DAVIS COMPANIES, a California corporation, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. EMERALD CASINO, INC., formerly known as HP, Inc., an Illinois corporation, Joseph McQuaid, individually and as an agent of HP, Inc., Donald F. Flynn, individually and as an agent of HP, Inc., et al., Defendants-Appellees.
No. 00-4042.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Argued April 12, 2001. Decided Sept. 28, 2001.
268 F.3d 477
Before BAUER, MANION, and KANNE, Circuit Judges.
Francis J. Higgins, John W. Rotunno (argued), Bell, Boyd & Lloyd, Chicago, IL, for Defendants-Appellees.
Davis Companies filed a complaint against Emerald Casino, Inc., formerly known as HP,1 and three of its officers, alleging breach of an oral contract pursuant to which Davis was to acquire stock ownership in HP. The defendants moved to dismiss under
I.
According to the Second Amended Complaint,2 on December 1, 1998, after extensive negotiations, Davis Companies, a California corporation, entered into аn oral contract with HP, an Illinois corporation and owner of an Illinois gaming license for the operation of riverboat gambling. The oral contract was negotiated for Davis by Michael Colleran, its Executive Vice President, and for HP by Kevin Flynn, a shareholder of HP and son of Donald Flynn, an officer, director and shareholder of HP.
The parties conditioned the oral contract upon passage of legislation in the Illinois General Assembly amending the Illinois Riverboat Gambling Act,
Davis understood that HP intended to raise a total of $30 million to be distributed to HP‘s original investors who had lost their $30 million investmеnt in HP‘s defunct riverboat operations. Davis also understood that HP might issue additional shares to third parties in the future, and that the 37.5% shares of Davis and the existing shareholders, the 20% interest of Duchossois and the 5% interest of local investors would be proportionally diluted. Davis also alleged that on December 1, 1998, in a separate oral contract, the Flynns promised to take any and all steps to assure HP‘s performance of its contractual obligation to Davis. Thе Complaint describes in detail the negotiations undertaken by a number of parties to structure an overall plan to open and support a casino in Rosemont.
According to the Complaint, immediately following the December 1, 1998 meeting between Flynn and Colleran, Flynn met with Duchossois and other parties. At
The Illinois Riverboat Gambling Act was amended, effective June 25, 1999, to permit the holder of a dormant license to renew and relocate its license to any community willing to accept a casino. See
Accordingly, Davis sued HP, the Flynns and Joseph McQuaid, an officer and director of HP, in federal district court claiming breach of contract, equitable estoppel, fraud and conspiracy, and seeking specific performance or monetary damages of not less than $250 million and punitive damages. The defendants moved to dismiss under
Since the joinder of Duchossois would destroy complete diversity, however, the court then proceeded under
II.
An initial matter concerns the appropriate standard of review of the district court‘s
The purpose of
First, the court must determine whether a party is one that should be joined if feasible—called, in the old days, a “necessary party.”
To answer the first question, whether Duchossois is a necessary party, under
In this case, it is unnecessary for us to determine whether a contract actually existed (whether between HP and Davis or between HP and Duchossois) in order to find that the alleged contract between HP аnd Davis is independent from one between HP and Duchossois. Based on the record before us, the district court incorrectly concluded that Davis and Duchossois had interdependent contracts or options. Instead, we conclude that the evidence demonstrates that, no matter what interest or relation he ultimately had with HP, it was separate from Davis‘s alleged contract and therefore Duchossois has no interest in the subject matter of this lawsuit.
Duchossоis was deposed during discovery and testified that he had a “gentleman‘s agreement” for an option to acquire a 20% interest in HP in the event HP‘s license was actually used in Rosemont. He testified that the precise terms of the option, such as price, were not agreed to. Furthermore, he testified that the “option” was never actually offered to him. He stated that a few days after the legislation was enacted, “[t]hey told us then that they couldn‘t make the offеr. They reneged on making the offer.” Duchossois testified that “there was a breach of trust, breach of confidence, a breach of a contract or breach of a gentleman‘s agreement.” Duchossois testified that “I wasn‘t doing any dealing with Colleran. We were entirely separate. His deal with Kevin [Flynn] was entirely separate from mine.” In discussing his involvement with the passage of the gambling law amendment, Duchossois testified that “if any legislation was going to go through for the villages that were benefitting by Rosemont, for Rosemont, for the casinos, for the harness people, the breeders, the thoroughbred people and the race track, everyone had to come together with some sort of a consensus.... That had been assumed from the very beginning that everyone was going to pull their own weight on the thing. There was no such thing as I would be helping them, they would be helping me; that wasn‘t even part of it. We were all going to be working together in one coalition.” Pl.App. A57.
Duchossois‘s attorney, David Filkin, testified that he understood that Duchossois “would be offered 20 percent of the entity which owned the license of the relocated riverboat.” He further testified that, in a meeting with Flynn, Flynn did not say that Duchossois‘s ability to purchase 20% depended upon whether Davis purchased 37.5% and vice-versa.
Colleran testified that he discussed Duchossois‘s interest in the deal with Flynn, but that “the deal for Duchossois to have acquired an intеrest was really a separate agreement between him and HP, the way I understood it.” In addition, he testified that his “agreement with Kevin Flynn was that Davis would receive a 37.5% interest for $12 million; and, you know, what he agreed to with respect to Duchossois and the 5% had to be up to him. I had no agreement with him on that. It was only with respect to what I could speak for,
Following briefing on HP‘s motion to dismiss and after the close of discovery, the district court granted HP‘s motion to compel Duchossois to produce a December 2, 1998 memorandum which had been prepared by his lawyer, David Filkin (the “Filkin Memo“), to which Duchossois had asserted an attorney-client privilege. The Filkin Memo summarized the December 1, 1998 meeting among Duchossois, Filkin and Colleran. At the meeting, Colleran stated that he had just come from a meeting with Kevin Flynn wherein they had allegedly negotiated the oral contract at issue in this case. Filkin‘s handwritten notes from the meeting had already been produced in discovery and both Filkin and Duchossois were deposed on the notes and their recollection of the meeting. Finding that the Filkin Memo contained nothing that was not already in the handwritten notes, the district court ordered its production. No party requested that the сourt reopen discovery to allow depositions on the Filkin Memo. The district court relied heavily on the Filkin Memo in granting HP‘s motion to dismiss under
The district court‘s reliance on the Filkin Memo to establish a tripartite or interrelated deal was misplaced. The Filkin Memo states that “Mike [Cоlleran] stated that he and Kevin Flynn had just agreed upon a deal structure as follows: Marvin Davis 37.5%, Flynns 37.5%, R.L. Duchossois 20%, Other 5%.” The district court concluded that this established the interrelatedness of the deals. To the extent that the Filkin Memo can be interpreted to conflict with the witnesses’ sworn deposition testimony, the district court should have resolved any “conflicts in the affidavits and depositions submitted by the parties ... in favor of the plaintiff.” Deluxe Ice Cream Co. v. R.C.H. Tool Corp., 726 F.2d 1209, 1215 (7th Cir. 1984). Instead, the district court resolved any conflicts created by its interpretation of the Filkin Memo in favor of the defendants.
Davis‘s pleadings in no way indicate that Duchossois was a party to their contract, and indeed specifically state that Duchossois‘s own expected participation was not a condition precedent to the Davis/HP oral contract. In addition, the overwhelming deposition testimony establishes that whatever interest he had, Duchossois specifically denied being part of thе alleged contract between Davis and HP. The Filkin Memo does not contradict this. On the record before us, construing the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, it is clear that whatever his interest in the Rosemont casino deal, it was not the same as the contract Davis alleges to have with HP. A number of parties clearly worked together to garner support for the Rosemont casino and to lobby the state legislature. In those negotiations, it would not be unusual for one party to refer to other capital suppliers as evidence that the deal would ultimately be lucrative or successful. Even if the negotiations were necessarily interrelated, the deals were not necessarily so. Thus, we conclude that the contracts were not interdependent and tripartite in nature. Whatever interest Duchossois has in HP, it is separate from the contract at issue before the court. Indeed, Duchossois dеnies an interest relating to the subject matter of this lawsuit and under
Thus, while it is true that “a contracting party is the paradigm of an indispensable party,” Hall, 100 F.3d at 479 (citation omitted), “[w]hen a person is not a party to the contract in litigation and has no rights or obligations under that contract, even though thе absent party may be obligated to abide by the result of the pending action by another contract that is not at issue, the absentee will not be regarded as an indispensable party in a suit to determine obligations under the disputed contract....” 7 Charles Alan Wright, Arthur R. Miller and Mary Kay Kane, Federal Practice and Procedure Civil 3d, § 1613 at 197 (2001). In addition to Duchossois there were no doubt a number of other parties involved in and certainly interested in the effort to open a casino in Rosemont. Obviously the litigation betweеn Davis and HP would not label these parties as necessary litigants. Likewise, we decline to find that Duchossois is a necessary party to litigation between Davis and HP.
The defendants respond by arguing that “complete relief” cannot be accorded among the existing parties absent joinder because any relief would require a determination of the respective stock ownership rights of HP‘s shareholders, Davis‘s claimed rights and any right Duchossois may claim. However, the term “complete relief” refers only to “relief between the persons already parties, and not as between a party and the absent person whose joinder is sought.” Perrian v. O‘Grady, 958 F.2d 192, 196 (7th Cir. 1992) (citation omitted). The present lawsuit concerns the alleged breach of contract by HP and its liability to Davis for damages caused by that breach. Here, if HP prevails, Davis‘s claims would be completely resolved. If, on the other hand, Davis prevails in this litigation, the court need only determine, under the contract at hand, the proper damages due Davis. See Abel v. American Art Analog, Inc., 838 F.2d 691, 695 (3d Cir. 1988) (where partner brought suit for 30% share of profits on his own behalf, and not on behalf of the partnership, and because a jury could easily calculate partner‘s rights and damages independently of other partners, other partners were not necessary parties). According complete relief to Davis would not require resolving every other collateral issue relаting to HP‘s corporate structure.
As noted,
Finally,
In closing, we note that the defendants are unlikely to produce someone to contradict Duchossois‘s denial that he had an interdependent agreement with HP and Davis. Indeed, their entire defense is premised on the fact that no contract existed. However, this litigation illustrates that the defendants would like to have their cake and eat it too. They would like the court to declare Duchossois a contracting party for purposes of dismissal from federal court, yet will deny the existence of any contract at all for purposes of the underlying merits of the case. The advantage of such a cross-current flows only to HP, and it does not persuade us that Duchossois must be joined as a necessary party to this litigation. See Pasco, 637 F.2d at 505. We also note that HP is certainly not precluded from presenting evidence relating to Duchossois‘s knowledge of the alleged oral contract, as well as his involvement in the deal. This is reinforced by the fact that Duchossois has already given testimony during discovery. See Perrian, 958 F.2d at 196 n. 5.
Because we conclude that Duchossois is not a necessary party pursuant to
Perry Steven MILLER, Petitioner-Appellant, v. Rondle ANDERSON, Respondent-Apрellee.
No. 00-2979.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Sept. 28, 2001.
268 F.3d 485
Before POSNER, EASTERBROOK, RIPPLE, Circuit Judges.
A “Joint Motion to Withdraw Petition For Rehearing and to Dismiss Appeal” was filed on August 7, 2001 and is now before the court.
On June 29, 2001 we reversed the judgment of the district court and directed that the State of Indiana release or retry the petitioner within 120 days. The state filed a Petition for Rehearing En Banc, which has been stayed pending further order. The parties have settled the case and now jointly move this court to withdraw the petition for rehearing and voluntarily dismiss this appеal.
