Dunhill Holdings

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 1, 2022
Docket20-384
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Dunhill Holdings, (N.C. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

2022-NCCOA-125

No. COA20-384

Filed 1 March 2022

Durham County, No. 17 CVS 3710

DUNHILL HOLDINGS, LLC, Plaintiff/ Counterclaim Defendant,

v.

TISHA L. LINDBERG, Defendant/ Counterclaim Plaintiff,

TISHA L. LINDBERG, Third-Party Plaintiff,

GREG LINDBERG, Third- Party Defendant.

Appeal by plaintiff/ counterclaim defendant and third-party defendant from

order entered 1 August 20201 by Judge Orlando F. Hudson, Jr. in Superior Court,

Durham County. Heard in the Court of Appeals 27 April 2021.

Fox Rothschild LLP, by Matthew Nis Leerberg and Kip D. Nelson, for plaintiff/counterclaim defendant-appellant and third-party defendant- appellant.

1 This 2020 date reflects the file stamp on the order on appeal, but the order was actually rendered in 2019. No party disputes this. We know the date of the order’s rendering was 2019 because the original and amended notices of appeal from the order are all from August 2019. DUNHILL HOLDINGS, LLC V. LINDBERG

Opinion of the Court

Zaytoun Ballew & Taylor, PLLC, by Matthew D. Ballew, Robert E. Zaytoun, John R. Taylor, and N. Cole Williams for defendant/ counterclaim plaintiff, third-party plaintiff-appellee.

STROUD, Chief Judge.

¶1 Appellants, Dunhill Holdings, LLC (“Dunhill”) and Greg Lindberg, appeal from

an order imposing sanctions on them for discovery violations and, pursuant to a

previous opinion from this Court in this case, from a discovery order requiring them

to submit their electronic devices for forensic examination. Because we find the trial

court did not abuse its discretion in imposing sanctions and did not err in its choice

of sanctions in most respects, we affirm in part. We vacate in part and remand

because two paragraphs of the ordered sanctions are inconsistent with the remainder

of the order or improperly bar objections, including objections for attorney-client

privilege. Finally, since we affirm the relevant parts of the sanctions order, we

dismiss the forensic examination issue as moot.

I. Background

¶2 This is the second appeal to this Court in this case. The first appeal concerned

an order from 27 June 2018 (“June 2018 Order”) that, inter alia, ordered Appellants

to make certain electronic devices available for a forensic examination to determine

if any relevant emails were deleted. Dunhill Holdings, LLC v. Lindberg, No. COA18-

1112, 270 N.C. App. 820, *7, *10–11 [hereinafter “Dunhill I”] (unpublished). The DUNHILL HOLDINGS, LLC V. LINDBERG

prior appeal dismissed the case “without deciding whether the appeal [was] an

interlocutory appeal that does not affect a substantial right” and “refer[red the

forensic examination issue] to the panel of this Court that will decide Dunhill and

Greg E. Lindberg’s appeals of the discovery order and the sanctions order together.”

Dunhill I at *12. Based upon the prior opinion, this panel must address the sanctions

order, and we will also address the discovery order at issue in the prior appeal. 2 Id.

The prior ruling from this Court is the law of the case and thus binds us. See, e.g.,

North Carolina Nat. Bank v. Virginia Carolina Builders, 307 N.C. 563, 567, 299

S.E.2d 629, 631 (“[O]nce a panel of the Court of Appeals has decided a question in a

given case that decision becomes the law of the case and governs other panels which

may thereafter consider the case.”). We therefore recount the facts and procedural

history from Dunhill I and only include additional details where necessary to

understand the sanctions order that was not before this Court in the prior appeal.

¶3 Dunhill I summarizes the initiation and pre-discovery occurrences in this

lawsuit:

Dunhill Holdings, LLC (“Dunhill”) filed a complaint against Tisha L. Lindberg, as well as four former

2We also note that both Dunhill and Mr. Lindberg specifically incorporated the arguments made in their prior appeal through footnotes in their briefs in this appeal, thereby avoiding any potential preservation issue. DUNHILL HOLDINGS, LLC V. LINDBERG

employees of Dunhill on 24 July 2017.[3] According to Dunhill, the company is owned by Greg E. Lindberg, who is “the founder and sole manager and member of Dunhill.” Greg E. Lindberg and Tisha L. Lindberg married on 19 September 2003 and separated on 22 May 2017. In its amended complaint filed 24 August 2017, Dunhill described Tisha L. Lindberg as Dunhill’s “Chief Executive Officer”; however, she denied this characterization in her answer, saying that “while [Mr.] Lindberg purported to call [her] the ‘C.E.O.’ of [Dunhill] on occasion, [Dunhill] never employed [Tisha L.] Lindberg in any capacity and [Dunhill] was merely a vehicle through which [Greg E.] Lindberg funded the personal lifestyle of the parties and their family . . . .” Dunhill described itself as a “real estate holding company” in its amended complaint and the primary asset owned by Dunhill was the family home of Greg E. Lindberg and Tisha L. Lindberg on Stagecoach Drive in Durham, North Carolina. In its amended complaint, Dunhill claimed Tisha L. Lindberg took funds from Dunhill and it asserted claims against her for breach of fiduciary duty, constructive fraud, civil liability for theft and embezzlement, civil conspiracy, conversion and an action for accounting, in addition to claims for unjust enrichment, disgorgement, and civil conspiracy against the other Defendants. In her answer, Tisha L. Lindberg moved to dismiss Dunhill’s complaint for failure to state a claim for which relief may be granted under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 12(b)(6), denying various allegations of Dunhill and asserting affirmative defenses of breach of fiduciary duty by Greg E. Lindberg, fraud, constructive fraud, equitable estoppel, waiver, ratification, actual authority, and laches. She also filed a third-party complaint against Greg E. Lindberg and counterclaim against Dunhill, seeking “all

3 In November 2017, the trial court granted each of the four employees’ motions to dismiss for failure to state a claim pursuant to Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A- 1, Rule 12(b)(6) (2017). DUNHILL HOLDINGS, LLC V. LINDBERG

right, title, and interest in the Key West House” and “all right, title, and interest in the tennis complex” Greg E. Lindberg allegedly promised to give her. Tisha L. Lindberg subsequently filed an amended third-party complaint against Greg E. Lindberg and a counterclaim against Dunhill, asserting breach of fiduciary duty, constructive fraud, indemnity, declaratory relief, abuse of process, malicious prosecution, intentional infliction of emotional distress, spoliation of material evidence, and for a constructive trust over the tennis court. In her amended third-party complaint and counterclaim, Tisha L. Lindberg alleged Dunhill was merely an “alter-ego” of Greg E. Lindberg and was therefore liable for his actions. Dunhill and Greg E. Lindberg did not file an answer to Tisha L. Lindberg’s counterclaim and third-party complaint or her amended counterclaim and third-party complaint, instead filing a motion to dismiss each complaint.

Dunhill I at *2–4. These motions to dismiss were later denied.

¶4 Before Appellants’ motions to dismiss had been ruled on, Dunhill and Ms.

Lindberg proceeded with discovery:

Dunhill served Tisha L. Lindberg with its first request for production of documents on 24 October 2017 and she replied with objections and responses on 22 December 2017. On 26 February 2018, Tisha L. Lindberg submitted her first set of interrogatories and request for production of documents to Greg E. Lindberg and Dunhill.

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