Duncan v. Moreno Energy, Inc.

129 So. 3d 849, 13 La.App. 3 Cir. 668, 2013 WL 6492252, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 2531
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 11, 2013
DocketNo. 13-668
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 129 So. 3d 849 (Duncan v. Moreno Energy, Inc.) 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
Duncan v. Moreno Energy, Inc., 129 So. 3d 849, 13 La.App. 3 Cir. 668, 2013 WL 6492252, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 2531 (La. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

AMY, Judge.

hThe plaintiff, a minority shareholder in a corporation, alleges that the majority shareholder, and others, breached fiduciary duties he alleges were owed to him as a shareholder. In particular, he contends that those actions resulted in the devaluation of his initial ownership interest in the corporation. The plaintiff additionally advanced causes of action in fraud and breach of contract. Following a bench trial, the trial court granted motions for involuntary dismissal in favor of the defendants. The plaintiff appeals. For the following reasons, we affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

This matter involves a series of corporate actions involving three distinct corporate entities. The plaintiff, Robert Duncan, was initially the majority shareholder in 3-D Directional Drilling, Inc. Charlie Hodges and Michel1 Moreno were also significant shareholders in the corporation.

In late 1997 and early 1998, Mr. Moreno sought to merge his company Moreno & Associates, Inc., along with 3-D Directional Drilling and Dynamic Industries, Inc., into one entity, Moreno Energy Services, Inc. (MES). MES distributed stock reflective of each shareholder’s contribution to the newly formed corporation, whether through ownership interest in one of the predecessor companies, or by capital contribution. As pertinent to this matter, MES issued 875,000 shares of common stock to Mr. Moreno and 50,000 shares to Williams Rucks, IV (in exchange for a capital contribution). MES further issued Series B Preferred Stock, assigning that stock a $100 par value. Mr. Duncan received 18,000 shares of the Series B Preferred Stock and Mr. Hodges received 6,000 [¡.shares of that stock. Ray Flores, a shareholder in the predecessor company, Moreno & Associates, Inc., also received Series B Preferred Stock, as did others.

As a component of the merger, Mr. Duncan and Mr. Hodges executed employment agreements with MES to continue in their work functions in its directional drilling division. The employment agreements included salary provisions as well as non-competition provisions.

Following the 1998 merger, Mr. Moreno served as the Chief Executive Officer and President of the newly formed MES. He further performed the day-to-day operations of the corporation and, per the terms of his employment agreement, was “responsible for the development and execution of short-term and long-term plans and goals in all functional areas of the Company!,]” among other duties. The employment agreement further required that his actions were “reviewable by requisite action of the Board and shareholders of the Company in accordance with the Articles of Incorporation, the By-Laws of the Company, and applicable law[.]”

[851]*851Testimony and documentary evidence indicate that, following the roll-up merger, MES faced financial difficulties during the subsequent two-year period, including those faced by the 3-D Directional Drilling division. In attempting to relieve MES of the liabilities associated with 3-D Directional Drilling, negotiations commenced for the assets and liabilities of that division to be carved from the company and sold to 3-D Acquisition Company, LLC. In pursuit of that transaction, both Mr. Duncan and Mr. Hodges signed a September 1999 agreement whereby they were released from non-competition agreements cited above. In return, Mr. Duncan and Mr. Hodges agreed for MES to have the right to convert their shares of Series B Preferred Stock into MES common stock. As seen below, |3the question of whether MES abided by the terms of that agreement, with regard to conversion, is at issue herein.

In October 1999, as reflected in an Asset Purchase Agreement entered into evidence, the operations of the former 3-D Directional Drilling were terminated and all assets sold to 3-D Acquisition. A contemporaneously confected Amendment to Employment and Stock Purchase Agreement terminated Mr. Duncan’s and Mr. Hodges’ employment with MES so that the two could begin employment with 3-D Acquisition. The amended agreement formally terminated the non-competition agreement, as well as other restrictions. After that point, neither Mr. Duncan nor Mr. Hodges performed further services for MES. Both, however, retained their shares of Series B Preferred Stock in the company.

Testimony reflects that MES continued in financial difficulty through the subsequent period and was unable to meet certain obligations with its lenders. Mr. Moreno testified that he did not draw a salary for several years. However, the Directors of MES issued stock bonuses to Mr. Moreno on four occasions (August 31, 2001, August 31, 2002, January 31, 2004, and August 18, 2004) to reflect his ongoing efforts to reduce MES’s indebtedness and turn it toward profitability.

The record reveals that MES took certain steps to convert Mr. Duncan’s and Mr. Hodges’ Series B Preferred Stock to MES common stock. By August 2001 letter, MES counsel informed the former shareholders of the ongoing financial difficulties and management’s desire to have the MES balance sheet “cleaned up” in order keep the company viable and attractive to investors. The letter explained that Mr. Moreno would like “to retire the Series B Preferred Stock ($100 par value) |4in MES[.]”2 [852]*852The letter requested that the men submit an offer to sell their shares to MES. Both men testified that they did not respond to the letter’s requests.

In November 2001, Mr. Moreno again requested by letter that Mr. Duncan and Mr. Hodges sell their stock to MES. He opined that the stock was “worth little, if anything” and that it could “remain on the books forever without any payments unless there is a public offering, which, as you are aware, is highly unlikely in the foreseeable future.” However, Mr. Moreno requested to purchase the stock in order to simplify the MES balance sheet, making the business more attractive for potential investors. Mr. Moreno proposed to buy Mr. Duncan’s 1 ¿18,000 shares for $20,000 and to forgive his “verbal commitment to reimburse the $40,000” that Mr. Moreno had “originally invested in 3-D[.]” Mr. Moreno proposed to purchase Mr. Hodges’ 6,000 shares for $20,000. He further noted that, if they rejected the offer, MES’s primary lender asked all shareholders to complete financial statements. Again, neither Mr. Duncan nor Mr. Hodges complied with Mr. Moreno’s requests.

Subsequently, in December 2003, MES amended its Articles of Incorporation to allow for, among other things, conversion of Series B Preferred Stock to common stock. MES notified Mr. Duncan and Mr. Hodges of its intent to exercise its right to convert their respective shares into common stock. Thereafter, both Mr. Duncan and Mr. Hodges signed an “Agreement to Accept Common Shares in Exchange for Series B Preferred Shares” dated January 5, 2004. By that agreement, Mr. Duncan “agree[d] to accept 60,000 shares of common stock of [MES] in exchange for the 18,000 shares of Series B Preferred Stock” held by him. Mr. Hodges accepted 20,000 shares of MES common stock in exchange for his 6,000 shares of Series B Preferred Stock.

Ultimately, in July 2005, and pursuant to the short form merger provisions of La.R.S. 12:112(G), MES merged into a newly formed corporation, Moreno Energy Services, Inc. (MEI). By resolution, the MEI board of directors approved the merger of MES into MEI and the cessation of MES.

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129 So. 3d 849, 13 La.App. 3 Cir. 668, 2013 WL 6492252, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 2531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duncan-v-moreno-energy-inc-lactapp-2013.