Appellant Katun Corporation (Katun) brought this breach of contract action against former shareholder Terence Michael Clarke after he refused to pay his share of a settlement agreement. That agreement had resolved claims asserted by Katun and its parent company PNA Holdings, LLC (PNA) against the previous owners of Katun. One of the settled claims had asserted indemnification for criminal penalties imposed on Katun, and Clarke moved to dismiss this case on grounds of public policy and in pari delicto. The district court granted his motion, and Katun appeals. We reverse.
Katun is a Minnesota corporation that supplies replacement parts for photocopiers, facsimile machines, and printers. Clarke cofounded the company in 1978 and served as a director and officer until he was removed from office for financial improprieties in June 2000. Clarke remained Katun’s largest shareholder until PNA acquired the company in July 2002.
PNA acquired Katun by means of a merger with a wholly owned subsidiary of PNA, leaving Katun as the surviving subsidiary. At the time of the sale Katun and its officers were under investigation by the United States Attorney for possible criminal conduct. Clarke and other selling shareholders of Katun made a number of representations to PNA in the merger agreement about the health of the company. The shareholders represented that Katun had not violated any material applicable laws as of the July 5, 2002 closing
On December 11, 2002, five months after PNA’s acquisition of Katun, Clarke pled guilty to four counts of filing false tax returns for failing to report the proceeds of his self dealing at Katun. He cooperated with the government in providing information about additional criminal activity that took place at the company during his tenure, and his cooperation helped lead to guilty pleas by several Katun officers for bribery and computer fraud. Clarke was subsequently charged with aiding and abetting mail fraud for unlawfully gathering competitive intelligence while an officer at Katun, and he again pled guilty in March 2004. These violations were not disclosed to PNA by the selling shareholders prior to its acquisition of Katun.
The government also brought charges against the company directly, and on February 6, 2004 Katun pled guilty to a twelve count information dealing with three separate criminal schemes involving computer fraud for unlawful gathering of competitive information, mail fraud arising out of the misappropriation of customer credit balances, and wire fraud. All three criminal schemes were initiated prior to the merger, but two of them continued until March or April of 2003, a number of months after PNA’s acquisition of the company. As part of its plea agreement Katun was required to pay more than $11 million in criminal fines, restitution, and forfeiture, and it was placed on probation for two years. Katun also incurred millions of dollars in attorney fees and costs.
Citing provisions in the merger agreement, PNA and Katun sought indemnification from the selling shareholders against losses sustained as a result of the sellers’ misrepresentations about the company at the time of the sale, including the fines and costs associated with the criminal investigations and 'the guilty plea of Katun. On behalf of the selling shareholders, Xerox Corporation, acting as their attorney in fact, entered into a settlement agreement with Katun and PNA on June 7, 2005. The settling shareholders agreed to pay PNA “or its designee” $11.65 million in exchange for a release of the indemnification claims. PNA named Katun as its designee to receive the settlement funds.
After Clarke refused to pay his portion of the settlement, Katun brought this action for breach of contract, alleging that he owed $1,731,575.99 under the settlement agreement. Katun attached both the settlement and merger agreements to the complaint. Clarke moved to dismiss, arguing that it would violate public policy to permit a company to shift responsibility for its own criminal penalties onto another party and that the action was also barred by the doctrine of in pari delicto. Katun moved for summary judgment to collect under the terms of the settlement agreement. The district court granted Clarke’s motion to dismiss on both of the grounds he advanced, concluding that the indemnification provision in the merger agreement was void as against public policy because it permitted Katun to avoid the consequences of its illegal actions. Katun’s motion for summary judgment was denied without further discussion.
Katun appeals, arguing that the district court erred in dismissing its claim. It contends that the district court mischarac-terized the present action as an attempt by
We review the grant of a motion to dismiss de novo, taking all well pleaded factual allegations as true and drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of the plaintiff.
Knieriem v. Group Health Plan, Inc.,
Katun first challenges the district court’s conclusion that the indemnification provision violated public policy, arguing that the settlement agreement resolved all defenses that Clarke and other settling shareholders might have had to the claims of PNA and Katun, including a public policy defense. Katun stresses that Minnesota courts recognize a “strong public policy favoring the settlement of disputed claims without litigation.”
Hentschel v. Smith,
In
Hoyt v. Wickham,
The settlement agreement under which Katun seeks to recover would thus be unenforceable only if the original claim for indemnification were per se invalid. Although “indemnification will not be allowed if its application would violate public policy,”
United States v. J & D Enters. of Duluth,
Katun argues that the indemnification provision at issue here does not violate public policy because it does not promote illegality or free any party to act with impunity. Katun acknowledges that a party may not insure itself against penalties for conduct not yet committed,
Zerby v. Warren,
In response to Katun’s first argument, Clarke points to paragraph 39 of the complaint which states that PNA “has suffered untold millions of dollars in additional losses not at issue in this lawsuit.” Clarke contends that this shows that it was Katun who originally sought indemnification for its criminal penalties. Clarke overlooks the fact that in the very next paragraph of the complaint it is alleged that
both
PNA and Katun made indemnity claims under the merger agreement, seeking compensation for losses associated with Katun’s criminal conviction “[ajmong other things.” Moreover, since Katun is a subsidiary of PNA, a loss to Katun is also a loss to PNA.
Cf. Wackerbarth v. Weisman,
The reasoning in Feuer is instructive here. The indemnification provision contained in the merger agreement was not a form of insurance against future acts, but rather protection against the financial consequences of actions that had already occurred and were not within PNA’s control. Clarke and the other selling shareholders who had controlled the company before the sale were in the best position to have known whether legal violations had been committed prior to the acquisition, and they represented to PNA that none had. PNA relied on their representations when it agreed on a purchase price for the company. The indemnification provision permitted PNA to recover part of that purchase price if the representations proved to be false and if Katun’s value turned out to be overstated due to undisclosed criminal violations. We conclude that the indemnification provision here did not free either PNA or Katun from the consequences of any future criminal actions.
Clarke argues that the settlement included payment for criminal penalties attributable to postsale conduct, noting that the settlement amount is nearly identical to the total amount of Katun’s sanctions even though two of the three schemes continued after the acquisition. In Clarke’s view PNA could not legally recover in full, even under the reasoning in
Feuer,
because some of the criminal penalties should be attributed to misconduct that occurred after the indemnification agreement was made and the company changed hands. We find this argument unpersuasive for two reasons. We are obliged at this stage to take the factual allegations in Katun’s complaint as true, including its allegation that the settlement agreement resolved claims arising from “illegal conduct that
pre-dated
the July 5, 2002 closing date” (emphasis added), an allegation that is not inconsistent with the terms of the indemnification provision or the settlement agreement. Moreover, the degree to which the parties’ losses are attributable to presale or postsale conduct is precisely the kind of disputed factual issue that the
Hoyt
court refused to examine because the parties had settled their differences.
Because the indemnification provision at issue in this case did not create the kind of negative incentives normally associated with attempts to insure against penal sanctions and because a contract should not be voided absent an unmistakable violation of public policy,
see Hollister,
Katun also argues that the defense of in pari delicto does not bar the present action because it was waived by the settlement agreement, or alternatively because it is inapplicable to this action to enforce that agreement. Under the in pari delicto doctrine courts will decline to enforce the rights of either party to an illegal transaction.
See State v. AAMCO Automatic Transmissions, Inc.,
Although the doctrine of in pari delicto is “based on judicial reluctance to intervene in disputes between parties who are mutually involved in wrongdoing,”
Brubaker v. Hi-Banks Resort Corp.,
For these reasons, we reverse the judgment and remand to the district court for further proceedings and consideration of Katun’s motion for summary judgment.
Notes
. It was PNA rather than Katun which was responsible for sending notice to tire selling shareholders of its intent to pursue indemnification. Although these notices were not attached to the pleadings, the district court referenced them in its decision. Since nei
