Newton v. Barth
Newton v. Barth
Opinion
*332 Plaintiffs John Newton, et al., and Diorio Forest Products, Inc., et al., appeal from the trial court's Orders and Judgments dismissing their claims against Defendants John M. Barth, Jr. ("Junior"), and John M. Barth ("Senior"), based on lack of subject matter jurisdiction and failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. Plaintiffs argue that the trial court erred in determining they lacked standing to assert their claims and that their claims were barred by the applicable statutes of limitations. We agree, and we consequently reverse the trial court's Orders and Judgments.
Factual Background and Procedural History
This case arises from two separate class action lawsuits filed in Wake County Superior Court alleging claims for fraud, unfair and *333 deceptive trade practices ("UDTP"), civil conspiracy, and punitive damages against Junior and Senior by the customers, vendors, and suppliers of AmerLink, Ltd., a North Carolina corporation that engaged in the business of selling materials and contracts for the construction of log homes. The Newton Plaintiffs were customers of AmerLink, and the Diorio Plaintiffs were vendors and suppliers of AmerLink. Junior was AmerLink's president and CEO from 2006 to 2008. Senior is Junior's father, and although he never held any formal position with AmerLink, the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs allege that beginning in 2007 and continuing until October 2009, Junior and Senior engaged in a fraudulent scheme to acquire control of AmerLink at a depreciated price by falsifying financial statements and other documents, secretly infusing over $2 million into AmerLink to prop up the corporation and conceal the falsified financial statements, and misrepresenting *657 AmerLink's distressed financial condition.
The facts underlying the allegations of the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs' complaints were previously discussed at length in this Court's opinion in a related action brought against Junior and Senior by AmerLink's founder, chairman, and former majority shareholder, Richard B. Spoor.
See
Spoor v. Barth,
--- N.C.App. ----,
On 12 February 2009, AmerLink filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.
engaged in the creation of new companies and transfer of assets to companies in an effort to sell a substantial portion of [Spoor's] ownership interest in AmerLink. The trustee also alleged that an employee stock option plan was adopted at the urging of [Spoor] and Junior effective 1 October 2005 and that [Spoor], Junior, and AmerLink's directors' actions were solely for the purpose of creating a means for [Spoor] to extract as much cash as possible from the business and for Junior to be in a position to take control of the company. This adversary proceeding was settled on 6 September 2011. The trustee dismissed with prejudice all claims and causes of action against Senior, Junior, and [Spoor]
*658 and released them from claims by the trustee or bankruptcy estate.
That same day, the Newton Plaintiffs filed a complaint in Wake County Superior Court alleging their claims for fraud, UDTP, civil conspiracy, and punitive damages against Junior and Senior in their individual capacities. The Newton Plaintiffs voluntarily dismissed their complaint without prejudice on 23 May 2013, refiled their complaint on 22 May 2014, and filed an amended complaint on 9 June 2014. The Diorio Plaintiffs filed a substantially similar complaint on 30 July 2014. In their complaints, the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs alleged that by infusing funds into AmerLink, falsifying corporate financial statements, and directing AmerLink staff to assure customers, vendors, and suppliers that AmerLink would either comply with its contracts or receive funds that would allow it to comply with those contracts, Junior and Senior intentionally misrepresented and concealed AmerLink's financial distress in order to deceive and induce the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs into entering into contracts with and providing funds, materials, and services to AmerLink, thus leaving them unable to protect themselves from the company's financial problems. The Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs also alleged that they could not have discovered the facts constituting Junior's and Senior's alleged fraud and UDTP through the exercise of reasonable diligence before 1 January 2012, given that much of the information supporting those facts was not produced until after Spoor filed his lawsuit against Junior and Senior. 1
On 11 July and 19 August 2014, our Supreme Court's Chief Justice entered separate orders designating these cases as exceptional pursuant to Rule 2.1 of the General Rules of Practice for the Superior and District Courts. Junior and Senior subsequently filed motions to dismiss both complaints pursuant to Rules 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6) of our State's Rules of Civil Procedure. Specifically, Junior and Senior contended that: (1) the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs lacked standing to sue, thereby depriving the trial court of subject matter jurisdiction, because the claims they alleged in their complaints were wholly derivative of claims that *336 properly belonged to the corporation and were already asserted, litigated, and settled by the adversary proceeding that had been brought by AmerLink's bankruptcy trustee; and (2) the claims were barred by the applicable statutes of limitations, failed to comply with the heightened pleading requirements for alleging fraud as required by N.C.R. Civ. P. 9(b), and otherwise failed to state any basis upon which relief could be granted.
After a hearing held in Wake County Superior Court on 2 March 2015, the Honorable Robert T. Sumner, Judge presiding, the trial court concluded that the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs lacked standing and that their claims were barred by the applicable statutes of limitations, and consequently dismissed their claims with prejudice by written orders entered 8 and 18 June 2015. The Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs filed timely notice of appeal to this Court.
Analysis
A. Standing
The Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs argue first that the trial court erred in dismissing their claims against Junior and Senior based on its conclusion that they lacked standing to sue. Specifically, the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs contend that the adversary proceeding filed by the AmerLink bankruptcy trustee does not preclude their claims for fraud, UDTP, civil conspiracy, and punitive damages against Junior and Senior in their *659 individual capacities because these claims were never asserted during the adversary proceeding and because these claims belong to the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs, rather than the AmerLink bankruptcy estate. We agree.
"In order for a court to have subject matter jurisdiction to hear a claim, the party bringing the claim must have standing."
Revolutionary Concepts, Inc. v. Clements Walker PLLC,
"When a corporation enters bankruptcy, any legal claims that could be maintained
by the corporation
against other parties become part of the bankruptcy estate, and claims that are part of the bankruptcy estate may only be brought by the trustee in the bankruptcy proceeding."
Keener Lumber Co. v. Perry,
The North Carolina Supreme Court has recognized that, as a general matter, a corporate officer "can be held personally liable for torts in which he actively participates," even when such torts were "committed when acting officially" and "regardless of whether the corporation is liable."
Wilson v. McLeod Oil Co., Inc.,
[s]hareholders, creditors, or guarantors of corporations generally may not bring individual actions to recover what they consider their share of the damages suffered by the corporation. Recovery is available, naturally, when the defendant owes an individual shareholder, creditor, or guarantor a special duty, or when the individual suffered an injury separate and distinct from that suffered by other shareholders, creditors, or guarantors.
*338
Barger v. McCoy Hillard & Parks,
In the present case, the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs do not allege that Junior or Senior owed them any special duty, so our analysis on the standing issue focuses solely on whether the injuries they have alleged are personal and belong to them. During the hearing on their motion to dismiss and in their briefs and oral arguments to this Court, Junior and Senior argued that the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs lacked standing to bring these claims because the harms they alleged were generalized injuries to AmerLink and had already been litigated by the bankruptcy estate trustee during the adversary proceeding. However, this Court rejected a strikingly similar argument in
Spoor v. Barth,
where we reversed the trial court's grant of summary judgment in favor of Junior and Senior, based in part on our conclusion that the court erred in concluding that Spoor lacked standing to bring suit.
See
Spoor,
---N.C.App. at ----,
Here, the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs' claims against Junior and Senior in their individual capacities arise from essentially the same set of facts as alleged in Spoor -namely, the cash infusions and falsified financial statements Junior and Senior engaged in throughout 2008 to conceal AmerLink's financial distress, as well as Junior's repeated assurances to Spoor and AmerLink's staff, customers, vendors, and suppliers that the company would receive additional funds and continue to perform its contractual obligations. As in Spoor, despite characterizations by Junior and Senior to the contrary, there is no indication in the record before us that the AmerLink bankruptcy trustee brought or settled any action related to, or ever discovered, the facts underlying these allegations.
Junior and Senior nevertheless contend that, unlike in
Spoor,
the injuries the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs allege are injuries to AmerLink itself, shared by all its creditors, and therefore properly belonged to the bankruptcy trustee. In support of their argument, Junior and Senior rely on cases holding that bankruptcy estate creditors were barred from suing third parties for injuries arising from pre-bankruptcy conveyances of corporate assets because such fraudulent conveyances and preferential transfers resulted in injuries to the corporations themselves, and thus, were injuries shared in common by every creditor to the bankruptcy estate, for which federal law expressly vests the trustee with exclusive standing to bring suit.
See, e.g.,
Nat'l Am. Ins. Co. v. Ruppert Landscaping Co.,
We are not persuaded. To be sure, the allegations in the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs' complaints do relate to conduct that undoubtedly harmed AmerLink itself. However, the gravamen of the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs' fraud and UDTP claims is not merely that they were injured by AmerLink's collapse and the resulting breach of its
*340
contractual obligations to them, but instead that they
never would have suffered any injury
if they had not been fraudulently induced into entering into contracts with AmerLink as a result of misrepresentations made by AmerLink staff acting at Junior's direction throughout 2008, when Junior was already aware of the company's financial distress. In their complaints, the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs detail how each member of their respective classes of AmerLink's customers, vendors, and suppliers relied on the alleged misrepresentations when entering into their individual contracts with AmerLink on various dates and for varying amounts, thereby resulting in injuries to themselves in their individual capacities. Junior and Senior argue that these alleged injuries are not separate and distinct because nearly every creditor of AmerLink had a contract that AmerLink breached, and they complain that if the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs have standing to pursue their claims, then so could every other creditor exposed to AmerLink's financial distress, which they insinuate would undermine the central purpose of bankruptcy to provide an orderly process for disposing of claims against the estate. But this argument ignores the fact that the United States Supreme Court expressly contemplated exactly this sort of creditor class action suit when it reasoned in
Caplin
that there was no need to empower a bankruptcy trustee to bring actions on behalf of creditors against third parties because " Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which provides for class actions, avoids some of the[ ] difficulties" that would ensue from allowing individual creditors to sue separately.
Caplin,
B. Statute of limitations
The Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs argue next that the trial court erred in granting Junior's and Senior's Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss their claims because they failed to bring suit within the applicable statute of limitations. We agree.
*341
This Court reviews
de novo
an order dismissing an action pursuant to N.C.R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6).
See
State Emps. Ass'n of N.C., Inc. v. N.C. Dep't of State Treasurer,
*662
"Dismissal is warranted if an examination of the complaint reveals that no law supports the claim, or that sufficient facts to make a good claim are absent, or that facts are disclosed which necessarily defeat the claim."
"In general a cause or right of action accrues, so as to start the running of the statute of limitations, as soon as the right to institute and maintain a suit arises."
Pierson v. Buyher,
In the trial court, Junior and Senior argued that the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs' actions were barred by the statute of limitations
*342
since they should have discovered the conduct underlying their fraud and UDTP claims in December 2008 when AmerLink closed its doors, because it was clear at that point that AmerLink would breach its contractual obligations to them. We rejected a similar argument in
Spoor.
There, we reversed the trial court's grant of summary judgment in favor of Senior based on a lapse of the statute of limitations, reasoning based on our Supreme Court's holding in
Forbis
that because the evidentiary forecast presented a genuine issue of material fact as to when Spoor discovered or should have discovered the alleged fraudulent conduct, the issue was one for the jury's determination. - -- N.C.app. at ----,
Here, we reach a similar result. The Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs are suing for fraud and UDTP based on a conspiratorial course of conduct by Junior and Senior that they allege began in 2007, continued until at least August 2009, and could not have been discovered until 1 January 2012. While the injuries the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs suffered may have been apparent once they learned that AmerLink could not perform its contractual obligations in December 2008, our General Statutes make clear that the statute of limitations is triggered not upon discovery of an injury, but upon "the discovery by the aggrieved party of the facts constituting the fraud...." N.C. Gen.Stat. § 1-52(9). We find it difficult to discern how AmerLink's mere act of closing its doors somehow laid plain the existence of a fraudulent scheme that the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs allege had not even been completed yet, especially in light of the fact that neither the AmerLink bankruptcy trustee, who brought the adverse proceeding, nor the United States Attorney, who prosecuted Junior for bankruptcy fraud, discovered the actions underlying these claims, either. In their complaints, the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs allege that as corporate outsiders, they could not have discovered any of the facts underlying their claims before Spoor, a corporate insider, exposed them by filing his
*663
initial complaint against Junior in October 2011 and his first amended complaint adding Senior as a defendant in February 2012. Taking these allegations as true-as we must, given the procedural posture of this case,
see
State Emps. Ass'n of N.C., Inc.,
These two arguments both depend on the validity of Senior's argument that the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs also failed to properly plead their claims for civil conspiracy. Our case law makes clear that "to state a claim for civil conspiracy, a complaint must allege a conspiracy, wrongful acts done by certain of the alleged conspirators, and injury."
Norman v. Nash Johnson & Sons' Farms, Inc.,
*344 The acts and agreements of [Senior] and [Junior] constitute a civil conspiracy, which existed for wrongful acts to be committed, and which were actually committed, by said [Senior] and [Junior] for the purpose of said civil conspiracy.
Senior contends these allegations are conclusory and legally insufficient because they fail to allege any specific details of any conspiratorial agreement he made with Junior. This argument fails, however, because it ignores the fact that the relevant paragraphs in both complaints expressly incorporate all prior allegations made, including,
inter alia,
that Junior and Senior "acted in concert and each acted as the agent of the other in a plan or scheme" to acquire Spoor's majority stake in AmerLink. The complaints also provide dozens of paragraphs of allegations extensively
*664
detailing the specific actions both Junior and Senior took over a period of several years to further this scheme by concealing AmerLink's financial distress, as well as Junior's directions to AmerLink staff throughout 2008, when he knew the company was nearly insolvent, to continue entering into contracts with the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs and to assure them that AmerLink had or would soon receive funds that would allow it to honor its contractual obligations to them. The allegations in both complaints further outline the specific dates when the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs entered their contracts and the specific amounts of damages suffered by each member of the class when Junior's and Senior's scheme finally unraveled. Because the complaints are "replete with allegations of a conspiracy by and between the defendants, acts done by some or all of the defendants in furtherance of that alleged conspiracy, and injury" to the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs, we reject Senior's argument that their complaints failed to state a claim for civil conspiracy.
Norman,
Accordingly, we hold that the trial court erred in dismissing the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs' complaints, and that its Orders and Judgments must be, and hereby are,
REVERSED.
Judges McCULLOUGH and ZACHARY concur.
Although Spoor was included as a plaintiff in the initial complaints filed by both the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs, the Newton and Diorio Plaintiffs voluntarily dismissed Spoor without prejudice from both actions on 15 October 2014.
Although
Caplin
was decided prior to the enactment of the federal Bankruptcy Code, it remains good law,
see, e.g.,
E.F. Hutton & Co., Inc. v. Hadley,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John NEWTON, Harry Schatmeyer, Cheryl Schatmeyer, Juanvelasquez, Robert Thompson, Kristi Thompson, Dale F. Camara, A.J. Rice, Violane Rice, Randall Slayton, Marie Paladino, Marcar Enterprises, Inc., Maynard Sikes, Nancy Sikes, Billy Bacon, Beverly Bacon, Sabina Houle, Kenneth Cournoyer, Lawanna Cournoyer, Gary Gross, Elke Gross, Jack Donnelly, and Joseph Kintz, on Behalf of Themselves and All Persons Similarly Situated, Plaintiffs, Richard B. Spoor, Plaintiff, v. John BARTH, Jr., and John Barth, (SR.), Defendants. Diorio Forest Products, Inc., 919 Marketing Company, Inc., and James B. Enterprises, Inc., Formerly Epperson Lumber Sales, Inc., on Behalf of Themselves and All Entities Similarly Situated, Plaintiffs, and Richard B. Spoor, Plaintiff, v. John Barth, Jr., and John Barth (Sr.), Defendants.
- Cited By
- 15 cases
- Status
- Published