David M. Dooley, Sr. v. Branch Banking & Trust Company

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 25, 2017
DocketCA-0017-0121
StatusUnknown

This text of David M. Dooley, Sr. v. Branch Banking & Trust Company (David M. Dooley, Sr. v. Branch Banking & Trust Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
David M. Dooley, Sr. v. Branch Banking & Trust Company, (La. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

17-121 C/W 16-766

DAVID M. DOOLEY, SR., ET AL.

VERSUS

BRANCH BANKING & TRUST CO., ET AL.

********** APPEAL FROM THE FIFTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF ACADIA, DOCKET NO. 2016-10436 HONORABLE PATRICK MICHOT, PRESIDING **********

SYLVIA R. COOKS JUDGE

*********

Court composed of Sylvia R. Cooks, Shannon J. Gremillion, and Van H. Kyzar, Judges.

AFFIRMED; WRIT DENIED; AND MOTION TO STRIKE DENIED.

Gerald C. deLaunay Oscar E. Reed, Jr. Perrin, Landry, deLaunay P.O. Box 53597 Lafayette, LA 70505 (337) 237-8500 ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFFS/APPELLANTS David M. Dooley, Sr. and Gerald deLaunay

W. Michael Adams Robert W. Johnson Timothy R. Wynn Blanchard, Walker, O’Quin & Roberts, APLC 333 Texas Street, Suite 700 P.O. Drawer 1126 (318) 221-6858 ATTORNEY FOR DEFENDANTS/APPELLEES Branch Banking & Trust Co., Hallwood Financial Limited, Hallwood Modular Buildings, LLC and Frederick J. Gossen, Jr. Michael J. Remondet Jill B. Wade Jeansonne & Remondet 200 West Congress Street, Suite 1100 P.O. Box 91530 Lafayettte, LA 70509 (337) 237-4370 ATTORNEY FOR DEFENDANTS/APPELLEES: Branch Banking & Trust Co., Hallwood Financial Limited, Hallwood Modular Buildings, LLC and Frederick J. Gossen, Jr. COOKS, Judge.

From 1999 to 2014, MB Industries, L.L.C. (MBI) was in the business of

manufacturing and selling blast-resistant buildings. MBI’s affiliate, MBI Leasing,

L.L.C. (MBI Leasing), leased blast-resistant buildings. Up until October of 2011,

Frederick Gossen, Jr., served as the president of both MBI and MBI Leasing.

David M. Dooley, Sr., served as the CEO of both companies. Gossen and Dooley

also served as the companies’ managers and they both owned equity in the

companies either directly or through their family trusts and holding companies.

MBI and MBI Leasing suffered significant financial losses in 2010 and

2011, and were in default on a $17 million debt to Capital One Bank. Dooley

negotiated a deal with Hallwood Financial Limited (HFL) whereby HFL agreed to

purchase an eighty percent (80%) interest in MBI Leasing, L.L.C. in a contract

styled the Membership Interest Purchase Agreement. The parties agreed that

Dooley would retain a nine percent (9%) membership interest in MBI Leasing.

Further, HFL agreed to help refinance the debts of MBI and MBI Leasing. To

assist with the debt owed to Capital One, HFL arranged for Branch Banking &

Trust Company (BB&T) to provide a $20 million line of credit to MBI Leasing.

At a closing in October 2011, the parties signed various closing documents,

including a MBI Leasing Operation Agreement, a Pledge Agreement, and a Carmel

Companies Realignment Agreement (Realignment Agreement). Pursuant to the

Realignment Agreement, Dooley sold all of his interest, with the exception of the

aforementioned nine percent (9%) interest in MBI Leasing, in a group of

companies known as the Carmel Companies. In the Pledge Agreement, MBI

Leasing’s equity owners pledged to BB&T their membership interests in MBI

Leasing as security for the line of credit which BB&T had provided. Thus,

Dooley’s nine percent interest in MBI Leasing was pledged to BB&T. As

consideration, Dooley received a $2.75 million promissory note from MBI, $250,000.00 in cash, and salary and benefits for Dooley’s wife, son and son-in-

law.

On February 15, 2013, Dooley filed a “Suit on Promissory Note” in the

Fifteenth Judicial District Court for Acadia Parish, seeking payment from MBI

Leasing, which has now become Hallwood Modular Buildings, LLC (HMB), on

the $2.75 million promissory note. Nearly one year from the filing of that suit

(hereafter referred to as the “First State Court Action”), Dooley amended the

petition adding numerous defendants, including Gossen and HFL. In the amended

petition Dooley claimed the agreements entered into should be rescinded because

he and his family were not paid pursuant to the Realignment Agreement. Dooley

also asserted his consent to the Realignment Agreement was vitiated due to fraud

or error. Specifically, it was asserted that after Dooley signed the Realignment

Agreement, various defendants secretly altered the language in the agreement such

that Dooley’s claims under the promissory note were made subordinate to other

indebtedness owed by MBI Leasing. A second amending petition was filed adding

Dooley’s family members and family trusts as plaintiffs (hereafter the Dooley

plaintiffs).

On October 2, 2014, MBI Leasing was placed into involuntary bankruptcy in

the United States Bankruptcy Court, Western District of Louisiana (hereafter

Bankruptcy Court), and the First State Court Action was automatically stayed

pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 362. The Dooley plaintiffs then filed a Motion to Sever

their claims against MBI Leasing (now HMB), so they could proceed against the

remaining defendants. The Dooley plaintiffs then filed a Motion for Partial

Summary Judgment against all defendants (except MBI Leasing), seeking

rescission of the Realignment Agreement. In response, HFL and HMB filed a

motion to strike both the Motion to Sever and the Motion for Partial Summary

2 Judgment. They also requested the court “stay the matter pending the outcome of

the bankruptcy proceedings of [MBI Leasing].”

On April 28, 2015, the trial court rendered judgment granting HFL’s and

HMB’s motion to strike the Dooley plaintiffs’ motions. The court also specifically

held the “matter is stayed until further notice from the Bankruptcy Court.” This

court, finding “no error in the trial court’s ruling,” denied the Dooley plaintiffs’

writ application. David M. Dooley, Sr. v. MB Industries, LLC, 15-460 (La.App. 3

Cir. 2015).

Meanwhile in Bankruptcy Court, on January 21, 2015, the Dooley plaintiffs

filed a Motion for Relief from Stay in the MBI Leasing bankruptcy case,

requesting the automatic stay be lifted to allow them to proceed with the state

district court suit. They maintained this would allow them to “prosecute claims

pending in state court in which [MBI] is a party and obtain relief.” On March 10,

2015, the Bankruptcy Court denied the Motion for Relief from Stay. On that same

day, the Dooley plaintiffs filed a “Complaint to Rescind and Dissolve Contract,

and for Damages” in Bankruptcy Court. This commenced the currently pending

adversary proceeding, David M. Dooley, Sr., et al. v. MB Industries, L.L.C., et al.,

in the United States Bankruptcy Court, Western District of Louisiana. On April 8,

2015, the Dooley plaintiffs also filed four Proofs of Claim covering the claims for

damages and rescission.

Several months later, a Writ of Mandamus and/or Writ of Quo Warranto was

filed by some of the Dooley plaintiffs in the Fifteenth Judicial District Court. In

this state court action, a determination was sought as to whether the transaction had

been “extrajudicially” rescinded. The Bankruptcy Court enjoined the state court

action, finding it was an “attempt to impermissibly collaterally attack this

[Bankruptcy] Court’s prior order staying denying relief from the automatic stay.”

3 On May 6, 2016, Dooley, along with his attorney, Gerald C. deLaunay, filed

the present suit for declaratory judgment in the Fifteenth Judicial District Court,

naming as defendants, BB&T, HFL, HMB and Gossen. Among the assertions was

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