Fleming v. Bayou Steel

83 F.4th 278
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 27, 2023
Docket22-30260
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 83 F.4th 278 (Fleming v. Bayou Steel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fleming v. Bayou Steel, 83 F.4th 278 (5th Cir. 2023).

Opinion

Case: 22-30260 Document: 00516911285 Page: 1 Date Filed: 09/27/2023

United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit

____________ FILED September 27, 2023 No. 22-30260 Lyle W. Cayce ____________ Clerk

Troy Fleming, Jarrod Nabor, Davarian Ursin, Charles Ziegeler, and Ronnie Millet, on behalf of themselves and all other similarly situated,

Plaintiffs—Appellants,

versus

Bayou Steel BD Holdings II L.L.C.; Black Diamond Capital Management L.L.C.,

Defendants—Appellees. ______________________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana USDC No. 2:20-CV-1476 ______________________________

Before Smith, Clement, and Wilson, Circuit Judges. Cory T. Wilson, Circuit Judge: The Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) Act requires certain employers to provide affected employees with 60-days’ notice before a plant closure or mass layoff. 29 U.S.C. § 2102(a). If an employer fails to comply, affected employees may sue the employer for backpay, benefits, and attorney’s fees. Id. § 2104(a). But a plant closure often occurs simultaneously with an employer’s bankruptcy, leaving little Case: 22-30260 Document: 00516911285 Page: 2 Date Filed: 09/27/2023

No. 22-30260

likelihood that affected employees will be able to recover damages from their employer. In such circumstances, plaintiffs sometimes seek WARN Act damages from other corporations that are legally distinct from but related to the defunct employer. Such companies may be found liable only if they acted as a “single employer” with the plaintiffs’ employer. This is one such suit. BD LaPlace, LLC, doing business as Bayou Steel (Bayou Steel), operated a steel mill in LaPlace, Louisiana. On September 30, 2019, without giving WARN Act notice, Bayou Steel terminated Plaintiffs’ employment and closed the LaPlace mill where they worked. The next day, Bayou Steel filed for bankruptcy. Seeking to recover under the WARN Act, Plaintiffs initially filed a putative class action complaint against Bayou Steel in Delaware bankruptcy court. Several months later, Plaintiffs dismissed that action and filed the instant class action in federal district court in Louisiana. Rather than suing their employer Bayou Steel, Plaintiffs sued Bayou Steel BD Holdings II, LLC (the holding company that indirectly owned Bayou Steel) and Black Diamond Capital Management, LLC (a private equity firm that advised the fund that owned BD Holdings II). Plaintiffs demanded a jury trial, which the district court denied, holding that the Seventh Amendment provides no right to a jury in WARN Act cases. After discovery, Defendants sought summary judgment, which the district court granted. The district court determined that Defendants could not be held liable under the WARN Act because they did not act as a single employer with Bayou Steel. Plaintiffs appealed, challenging both the denial of their jury demand and the summary judgment for Defendants. We affirm the district court’s denial of Plaintiffs’ jury demand. We also affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment for BD Holdings II. But we conclude there is an issue of material fact about whether Black

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Diamond Capital Management was a single employer with Bayou Steel. We accordingly reverse and remand on that question. I. Bayou Steel was a producer of steel products. BD LaPlace, LLC was the employer of Bayou Steel’s officers and employees. BD LaPlace, LLC’s ownership structure, in turn, was fairly complex, involving labyrinthine relationships among a half-dozen corporate entities, as illustrated by the following chart included in the district court’s summary judgment opinion:

We thus begin by briefly sketching the history of Bayou Steel’s corporate structure. Black Diamond Opportunity Fund IV, LP (BD Fund IV) is a private equity fund structured as a limited partnership. 1 In April 2016, BD Fund IV _____________________ 1 Most partners in BD Fund IV are institutional investors, but Defendant Black Diamond Capital Management also owns 2.5% of BD Fund IV.

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indirectly acquired BD LaPlace, LLC and its parent company BD Bayou Steel Investment, LLC from ArcelorMittal Bayou Acquisition, LLC. At the time of the acquisition, BD Fund IV created two new companies—Bayou Steel BD Holdings, LLC (BD Holdings) and Bayou Steel BD Holdings II, LLC (BD Holdings II)—to hold the membership units of the newly acquired companies. Both BD Holdings and BD Holdings II are single-member LLCs without any employees. BD Holdings II is a Defendant in this case. The other Defendant is Black Diamond Capital Management (BDCM), a private equity fund that acted as an investment advisor to BD Fund IV. In this role, BDCM offered oversight and strategic support to the portfolio of companies in which BD Fund IV invested, including Bayou Steel. Bayou Steel had been managed by its prior owner ArcelorMittal and had no internal management team of its own. After BD Fund IV acquired Bayou Steel, BDCM helped set up Bayou Steel’s new management structure. BDCM selected Robert Simon, an experienced steel industry executive, as Bayou Steel’s new Chief Executive Officer. Alton Davis, a former Bayou Steel employee, became President and Chief Operating Officer, and Dan Lay was hired from a Bayou Steel competitor to be Bayou Steel’s Vice President of Sales. BDCM also helped establish a five-member Board of Directors by recommending potential board members to Bayou Steel’s new management team for approval. BDCM recommended two BDCM employees (Sahand Farahnak and Phil Raygorodetsky) and three non-BDCM employees. 2 Bayou Steel management approved all of them. The BDCM employees served as _____________________ 2 Those individuals were Robert Unfried, Terry Taft, and Robert Archambault. Unfried was Executive Vice President of Finance and Administration for Commercial Metals Company. Taft was President and CEO of Metalwest and TAD Metals, member companies of O’Neal Industrial Group, a Bayou Steel customer. Archambault was a partner with Platinum Equity, which managed Ryerson, Inc., another Bayou Steel customer.

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chairs of the audit and compensation committees, and Raygorodetsky was appointed Chairman of the Board. Later, with management’s approval, a third BDCM employee (James Hogarth) joined the Board, increasing its size from five to six members. Soon after the acquisition, BD Fund IV contributed $5 million to Bayou Steel’s balance sheet. Bayou Steel also received revolving loans up to $75 million from Bank of America and SunTrust to provide capital for its day- to-day operations. As security, the banks received a first-priority lien against all of Bayou Steel’s assets, excluding its real estate. With these cash infusions, Bayou Steel ostensibly had sufficient funds for its day-to-day operations. By the fourth quarter of 2017, however, fluctuations in the steel market threw Bayou Steel into financial turmoil. BDCM helped Bayou Steel implement cost-cutting measures, including a reduction in force, changes to employee benefits and compensation, and renegotiation of vendor contracts. Bayou Steel’s CEO Simon offered another source of Bayou Steel’s troubles: He believed that he had been unable to do his job because he had been micromanaged by Raygorodetsky and Farahnak, the BDCM employees on Bayou Steel’s Board. In November 2017, Simon was removed from his position.

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Bluebook (online)
83 F.4th 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fleming-v-bayou-steel-ca5-2023.