FA ND Chev, LLC v. Kupper

CourtDistrict Court, D. North Dakota
DecidedOctober 6, 2025
Docket1:20-cv-00138
StatusUnknown

This text of FA ND Chev, LLC v. Kupper (FA ND Chev, LLC v. Kupper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. North Dakota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
FA ND Chev, LLC v. Kupper, (D.N.D. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NORTH DAKOTA FA ND CHEV, LLC and FA ND SUB, ) LLC, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) ORDER v. ) ) Robert Kupper; Bismarck Motor ) Company; and BMC Marine LLC d/b/a ) Moritz Sport & Marine, ) ) Defendants. ) ____________________________________) Case No. 1:20-cv-138 ) BAPTKO, Inc., ) ) Plaintiff and ) Counterclaim Defendant, ) ) v. ) ) Foundation Automotive Corp, an Alberta ) Corporation, FA ND CHEV, LLC and ) FA ND SUB, LLC, ) ) Defendants and ) Counterclaimants. ) On September 29, 2025, BAPTKO, Inc. (“BAPTKO”) and Robert Kupper (“Kupper”) (collectively “the Kupper Parties”) filed a “Motion to Compel Kevin Kuschinski’s Appearance to Testify at October 7, 2025, Hearing.” (Doc. No. 609). For the reasons that follow, the motion is denied. I. BACKGROUND This consolidated action concerned, inter alia, the operation of five Chevrolet and Subaru 1 dealerships in and around Mandan, North Dakota, that FA ND Chev, LLC and FA ND Sub, LLC purchased from Kupper. Pursuant to the jury’s verdict entered on November 5, 2024, the court entered judgment on November 7, 2024, in favor of BAPTKO, Inc. on its counterclaims against FA ND Chev, LLC, FA ND Sub, LLC, and their parent company, Foundation Automotive Corp., for

breach of contract. (Doc. Nos. 489, 490). The judgment was amended on April 7, 2025, to include an award of attorney’s fees and costs to the Kupper Parties. (Doc. No. 545). Foundation Automotive Corp., FA ND Chev, LLC, and FA ND Sub, LLC (collectively the “Foundation Parties”) have appealed the amended judgment. FA ND Chev, LLC, and FA ND Sub, LLC have also sold two of the dealerships they purchased from Kupper to a third party. According to the Kupper Parties, they learned of this sale through local media reports and its own investigation. They also learned through post-judgment discovery that FA ND CHEV, LLC and FA ND SUB, LLC had transferred the proceeds from the sale of the two dealerships to Foundation Automotive US Corp. and Foundation Auto Holdings, LLC shortly after judgment was

entered in this case. Asserting that this transfer of assets was intended to hinder their ability to collect on their judgment and therefore fraudulent, they have filed, inter alia, motions to compel and for sanctions, and to use documents and information obtained in post-judgment discovery in state actions they have filed in North Dakota and Texas. The Foundation Parties have in turn filed, inter alia, motions to enforce an existing protective order, to stay, and for attorney’s fees. The court has scheduled a hearing on the parties’ pending motions for October 7, 2025. The Kupper Parties subpoenaed Kevin Kutschinski (“Kutschinski”) to testify at the October 7 hearing either in person or remotely. Kutschinski is the president/CEO of Foundation Automotive

US Corp., the non-party corporation to which the Kupper Parties assert that FA ND CHEV, LLC 2 and FA ND SUB, LLC fraudulently transferred some or all of their assets following their sale of the two Mandan dealerships to a third party. On September 29, 2025, the Kupper Parties filed a motion to compel Kuschinski’s appearance at the hearing on October 7, 2025. They assert Kutschinski’s testimony is critical

because: (1) he is the primary owner and decision maker for all of the Foundation entities; and (2) the Foundation Parties did not disclose FA ND CHEV, LLC’s and FA ND SUB, LLC’s transfer of assets and have been less than forthcoming when responding to post-judgment discovery requests. Acknowledging that Derek Slemko, Foundation Automotive Corp’s chief financial officer, will be available to testify at the hearing in his capacity as the Foundation Parties’ designated corporate representative, they assert that Slemko’s testimony is unlikely to be sufficient as he does not have an ownership interest in the Foundation entities and given what they characterize as his evasive testimony at trial and his vague, evasive declarations that the Foundation Parties have submitted to the court regarding FA ND CHEV, LLC’s and FA ND SUB, LLC’s transfer of assets to Foundation

Automotive US Corp. and Foundation Auto Holdings, LLC. They go on to advise of their intent to question Kutschinski about what they assert is the Foundation Parties’ breach of the asset purchase agreement with BAPTKO after the sale of the Mandan dealerships to a third party. The Foundation Parties filed their response on October 2, 2025. (Doc. No. 621). They assert that Kutschinski’s subpoena must be quashed as it exceeds the geographical limits of Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(c) and is otherwise defective as the Kupper Parties did not obtain prior authorization to take remote testimony much less demonstrate the existence of good cause to warrant remote testimony. Next, they assert that the subpoena creates “jurisdictional chaos and procedural uncertainty” as it

does not specify the location at which Kutschinski is to appear but rather gives Kutschinski the 3 option of either appearing in person at the federal courthouse in Bismarck or at an unspecified federal courthouse near his residence in the Southern District of Texas. In so doing they intimate their intent to file motions to quash in this district as well as the Southern District of Texas. Taking issue with the Kupper Parties’ characterization of Slemko’s trial testimony and declarations, they

go on to assert that the Kupper Parties concerns regarding Slemko’s anticipated hearing testimony are at best speculative, that Slemko is prepared to testify about corporate matters such as asset transfers, dealership sales, and related transactions, and that the Kupper Parties’ assertions regarding breaches of the parties’ asset purchase agreement are beyond the scope of the hearing scheduled by the court and are otherwise legally frivolous. Finally, they assert that the subpoena served by the Kupper Parties on Kutschinski was designed simply to harass Kutschinski. In their reply dated October 3, 2025, the Kupper Parties assert that Kutschinski would not be unduly burdened if required to appear virtually at the hearing on October 7 and that the Foundation Parties objections to the validty of the subpoena are “deliberately obtuse.” Dismissing

the Foundation Parties’ assertion that Kutschinski is outside this court’s reach, attributing any confusion regarding the subpoena and its provision for a choice on where/how to appear to the Foundation Parties lack of communication, and noting that to date that no motion to quash has been filed by the Foundation Parties in this district or the Southern District of Texas, they request that “this Court adopt the view that Kutschinski can be compelled to appear remotely in a North Dakota hearing from a location in Texas within the geographical limits of Rule 45(c)” and in so doing require Kutschinski’s appearance at the October 7 hearing. II. APPLICABLE RULES

Rule 69 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides “a judgment creditor . . . may 4 obtain discovery from any persons–including the judgment debtor–as provided in these rules or by the procedure of the state where the court is located.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 69(a)(2). Rule 43 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Sather Banking Co. v. Hartwig
23 Misc. 89 (New York Supreme Court, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
FA ND Chev, LLC v. Kupper, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fa-nd-chev-llc-v-kupper-ndd-2025.