Beichle v. Rohrbough

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedDecember 13, 2019
Docket120074
StatusUnpublished

This text of Beichle v. Rohrbough (Beichle v. Rohrbough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beichle v. Rohrbough, (kanctapp 2019).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 120,074

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

SHARON K. BEICHLE and LARRY C. BEICHLE, Trustees of the SHARON K. BEICHLE TRUST and the LARRY C. BEICHLE TRUST; TAMI PRESTON and JAY PRESTON; and LORI BLAIR, Appellees,

v.

JOHN ROHRBOUGH and TYDD ROHRBOUGH, Appellants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Saline District Court; PAUL J. HICKMAN, judge. Opinion filed December 13, 2019. Affirmed.

Patrick J. Doran, of Doran Law Office, of Kansas City, Missouri, for appellants.

Derek S. Casey, of Triplett Woolf Garretson LLC, of Wichita, for appellees.

Before MALONE, P.J., STANDRIDGE and WARNER, JJ.

PER CURIAM: The parties in this case are all members of the same family. Plaintiffs Sharon Beichle, Tami Preston, and Lori Blair are sisters of defendant John Rohrbough. Plaintiff Larry Beichle is married to Sharon Beichle. Plaintiff Jay Preston is married to Tami Preston. Defendant John Rohrbough is married to Bernita Rohrbough, but Bernita is not a party to this lawsuit. Finally, John and Bernita have an adult son named Tydd Rohrbough, who is John's codefendant in this suit.

1 Following a bench trial, the district court granted judgment in favor of the Beichles and the Prestons (appellees) on their breach of contract and fraud claims, all of which arose from their financial dealings with John and Tydd (appellants). On appeal, the appellants raise several points of error and make a claim of insufficient evidence. For the reasons stated below, we affirm the district court's decision.

FACTS

In 2002, the appellants formed Cornhusker Energy Lexington, LLC (CEL) for the purpose of constructing and operating an ethanol plant near Lexington, Nebraska. They sought initial investments from family and friends. In October of that year, the appellees each agreed to invest $200,000, for a total of $400,000, into the newly formed company with the understanding that they would become members of CEL. The investment money was paid into CEL's US Bank account in Omaha, Nebraska, on October 11, 2002, and was held there, along with money from other sources, while the appellants attempted to raise additional funds to further capitalize the venture.

In 2003, the appellees both agreed to convert their equity investment in CEL to a debt secured by assets, including real estate, owned by CEL. Accordingly, on June 30, 2003, CEL executed two $200,000 promissory notes, one for the Prestons and one for the Beichles, and CEL secured each note with deeds of trust on real estate owned by CEL.

CEL continued to seek additional investors and, in 2004, ultimately found a number of private equity and venture capitalist firms willing to finance the ethanol operation. As a condition of that financing, however, the firms wanted to restructure CEL so that it became the operating company for the ethanol facility. CEL would then become a wholly owned subsidiary of a newly established Delaware holding company— Cornhusker Energy Lexington Holdings, LLC (CELH). The firms did not want the appellants' friends and family to remain involved in CELH, so they required CEL to

2 repay the $400,000 in loans made by the appellees under the June 30, 2003 promissory notes and established minimum eligibility requirements for future investors in CELH.

The appellees wanted to remain involved in the appellants' ethanol venture, but they could not qualify as accredited individual investors under the new minimum eligibility requirements. Because the minimum investment eligibility requirements for corporations were different than the requirements for an individual, CEL's attorney Brian Harr established an entity named Ludvig PBR, LLC, through which the appellees could invest in CELH. A business bank account in Ludvig's name was opened at Security National Bank in Omaha. To allow the appellees to reinvest, John told the appellees that as soon as they received the loan repayment from CEL, they immediately should transfer that money to the Ludvig bank account. There were no documents, records, or testimony introduced at trial to establish who held an ownership interest in Ludvig. Blair signed the company's operating agreement as the manager but said she did so because it would be a "conflict of interest" for the appellees to be the manager/signer on the account. Although Blair lived in Wichita, the mailing address on the account was identified as John's home address in Nebraska.

Around this same time period, Bernita called Blair and told her "that they had a spot for $20,000" in their ethanol venture if she was interested in investing. Blair said she was interested, and after that conversation she borrowed $20,000 from her local bank to fund her investment. Blair gave that money to her brother-in-law Jay and testified that she thought it was being directly invested into the appellants' ethanol venture. Like her siblings, however, Blair did not qualify as an accredited individual investor; therefore her money actually was deposited into the Ludvig bank account. Blair's bank records indicated that the transfer of funds was completed on October 28, 2004.

The restructuring of CEL was completed on October 29, 2004. In what has been described as a "perk" for being early investors in Cornhusker Energy, the restructuring

3 agreement provided the appellees each with 64,786 common ownership units in CELH. The restructuring agreement set aside 436,250 ownership units of CELH to Ludvig. The CELH operating agreement was signed by: (1) Tydd, individually and as trustee for three trusts; (2) John; (3) the Prestons; (4) the Beichles; and (5) Blair, as the manager of Ludvig.

The restructuring agreement included payments to the appellees to satisfy the June 30, 2003 promissory notes. The payments were scheduled for October 29, 2004, as part of the closing transaction, but the transfers were delayed due to circumstances beyond the parties' control. The appellees received the payoff on November 2, 2004, and, as instructed by John, they immediately wire transferred those funds into the Ludvig bank account. On November 3, 2004, a check for $436,250 was drawn from the Ludvig account. This check appears to represent Ludvig's payment for the ownership units in CELH that were set aside for the entity at the October 29, 2004 closing. The check purportedly was signed by Blair, but she denied issuing it.

On the same day as the closing, the appellants prepared and signed four $100,000 promissory notes, one for each of the appellees. Those promissory notes "contained the following provisions:

"a. John Rohrbough and Tydd Rohrbough, individually, were the Makers, who undertook the obligation stated 'jointly and severally'; "b. The Holders of the promissory note were Sharon K. Beichle and Larry C. Beichle as Trustees for the Sharon K. Beichle Trust [Sharon K. Beichle and Larry C. Beichle as Trustees for the Larry C. Beichle Trust; Jay Preston; and Tami Preston]; "c. The principal amount of the promissory note was $100,000.00; "d. The promissory note bore interest at 25.00% per annum (not compounded); "e. The interest commenced on November 1, 2004;

4 "f. No payment was due until the fifth anniversary of the note (October 29, 2009) or the sale of the assets, business, operations, or majority of outstanding units of CEL or CELH; "g. The Makers agreed to pay the Holders attorney's fees and costs to enforce the note; and "h. The note was governed by Nebraska law to be enforced in Dawson County, Nebraska."

The promissory note expressly stated that it was secured by a pledge agreement, which was executed on the same day as the note. That pledge agreement provided, in relevant part, as follows:

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