2815 Grand Realty Corp. v. Goose Creek Energy, Inc.

656 F. Supp. 2d 707, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84107, 2009 WL 2982935
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Kentucky
DecidedSeptember 14, 2009
Docket5:08-mc-00186
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 656 F. Supp. 2d 707 (2815 Grand Realty Corp. v. Goose Creek Energy, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
2815 Grand Realty Corp. v. Goose Creek Energy, Inc., 656 F. Supp. 2d 707, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84107, 2009 WL 2982935 (E.D. Ky. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

KAREN K. CALDWELL, District Judge.

This matter is before the Court on four Motions to Dismiss filed by all eight of the Defendants (DE 17-20); a Motion for Summary Judgment (DE 16) filed by the Plaintiff; two motions to strike (DE 35 and 41); and a Motion for Leave to File a 47-page response brief filed by the Plaintiffs (DE 38). The Court will address each motion below.

*710 I. BACKGROUND.

The Plaintiffs are minority shareholders in a corporation. This action is largely based on their claim that the officers, directors and controlling shareholder of the corporation have been involved in self-dealing transactions and otherwise mismanaged the corporation.

The Plaintiffs’ claims and the current motions before the Court are, however, complicated by the fact that the parties either disagree about which of two corporations the Plaintiffs hold stock in or the Plaintiffs are uncertain as to which of the two companies they hold stock in. The Plaintiffs either hold stock in the Defendant Goose Creek Energy, Inc. (“Goose Creek”) or Goose Creek Energy Holdings, Inc. (“GC Holdings”).

The Plaintiffs’ claims and the current motions before the Court are also complicated by the Plaintiffs’ liberal use of the collective term “Defendants” throughout their Complaint, making it difficult to determine which claims they are asserting against which of the eight Defendants.

In sorting through the pending motions, for reasons to be explained below, the Court has presumed that the Plaintiffs assert they may be stockholders in Goose Creek or GC Holdings. The Court has also reviewed the entire Complaint and the pleadings pertaining to the pending motions to determine which claims the Plaintiffs are asserting against which Defendants and has noted its conclusion on this issue in Section D Below.

A. The Plaintiffs.

In their Complaint, the Plaintiffs allege they are investors in an endeavor to mine, process and sell coal from seven mines located in eastern Kentucky. (DE 1, ¶ 13). The Plaintiffs further assert that they are shareholders of Defendants Goose Creek, GC Holdings or both. (DE ¶ 45).

B. The Defendants.

There are eight Defendants in this matter: four corporate defendants and four individuals. Two of the corporate defendants are Goose Creek and GC Holdings. The Plaintiffs allege that GC Holdings is the parent company of Goose Creek control and that the two companies control and operate the seven mines at issue. (DE 1, ¶ 13).

A third corporate defendant is Uriah Bement Coal, Inc. (“UB Coal”). The Plaintiffs allege that it is the majority shareholder of Goose Creek (DE 1, ¶ 31) and GC Holdings (DE 1, ¶ 54). The Plaintiffs allege that UB Coal formed Goose Creek on October 31, 2006 to raise money to buy the mines and a coal processing facility from a company called Eastern Fuels. (DEI, ¶ 16).

The fourth corporate defendant is T Squared Partners, LLC (“TSP”). The Plaintiffs charge that it was retained by UB Coal to manage its initial public offering. (DE^31).

As to the four individual defendants, the Plaintiffs charge that the individual Defendants John and Tracy Grounds are directors or officers of Goose Creek, GC Holdings, and UB Coal. (DE 1, ¶ 6). The Plaintiffs charge that the Groundses also own a controlling share of UB Coal. (DE 1, ¶ 15).

The Plaintiffs charge that the individual Defendant Chad Jensen was a TSP employee or owner and was also an officer of UB Coal. (DE 1 ¶ 31). As to the eighth Defendant, Mark Jensen, the Plaintiffs assert that he was a TSP agent or employee. (DE 1 ¶ 31).

*711 C. The Events.

The Plaintiffs assert that representatives of Goose Creek and UB Coal solicited the Plaintiffs’ investment in Goose Creek. (DE 1 ¶ 17). The Plaintiffs assert that they purchased five percent of Goose Creeks’ outstanding stock. (DE ¶ 18).

They further assert that the securities purchase agreement between them and Goose Creek stated that Goose Creek would issue 100,000 shares and there would be no subsequent increase in authorized shares without the unanimous approval of all shareholders or unless issuing additional shares would not dilute the ownership percentages of the current shareholders. The Plaintiffs assert they never consented to the issuance of additional stock in Goose Creek and that they have never received additional Goose Creek shares to counteract the dilutive effect on their ownership percentage of a subsequent issuance of shares. (DE ¶ 19).

The Plaintiffs assert that the security purchase agreement guaranteed them quarterly dividend payments from the company’s net operating income. (DE ¶ 20).

The Plaintiffs assert that, after they invested in Goose Creek, Mr. Grounds and UB Coal formed a new company GC Holdings. They assert that Grounds solicited the Goose Creek shareholders to swap their Goose Creek stock for GC Holdings stock. (DE ¶ 22). The Plaintiffs assert that Goose Creek never issued stock certificates for the originally purchased shares. (DE ¶ 33). The Plaintiffs assert they never entered into any written agreement to swap their Goose Creek stock for GC Holdings stock. (DE ¶ 33). The Plaintiffs assert that the Defendant GC Holdings nevertheless issued them stock certificates. (DE ¶ 33).

The Plaintiffs also appear to assert that they were some how informed that Goose Creek required additional financing to pay off its debt to Eastern Fuels arising from its purchase of the coal mines and processing facility. (DE ¶ 23). The Plaintiffs assert that Plaintiff Primsky wrote John Grounds asking for corporate records including all board minutes and a description of the financing structure for a proposed $3.75 million loan to Goose Creek. The Court assumes that Primsky requested corporate records for Goose Creek and GC Holdings. (DE ¶ 24). The Plaintiffs assert that Goose Creek and GC Holdings failed to provide any of the requested information. (DE ¶ 24).

The Plaintiffs assert that Goose Creek reported that it obtained a $3.75 million loan, the proceeds of which were used to pay large consulting or loan origination fees and to pay off the remaining $2.5 million debt to Eastern Fuels. (DE ¶ 26).

The Plaintiffs assert that Grounds later issued a report to GC Holdings investors explaining the reasons for the company’s continuing losses. The Plaintiffs assert that Grounds encouraged the GC Holdings shareholders to swap their stock for stock to be issued by UB Coal as part of its imminent initial public offering. (DE ¶ 29).

The Plaintiffs assert that they elected to retain their shares in Goose Creek. (DE ¶ 30). They assert that Goose Creek later released financial statements reporting consistent monthly losses totaling $360,550. (DE ¶ 34). The Plaintiffs assert that, in response to their inquires regarding the operations of Goose Creek, John Grounds admitted that Goose Creek was being operated as a subsidiary of UB Coal and that Goose Creek did not have a separate board of directors or financial controls. (DE ¶ 37).

*712

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
656 F. Supp. 2d 707, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84107, 2009 WL 2982935, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/2815-grand-realty-corp-v-goose-creek-energy-inc-kyed-2009.