SECOND DIVISION
MILLER, P. J.,
ANDREWS, J., and RICKMAN, J.
NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be
physically received in our clerk’s office within ten
days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed.
http://www.gaappeals.us/rules
April 24, 2018
In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
A18A0778. WALLACE v. WALLACE et al.
MILLER, Presiding Judge.
This dispute arises from the forced sale of one brother’s stock in a family-
owned business, Wallace Electric Company. Dorsey “Doss” Wallace, and his
brothers, Phillip and Gary, all worked for Wallace Electric and owned stock in the
company. After Doss stopped working for Wallace Electric in 1994, he did not sell
– and the company did not even attempt to buy – his stock as was required by the
company Bylaws and the shareholders’ Buy-Sell Agreement (“the Agreement”).
When Phillip asked Doss about returning the shares in 2003, Doss unequivocally
refused. Several years later, Doss filed a complaint alleging that Phillip and Gary
breached their fiduciary duty towards him as a shareholder. During the ensuing
litigation, both parties sought specific performance of either the Bylaws or the
Agreement. Following a bench trial, the trial court found that Doss breached the
Agreement when he did not return the stock in 1994, and it valued Doss’s shares as
they would have been valued in 1994, with a reduction for the minority interest Doss
held. Doss now appeals. After a thorough review of the record and the applicable law,
we conclude that the trial court erred in determining that Doss was required to sell his
shares at the 1994 value and in applying a minority interest discount to the value of
the stock. Instead, the trial court should have valued Doss’s shares in 2003 when he
breached the Agreement by refusing to sell his shares. Moreover, because we
conclude that Doss continued to hold his shares until he breached the Agreement in
2003, the trial court erred in finding that Doss’s claims for breach of fiduciary duty
and tortious interference were moot. Accordingly, we vacate the trial court’s order,
and remand the case for further proceedings.
“Appeals from bench trials, where the trial judge sits as the trier of fact and has
the opportunity to assess the credibility of the witnesses, are reviewed under the
clearly erroneous standard. We will not disturb a trial court’s findings if there is any
evidence to support them.” (Citations and footnotes omitted.) Jenkins v. Sallie Mae,
Inc., 286 Ga. App. 502 (649 SE2d 802) (2007). Questions of law are reviewed de
novo. Lewis v. McNeely, 336 Ga. App. 696 (783 SE2d 172) (2016).
2
The facts of this case are undisputed. Wallace Electric is a family-owned
company that was incorporated in 1959 by the parties’ father. The father was head of
Wallace Electric and controlled the business until his death in 2000. After the father
died, Gary, as president, and Phillip, as vice president, controlled Wallace Electric,
increasing the company’s profitability substantially.
The stated purpose of the company is to make a profit. Additionally, because
Wallace Electric was designed to be a family-owned business, only current employees
of the company could retain stock. Pursuant to Wallace Electric’s Bylaws, enacted in
1959, the retention and sale of stock were controlled as follows:
[I]f the employment of any stockholder or officer is terminated, for any
reason, the corporation shall have the right and duty to purchase all the
stock of said employee or officer and the former officer or employee
shall be obligated to sell his stock pursuant to these by-laws.
The purchase price, in any event, shall be the book value of the stock (as
of the time of said notice) as determined according to accepted
accounting practices, and shall be binding upon the parties.
(Emphasis supplied.) (“Article V” of the Bylaws).
3
In 1988, Wallace Electric issued stock to all three brothers; Gary and Phillip
received 30 shares (25 percent) each and Doss received 20 shares (16.67 percent).1
Additionally, when Doss, Gary, and Phillip obtained their shares in 1988, the parties
entered into the Agreement, which provided,
Upon the . . . termination of employment of a Shareholder, such
Shareholder . . . shall sell, and the Corporation shall buy, all, but not less
than all, of the stock owned by such Shareholder for a purchase price
equal to the current value.[2]
...
In the event of termination of employment of a Shareholder, the
Corporation shall purchase all of the stock owned by such Shareholder
within sixty (60) days after the date of termination of employment.
(Emphasis supplied.) Finally, the Agreement specified that damages for breach of the
Agreement were “immeasurable,” and thus, the Agreement contemplated specific
performance or other equitable remedies. In signing the Agreement, the parties
1
The father also received 40 shares of stock. When he died in 2000, he
bequeathed his stock to his wife, but she later sold the stock back to Wallace Electric.
2
The Agreement defined “current value” as $1,806 per share. Per the terms of
the Agreement, the “current value” was subject to annual review. It is undisputed that
the value has never been amended.
4
expressly waived any defense that they had an adequate remedy at law. By its own
terms, the Agreement expired in 2008.3
All three brothers initially worked for Wallace Electric, but Doss left his
employment in 1994. At the time Doss left Wallace Electric, he owned one-sixth of
the issued stock. He did not offer to sell his stock to the company as required by the
Bylaws and Agreement, however, because he planned to return to the company “at
some point.” Nor did Wallace Electric attempt to buy Doss’s stock when his
employment ceased.
In 2003, during a review of the company’s status, Gary and Phillip realized that
Wallace Electric had not repurchased Doss’s stock after Doss left the company.
Phillip contacted Doss to inquire about Wallace Electric repurchasing Doss’s stock,
but they never discussed a purchase price because Doss adamantly refused to sell it.
Phillip allegedly spoke to Doss again about selling the stock in 2006 or 2007, to no
avail.
In August 2011, Doss filed a complaint for an accounting and damages against
Gary and Phillip, alleging breach of fiduciary duty and tortious deprivation of his
3
This lawsuit, which was filed within three years of the expiration of the
Agreement, was timely. See OCGA § 9-3-24.
5
interest in Wallace Electric, and seeking punitive damages and attorney fees. He
subsequently moved to add Wallace Electric as a defendant, and filed an amended
complaint to add claims that are not relevant to the instant appeal.
Gary, Phillip, and Wallace Electric (collectively “the defendants”) filed an
answer, a counterclaim seeking damages and fees for abusive litigation, and an
amended counterclaim. In the amended counterclaim, the defendants argued that, as
a matter of equity, Doss should be ordered to sell his stock back to Wallace Electric
at the 1994 value. Doss moved to dismiss the counterclaim as untimely, but the trial
court denied the motion.
In 2015, Doss notified Wallace Electric that he wished to sell his shares back
to the company at their present value. He also filed a motion for specific performance,
demanding that Wallace Electric repurchase the 25 percent interest in stock that he
now owned as a result of his father’s shares being reabsorbed into the company, at
Wallace Electric’s 2015 book value. In response, the defendants tendered Doss a
check in the amount of $54,200, which represented the 1994 book value of Doss’s
16.67 percent interest in the company at that time. Doss rejected this offer. At the
time, the book value of Wallace Electric was just over $8 million.
6
At a bench trial, the parties agreed that there should be a buyout of Doss’s
shares.4 The parties disagreed, however, about which document controlled the buyout
and the appropriate year for valuing Doss’s stock. Doss contended that Article V of
the Bylaws controlled the manner and value of the stock purchase, and that his offer
to sell his stock in 2015 required Wallace Electric to purchase the stock at the 2015
value. The defendants argued that the Agreement controlled because the Bylaws
expired prior to the effective date of the Agreement, the Agreement superseded the
Bylaws, and therefore, Doss was obligated to sell his stock at the 1994 value.
The trial court found in favor of Phillip and Gary, and ordered Doss to sell his
shares at the 1994 value. In doing so, however, the trial court initially did not
expressly rule on any of the parties’ specific legal arguments. Doss appealed to the
Supreme Court of Georgia,5 which vacated the trial court’s order and remanded for
the trial court to make factual findings and state its legal conclusions. See Wallace v.
Wallace, 301 Ga. 195 (800 SE2d 303) (2017).
4
Thus, the parties agreed that the bench trial would address only the buyout
issue and not matters related to Doss’s claims for breach of fiduciary duty, tortious
interference, and punitive damages and attorney fees.
5
At the time of Doss’s first appeal, equity jurisdiction lay in the Supreme Court
of Georgia. See Wallace, supra, 301 Ga. at 197 (I), n. 3. We now have jurisdiction.
See OCGA § 15-3-3.1 (a) (2) (2017).
7
On remand, the trial court found that (1) the Agreement governed the dispute
because it superseded and replaced Article V of the Bylaws; (2) the Agreement was
not executory in nature; (3) Doss breached the Agreement in 1994 when he failed to
sell his stock upon leaving Wallace Electric; (4) the defendants’ counterclaims were
timely because Doss’s breach continued through 2008, the complaint was filed within
the statute of limitations, and the counterclaims related back to the timely-filed
complaint; (5) an equitable remedy was appropriate to give effect to the parties’ intent
and required the conclusion that Doss be held to the terms of the Agreement as if he
had sold his shares in 1994 when he left the company; and (6) in light of this
conclusion, Doss’s remaining claims were moot. This appeal followed.
1. In several related enumerations of error, Doss argues that the trial court erred
in concluding that (a) the counterclaim was timely; (b) the Agreement controlled; and
(c) he was in breach of the Agreement. We disagree.
To begin, we agree with the trial court that the equitable remedy of specific
performance is appropriate here. “Equity jurisdiction is established and allowed for
the protection and relief of parties where, from any peculiar circumstances, the
operation of the general rules of law would be deficient in protecting from anticipated
8
wrong or relieving for injuries done.” OCGA § 23-1-3. “Equity considers that done
which ought to be done and directs its relief accordingly.” OCGA § 23-1-8.
“Specific performance is an equitable remedy available when the damages
recoverable at law would not be an adequate compensation for nonperformance.”
(Citations, punctuation, and footnotes omitted.) Simpson v. Pendergast, 290 Ga. App.
293, 297 (2) (a) (659 SE2d 716) (2008). Here, there is no adequate remedy at law
given the nature of the stock in this small, family-owned business, and the explicit
acknowledgment in the Agreement that specific performance was the appropriate
remedy in the event of a breach. Moreover, given the failure of all parties to strictly
follow the terms of either the Agreement or Bylaws, an equitable remedy “considers
that done which ought to be done.” See OCGA § 23-1-8. With this in mind, we turn
to Doss’s substantive claims on appeal.
(a) Whether the trial court properly allowed the defendants’ counterclaim
Doss argues that the trial court abused its discretion when it permitted the
defendants to file an amended counterclaim seeking specific performance of the
Agreement. The trial court did not abuse its discretion.
Here, Doss’s complaint alleged breach of fiduciary duty and tortious
interference against Gary and Phillip. Doss did not originally name Wallace Electric
9
as a defendant, but Wallace Electric was the proper party to demand that Doss sell or
Wallace Electric repurchase Doss’s shares. The amended counterclaim alleged that
Doss wrongfully retained his shares in Wallace Electric despite repeated demands to
sell his shares, and that equity required he be ordered to sell his shares at the 1994
value. OCGA § 9-11-13 (f) provides, “[w]hen a pleader fails to set up a counterclaim
through oversight, inadvertence, or excusable neglect, or when justice requires, he
may by leave of court set up the counterclaim by amendment.” Thus, it was only after
Doss added Wallace Electric that the counterclaim for specific performance became
relevant and applicable in the present suit.
Moreover, given that Doss also seeks specific performance of Wallace
Electric’s obligation to repurchase his shares, there is no prejudice from allowing the
counterclaim. Martin & Jones Produce, Inc. v. Lundy, 197 Ga. App. 38, 39 (2) (397
SE2d 461) (1990) (trial court should liberally allow omitted counterclaim where no
prejudice results). We thus conclude that the trial court properly exercised its
discretion to permit the amended counterclaim. EarthLink, Inc. v. Eaves, 293 Ga.
App. 75, 78 (4) (666 SE2d 420) (2008) (applying abuse of discretion standard of
review to amendment to add counterclaim).
(b) Whether the Agreement was the controlling document
10
Doss next argues that the trial court erred by concluding that the terms of the
Agreement controlled the sale of the shares. We find no error in the trial court’s
determination that the Agreement governed the sale.6
Shareholder agreements are construed according to the principles of the
law of contracts. The cardinal rule of contract construction is to
ascertain the intent of the parties at the time they entered the agreement.
Construction of a contract by the court involves three steps. First, if no
ambiguity appears, the trial court enforces the contract according to its
terms irrespective of all technical or arbitrary rules of construction.
Secondly, if ambiguity does appear, the existence or nonexistence of an
ambiguity is a question of law for the court. Finally, a question arises for
the factfinder only when there appears to be an ambiguity in the contract
which cannot be negated by the court’s application of the statutory rules
of construction.
(Citations and footnotes omitted.) Foster v. Ohlwiler, 266 Ga. App. 371, 375-376 (1)
(b) (597 SE2d 481) (2004). Here, it is clear that the parties intended that a shareholder
return his shares to the company when that shareholder was no longer an employee.
6
We note that the trial court based its ruling that the Agreement controlled on
its erroneous conclusion that the Bylaws had expired before Doss left the company.
Contrary to the trial court’s conclusion, the 20-year validity provision in OCGA § 14-
2-732 does not apply to shareholder agreements in effect prior to the enactment of
this statute. See Ansley v. Ansley, 307 Ga. App. 388, 390 (1) (705 SE2d 289) (2010).
11
To effectuate this intent, however, the parties employed two different contracts with
different terms, and we must determine which of these documents controls: the
Bylaws or the Agreement.
“An existing contract is superseded and discharged whenever the parties
subsequently enter upon a valid and inconsistent agreement completely covering the
subject-matter embraced by the original contract.” (Citation and punctuation omitted.)
Triple Net Properties, LLC v. Burruss Dev. & Constr., Inc., 293 Ga. App. 323, 327
(2) (a) (667 SE2d 127) (2008). Here, the Agreement contradicted Article V of the
Bylaws in the manner of calculating the share valuation at the time of repurchase and
by setting a specific time frame in which the repurchase was to occur. All parties
signed the Agreement, and there is no dispute as to its validity. Thus, because the
valuation as set forth in the Agreement is inconsistent with that set forth in Article V
of the Bylaws, the Agreement superseded this portion of the Bylaws.
(b) Whether Doss breached the Agreement
Doss next argues that the trial court erred in finding that he breached the
Agreement in 1994 by failing to sell his stock back to the company upon his
termination of employment. We conclude that the trial court properly determined that
12
Doss breached the agreement, but that it erred in its analysis of when that breach
occurred.
We begin by noting that, contrary to the trial court’s finding, the Agreement is
an executory contract. See OCGA § 13-1-2 (b) (“An executory contract is one in
which something remains to be done by one or more parties.”); Drennon Food
Products Co. v. Drennon, 101 Ga. App. 606, 607 (1) (114 SE2d 799) (1960). The
Agreement placed an affirmative duty on each party: “the Shareholder . . . shall sell,
and the Corporation shall buy” the former employee’s stock. The contract required
that the shares be repurchased within 60 days of Doss’s departure from Wallace
Electric.
Importantly, however, no one adhered to the Agreement’s contractual
obligation to buy and sell the stock within 60 days of Doss’s termination of
employment in 1994. Before we can address which of the parties breached, we must
consider what effect that failure has on the parties’ obligations.
A waiver may be express, or may be inferred from actions, conduct, or
a course of dealing. Waiver of a contract right may result from a party’s
conduct showing his election between two inconsistent rights. Acting on
the theory that the contract is still in force, as by continuing
performance, demanding or urging performance, or permitting the other
party to perform and accepting or retaining benefits under the contract,
13
may constitute waiver of a breach. However, all the attendant facts,
taken together, must amount to an intentional relinquishment of a known
right, in order that a waiver may exist.
(Citations omitted.) Forsyth County v. Waterscape Svcs., LLC, 303 Ga. App. 623, 630
(2) (a) (694 SE2d 102) (2010). “[W]here, as here, the facts and circumstances
essential to the waiver issue are clearly established, waiver becomes a question of
law.” (Citation and punctuation omitted.) Id.
We may infer waiver where a party’s acts or omissions are “so manifestly
consistent with an intent to relinquish a then-known particular right or benefit that no
other reasonable explanation of his conduct is possible.” (Citation and footnote
omitted.) Eckerd Corp. v. Alterman Props., Ltd., 264 Ga. App. 72, 75 (1) (589 SE2d
660) (2003). Based on the evidence in the record, we conclude that there is no other
reasonable explanation for the parties’ inaction but to infer that the parties’ mutual
failure to adhere to the 60-day repurchase and sale term in the Agreement was a
waiver of the breach and a decision to treat the remaining contract as in force. See
Ansley v. Ansley, 307 Ga. App. 388, 393 (2) (705 SE2d 289) (2010); see also Eckerd
Corp, supra, 264 Ga. App. at 75 (1); Waterscape Svcs., supra, 303 Ga. App. at 630
(2) (a).
14
Having concluded that the 60-day term is no longer part of the contract, we turn
to whether Doss subsequently breached the Agreement. Based on the undisputed
facts, we conclude that Doss breached the Agreement in 2003 when he refused
Phillip’s request to repurchase the stock.
As noted, the Agreement was an executory contract. As such, an attempt by
either party to perform under the contract triggered the other party’s duty to perform.
Drennon Food Products Co., supra, 101 Ga. App. at 607 (1). The first time there was
any discussion regarding the sale of shares was in 2003, when Phillip approached
Doss about selling his stock.
A party seeking specific performance must be ready,
willing, and able to perform all provisions of the contract,
including any payment. But it is a well-established rule that
tender before suit is filed may be and is waived where the
party entitled to payment, by conduct or declaration,
proclaims that, if a tender should be made, acceptance
would be refused.
(Citations, punctuation, and footnotes omitted.) Simpson, supra, 290 Ga. App. at 297
(2) (a). Because the Agreement is an executory contract, Phillip’s request on behalf
of Wallace Electric in 2003 triggered Doss’s obligation to sell, and Doss’s refusal to
comply at that time constituted an anticipatory breach.
15
Doss claims that the defendants were not ready, willing, and able to perform
in 2003 because they did not tender a purchase price. This argument is without merit.
Once Doss unequivocally indicated that he would never sell his stock, the defendants’
obligation to tender payment in 2003 was waived. Simpson, supra, 290 Ga. App. at
297 (2) (a).
Thus, the relevant year for purposes of the breach is 2003, when Wallace
Electric exercised its obligation to repurchase the stock, and Doss refused to sell.7
See, e.g., Capps v. Edwards, 130 Ga. 146 (2) (60 SE 455) (1908) (in executory
contract for sale of stocks, once tender is alleged, refusal to adhere to contractual
7
The defendants also argue that Doss is not entitled to sell his stock at the 2015
value because he has unclean hands. “The doctrine of unclean hands is a
well-established principle. ‘He who would have equity must do equity and must give
effect to all equitable rights of the other party respecting the subject matter of the
action.’ OCGA § 23-1-10. The unclean-hands maxim which bars a complainant in
equity from obtaining relief has reference to an inequity which infects the cause of
action so that to entertain it would be violative of conscience.” (Citation and
punctuation omitted.) Park v. Fortune Partner, Inc., 279 Ga. App. 268, 273 (6) (630
SE2d 871) (2006). Here, none of the parties have clean hands: No party attempted to
adhere to the terms of the Agreement in 1994; Gary and Phillip then made no attempt
to obtain the shares when they gained control of the company in 2000; and, once the
issue was raised in 2003, Doss refused to sell his shares. Given the conduct of all the
parties here, we find that the doctrine of unclean hands does not bar the equitable sale
of the stock.
16
obligation allows suit for damages to recover the value of the stock according to the
contract terms).
2. Doss next contends that the trial court improperly determined the value of
his stock by using the 1994 value and discounting his percentage for minority
interest.8 We agree.
(a) Relevant time period for valuation of stock
Given our conclusion in Division 1 that Doss breached the Agreement in 2003,
the trial court erred in considering Wallace Electric’s value in 1994. The relevant year
for valuation purposes is 2003.
According to the expert testimony at trial, the “fair market value” of Wallace
Electric’s stock in 2003 was $1,834,305. At that time, Doss owned 16.67 percent of
the company, which placed the “fair market value” of Doss’s stock at $305,700.
Because Doss’s 16.67 percent share of the company was not a controlling interest, the
expert applied a minority interest discount to 15 percent, which he testified made
Doss’s shares worth $259,900.
8
The defendants’ expert testified that he used two approaches to calculate the
value and that this was consistent with the Professional Standards and Code of
Professional Conduct of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants. Doss
does not challenge this method on appeal.
17
We note that the Agreement required that the purchase price be the “current
value” of the stock, which the Agreement quantified as $1,806 per share. The
Agreement, however, also called for this figure to be re-evaluated annually – a task
that undisputably was never done. There is nothing in the Agreement that relates
valuation to “fair market value.” Therefore, on remand, the trial court must determine,
in the first instance, whether the parties waived this valuation provision establishing
the current value. If the trial court determines that this provision establishing the
“current value” has been waived, it must then determine how to establish the “current
value.”
(b) Application of a minority interest deduction
The expert explained that the minority interest discount was a factor in
determining the fair market value because the value is “affected by the rights and
privileges that interest has, and a minority interest cannot . . . dictate the course of the
company” thus making the minority interest less valuable. We conclude that the trial
court erred when it discounted the value of the stock based on a minority interest.
In discussing the minority interest discount in dissenting shareholder lawsuits,
this Court explained:
18
[M]inority and marketability discounts should not be applied when
determining the fair value of dissenting shareholders’ stock. [Other]
courts have reasoned that using discounts injects speculation into the
appraisal process, fails to give minority shareholders the full
proportionate value of their stock, encourages corporations to squeeze
out minority shareholders, and penalizes the minority for taking
advantage of the protection afforded by dissenters’ rights statutes.
Reflecting this majority view, the Model Act definition of fair value . .
. now expressly provides that fair value should be determined without
discounting for lack of marketability or minority status. The Official
Comment to the new Model Act explains . . . that valuation discounts for
lack of marketability or minority status are inappropriate in most
appraisal actions, both because most transactions that trigger appraisal
rights affect the corporation as a whole and because such discounts give
the majority the opportunity to take advantage of minority shareholders
who have been forced against their will to accept the
appraisal-triggering transaction . . . . [A]ppraisal should generally award
a shareholder his or her proportional interest in the corporation after
valuing the corporation as a whole, rather than the value of the
shareholder’s shares when valued alone.
(Citations and footnotes omitted.) Blitch v. Peoples Bank, 246 Ga. App. 453, 456-457
(1) (540 SE2d 667) (2000) (discussing minority interest discount in dissenter’s rights
suit). Although the instant case does not arise in the context of a dissenter’s rights
19
suit, we find the logic of our prior holding persuasive. Where, as here, the stock
involves a small, family-owned business, with little marketability, the value of the
shares necessarily accounts for the minority interest without further reduction. Thus,
as Blitch makes clear, the trial court erred in applying a minority interest discount.
The defendants’ reliance on Atlantic States Constr., Inc. v. Beavers, 169 Ga.
App. 584, 588-589 (6) (d) (314 SE2d 245) (1984), to support the trial court’s use of
the discount is unpersuasive, as that case is physical precedent only. Moreover,
Beavers does not hold that a stockholder’s minority interest must be considered;
rather, the opinion warns the trial court to apply the minority interest factor with
caution and explains that the valuation can account for the stock having a lesser value
because of a lack of marketability. Id. at 588-589 (6) (d). Nothing in the record
convinces us that the minority interest reduction should apply because the value
already took into account the lack of marketability.
In summary, on remand, the trial court should determine the value of Doss’s
16.67 percent share of the stock as of 2003 without the minority interest discount and
taking into account that the Agreement provided that the purchase price of the stock
would be “current value.”
20
3. Doss next claims that the trial court’s award constitutes an unconstitutional
taking of his property. Although Doss raised this issue before the trial court, the trial
court did not rule on it. Thus, it is not properly before this Court. City of Brookhaven
v. City of Chamblee, 329 Ga. App. 346, 353 (4) (765 SE2d 33) (2014) (“a
constitutional issue is waived for appellate review where the trial court fails to rule
upon it.”). We recognize that more recent Supreme Court of Georgia cases have
suggested that remand is necessary for the trial court to rule on the constitutional
issue, however, we find remand is unnecessary in this case because the takings
argument is without merit. See id. A trial court’s order issuing an award in a case
pending before it is simply not an unconstitutional governmental taking.
4. Finally, Doss argues that the trial court deprived him of his right to a jury
trial on his claims for breach of fiduciary duty, tortious deprivation, punitive
damages, and attorney fees.
In light of our conclusion in Division 1 that the breach occurred in 2003, the
trial court’s conclusion that the claims were moot is error. From 1994 through 2003,
Doss retained a shareholder interest in Wallace Electric. Thus, his claims for breach
21
of fiduciary duty during this time frame survive, and the trial court must evaluate
them on remand.9
We are mindful that this litigation has been lengthy, and that our Supreme
Court has already remanded this case once for further factual findings. Nevertheless,
we must remand again. We urge the trial court to bring this lengthy dispute to an
expeditious conclusion consistent with the directions in this opinion. Specifically, on
remand, the trial court is instructed to determine the “current” value of the stock as
of 2003, without applying any minority interest discount. Moreover, the trial court
should allow Doss’s claims for breach of fiduciary duty, tortious deprivation of his
interest in the company, and for attorney fees and punitive damages from 1994
through 2003 to proceed.
Judgment vacated and case remanded. Andrews and Rickman, JJ., concur.
9
We express no opinion on the timeliness or merit of those allegations.
22