Charter Services, Inc. v. Dl Air, LLC

711 F. Supp. 2d 1298, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 45177, 2010 WL 1904457
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Alabama
DecidedMay 7, 2010
DocketCivil Action 09-00281-KD-N
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 711 F. Supp. 2d 1298 (Charter Services, Inc. v. Dl Air, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Charter Services, Inc. v. Dl Air, LLC, 711 F. Supp. 2d 1298, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 45177, 2010 WL 1904457 (S.D. Ala. 2010).

Opinion

ORDER

KRISTI K. DuBOSE, District Judge.

This matter is before the Court on the Motion for Summary Judgment filed by Defendants Central Progressive Bank, Blossman Bancshares, Inc. and Richard Blossman (Docs. 30-32), 1 Plaintiffs’ response in opposition (Docs. 34, 35) and Defendants’ Reply thereto (Doc. 38).

I. Relevant Background

A. Procedural History

On May 20, 2009, this case was removed to this Court on the basis of federal diversity subject matter jurisdiction. 2 (Doc. 1). On April 30, 2010, based on the plaintiffs’ notice of voluntary dismissal, the following claims were dismissed: Count One (Breach of Contract) of the Complaint against Defendants Blossman Bancshares, Inc., Central Progressive Bank, Inc. and Richard Blossman; 3 and Count Two (Breach of Guarantee) of the Complaint against Defendants D.L. Air, LLC, Blossman Bancshares, Inc., Central Progressive Bank, Inc. and Richard Blossman.

*1300 B. Factual History

This case arises from a contractual agreement relating to the lease of usage of aircraft between Plaintiff Mobile Fractional Leasing, LLC (“MFL”)' 4 and DL Air, LLC (“DL Air”), 5 and a contractual agreement for management services incident to that lease between Plaintiff Charter Services, Inc. (“Charter”) 6 and DL Air. Plaintiffs allege that DL Air failed to make payments under the terms of the renewals of these agreements and that Defendants Central Progressive Bank (“CPB”), 7 Blossman Bancshares (“BB”) 8 and/or Richard Blossman (“Blossman”) 9 — none of which were parties to the Agreements — are liable for DL Air’s failure to pay. Specifically, Plaintiffs argue that CPB, BB and Blossman are liable under theories of piercing the corporate veil/alter ego and promissory fraud.

On May 23, 2002, Blossman purchased 100% of the membership interest in DL Air, which at that time owned an airplane. (Doc. 31-3 at 6-7 (Dep. Blossman at 24, 26); Doc. 31-5). Prior to the agreements with Plaintiffs, DL Air sold the airplane. (Doc. 31-3 at 7 (Dep. Blossman at 27-28)). DL Air does not presently own assets or real property apart from some cash assets in checking accounts at CPB. (Id. at 7-8 (Dep. Blossman at 28-29)).

On September 22, 2006, Plaintiff MFL and DL Air entered into an Aircraft Lease Agreement through which MFL subleased a fractional portion of use of an aircraft to DL Air. (Doc. 31-1 at 3 (Dep. Brown at 11-12); Doc. 31-3 at 8 (Dep. Blossman at 29-30); Doc. 31-6 (9/22/06 Aircraft Lease Agreement)). According to Brown, MFL’s owner, “[i]t’s a direct lease between [MFL] and D.L. Air or [CPB], I *1301 have what’s called a head lease with Charter [ ] and the right to lease the plane by billable hours, and so ... I guess it’s a sublease.” (Doc. 31-1 at 3 (Dep. Brown at 12)). Blossman signed the Aircraft Lease Agreement on behalf of DL Air and Brown signed on behalf of Plaintiff MFL. (Doc. 31-6 at 11; Doc. 31-1 at 3 (Dep. Brown at 11); Doc. 31-3 at 8 (Dep. Blossman at 29-30)). The Aircraft Lease Agreement was for a term of one (1) year; it expired on September 21, 2007. (Doc. 31-6 at 3; Doc. 31-1 at 4 (Dep. Brown at 15-16)).

Even though the Lease Agreement was between MFL and DL Air, Brown testified that he “never dealt with anybody except [CPB] ... Every payment I received was from [CPB] ... and ... my account .... said [CPB], and all the checks continued to come from [CPB] on one of their checks. So it was always [CPB] to me. But this contract says what it says [DL Air].” (Doc. 31-1 at 4 (Dep. Brown at 13)). Brown testified that there was a signed contract between MFL and CPB before the MFL-DL Air agreement and that he was “not entirely certain under which contract we were dealing under.” (Id. (Dep. Brown at 14)). Brown testified though, that “every payment” came from CPB and “I don’t know what Blossman Bancshares’ relationship is to [CPB] ... I never got a cheek that said this is coming from Blossman Bancshares.” (Id. at 8 (Dep. Brown at 29)).

Also on September 22, 2006, DL Air entered into an Aircraft Management Agreement with non-party GulfShares Management, LLC (“GulfShares”), under which GulfShares was to provide flight crews, insurance, maintenance and other services on the aircraft DL Air was subleasing from MFL. GulfShores was the party to the contract but Charter performed all the services under the contract (GulfShares outsourced the performance of its obligations under the contract to Charter). (Doc. 31-2 at 3, 7 (Dep. Marks at 11, 26-27); Doc. 31-3 at 8 (Dep. Blossman at 29-30); Doc. 31-7 (9/22/06 Aircraft Management Agreement)). Marks, owner of Charter and GulfShares, testified that the contract was originally entered into between GulfShares and CPB; CPB later requested the name change to DL Air in the contract. (Doc. 31-2 at 4 (Dep. Marks at 16)). In the contract at issue, however, Blossman signed the Aircraft Management Agreement on behalf of DL Air and Marks signed on behalf of non-party GulfShares. (Doc. 31-7 at 11). The Aircraft Management Agreement was for a term of one (1) year; it expired on September 21, 2007. (Doc. 31-2 at 3 (Dep. Marks at 12-13); (Doc. 31-7 at 1-2)). MFL was not a party to the Aircraft Management Agreement. (Doc. 31-1 at 5 (Dep. Brown at 17)). According to Marks, Charter received payments from BB and CPB accounts for services rendered under DL Air’s contract. (Doc. 31-2 at 3 (Dep. Marks at 17)).

During the original one (1) year term of both the Lease and Management Agreements, DL Air sublet or chartered its use of the aircraft to CPB and occasionally to BB, and in return, CPB and BB paid for their actual use of the aircraft (CPB paid the standard monthly payments that DL Air owed under the terms of the Lease and Management Agreements). (Doc. 31-3 at 8 (Dep. Blossman at 31); Doc. 31-4 at 2-4 (Dep. Faciane at 8-10, 13-14, 16)).

Plaintiffs issued the first invoice to DL Air. (Doc. 31-2 at 5 (Dep. Marks at 19-20)). On September 27, 2006, however, Blossman requested via BB letterhead that Charter send all invoices to CPB (instead of DL Air). (Doc. 31-8; Doe. 31-3 at 8-10 (Dep. Blossman at 31-35, 40)). See also (Doc. 31-2 at 5-6 (Dep. Marks at 19-20, 23)). CPB President Faciane was not involved in that decision. (Doc. 31-4 at 8-10 (Dep. Faciane at 31-32, 36-37)). *1302 Marks testified that CPB asked to make the payments for DL Air and so they did. (Id. at 4 (Dep. Marks at 23)). Ail invoices were subsequently paid by CPB or BB instead of DL Air. (Doc. 34 at 2; Doc. 31-1 at 4-6 (Dep. Brown at 16, 19-24)).

Both CPB and BB used the aircraft for business purposes. (Doc. 31-3 at 11-12 (Dep.

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Bluebook (online)
711 F. Supp. 2d 1298, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 45177, 2010 WL 1904457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charter-services-inc-v-dl-air-llc-alsd-2010.