MARTIN C. CARLSON, Magistrate Judge.
The plaintiffs, Lewis J. Grill and Carmela C. Grill, husband and wife, as minority shareholders of the Sage Corporation, commenced this action on January 23, 2012, seeking injunctive relief against Sage and its President and majority shareholder, Gregg R. Aversa. In the original complaint, the Grills claimed that Aversa was mismanaging Sage, engaging in corporate malfeasance, and indulging in shareholder oppression. The Grills accordingly sought equitable relief in the form of a court order requiring defendants to produce, or permit plaintiffs, their agents, and representatives, to gain access to corporate records in accordance with Pennsylvania law. (Doc. 1.)
Following initial proceedings in this case, including a motion for preliminary injunction brought by Lewis Grill, which unsuccessfully sought reinstatement of his employment at Sage after he was discharged by Aversa,
Aversa and Sage have responded to this wholesale assault upon their corporate governance and conduct by, inter alia, bringing a third-party complaint against Atlantic Pacific Resource Group, Inc., (APRG), a corporation owned and operated by the Grills. (Doc. 51.) This third-party complaint alleges that the Grills and APRG have engaged in corporate misconduct by surreptitiously diverting corporate opportunities and revenues of Sage in the consulting and expert witness fields to their own benefit. (
Presently, this matter is scheduled for trial on September 29, 2014. In anticipation of this trial the defendants have filed a motion in limine, which seeks to exclude the testimony of an expert witness, WithumSmith+Brown PC, from the trial of this case. (Doc. 126.) This proffered expert testimony would relate to a valuation of the Grills' minority stock holdings in Sage Corporation, a matter which may be relevant to the Court in fashioning relief in this case in the event that it finds in favor of the plaintiffs.
Because we deem this evidence to be potentially relevant to the issues in this litigation, this motion in limine will be denied.
Parties often invite courts to make pre-trial rulings on issues of prejudice, relevance and admissibility through motions in limine. The United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has cautioned, however, that "pretrial [rulings regarding evidentiary] exclusions should rarely be granted. . . . Excluding evidence as being more prejudicial than probative at the pretrial stage is an extreme measure that is rarely necessary, because no harm is done by admitting it at that stage."
This case aptly illustrates why caution is appropriate in this field. The parties' competing submissions in this matter, in part, cast this dispute as one which entails the balancing of questions of relevance and prejudice. Rule 401 of the Federal Rules of Evidence defines relevant evidence broadly as:
Fed. R. Evid. 401. Rule 402 provides, further, that all "relevant" evidence shall be admissible at trial, except as otherwise provided by other Rules of Evidence or other law. Fed. R. Evid. 402.
These broadly fashioned rules regarding relevant evidence and its presumptive admissibility are tempered by Rule 403, which provides that:
Fed. R. Evid. 403.
Implicit in these evidentiary rules is a fundamental concept: Determinations of relevance, probative value, and unfair prejudice involve an informed assessment of the impact of particular proof in the specific factual context of a specific case. For these reasons, "pretrial [rulings regarding evidentiary] exclusions should rarely be granted. . . . Excluding evidence as being more prejudicial than probative at the pretrial stage is an extreme measure that is rarely necessary, because no harm is done by admitting it at that stage."
In this case the proffered expert testimony may assist the Court is assessing a value of the plaintiffs' stock holdings in Sage Corporation. Establishing a value for these stock holdings, in turn, could potentially be relevant to the Court at the remedial phase of this litigation, if the plaintiffs carry their burden of proof on the questions of liability, since one potential remedy in the event of a finding of minority shareholder oppression would be to direct that the minority shareholder be reimbursed for "the fair value of his interest in the corporation."
For the foregoing reasons, the defendants' motion in limine relating to the testimony of WithumSmith+Brown, (Doc. 126.) is DENIED.