Buke, LLC v. Cross County Auto Sales, LLC

CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 23, 2014
Docket32,559
StatusPublished

This text of Buke, LLC v. Cross County Auto Sales, LLC (Buke, LLC v. Cross County Auto Sales, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buke, LLC v. Cross County Auto Sales, LLC, (N.M. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

Opinion Number: _______________

Filing Date: April 23, 2014

Docket No. 32,559

BUKE, LLC,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

CROSS COUNTRY AUTO SALES, LLC, CROSS COUNTRY AUTO SALES WESTSIDE, LLC, SOUTHWEST AUTO WHOLESALE, LLC, CAS, LLC, JOHN CHIADO, JOE CHIADO, JOHN T. REILLY, BEDO, LLC, JOHN PERNER, and PERNER AND MICHNOVICZ, LLC,

Defendants-Appellees.

APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY Ted Baca, District Judge

Modrall, Sperling, Roehl, Harris & Sisk, P.A. John J. Kelly Michelle A. Hernandez Kevin D. Pierce Albuquerque, NM

for Appellant

Law Office of Jane B. Yohalem Jane B. Yohalem Santa Fe, NM Law Office of Chris Key Chris Key Albuquerque, NM

for Appellees Cross Country Auto Sales, LLC; Cross Country Auto Sales Westside, LLC; Southwest Auto Wholesale, LLC; CAS, LLC;

1 John Chiado; John T. Reilly, and BEDO, LLC

Law Office of Jack Brant, P.C. John M. Brant Jeannie Hunt Albuquerque, NM

for Appellees John Perner and Perner and Michnovicz, LLC

OPINION

VANZI, Judge.

{1} This lawsuit arises from a dispute concerning the use of certain assets of Plaintiff- Appellant BUKE, LLC (BUKE), a limited liability company (LLC) car dealership, by BUKE’s manager, Randall Eastburg, who was also a member of BUKE and of Defendant LLC car dealerships. Rounding out the named Defendants are other members of Defendant LLC car dealerships, along with a certified public accountant (CPA) and his accounting firm.

{2} The case involves many players, claims, and contentions, but resolution of the central issues raised in this appeal turns primarily on one disputed point—whether Eastburg had the requisite consent to use the assets in question. We conclude that the only reasonable conclusion to be drawn from the undisputed material facts is that he did, so we affirm the district court’s summary judgment rulings in favor of Defendant LLC car dealerships and their members. We also affirm the district court’s entry of summary judgment dismissing the accountant malpractice claim and its denial of BUKE’s motion to amend the scheduling order.

I. BACKGROUND

A. The Parties

{3} BUKE was formed in 2005 with the following members: Brian Urlacher (32.5%), Turner and Margaret Branch (20%), Bryce Karger (15%), and Randall and Lisa Eastburg (32.5%).1

{4} Defendants fall into three groups: (1) Albuquerque used car dealerships Cross Country Auto Sales Eastside, LLC and Cross Country Auto Sales Westside, LLC, along with Albuquerque wholesale dealership Southwest Auto Wholesale, LLC (collectively, Cross

1 The parties do not mention Margaret Branch and Lisa Eastburg, other than to initially note the fact of their membership in BUKE. Accordingly, “Branch” refers to Turner Branch and “Eastburg” to Randall Eastburg.

2 Country LLCs); (2) Cross Country LLCs’ members: John T. Reilly and BEDO, LLC (BEDO), which consists of six members of the Chiado family, two of whom are also named Defendants (collectively, Cross Country Members)2; (3) John Perner, a CPA who provided services to BUKE and the Cross Country LLCs, and his accounting firm, Perner and Michnovicz (collectively, the Accountants).

B. The Undisputed Material Facts

1. Eastburg’s Relationships With the Parties

{5} Eastburg was an experienced owner and operator of car dealerships, who operated the Cross Country LLCs since 1998. Eastburg continued to be a member of the Cross Country LLCs and to operate those dealerships after he became involved with BUKE in 2005. All of BUKE’s members were aware of Eastburg’s involvement with the Cross Country LLCs.

{6} Eastburg was also a member and manager of a used car dealership in Lovington, New Mexico called “Brian Urlacher Cross Country Auto Sales LLC” (Lovington Dealership), in which Urlacher and Karger had an ownership interest. Turner Branch was the only BUKE member who did not hold a membership interest in the Lovington Dealership.

2. Eastburg’s Management and Use of Certain BUKE Assets

{7} BUKE selected Eastburg to be its sole manager at its inception in 2005, and Eastburg held that position until 2009. As discussed further below, BUKE’s operating agreement (Operating Agreement) prohibited BUKE’s members from participating in “the control, management, direction or operation” of BUKE’s affairs and gave BUKE’s manager (Eastburg) “the exclusive right to manage all of” BUKE’s affairs, subject to certain limitations.

{8} In 2006, BUKE bought the assets of a General Motors (GM) new car dealership in Tucumcari, New Mexico (Tucumcari Dealership) and named it “Brian Urlacher Cross Country Autoplex.” As a GM franchisee (via the Tucumcari Dealership), BUKE had access to GM “credentials,” also known as a “badge,” which allowed BUKE to purchase low- mileage GM vehicles at closed GM auctions (GM Badge). BUKE also had a General Motors Acceptance Corporation (GMAC) credit line (also known as a “floor plan”), which allowed BUKE to finance the vehicles it purchased at low interest rates (Credit Line).

{9} Eastburg testified that access to the GM Badge and Credit Line was one of the reasons he wanted to become involved with the Tucumcari Dealership. The Tucumcari

2 Eastburg was also a member of the Cross Country LLCs. As discussed below, BUKE dismissed its claims against Eastburg.

3 Dealership’s former owner was aware that Eastburg was going to use the GM Badge during the management contract period. Eastburg told Karger that he was going to use the GM Badge to purchase vehicles for the Cross Country LLCs, although he does not recall discussing use of the GM Badge or Credit Line for this purpose with Urlacher or Branch. Karger did not object, although some details of that conversation are disputed: Karger testified that, during their conversation, Eastburg promised that the Cross Country LLCs would pay BUKE $500 for each vehicle it purchased using the GM Badge, while Eastburg said that he does not remember making this promise and that he never would have made it because that amount would be excessive. The Cross Country LLCs never paid BUKE a per- vehicle fee.

{10} Once BUKE began operating the Tucumcari Dealership in 2006, Eastburg arranged with one of BUKE’s employees to obtain GM Badges for himself and others working for him to purchase vehicles at closed GM auctions. BUKE’s employees understood that Eastburg was authorized to do so. Thereafter, Eastburg used the GM Badges to purchase and sell vehicles for BUKE, the Lovington Dealership, and the Cross Country LLCs. Eastburg also arranged with BUKE’s employees for the Cross Country LLCs to reimburse BUKE for the vehicles that were purchased for them at GM auctions on the Credit Line. The Cross Country LLCs’ lender, New Mexico Bank & Trust, was aware that Eastburg was purchasing vehicles for the Cross Country LLCs on BUKE’s Credit Line.

{11} Eastburg publicized that he was using the GM Badge and Credit Line to purchase vehicles for all of the dealerships he operated. For instance, in March 2007, Eastburg gave an interview for an article published in the New Mexico Business Weekly. That article discussed all of the dealerships Eastburg operated, referring to them collectively as “Cross Country” notwithstanding their different ownerships. It also stated that “[t]he GM Tucumcari deal is huge because it will give Eastburg access to all GM auto auctions, as well as to GM financing for his inventory of cars, both new and used.” BUKE posted the article on its website. Eastburg also spoke openly to Albuquerque newspapers about “moving inventory between the various stores with which [he] was affiliated[.]”

3.

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Buke, LLC v. Cross County Auto Sales, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buke-llc-v-cross-county-auto-sales-llc-nmctapp-2014.