This case concerns whether Tandem Energy Corporation (“Tandem Colorado”), Tandem Energy Holdings, Inc. (“Tandem Nevada”), Todd Yocham, Tim Culp, Jack Chambers, and Michael Cunningham (collectively “Defendants”) can be held liable for conversion and civil conspiracy. We find genuine issues of fact regarding whether Plaintiff Arthur W. Tifford, PA (“Tifford”), a Florida corporation, owns a valid interest in Tandem Nevada, and whether Defendants’ actions unreasonably deprived Tifford of that interest. We therefore reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment and remand for further proceedings.
I.
This dispute centers on a stock certificate in Tifford’s possession. The eertifi
The conflict arises from a corporate deal gone wrong. In 2005, the owners of Tandem Colorado agreed to sell the company. The buyers hired Ron Williams to make a deal happen. Williams hired Aritex Consultants (“Aritex”), which was owned and operated by Lyle Mortensen. Williams and Mortensen were to execute a “reverse merger,” in which a publicly held shell company acquires the stock of a private company in exchange for the public company’s stock. The plan was this: Tandem Texas, a private company, was to purchase Tandem Colorado and other assets. The yet-to-be-acquired shell company, Tandem Nevada, was then to purchase Tandem Texas. There was apparently no written agreement concerning the duties and compensation of Williams, Mortensen, or Aritex. Mortensen purchased a public shell company, renamed it Tandem Nevada, and named himself president, secretary, and sole director. In that capacity, he issued 20 million shares to himself in March 2005, to allow him to complete the formalities necessary to the deal. What happened next is disputed.
Tifford acknowledges that the deal did not go according to plan, but notes that a reverse merger took place. After the merger, Mortensen re-issued just over 20 million shares of Tandem Nevada. Of those, just over 17 million went to the sellers of Tandem Colorado and new investors. Three million shares went to Aritex, Mortensen’s company, as compensation for expenses and services. Mortensen resigned from the positions he held in Tandem Nevada, appointing in his place certain of the Defendants. His shares were later reissued, including into a block of 2.7 million shares represented by Certificate 1069. All stock issuances and transfers were done by Manhattan Transfer Registrar Company (“Manhattan Transfer”), Tandem Nevada’s transfer agent. 1
Defendants paint a different picture. They agree that Aritex was supposed to receive 3 million shares of Tandem Nevada for shepherding the reverse merger to a close. However, Defendants say that Williams, who is a “securities fraud felon and disbarred attorney,” sold $8-9 million of the shares issued by Mortensen in a “pump and dump” scheme, with Mortensen’s knowledge or complicity. Defendants also aver that Mortensen did not have the power to issue stock in Tandem Nevada in March 2005 because he was not actually a director of the company. Moreover, Williams’s and Mortensen’s acts allegedly caused the original buyers to back out of the deal. After Williams and Mortensen moved on, Defendants restructured the deal. They capitalized Tandem Nevada directly with the assets of Tandem Colorado, some other assets, and borrowed funds. In sum, the originally contemplated reverse merger failed, but Defendants salvaged a deal by converting Tandem Colorado into publicly held Tandem Nevada.
Defendants state that “[o]n August 25, 2005, the new Tandem Board of Directors, by unanimous resolution, and pursuant to Nev.Rev.Stat. § 78.211 cancelled the 20
In April 2006, Mortensen signed a Stock Power on behalf of Aritex which purports to transfer the shares represented by Certificate 1069 to Tifford. In an affidavit, Arthur Tifford, the owner of the eponymous corporate plaintiff, states that the transfer was in partial satisfaction of a judgment entered for Tifford’s client, Universal Express, Inc., in a Florida state-court lawsuit. Tifford now claims a partial interest in the shares by virtue of a contingency-fee agreement with Universal Express. Additionally, Tifford alleges he had no knowledge of Tandem Nevada’s efforts to cancel the shares. In May 2006, Tifford’s agent, T.D. Ameritrade, made a demand on Manhattan Transfer to have Certificate 1069 reissued in its name. Manhattan Transfer refused due to the August 26, 2005 stop order. On May 17, 2006, Tifford sent a letter to Tandem Nevada’s attorneys demanding that the shares be reissued. Tandem Nevada refused.
On June 14, 2006, Tandem Nevada sued Aritex, Arthur Tifford and his corporation, Williams, Mortensen, and Manhattan Transfer in Nevada state court. Tandem Nevada sought a declaration that Certificate 1069 was invalid. All defendants but Manhattan Transfer were dismissed for lack of personal jurisdiction. On May 15, 2007, the court found that the dismissed defendants were not indispensable parties, and granted summary judgment in favor of Tandem Nevada. The court held that the shares issued by Mortensen, including Certificate 1069, were invalid and void. The court ordered Manhattan Transfer to void and refuse to transfer Certificate 1069 if such were presented to it. A separate lawsuit involving Aritex and concerning the validity of the stock is currently proceeding in a Texas state court.
Tifford filed this suit on June 12, 2007. Tifford sought a declaration of its rights in Tandem Nevada and damages in excess of $12 million for conversion and civil conspiracy. Initially, Defendants moved to have the claim dismissed for failure to state a claim. Upon considering evidence outside of the pleadings, the district court construed Defendants’ motion as one for summary judgment. However, Defendants have not filed answers to Tifford’s complaint. In a written order, the court stated that the parties agreed that the conversion took place on August 25, 2005, and Tifford did not own Certificate 1069 at that time. Thus, Defendants did not deprive Tifford of a property interest, and summary judgment was proper. In the alternative, the court held that the Nevada judgment invalidating Certificate 1069 was an in rem judgment, and thus bound Tifford. As Tifford could not demonstrate an unlawful act, the court granted summary judgment in favor of Defendants on Tifford’s civil conspiracy claim as well. Final judgment was entered and Tifford appealed. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
We review a grant of summary judgment de novo.
Delta & Pine Land Co. v. Nationwide Agribus. Ins. Co.,
A.
“The unauthorized and wrongful assumption and exercise of dominion and control over the personal property of another, to the exclusion of or inconsistent with the owner’s rights, is in law a conversion.”
Waisath v. Lack’s Stores, Inc.,
In Texas, a shareholder may sue a corporation for conversion of shares.
See Rio Grande Cattle Co. v. Burns,
Tifford has shown genuine issues of fact for the elements of the conversion claim. We therefore reverse the district court’s entry of summary judgment.
1.
Tifford has shown a genuine issue under Nevada law, which incorporates Article 8 of the Uniform Commercial Code
Defendants note that “a purchaser of a certificated ... security acquires all rights in the security that the transferor had or had power to transfer.” Nev.Rev. Stat. § 104.8302(1). Because Certificate 1069 was cancelled in 2005, goes the argument, Tifford received a worthless piece of paper. There are several problems with this argument. First, Mortensen has sworn that he does not recall receiving notice of the cancellation. Defendants have not produced a certified mail receipt showing otherwise. Whether Mortensen is telling the truth is a disputed issue of material fact. Second, even if Mortensen knew of the August 2005 resolution, we are not convinced that, as a matter of law, the board’s resolution cancelled the shares. As a treatise explains, “[i]f share certificates are issued illegally, or by an officer fraudulently or without authority, and the circumstances are such that they are either void or voidable, the corporation may cancel them, or they may be cancelled by a court of equity in a suit brought for that purpose by the corporation----” William Meade Fletcher, Cyclopedia of the Law of Corporations § 5166 (West 2008). Whether Mortensen issued the shares “illegally,” “fraudulently,” or “without authority” is an open question. In the present circumstances, we cannot determine as a matter of law that the shares were void or voidable. Third, conversion is a tort concerning property rights. As such, a conversion claim is assignable.
See generally PPG Indus., Inc. v. JMB/Houston Ctrs. Partners LP,
2.
Turning to the second element of conversion, we think that there is a genuine question whether Defendants’ refusal to transfer record ownership of the stock impaired Tifford’s rights. The district court stated: “It is undisputed by the parties that the alleged conversion took place when Tandem Nevada’s Board of Directors cancelled the certificate on August 25, 2005.” Because Tifford received Certifícate 1069 in April 2006, the court held that Tifford could not prove a right to the shares at the time of the conversion. However, Tifford has consistently argued that Defendants’ refusal to transfer ownership of the stock from Aritex to Tifford was conversion. This occurred in May 2006, after Tifford obtained the shares, when Manhattan Transfer refused to reissue Certificate 1069 pursuant to the August 26, 2005 stop order. It is well-established that an unreasonable refusal- to acknowledge a lawful transfer of corporate stock is conversion.
See Bums,
Defendants suggest that their refusal to transfer ownership was excused because it was unclear whether Tifford had a legitimate right to the stock. A good-faith refusal to return property in order to resolve a doubtful matter may or may not excuse conversion.
Compare Whitaker v. Bank of El Paso,
3.
Tifford also satisfies its burden at the summary judgment stage with regard to the third and fourth elements of conversion. Tifford made a request via its agent, T.D. Ameritrade, to have Certificate 1069 reissued in Tifford’s name. Tandem Nevada’s agent, Manhattan Transfer, refused. Certificate 1069 was apparently never physically delivered to Manhattan Transfer, but we do not find this problematic. In light of Tandem Nevada’s unequivocal refusal to transfer record ownership, delivery of the certificate would have been an empty formality. Texas law does not require such an act.
See Prudential Petrol.,
Tifford has shown a genuine issue of fact as to each element of conversion. Given the questions of fact which abound in this case, we must reverse the district court’s judgment unless there is another ground supported by the record.
See Holtzclaw,
In an alternate holding, the district court concluded that the Nevada state court judgment was in rem, and thus binds litigant and stranger alike. Specifically, the district court noted that: (1) Tifford was not an indispensable party, and (2) the “proceeding was in rem pursuant to Nev. Rev. Stat. § 104.811(l)(a).” We disagree.
We must give the judgment of the Nevada court the same effect it would have in subsequent litigation in Nevada.
See
28 U.S.C. § 1738;
Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Epstein,
Defendants also argue that the Nevada judgment should bind Tifford under the doctrines of res judicata and collateral estoppel. For these doctrines to apply in Nevada, “the party against whom the judgment is asserted must have been a party or in privity with a party to the prior litigation.”
Univ. of Nev. v. Tarkanian,
In sum, we feel compelled to reverse the district court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of Defendants on Tifford’s conversion claim.
C.
We also reverse the grant of summary judgment on Tifford’s civil conspiracy claim. In Texas, a civil conspiracy is a combination “to accomplish an unlawful purpose or to accomplish a lawful purpose by unlawful means.”
Lane v. Halliburton, 529
F.3d 548, 564 (5th Cir.2008) (citation omitted). The elements are: “(1) two or more persons; (2) an end to be accomplished; (3) meeting of the minds on the end or course of action; (4) one or more overt, unlawful acts; and (5) proximately resulting in injury.”
Id.
A defendant’s liability is derivative of an underlying tort; without independent tortious conduct, there is no actionable civil conspiracy claim.
Miller v. Raytheon Air
Tifford’s civil conspiracy claim lives or dies with its conversion claim. The district court correctly noted that without a predicate unlawful act, there is no cause of action for civil conspiracy.
See id.
However, if there is an issue of fact on conversion, and Tifford shows evidence of an agreement by Defendants to commit the acts comprising conversion, then there is an issue of fact on conspiracy.
See Watts v. Miles,
III.
We hold that there are genuine issues of fact on claims by Arthur W. Tifford, P.A. for conversion and civil conspiracy. We also hold that Tifford is not bound by the Nevada state court judgment canceling Certificate 1069. We therefore reverse the district court’s judgment and remand for further proceedings. We express no opinion as to the ultimate merit of Tifford’s claims.
REVERSED and REMANDED
Notes
. Tifford named Manhattan Transfer as a defendant in the complaint. The district court dismissed Manhattan Transfer for failure to prosecute. Tifford does not appeal this dismissal.
. The parlies have briefed Texas’s law of conversion. Under the
Erie
rule, we must apply the substantive law of the forum state — including choice of law rules, which may dictate applying another state's laws.
See Denman v. Snapper Div.,
