count I: The Voting Rights Provision is Unambiguous.
    The first and main substantive issue on appeal is the meaning of Section 6(d) of the
    Articles, the provision defining the preferred shareholders’ voting rights (we’ll call it the
    “voting rights provision”). The circuit court granted summary judgment for Mr. Timm and
    Camac on Count I, in which they alleged that Impac breached the Series B Articles by
    17
    In support of the Rule 2-602(b) certification, the circuit court relied on Len Stoler, Inc.
    v. Wisner, 
    223 Md. App. 218
     (2015), a case on which Impac relies as well in its
    supplemental brief. The procedural posture of that case was similar to that here: the circuit
    court decided all issues relating to liability and relief as to the named plaintiffs, leaving
    class certification as the primary remaining issue. 
    Id. at 228
    . Federal cases applying Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 54(b)—upon which Maryland Rule 2-602(b) was modeled—have also reached that
    conclusion on similar procedural postures. See, e.g., Pichler v. UNITE, 
    542 F.3d 380
    , 385
    n.6 (2008). In Len Stoler, this Court held that the requirements of Rule 2-602(b) had been
    met. Even so, we recognize some tension between Len Stoler and Court of Appeals
    jurisprudence holding that class certification is not a “claim” under Rule 2-602(b).
    Snowden v. Balt. Gas & Elec. Co., 
    300 Md. 555
     (1984). In Snowden, in contrast to the
    situation here and in Len Stoler, a party appealed the denial of a class certification motion,
    an attempt that the Court of Appeals rejected because the denial “was not dispositive with
    respect to an entire claim or party.” 
    Id. at 566
    . See also Royal Fin. Servs., Inc. v. Eason,
    
    183 Md. App. 496
    , 499 (2008) (relying on Snowden and holding that grant of class
    certification motion, before resolution of any issues of liability, did not meet requirements
    of Rule 2-206(b) “because the class certification was not dispositive as to an entire claim
    or party.”).
    The notion that class certification is not a “claim” creates uncertainty in cases such as
    this and Len Stoler about whether claims could be certified under Rule 2-602(b) in advance
    of class certification. If class certification is not a “claim” under any circumstances, and all
    issues of liability and relief have been decided as to the named parties in a class certification
    case, then it is not clear that such a case would meet the technical requirements of Rule 2-
    602(b) that “one or more but fewer than all” claims have been decided. Indeed, “all” of the
    claims would have been decided, and with only collateral issues remaining. And the text of
    Rule 2-602(b) does not, on its face, allow for certification of an order when nothing but
    collateral issues remain. The injunction in this case, though, spares us that conundrum.
    21
    amending them without obtaining the consent of two-thirds of Series B shareholders.
    Whether Impac obtained the consent of the shareholders depends on how the Articles
    define the consent threshold, and that’s where the parties disagree. Let’s start, then, with
    the language itself, this time with emphases that highlight the operative portions:
    So long as any shares of Series B Preferred Stock remain
    outstanding, the Corporation shall not, without the affirmative
    vote or consent of the holders of at least two-thirds of the
    shares of the Series B Preferred Stock outstanding at the time,
    given in person or by proxy, either in writing or at a meeting
    (voting separately as a class with all series of Parity Preferred
    that the Corporation may issue upon which like voting rights
    have been conferred and are exercisable), . . . (ii) amend, alter
    or repeal any of the provisions of the Charter, so as to
    materially and adversely affect any preferences, conversion or
    other rights, voting powers, restrictions, limitations as to
    dividends or other distributions, qualifications, or terms or
    conditions of redemption of the Series B Preferred Stock or the
    holders thereof . . . .
    For the reasons we’ll explain, we hold that the provision is unambiguous, that it requires a
    two-thirds vote of each class counted on its own to approve amendments to the Articles,
    and affirm the summary judgment in Mr. Timm’s and Camac’s favor on that ground.
    When reviewing a summary judgment grant, we determine whether the trial court
    was legally correct. Maryland Cas. Co. v. Blackstone Int’l Ltd., 
    442 Md. 685
    , 694 (2015).
    The interpretation of a contract, including the determination of whether a contract is
    ambiguous, is a question of law subject to de novo review. Spacesaver Sys., Inc. v. Adam,
    
    440 Md. 1
    , 7 (2014) (citing Towson Univ. v. Conte, 
    384 Md. 68
    , 78 (2004)); Calomiris v.
    Woods, 
    353 Md. 425
    , 434 (1999). And that is the standard here, since the rights of preferred
    stockholders are defined by contract (in this case the Articles). See Scott v. B & O R.R. Co.,
    22
    
    93 Md. 475
    , 497 (1901) (preferred stock “has about it no elements or rights other than those
    that are conferred upon it by the statute or contract to the authority of which it owes its
    existence”); see also Matulich v. Aegis Commc’ns Grp., Inc., 
    942 A.2d 596
    , 600 (Del.
    2008) (observing that the “rights of preferred shareholders are primarily contractual in
    nature”).18
    Maryland follows the objective law of contract interpretation, which “giv[es] effect
    to the clear terms of agreements, regardless of the intent of the parties at the time of contract
    formation.” Precision Small Engines, Inc. v. College Park, 
    457 Md. 573
    , 585 (2018)
    (quoting Myers v. Kayhoe, 
    391 Md. 188
    , 198 (2006)). “[T]he true test of what is meant is
    not what the parties to the contract intended it to mean, but what a reasonable person in the
    position of the parties would have thought it meant.” Spacesaver, 
    440 Md. at 8
     (quoting
    General Motors Acceptance Corp. v. Daniels, 
    303 Md. 254
    , 261 (1985)). “[T]he contract
    must be construed in its entirety and, if reasonably possible, effect must be given to each
    clause so that a court will not find an interpretation which casts out or disregards a
    meaningful part of the language of the writing unless no other course can be sensibly and
    reasonably followed.” Dumbarton Improvement Ass’n, Inc. v. Druid Ridge Cemetery Co.,
    
    434 Md. 37
    , 52 (2013) (quoting Sagner v. Glenangus Farms, Inc., 
    234 Md. 156
    , 167
    (1964)).
    “Under the objective view, a written contract is ambiguous if, when read by a
    18
    Maryland courts “frequently look [] to Delaware courts for guidance on issues of
    corporate law.” Oliveira v. Sugarman, 
    451 Md. 208
    , 221 n.4 (2017).
    23
    reasonably prudent person, it is susceptible of more than one meaning.” Calomiris, 
    353 Md. at 436
     (citations omitted); accord Dumbarton, 
    434 Md. at 53
     (“As with contracts
    generally, a covenant is ambiguous if its language is susceptible to multiple interpretations
    by a reasonable person.”). “The determination of whether language is susceptible of more
    than one meaning includes a consideration of ‘the character of the contract, its purpose,
    and the facts and circumstances of the parties at the time of execution.’” Calomiris, 
    353 Md. at 436
     (quoting Pacific Indem. v. Interstate Fire & Cas., 
    302 Md. 383
    , 388 (1985)).
    Put another way, “while evidence of prior intentions and negotiations of the parties is
    inadmissible, the parol evidence rule would not bar a court from considering the context of
    the transaction or the custom of the trade in a determination of ambiguity.” 
    Id.
    The circuit court found the voting rights provision ambiguous, so we start by
    reviewing the court’s reasoning and decisions on ambiguity. Impac concedes that it did not
    obtain the consent of two-thirds of the Series B shareholders—it obtained the consent of
    66.7% of the Series B and Series C shareholders tallied together, but only 66.2% of
    Series B shareholders when counted separately. When the issue was first raised before the
    circuit court, Impac argued that its failure to obtain the consent of two-thirds of Series B
    shareholders was not a breach of the voting rights provision because the provision did not
    require it. Instead, Impac argued, the provision is ambiguous, and, after considering
    extrinsic evidence, should be read to require the consent of two-thirds of the Series B and
    Series C shareholders counted together.
    In its January 2013 memorandum opinion denying Impac’s motion to dismiss, the
    circuit court viewed the voting rights provision as Impac did: it found the provision
    24
    ambiguous and concluded that its meaning could not be determined without considering
    extrinsic evidence. The court explained that the clause could be interpreted to mean either
    that the consent of two-thirds of Series B shareholders was required or that the consent of
    two-thirds of all preferred shareholders was required:
    To conclude that the provision in question is unambiguous, the
    court must conclude that the two-thirds requirement is
    susceptible of only one interpretation. Defendants urge a
    reading of section 6(d) under which the parenthetical class
    voting provision modifies the requirement for a minimum of
    two-thirds of the Preferred B shares. Under this reading, the
    Articles Supplementary could be understood to require a vote
    of two-thirds of the entire class. However, the language of
    section 6(d) can also be reasonably interpreted to require
    approval specifically by two-thirds of each class, regardless of
    the class voting requirement. Notwithstanding the class voting
    parenthetical, the language of section 6(d) also states that no
    amendment shall occur “without the affirmative vote or
    consent of the holders of at least two-thirds of the shares of the
    Series B Preferred Stock outstanding at the time.” The specific
    requirement of two-thirds of the Preferred B shares precludes
    a conclusion, based on the words of the Articles
    Supplementary alone, that the language is unambiguous.
    Discovery proceeded, and Impac sought summary judgment on Count I on February
    28, 2014. Impac presented extrinsic evidence supporting its position that the parties
    intended that the voting rights provision mean that the affirmative consent or vote of two-
    thirds of all of the preferred shareholders, counted collectively, was required to amend
    either Series B or Series C Articles. In turn, Mr. Timm and Camac continued to maintain
    that the voting rights provision was unambiguous, and in the alternative, that the extrinsic
    evidence weighed in favor of interpreting the provision to mean that consent required a
    two-thirds vote of each series of shareholders counted separately. They argued as well that
    25
    any ambiguity remaining after consideration of extrinsic evidence should be construed
    against Impac, as the “ultimate drafter” of the Articles under the canon of contra
    proferentem.
    In its December 2017 memorandum opinion, the circuit court held, consistent with
    its earlier decision, that the provision is ambiguous. The court explained that the conflict
    between the meanings of the first and second clauses of the provision created ambiguity
    about the votes needed to approve an amendment:
    [The provision] is ambiguous because of the conflict between
    the first clause and the later parenthetical. The first clause
    expressly requires the consent of two-thirds of the holders of
    Series B shares. Without the parenthetical the clause would be
    unambiguous because it could only be read to require the
    consent of two-thirds of the Series B shares. However, the
    parenthetical apparently qualifies the first phrase by stating
    that the Series B shares vote together with other party shares as
    a class. Impac’s argument that the parenthetical means that the
    Voting Rights Provision should be read to require the consent
    of two-thirds of all parity shares requires the reader to
    substitute for the express language the understanding that it
    means two-thirds of all parity shares, not two-thirds of Series
    B shares.
    The court rejected Mr. Timm and Camac’s argument that the second clause concerned only
    the “mechanics of how the vote is conducted,” i.e., that the Series B and Series C
    shareholders were required to vote at the same time and place:
    Plaintiffs’ argument that the Voting Rights Provision is
    unambiguous rests on the assertion that the parenthetical does
    not provide for a class vote of all parity shares but rather
    concerns the manner of voting. In this reading, the
    parenthetical merely describes the mechanics of how the vote
    is conducted, i.e., that the Series B shareholders would vote at
    the same place and time as other series. This argument is not
    compelling. While this reading expresses what is, perhaps, one
    26
    possible meaning, it fails to convince because it does not
    explain the time and place of voting, and the provision that the
    preferred stock vote separately as a class has no apparent
    significance as a mere regulation of voting procedure. Because
    plaintiffs do not convince the court that the provision is
    susceptible of only one meaning, the court rejects plaintiffs’
    argument that the provision is unambiguous.
    The court considered the extrinsic evidence at length but found that it did not resolve
    the ambiguity, and ultimately resorted to the rule of construction that resolves ambiguities
    against the drafter of the contract, contra proferentem. See Empire Fire and Marine Ins.
    Co. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 
    116 Md. App. 143
    , 168 n.10 (1997). Although the Articles
    were drafted by Bear Stearns, the underwriter in the tender offer transaction, the court
    considered Impac to be the drafter for contra proferentem purposes because Impac had
    issued the preferred shares and, the court found, was responsible for the language of the
    Articles. The court then construed the language to mean that the consent of two-thirds of
    the Series B Preferred Stock was required to affect an amendment to the charter provisions
    for that class of stock.
    We don’t see the conflict between the first and second clauses. The written language
    of an agreement “govern[s] the rights and liabilities of the parties, irrespective of the intent
    of the parties at the time they entered into the contract” and the words in the contract “must
    be accorded their customary, ordinary, and accepted meaning.” Blackstone, 442 Md. at 695
    (quotations and citations omitted). The first clause—“the Corporation shall not, without
    the affirmative vote or consent of the holders of at least two-thirds of the shares of the
    Series B Preferred Stock outstanding at the time”—is not “susceptible of more than one
    meaning.” Calomiris, 
    353 Md. at 436
    . It means that Impac can’t take the actions that follow
    27
    without the vote or consent, to the extent there’s a difference, of the Class B shareholders.
    The wording of the first clause, particularly the unambiguous requirement that Impac
    obtain “the affirmative vote or consent of the holders of at least two-thirds of the Series B
    Preferred Stock,” precludes any conclusion that a vote garnering fewer than two-thirds of
    the Class B shares can succeed. The parties and the circuit court all seem to agree with this
    analysis as well.
    The disagreement, and the alleged ambiguity, really arises in the second clause and
    its interaction with the first. On its face, the second clause—“voting separately as a class
    with all series of Parity Preferred”—means unambiguously that the Class B shareholders
    vote separately as a class with all of the other series of preferred stock. Yes, the
    parenthetical as a whole—“voting separately as a class with all series of Parity Preferred
    that the Corporation may issue upon which like voting rights have been conferred and are
    exercisable”—indicates that all of the classes will vote at the same time. But nothing in
    that language even purports to pool the Class B votes with the Class C votes, or anyone
    else’s, in determining whether the class has consented to the amendments. If anything, the
    reference to the Class Bs “voting separately as a class” only bolsters the first clause in
    requiring a two-thirds vote of just the Class B shares. And to us, that ends the inquiry. Any
    other reading would “jettison[]” the substance of the provision. Credible Behavioral
    Health, Inc. v. Johnson, 
    466 Md. 380
    , 397 (2019) (observing that “contract interpretation
    requires that effect be given to each clause to avoid an interpretation which casts out or
    disregards a meaningful part of the language of the writing unless no other course can be
    sensibly and reasonably followed”) (cleaned up).
    28
    Nevertheless, Impac argues, and the circuit court agreed, that the second clause’s
    reference to voting “with all series of Parity Preferred” means, at least arguably, that the
    votes of all of the series voting at that time (in this instance, the Series B and Series C
    shareholders) must be counted together, and thus that a two-thirds vote of the shareholders
    tallied collectively yields consent. To us, the plain language is not susceptible to such a
    reading. The Articles certainly could have been drafted more artfully, but they mean what
    they say: Series B and C shareholders vote, by class, at the same time, and their votes on
    proposed amendments are counted separately. Each Series had its own set of Articles
    Supplementary. Each had a different dividend rate. Each was valued differently at the time
    of repurchase. The total number of shares for each class was different. Considering the
    plain language of the provision in context only reinforces our conclusion that it is not
    ambiguous. And as a result, there is no need to consider extrinsic evidence or alternative
    principles of construction: the unambiguous language of the voting rights provision
    required each class of preferred stock to vote separately, if at the same time as the other
    affected classes, and two-thirds of each class, counted separately, had to approve any
    amendments. We reach the same conclusion as the circuit court, albeit by a different path,
    and affirm its decision to grant summary judgment for Camac and Mr. Timm on Count I.
    Impac argued, and points to lots of extrinsic evidence suggesting, that it was
    common practice to structure multiple classes of preferred stock with identical rights and
    obligations. The only real differences between the two classes here are the time of issue,
    the sale price, and the dividend rate. Impac would seem to have little to gain, and at least
    some control to lose, by allowing classes of preferred stock to make decisions individually.
    29
    But even if Impac and its professionals intended its classes of preferred stock to vote and
    act in lockstep, the unambiguous language of the Articles they prepared provides
    otherwise. There are sophisticated parties on both sides of this preferred stock relationship,
    and they are bound by the unambiguous terms of the documents memorializing that
    relationship. They had the ability and opportunity to create any preferred stock relationship
    they wanted within the bounds of the corporate and securities laws, and this is the
    relationship their documents created.
    C. The Circuit Court Did Not Err In Granting Summary Judgment In
    Impac’s Favor On Count II.
    Mr. Timm and Camac alleged in Count II that Impac had breached the Articles by
    amending them notwithstanding its failure, they claim, to obtain any consents or votes from
    the Series B or Series C stockholders. Mr. Timm and Camac offered two theories in support
    of that count. The first, as alleged in the Complaint, was the 2009 offer was flawed
    structurally because it had Impac repurchasing the shares before receiving shareholder
    consent. The court rejected that theory based on the language of the governing documents,
    and granted summary judgment in favor of Impac on that count in January 2013.
    The second theory emerged after discovery and appeared first in Mr. Timm and
    Camac’s motion to revise summary judgment under Rule 2-602(a)(3) and attempt to add
    another count based on the new theory. They asserted that the record lacked any evidence
    of the preferred shareholders’ written, hard-copy consents, the existence of which the
    circuit court had assumed in its earlier rulings. They also asserted that a third party—the
    Depositary and transfer agent, AmStock—failed to fulfill its obligation to transmit
    30
    shareholder consents to Impac, and that because Impac never received the consents, its
    amendment of the Series B and Series C Articles breached the Articles’ consent
    requirements.
    In its December 2017 opinion, the circuit court denied Mr. Timm and Camac’s
    Rule 2-602(b) motion to revise the court’s earlier summary judgment ruling and likewise
    precluded them from adding a new claim. As best we can discern, Mr. Timm appeals all of
    the court’s decisions relating to Count II, although he places the most emphasis on the
    second theory, i.e., that Impac did not receive sufficient—and indeed any—consents from
    the preferred shareholders. We affirm the circuit court’s decisions in toto.
    First, with regard to Mr. Timm’s challenge to the circuit court’s January 2013
    summary judgment decision in Impac’s favor on Count II, there was no factual dispute,
    and so our task is to determine whether the trial court was correct as a matter of law.
    Blackstone, 442 Md. at 694. The following excerpt from Mr. Timm’s opening appellate
    brief appears to be the full extent of his argument on appeal:
    17. Redemption and Acquisition- Art. 5(f)
    To understand this case, you can’t talk about Preferred B
    without talking about Preferred C because the same rules apply
    to both separate series created in 2004, on different dates. You
    must understand the section of the 2004 a “Preferred B” Form
    of Articles Supplementary labeled, (5) Redemption (f) Status
    of Redeemed Shares.
    “Any shares of Series B Preferred Stock that shall at any
    time have been redeemed or otherwise acquired by the
    Corporation shall, after such redemption or acquisition,
    have the status of authorized but unissued preferred
    stock, without designation as to series until such shares
    are once more classified and designated as part of a
    particular series by the Board of Directors.” []
    31
    Under 5(f) status of redeemed shares in each of the Impac
    separate 2004 Forms of Articles Supplementary for “preferred
    B” stock or “Preferred C” stock, it is understood that once a
    Preferred share becomes a Treasury Stock or reacquired stock
    (a stock which was bought back by the issuing Company), it
    becomes unissued and thus has no voting power.
    Additionally, in the 2004 Form of Articles Supplementary of
    those same documents, there is no mention of a “Depositary”
    or a “Letter of Transmittal” and “Consent” []
    They never existed as part of these documents in regards to
    relinquishing your shares. Even if the shares remained issued
    and outstanding after Impac accepted them for purchase, they
    could not be voted under Maryland corporate law, which
    prohibits a corporation from directly or indirectly voting its
    own stock. []
    (emphasis in original). That’s it—Mr. Timm develops his argument no further and cites no
    case law to support it. His failure to present sufficient argument in his appellate brief means
    that Mr. Timm has waived his challenge to the court’s summary judgment ruling, and we
    affirm the circuit court judgment on that ground. Md. Rule 8-504(a)(6) (requiring that an
    appellate brief contain “[a]rgument in support of the party’s position”); Klauenberg v.
    State, 
    355 Md. 528
    , 552 (1999) (“[A]rguments not presented in a brief or not presented
    with particularity will not be considered on appeal.”); Beck v. Mangels, 
    100 Md. App. 144
    ,
    149 (1994). It is not our role to review a trial court’s decision—which on this issue spans
    over ten pages—and issue-spot errors that the appellant hasn’t identified.19
    Second and third, we address Mr. Timm’s other challenges to the denial of his (and
    Camac’s) Rule 2-602(a)(3)20 motion to revise judgment and the granting of Impac’s motion
    19
    Even if he had not waived this argument, we discern no error in the court’s interpretation
    of the governing documents after reviewing its analysis and the documents themselves.
    20
    Under Rule 2-602(a)(3), a circuit court has full revisory power over interlocutory orders:
    32
    to strike. We review those decisions for abuse of discretion. See RCC Northeast, LLC v.
    BAA Md., Inc., 
    413 Md. 638
    , 673 (2010) (a trial court’s denial of a motion to modify an
    interlocutory order reviewed for abuse of discretion); Bacon v. Arey, 
    203 Md. App. 606
    ,
    666 (2012) (a trial court’s decision on a motion to strike is reviewed for abuse of
    discretion). An abuse of discretion occurs when a decision is “manifestly unreasonable, or
    exercised on untenable grounds, or for untenable reasons.” Spaw, LLC v. City of Annapolis,
    
    452 Md. 314
    , 363 (2017) (cleaned up).
    Again, Mr. Timm’s appellate briefing does not focus on the language of the
    documents governing the 2009 tender offer, but instead emphasizes the purported lack of
    evidence that shareholders consented to the amendments. He states in his Questions
    Presented that “the main issue is that there are no votes.” He asserts that the shareholders
    “never agreed” to amend the Articles and again that “there are not any votes.” He takes
    issue with the circuit court’s “not check[ing] the ‘facts’ like asking to see the actual
    Except as provided in section (b) of this Rule, an order or other
    form of decision, however designated, that adjudicates fewer
    than all of the claims in an action (whether raised by original
    claim, counterclaim, cross-claim, or third-party claim), or that
    adjudicates less than an entire claim, or that adjudicates the
    rights and liabilities of fewer than all the parties to the action:
    (1) is not a final judgment;
    (2) does not terminate the action as to any of the claims or any
    of the parties; and
    (3) is subject to revision at any time before the entry of a
    judgment that adjudicates all of the claims by and against all
    of the parties.
    (emphasis added).
    33
    signed consents and shareholder names, and verifying the voting percentage or anything
    else.” (emphasis in original). He asserts that the circuit court “believed Impac allegedly
    received consents from the shareholders of Pfd. B Shares and Pfd. C Shares and received
    votes in excess of 66 2/3 [] even though Impac didn’t actually do this.” (emphasis in
    original). He raises the Depositary’s initial testimony that it was not involved in
    shareholder consents and asserts that the “Letters of Transmittal were never signed by the
    Depositary or Impac or anyone else because they didn’t exist.” And he cites the deposition
    testimony of Impac’s general counsel to the effect that that counsel did not know where
    the consents were. Finally, he challenges the electronic “book-entry” consent procedure by
    asserting that, just as there is no evidence of hand-signed consents in the record, there is no
    evidence of “Agent’s Messages” in the record, which were required as part of the electronic
    consent procedures.
    As before, Mr. Timm’s legal arguments are far from fully developed. But as best
    we can discern, he claims that the circuit court erred in precluding him from bringing a
    claim grounded in the absence of evidence of shareholder consents, either handwritten or
    electronic. Over the course of fifteen pages in its December 2017 memorandum opinion,
    the circuit court considered and rejected Mr. Timm’s (and Camac’s) effort to raise their
    new “no consents” theory of liability. The circuit court identified the following arguments,
    which parallel the ones Mr. Timm raises here:
    The affidavit of [AmStock] establishes that the Depositary
    performed no function because the affidavit states that
    AmStock had no involvement with shareholder votes.
    The deposition testimony of [Impac’s general counsel]
    34
    establishes that the transaction did not occur because [Impac’s
    general counsel] stated that he did not know the location of any
    written consents.
    The court’s grant of partial summary judgment was based on
    the understanding that written consents were executed by
    preferred shareholders and that written consent to the
    amendments was made by the Depositary. However, neither
    occurred because there were no written consents from either.
    The electronic voting procedures do not establish consent by
    the shareholders to the amendments. A variety of arguments
    are included with this contention. Plaintiffs assert that the
    Articles Supplementary require a vote or consent at a meeting,
    and the electronic voting procedures do not comply with this
    requirement. They also question certain aspects of the
    electronic voting process.
    None of these arguments—which the circuit court addressed carefully and
    systematically—convinces us that the court abused its discretion in denying his motion to
    modify the summary judgment ruling as to Count II. As an initial matter, Impac does not
    dispute the absence of paper shareholder consents or the electronic “Agent’s Messages.”
    But Impac did receive daily reports from AmStock identifying the numbers of electronic
    tenders it had received. And the absence of evidence beyond these reports doesn’t compel
    us to find that the circuit court abused its discretion in declining to allow Mr. Timm and
    Camac to pursue their alternate “no consents” theory of liability. Whether or not consents
    were transmitted to Impac was not at issue in the case. Discovery was never developed nor
    pursued on that question—indeed, the circuit court entered a protective order precluding
    such discovery on the ground that it was a fishing expedition. The issue was injected into
    the case at a later stage by the Depositary’s vague response to a subpoena that it was “not
    involved” with shareholder votes. And after giving due consideration to the parties’
    35
    positions, the circuit court found that neither revising summary judgment on Count II nor
    allowing amendment of the Complaint was warranted.
    The circuit court explained its reasoning fully, and found “disingenuous” any
    implication that Impac had failed to establish its case by not producing the actual consents:
    Plaintiffs also argue that the grant of summary judgment
    should be revisited because of the lack of actual evidence in
    the record concerning some features of the operation of the
    transaction. Specifically, plaintiffs argue that if Impac received
    Agents’ Messages they are not in the record. The court
    previously rejected plaintiff Timm’s argument that the
    complaint actually alleged that the transaction did not occur as
    provided for by the documents. The court also rejected his
    attempt to undertake discovery in order to search for evidence
    to support a claim that had not been alleged in the Complaint.
    The argument that the absence of Agents’ Messages in the
    record is fatal to Impac’s contention is the equivalent of the
    argument previously made that plaintiffs should be entitled to
    take discovery in order to assess whether or not a cause of
    action exists. The court again rejects plaintiffs’ proposal that
    discovery should be employed to ascertain whether or not
    plaintiffs have a cause of action.[]
    Plaintiffs’ argument that if Impac had received the
    required number of timely delivered written consent[s] it
    would have moved for summary judgment on that basis is
    disingenuous. As stated many times, plaintiff never alleged in
    the complaint that Impac had not received the required number
    of written consents, and there was no reason for Impac to move
    for summary judgment on that basis. Again, this is an attempt
    to assert a new cause of action based on hypothetical
    assertions of fact.
    (emphasis added).
    The circuit court also addressed the absence of evidence that the Depositary
    transmitted the consents to Impac. Between arguing that the Depositary failed to transmit
    the consents and claiming that the Depositary itself failed to consent on behalf of the
    36
    shareholders, Mr. Timm and Camac argued that Impac breached the Articles by amending
    them without having received the consents from either the shareholders or from the
    Depositary. But while the governing documents appeared to have authorized the
    Depositary to consent on behalf of the shareholders, there was no requirement that the
    Depositary itself consent. The circuit court suggested that the latter was the case in its
    January 2013 opinion, but clarified this issue as follows in its December 2017 opinion: “To
    the extent that the court held that the Depositary was required to consent, there does not
    appear to be any reason in the transaction that the Depositary’s consent would be essential.”
    We find no abuse of discretion in that conclusion.
    Finally, the circuit court also addressed Mr. Timm’s (and Camac’s) challenges to
    the validity of the electronic consent procedures. As an initial matter, the court
    acknowledged that its January 2013 memorandum opinion and the associated briefing
    assumed that consents were transmitted via handwritten papers and that it appeared instead
    that the consents were transmitted by the book-entry procedures. But it concluded that the
    means of the consent transmittal did not affect its ultimate conclusion that the original
    theory of liability under Count II for breach of the Articles was not borne out by language
    of the governing documents, and additionally observed that the plaintiffs, being
    shareholders, presumably knew that they held their shares in electronic, as opposed to
    paper, form:
    Plaintiffs correctly observe that all of the language in the
    opinion granting summary judgment on Count II (which they
    quote at length), as well as defendant’s argument (which they
    also quote at length) spoke about the return of written consents
    in terms of the Letter of Transmittal. Plaintiffs interpret
    37
    Impac’s arguments as false in the light of the realization that
    consents were delivered by means of a book-entry electronic
    voting procedure instead of the return of physical Letters of
    Transmittal and Consent. The court does not view this
    retrojection as undermining the veracity of the argument that
    was made by Impac. Those arguments must be read in the
    context of the issues that were before the court upon the Motion
    to Dismiss. Plaintiffs’ attack upon the transaction at that time
    focused upon the provisions of the transaction documents
    dealing with Letters of Transmittal and Consent. Given that
    context, the fact that Impac’s arguments responded in kind
    does not establish an intent to hoodwink the court nor that they
    were inaccurate. For the reasons state below, the court believes
    that the provisions of the documents relating to electronic
    voting incorporate the provisions of the Letter of Transmittal
    and Consent. Therefore the court’s conclusions rejecting
    plaintiffs’ arguments that the design of the transaction was
    fatally flawed apply with equal force notwithstanding the
    fact that physical Letters of Transmittal and Consent were
    not returned. If the court’s conclusions are read in light of this
    fact, they are equally valid as in their original expression.
    At the time, apparently no one focused on the fact that
    shareholders who held their shares in book-entry form would
    not be using the physical Letter of Transmittal. However, that
    fact was plainly apparent from the contents of the Letter of
    Transmittal and the Offering Circular themselves.
    Furthermore, it appears from the Moisio affidavit, as well
    as the Prospectus Supplements from the original issues,
    that all of the preferred stock was held in book-entry
    form.21 Impac’s argument was phrased in the way that it
    was because the allegations of the complaint focused on the
    terms of the Letters of Transmittal. Accordingly, the fact
    that there were no written consents in the form of executed
    Letters of Transmittal does not by itself affect the court’s
    ruling.
    (emphasis added).
    21
    Presumably that fact was known by plaintiffs as shareholders. (emphasis added;
    footnote from original).
    38
    The court went on to conclude that the governing documents made clear to
    shareholders that, if they tendered their consents through the book-entry procedures, then
    that tender would indicate their consent, and an Agent’s Message would take the place of
    a paper consent. The court cited CL § 21-106, which provides in part that “[a] record . . .
    may not be denied legal effect or enforceability solely because it is in electronic form,” and
    concluded that electronic consents satisfied any “writing” requirement. After reviewing the
    governing documents, we find no abuse of discretion in the court’s conclusion that
    “shareholders who submitted tenders electronically did so with the understanding that the
    Letters of Transmittal specified that their tender constituted consent.”
    Although the procedural history behind the “no consents” issue is lengthy and
    complex, the issue to be decided is relatively simple: Did the court abuse its discretion in
    effectively precluding Mr. Timm from pursuing that theory? We are mindful that a trial
    court abuses its discretion when “no reasonable person would take [its] view” or when its
    ruling is “violative of fact and logic.” In re Adoption/Guardianship No. 3598, 
    347 Md. 295
    ,
    312 (1997) (cleaned up). And reviewing the “no consents” issue in depth, we find no abuse
    of discretion in the court’s denial of the Rule 2-602(a)(3) motion to amend summary
    judgment as to Count II.
    We make the same finding with respect to Mr. Timm’s attempt to amend the
    Complaint to add that theory. We so hold, recognizing that “leave to amend complaints
    should be granted freely to serve the ends of justice and [] it is the rare situation in which
    a court should not grant leave to amend . . . .” RCC Northeast, LLC v. BAA Md., Inc., 
    413 Md. 638
    , 673 (2010) (citing Hall v. Barlow Corp., 
    255 Md. 28
    , 40–41 (1969)). But “an
    39
    amendment should not be allowed if it would result in prejudice to the opposing party or
    undue delay, such as where amendment would be futile because the claim is flawed
    irreparably.” 
    Id.
     at 673–74 (citing Robertson v. Davis, 
    271 Md. 708
    , 710 (1974)). And in
    this case, the court did not abuse its discretion in disallowing Mr. Timm (and Camac) from
    amending the Complaint to pursue a theory prompted by a vague statement in an
    affidavit—which was later clarified—in response to discovery requests propounded with
    respect to a separate claim. Moreover, the information that did come to light concerning
    the electronic consent procedures strongly suggests that there was and is no reason to
    believe that Impac received “no” consents from shareholders.
    D. The Circuit Court Did Not Err In Granting Summary Judgment In
    Impac’s Favor On Count III.
    In Count III, Mr. Timm alleged several theories of liability, including breach of
    contract based on the violation of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, breach of
    fiduciary duty, “illegal vote buying,” and “coercion.” All theories were based on the global
    assertion that Impac’s 2009 tender offer was—by its very nature—illegal. The circuit court
    granted summary judgment on Count III in January 2013, and Mr. Timm appeals.
    Mr. Timm’s opening appellate brief does not cite any case law or develop any legal
    argument concerning the legal theories underlying Count III that he asserted in the
    Complaint and that the circuit court addressed in depth in its January 2013 memorandum
    opinion. His reply brief mentions the legal theories, but cites no case law and develops no
    legal argument as to the grounds upon which the circuit court erred in granting summary
    judgment in Impac’s favor on Count III. Accordingly, we find that Mr. Timm has waived
    40
    his challenge to the court’s grant of judgment on Count III for failure to offer sufficient
    argument. Md. Rule 8-504(a)(6); Klauenberg, 355 Md. at 551–52; Beck, 
    100 Md. App. at 149
    . Again, it is not our task to identify errors where the appellant has not.
    E. The Other Issues That Mr. Timm Raises Are Without Merit.
    Mr. Timm raises a number of other issues, none of which have merit.
    First, Mr. Timm claimed punitive damages in Count V, and on appeal he challenges
    the circuit court’s grant of summary judgment in Impac’s favor on that count. As an initial
    matter, a claim for punitive damages is not a standalone cause of action. It is part of a
    prayer for relief. But Mr. Timm is not entitled to punitive damages in any event because
    they are not available as a form of relief for breach of contract. George Wasserman &
    Janice Wasserman Goldstein Family LLC v. Kay, 
    197 Md. App. 586
    , 636 (2011) (citing
    Sims v. Ryland Group, Inc., 
    37 Md. App. 470
     (1977)). Mr. Timm argues that punitive
    damages “are permitted in a tort action arising from a breach of contract where the plaintiff
    demonstrates actual malice by the defendant.” But Mr. Timm alleges no tort claim. The
    circuit court did not err in granting judgment on Count V.
    Second, Mr. Timm’s appellate briefing contains various assertions of fraud by
    Impac and the individual defendants, including that Impac made false statements in filings
    with the SEC to the effect that Impac had received the requisite consent to amend the
    Articles. Mr. Timm also maintained that Impac’s general counsel, Mr. Morrison, violated
    
    18 U.S.C. § 1001
     in making these false statements, and asserted that Mr. Morrison “could
    have been fined or spent up to five years in prison before the statute of limitations expired
    in that five year window of time.” Mr. Timm did not explicitly allege any color of a fraud
    41
    as an underlying theory of liability in the operative Complaint. Impac characterizes the
    fraud assertions as an attempt to reassert Count III, which contained allegations of “illegal
    vote buying.” But we address these assertions only to say that we discern no question that
    is properly before us. Put another way, fraud is simply not at issue in this case and therefore
    is not an issue upon which we may render a decision.
    Third, Mr. Timm requests an award of attorneys’ fees. Attorneys’ fees were neither
    decided nor certified for appeal by the circuit court—indeed, the circuit court explicitly
    identified attorneys’ fees as an issue that would remain to be decided after this appeal—
    and we will likewise not consider that question.
    Fourth, and finally, Mr. Timm asserts that, because the 2004 Series B Articles
    Supplementary remain in effect, Impac owes him and other Series B shareholders
    dividends on all quarters since 2009.22 This, too, is a question not yet decided by the circuit
    court, if it even has been raised, and there is no decision for us to review.23
    JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
    FOR BALTIMORE CITY AFFIRMED.
    APPELLANT AND CROSS-APPELLANT
    TO SPLIT COSTS.
    22
    Mr. Timm advances this argument with respect to Series C shares as well, but that
    argument fails at the threshold because we have affirmed the circuit court’s grant of
    summary judgment on Counts II and III.
    23
    The circuit court did not expressly identify the question of whether damages in the form
    of dividend payments after 2009 would be owed as part of Count I as an outstanding issue
    in its July 2018 memorandum opinion. Impac does not address this question in its appellate
    briefing, and we did not find anywhere in the record where this question was either
    addressed or decided.
    42
    The correction notice(s) for this opinion(s) can be found here:
    https://mdcourts.gov/sites/default/files/import/appellate/correctionnotices/cosa/2119s18cn.pdf
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2119-18

Judges: Nazarian

Filed Date: 4/1/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/30/2024