Carlisle v. Keith

614 S.E.2d 542, 169 N.C. App. 674, 2005 N.C. App. LEXIS 800
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedApril 19, 2005
DocketCOA04-819
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 614 S.E.2d 542 (Carlisle v. Keith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carlisle v. Keith, 614 S.E.2d 542, 169 N.C. App. 674, 2005 N.C. App. LEXIS 800 (N.C. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

*676 BRYANT, Judge.

William H. Carlisle (plaintiff) appeals an order filed 15 March 2004, dismissing all causes of action against N. Deane Brunson (defendant) pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6).

Procedural History

On 22 April 2003, plaintiff filed an amended complaint against defendants Fletcher G. Keith (Keith), Cecilia K. Smith (Smith), Margaret M. (Peggy) Keith (Peggy Keith), N. Deane Brunson (Brunson), Stonehaven, Inc. (Stonehaven), W.O.L., Inc. (WOL), and K&K Real Estate, Inc. (K&K), alleging Carious causes of action.

• Against Brunson, plaintiff asserted claims for breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, negligent misrepresentation, civil conspiracy, and constructive fraud. Each of the defendants, with the exception of WOL, filed a motion to dismiss, and in the alternative, a motion for a more definite statement. Brunson filed his motion to dismiss on 11 July 2003.

On 9 February 2004, plaintiff and Brunson served memoranda of law pertaining to the motions to dismiss, and on 10 February 2004, plaintiff filed a single page amendment to his amended complaint. This matter came for hearing at the 11 February 2004 civil session of Mecklenburg County Superior Court with the Honorable W. Erwin Spainhour presiding. By order filed 15 March 2004, the trial court granted Brunson’s motion to dismiss. The trial court certified, pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 54(b), that its order granting Brunson’s motion was a final judgment as to Brunson and that there was no just reason for delay for the purpose of appeal.

Plaintiff filed timely notice of appeal.

Facts

The facts according to plaintiff are as follows: On 1 February 1989, defendant Keith and Ray Hollowell formed Hatteras Island Plaza Partnership (HIPP) pursuant to the North Carolina General Partnership, Act for the purpose of developing property in Dare County, North Carolina. Defendant Smith became owner of a 1.5% interest in HIPP on 9 April 1992. On 15 June 1993, Hollowell resigned his interest in HIPP, and plaintiff became owner of a 49.25% interest in the partnership. Brunson, an attorney licensed to practice law in North Carolina, acted as the attorney for HIPP and represented the *677 partnership and its individual partners in both partnership and personal matters.

Hatteras Island Plaza

Consistent with its plan to develop property, HIPP purchased a shopping center on 16 May 1991 for $2.2 million and named the property Hatteras Island Plaza (HIP). Plans were formulated to develop the entire tract of land in several phases to compliment the existing grocery store and to include other shops, restaurants, a drug store, and cinema. Financing was arranged and an appraisal ordered by First Union National Bank. The appraiser, John McCracken, prepared two appraisals, one in February 1996 in which he valued HIP at $2.1 million and the second approximately one month later in which he valued HIP at $2.8 million.

Although Keith was aware of both appraisals, plaintiff was not informed of the second higher appraisal by Keith or by any other defendant to this action. Subsequently, Keith requested a third appraisal, which was completed in September 1996 by Raspberry & Associates (the Raspberry appraisal). Raspberry & Associates valued the property between $9.3 and $11 million once HIP was completed. Keith, Smith, and Brunson were aware of the results of the Raspberry appraisal, but neither informed plaintiff of the request for nor the results of the appraisal.

In December 1996, the partners of HIPP sought to refinance the HIPP First Union National Bank debt with BB&T Bank (BB&T) by obtaining a loan on behalf of HIPP. Keith, without notifying plaintiff, submitted only the first appraisal of $2.1 million to BB&T. Brunson wrote a title opinion letter to BB&T on behalf of HIPP, and BB&T subsequently refinanced the existing debt of HIPP.

The accounting and bookkeeping for HIPP was being conducted by Metro Management Co. (Metro) which is owned by defendant Peggy Keith, wife of defendant Keith. One of Metro’s employees was Virginia Goodrum whose primary job was to handle various accounting duties for plaintiff.

One month after the refinancing in January 1997, Keith offered Virginia Goodrum $10,000.00 if she could persuade plaintiff to sell his interest in HIP. Keith advised Goodrum that plaintiff would never willingly sell his interest in the property to defendant Keith. Goodrum subsequently proposed to plaintiff that he sell his interest in HIP to *678 defendant Stonehaven, a North Carolina corporation incorporated on 3 February 1997. Because plaintiff believed that Keith was also selling his interest in HIP to Stonehaven, he agreed to the sale.

No one disclosed to plaintiff that Keith was a shareholder and an officer in Stonehaven, and that Smith was owner of a 1.5% interest in Stonehaven. Also, no one disclosed to plaintiff that Stonehaven and Metro maintained identical places of business, and that Metro handled the accounting and bookkeeping services for Stonehaven and even collected rents from tenants at HIP for Stonehaven before Stonehaven ever owned the HIP property.

Keith, Peggy Keith, Smith, and Brunson all failed to inform plaintiff that Keith and Smith had ownership interests in Stonehaven. In fact, plaintiff asked Brunson if he knew anything about the purchaser (Stonehaven), and Brunson replied that he did not. Notably, Brunson was acting as attorney for Stonehaven and HIPP and its partners, including plaintiff, and Brunson and Keith, Smith and Peggy Keith also withheld this information from plaintiff.

Nine days after its incorporation on 11 February 1997, Stonehaven borrowed $3.2 million from BB&T to assume the existing loan from BB&T to HIPP. With the money, Stonehaven purchased HIP from the partners of HIPP for $3.2 million, well below its estimated value of $9.3 to $11 million. Keith, Peggy Keith, Smith, and Brunson knew that the value of HIP was more than the $3.2 million purchase price but did not inform plaintiff of this information. Prior to the closing, Keith and Peggy Keith signed personal guaranties to BB&T for the loan to Stonehaven and withheld this information from plaintiff. A copy of an indemnity agreement whereby Keith absolves the president of Stonehaven from any liability was placed in Brunson’s HIPP file.

From the closing proceeds, Brunson was paid $7,000.00 by Stonehaven as buyer of HIP and $3,000.00 by HIPP as seller of HIP. Settlement statements were generated by Brunson whereby Keith signed as both “seller” of his interest in HIP and “buyer” as a representative of Stonehaven. Brunson also prepared a fraudulent statement, distributed by Brunson to plaintiff, showing that real estate commissions of $128,000.00 were paid to Elm Realty.

Elm Realty, in fact, was a fictitious company and did not generate any real estate commissions for the sale of HIP. The $128,000.00 commission to Elm Realty was never paid by Brunson out of his trust *679 account or any other account, but instead was kept by defendant Stonehaven and later distributed to Keith.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
614 S.E.2d 542, 169 N.C. App. 674, 2005 N.C. App. LEXIS 800, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlisle-v-keith-ncctapp-2005.