Finkel v. Palm Park, Inc.

2019 NCBC 37
CourtNorth Carolina Business Court
DecidedJune 11, 2019
Docket17-CVS-14515
StatusPublished

This text of 2019 NCBC 37 (Finkel v. Palm Park, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Carolina Business Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Finkel v. Palm Park, Inc., 2019 NCBC 37 (N.C. Super. Ct. 2019).

Opinion

Finkel v. Palm Park, Inc., 2019 NCBC 37.

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION COUNTY OF WAKE 17 CVS 14515

DAVID FINKEL, HD FUNDING, INC., and HORIZON FUNDING, LLC, Plaintiffs,

v. ORDER AND OPINION ON PLAINTIFFS’ AND DEFENDANTS’ PALM PARK, INC., NATHAN MOTIONS FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY BYELICK, MARGARET JUDGMENT BYELICK, OAK CREST PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, INC., and THE OAKS AT NORTHGATE, LLC,

Defendants.

THIS MATTER is before the Court on Plaintiffs’ Motion for Partial Summary

Judgment, (“Plaintiffs’ Motion”, ECF No. 62), and Defendants’ Motion for Partial

Summary Judgment, (“Defendants’ Motion”, ECF No. 67) (together, the “Motions”).

THE COURT, having considered the Motions, the briefs and evidence filed in

support of and in opposition to the Motions, the arguments of counsel at the hearing,

and other appropriate matters of record, CONCLUDES that Plaintiffs’ Motion should

be GRANTED, in part, and DENIED, in part, and Defendants’ Motion should be

DENIED, in the manner and for the reasons set forth below.

Smith Moore Leatherwood LLP, by Mark A. Finkelstein, Esq. for Plaintiffs David Finkel, HD Funding, Inc., and Horizon Funding, LLC.

Parry Tyndall White, by James C. White, Esq. for Defendants Palm Park, Inc., Nathan Byelick, Margaret Byelick, Oak Crest Property Management, Inc., and The Oaks at Northgate, LLC.

McGuire, Judge. I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

A. The Parties

1. Plaintiff David Finkel (“Finkel”) is a resident of Wyoming and a member

and the manager of Plaintiff Horizon Funding, LLC (“Horizon”), a Wyoming limited

liability company. Finkel also is a shareholder and the president of Plaintiff HD

Funding, Inc. (“HD Funding”). (First Am. Compl., ECF No. 31, at ¶¶ 1–2, “FAC”.)

2. Defendant Nathan Byelick (“Nathan”) is a citizen and resident of

Chatham County, North Carolina, and is the president of Defendant Oak Crest

Property Management, Inc. (“Oak Crest”). Oak Crest is a North Carolina corporation

with its principal place of business in Wake County. Nathan and his wife, Defendant

Margaret Byelick (“Margaret”), are the sole shareholders of Oak Crest (collectively,

Nathan and Margaret are referred to as the “Byelicks”).

B. Organization and Membership of “TONG”

3. In 2005, Finkel, the Byelicks, and a third individual not involved in this

suit named Peter Conti, organized The Oaks at Northgate, LLC (“TONG”), a North

Carolina limited liability company. (First D. Finkel Aff., ECF No. 52, at ¶ 10.)

Though Finkel and the Byelicks signed the TONG Operating Agreement, (ECF No.

11, at pp. 33–34), neither Finkel nor the Byelicks directly owned a membership

interest in TONG. Instead, Finkel owned his membership interest in TONG through

Horizon, and the Byelicks owned their membership interest in TONG through Oak

Crest. (See Id. at ¶¶ 21–22.) In 2008 Peter Conti transferred his interest in TONG

in equal parts to Horizon and Oak Crest. (Id. at ¶ 10; Second D. Finkel Aff., ECF No. 64, at ¶¶ 3—4.) Following Conti’s transfer of his interest, Horizon owned a 37.5%

interest in TONG, and Oak Crest owned a 62.5% interest. (ECF No. 64, at ¶¶ 3–4.)

4. The TONG Operating Agreement (“Operating Agreement”) names the

Byelicks as the initial Managers of TONG. (ECF No. 11, at p. 36; ECF No. 31, at ¶¶

5, 6.) The Operating Agreement provides that Managers have broad authority to

manage and control the business and operations of TONG. In addition, the Operating

Agreement provides that the Managers shall “[b]e under a fiduciary duty to conduct

the affairs of [TONG] in the best interests of [TONG] and the Members, including the

safekeeping and use of all of [TONG]’s property.” (ECF No. 11, at p. 9.)

5. The Operating Agreement also provides procedures for transferring

membership interests and the effects of failing to follow those procedures. Article

Eleven of the Operating Agreement requires a transferor-member to get prior written

approval from the other members before transferring a membership interest. The

other members are prohibited from consenting to the proposed transfer “unless the

proposed transferee . . . furnished the Company with an opinion of counsel,

satisfactory in form and substance to such Members, that neither the offering nor the

proposed transfer will violate any federal or applicable state securities law and” will

not jeopardize TONG’s partnership tax treatment. (Id. at p. 22 sec. 11.2.)

6. After obtaining proper written consent of all members but prior to the

actual interest transfer, whether or not the proposed transferee actually furnished

the required satisfactory opinion of counsel, the proposed transferee must “offer each

and every one of the other Members the first right of refusal to acquire the Membership Interest that the proposed transferee decides to transfer.” (Id. at sec.

11.2.1.) The Right of First Refusal section of the Operating Agreement outlines the

methods for determining the purchase price, and states that the Members shall have

thirty days to purchase the proposed transferor’s interest, before the proposed

transferor may sell their interest to an unrelated party. (Id.) The Operating

Agreement provides that if the transfer of “any Membership Interest” is not made

properly, it “shall be deemed invalid, null and void, and of no force and effect.” (Id.

at sec. 11.1)

7. Once the membership interest is transferred to a non-member pursuant

to Section 11.2, the transferee can only be admitted as a member of TONG by

obtaining the written consent of TONG’s members and managers, accepting the

terms of the Operating Agreement, and paying any costs incurred in making them a

member. (Id. at p. 23 sec. 11.4.) Unless and until the transferee is admitted as a

member pursuant to Section 11.4, “the transferee of a Membership Interest shall not

be entitled to any rights, powers, or privileges of a Member, except that the transferee

shall be entitled to receive the distributions and allocations to which the Member

would be entitled.” (Id. at p. 22 sec. 11.3.)

8. Article Thirteen of the Operating Agreement, titled “Buy-Sell

Provisions,” states that “any purported voluntary or involuntary Transfer of all or

any part of a Member’s Membership Interest in a manner not expressly permitted in”

the Operating Agreement is a “Buy-Sell Event”. (Id. at p. 26 sec. 13.1(d).) The Buy-

Sell Provisions outline the steps that members must take following a Buy-Sell Event, and various agreements regarding the withdrawing member’s interest following the

Buy-Sell Event. (Id. at pp. 26–27 secs. 13.2 (Buy-Sell Notice); 13.3 (Member’s

Purchase Option); 13.5 (Agreement on Valuation); 13.6 (Closing); 13.8 (Effect of

Withdrawing Member’s Interest); 13.9 (Failure to Exercise Purchase Option)).

C. Finkel’s Attempted TONG Membership Transfer

9. In 2013, Finkel attempted to transfer Horizon’s membership interest in

TONG to HD Funding. The parties dispute the nature and effect of the attempted

transfer. Plaintiffs contend that the transfer was merely a “re-titling” of Horizon’s

interest to HD Funding—not a transfer as contemplated by the Operating

Agreement—and that the transfer was done with the understanding and agreement

of Nathan. (ECF No. 52, at ¶ 20.) Finkel contends that Nathan and TONG treated

HD Funding as the member of TONG after the transfer. (ECF No.

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