Fair Farms, Inc. v. Holt

124 So. 3d 25, 2013 WL 4552296, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 1736
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 28, 2013
DocketNo. 48,246-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 124 So. 3d 25 (Fair Farms, Inc. v. Holt) 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
Fair Farms, Inc. v. Holt, 124 So. 3d 25, 2013 WL 4552296, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 1736 (La. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

DREW, J.

_JjIn this stockholder lawsuit concerning the closing of Transylvania Gin, Inc., Fair Farms, Inc.,1 appeals a summary judgment granted in favor of defendants. Fair Farms also appeals a judgment granting the exception of prescription as to its negligence claims.

We reverse the summary judgment. We also reverse the granting of the exception of prescription insofar as it dismissed certain negligence claims. The matter is remanded for further proceedings.

FACTS

Transylvania Gin is a closely held corporation owned, at the filing of this suit, by eight stockholders. The stock was held in six blocks of 20 shares and two blocks of 10 shares. The stockholders and their interests were recorded for notice of the annual meeting in 2010, and this was the last record of stock ownership before the suit was filed. Ownership was as follows:

• Fair Farms, Inc. (formerly Scrapping Cotton, Inc.), represented by Robert A. Fairchild: 20 shares.

• JBF Partnership, represented by William Bradley Johnson: 20 shares.

• Robert B. Holt, Inc., represented by Robert B. Holt: 20 shares.

• Anthony Hal Waller: 20 shares.

• Boba, Inc., represented by Boyce Miller: 20 shares.

• Roy Dean Hart: 20 shares.

• John S. “Johnny” Johnson & Linda Johnson Green: 10 shares.

• Voncile Johnson: 10 shares.

|2The gin was traditionally run very informally, with no minutes from many meetings prior to 2009. The members of the gin’s board had allowed Robert Fair-child, who began serving as president of the gin in 1972, to have nearly total control over the gin, including buying and marketing cottonseed, for almost 40 years. The board raised no objection to the gin being run in this manner, and Fairchild said all stockholders had a vote in major decisions.

Beginning in December 2008, the stockholders became concerned about the decreasing availability of cotton in East Carroll Parish. The number of cotton acres farmed in East Carroll Parish had dropped during the period from 2005 through 2008. During this period, the number of bales ginned at Transylvania Gin had decreased 70%. A stockholders’ meeting was held in December 2008, during which the gin’s accountant, Alyssa Oliver, presented rough estimates of the potential costs for the 2009 ginning season.

To determine the income from ginning, she considered the potential for 3500 or 5000 bales of cotton available with a 1.3 seed factor and $180 per ton seed price. [27]*27Oliver then looked at the cost of ginning, using estimates of $53-55 per bale from historical cost estimates. After taking into account the costs of ginning and potential income, she estimated the net profit for the season, excluding rebates, repairs, and note payments. She believed the gin would have between $9,000 and $19,000 to spend on expenses after the costs of ginning were deducted. Robert Holt, secretary of the gin and the only person who spoke to Oliver about these projections |sprior to the meeting, provided the seed price and the number of bales used in Oliver’s estimates. Holt said in his deposition that as a stockholder he was entitled to request these calculations. He admitted that despite giving Oliver the numbers to determine the potential income for the 2009 season, he was not familiar with the “workout monies” method of payment that the gin typically used for receiving payment for cottonseed; he had, however, heard Fairchild mention “workout monies.” 2 This anticipated payment for cottonseed was, therefore, not considered in Oliver’s calculations.

The gin’s minutes indicate that at the next meeting the board agreed to decrease Fairchild’s salary by one-half and terminate the remaining employees.

At the following meeting, Fairchild informed the board that he did not agree with decisions made at the earlier meeting and submitted his resignation. The board voted not to accept his resignation, and many of the stockholders described a disagreement between Fairchild and Holt that abruptly ended the meeting.

Fairchild contended that he and Holt argued because Holt said he did not intend to grow cotton that season. Fairchild said he offered Holt $35,000 for his stock, and Holt countered that he wanted $100,000 for the stock; Holt denied that Fairchild offered him a price for his stock at that meeting.

At the next meeting on March 19, 2009, the board accepted Fairchild’s resignation. Brad Johnson became the gin’s president. At aRMarch 26, 2009, meeting, there was a vote to close the gin for that year’s ginning season, but the vote was subsequently delayed until the annual stockholders’ meeting. The stockholders voted to close the gin at this annual meeting. Hart, Fairchild, and Johnny Johnson were absent from the meeting. In June 2010, the board of directors voted to keep the gin closed for the 2010 ginning season. In 2011, the board of directors elected to value the corporate stock at $3,446.67 per share, or $68,953 per 20-share block. At the May 6, 2011, meeting, held at Brad Johnson’s shop, the board of directors voted for the gin to remain closed for the 2011 ginning season. Throughout all these votes for the gin to close and remain closed, there was no business plan in place for the gin.

The plaintiffs filed this lawsuit on February 28, 2011. After several amending and supplemental petitions, all directors of the gin were named as defendants in the lawsuit. The defendants filed the exception of prescription and a motion for summary judgment. Included among the submissions in support of the motion were the gin’s articles of incorporation and amendments, affidavits, minutes, Oliver’s projections, and depositions of the parties and Oliver. In opposition to the motion, Fair Farms submitted the affidavits of Fair-child and several former stockholders, a sealed affidavit from Donald Gregory, the [28]*28gin’s articles and bylaws, the gin’s La. C.C.P. art. 1442 deposition given by Holt, and exhibits to Oliver’s deposition.

The trial court ruled in October 2011 that the claims for negligence had prescribed. On September 19, 2012, the trial court granted summary judgment for the defendants. Fair Farms appeals both judgments.

JjDISCUSSION

The foundation for this lawsuit lies in the Articles of Incorporation, as amended in 1974. Article XI requires that a stockholder be engaged in the production of cotton.3 Article XIV provides the procedure for the removal of a stockholder no longer engaged in the production of cotton.4 Fair Farms claims that the directors breached their fiduciary duties by not enforcing Article XI or XIV, which both require stockholders to be cotton producers. Fair Farms argues that in addition to these articles, a resolution had once been passed that required each stockholder to grow at least 200 acres of cotton per season. Fair Farms contends that the defendants’ goal in not enforcing the articles and shuttering the gin was to increase the value of their shares through liquidating the gin, rather than being forced to sell their shares to the gin for a lower value.

| (¡Robert Holt

Robert Holt bought his stock in the gin from another stockholder trying to divest himself of the stock.

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Bluebook (online)
124 So. 3d 25, 2013 WL 4552296, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 1736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fair-farms-inc-v-holt-lactapp-2013.