Justia U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals Opinion Summaries

Articles Posted in Commercial Law
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Plaintiff contracted to purchase 11 Burger King restaurants. A jury found that defendant had properly terminated the agreement but had breached the duty of good faith and fair dealing, and awarded $190,907.27. Over one year later, the district court entered a partial judgment denying specific performance and awarding $5,176.24 of the $424,282.19 in attorneys’ fees and expenses incurred in connection with the litigation. The Sixth Circuit reversed and remanded. The plaintiffs presented evidence that defendant hindered attempts to close the transaction, but defendant's actions in blocking due diligence and failing to provide financial information did not cause plaintiff damages because defendant properly terminated the agreement. The district court erred in calculating fees and expenses.

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The credit union provides indirect lending, which allows applicants to apply for loans at automobile dealerships. A third-party administrator compiles the applications and automatically approves low-risk loans. Higher-risk applications are forwarded to the credit union for further review using an eight-factor policy. After an audit disclosed hundreds of high-risk loans issued in violation of the policy, the credit union filed a claim under a fidelity bond that provided coverage for losses caused by an employeeâs "failure to faithfully perform his/her trust." The district court awarded $5,050,000 plus $2,730,415 in interest to be offset by prejudgment interest. The Sixth Circuit affirmed; there was sufficient evidence to support the juryâs finding that the lending policy was "established," "enforced," and "consciously disregarded" as described in the bond language. There was no evidence that the credit union board acquiesced in the violations. Although the court allowed an improper "golden rule" argument, the error does not require reversal; references to the insurer's ability to check the policies and to checklists were not errors.

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Plaintiff and defendant, investment trusts that specialize in healthcare-related properties, participated in a two-step auction to purchase the assets of a Canadian company. The defendant's efforts derailed. Plaintiff entered into an agreement to purchase the assets, but before the agreement was approved by shareholders, the defendant made a higher bid and made a public announcement. After a flurry of press releases and a ruling by a Canadian court concerning a confidentiality clause that was part of the bidding process, the defendant revoked its bid. The stockholders rejected the agreement with the plaintiff; the deal closed after plaintiff increased its bid. The district court awarded the plaintiff $101,672,807 for tortious interference with contract and with prospective advantage. The Sixth Circuit affirmed, but remanded for consideration of punitive damages. The declaratory proceedings in Canada did not preclude the claims at issue. Jury instructions concerning tortious interference involving competitors, motive, causation, and breach of the confidentiality agreement as wrongful conduct were appropriate.

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The owner of a mortgage company was sentenced to 96 months for fraud and money laundering. The Sixth Circuit affirmed, holding that the conviction was supported by substantial evidence. Evidence of a government witness's prior inconsistent statements that referred to a conviction more than 10 years prior was properly excluded; the trial judge gave the defense proper latitude to impeach the witness. The sentence was properly enhanced for attempting to obstruct the investigation, use of "sophisticated means," and acting as the organizer or leader.