Garlock v. Hilliard

2001 NCBC 10
CourtNorth Carolina Business Court
DecidedNovember 14, 2001
Docket00-CVS-01018
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2001 NCBC 10 (Garlock v. Hilliard) 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
Garlock v. Hilliard, 2001 NCBC 10 (N.C. Super. Ct. 2001).

Opinion

GARLOCK v. HILLIARD, 2001 NCBC 10

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION COUNTY OF MECKLENBURG 00-CVS-01018

TAMMY L. GARLOCK, JUDITH L. JACOBS and RALPH W. JOHNSON,

Plaintiffs,

v. OPINION AND ORDER

SOUTHEASTERN GAS & POWER, INC., and AUBREY L. HILLIARD,

Defendants.

{1} This matter came on for trial before the undersigned without a jury at the October 8, 2001 civil session of the Mecklenburg County Superior Court. The Court makes the Findings of Fact and

Conclusions of Law set forth below. Judgment is entered ordering dissolution of Southeastern Gas & Power, Inc. pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 55-14-30(2)(ii) subject to the corporation’s rights under N.C.G.S. §

55-14-31(d) to purchase the shares of the minority shareholders at fair value, which the Court has determined to be $240 per share or a total of $936,000.

Bishop, Capitano & Abner, P.A., by J. Daniel Bishop and A. Todd Capitano, for plaintiffs.

Andresen & Associates, by Kenneth P. Andresen and Christopher M. Vann, for defendants.

I. FINDINGS OF FACT

{2} Plaintiffs Tammy L. Garlock, Judith L. Jacobs, and Ralph W. Johnson are citizens and residents

of Mecklenburg County, North Carolina. Defendant Aubrey L. Hilliard is a citizen and resident of

Mecklenburg County, North Carolina. Southeastern Gas & Power, Inc. (“Southeastern”) is a North Carolina corporation with an office and principal place of business in Mecklenburg County.

{3} In early 1997, plaintiffs and Aubrey L. Hilliard began discussing forming a company to market

natural gas to industrial customers and municipalities in the southeastern United States. All four of these individuals were then employed in the Charlotte office of a Texas-based gas marketing firm, El

Paso Energy. Hilliard was a salesman and marketer for the Carolinas and Virginia. He had between

70 and 80 customers. Plaintiff Garlock was risk manager, administering clients’ natural gas futures positions. Plaintiff Jacobs was an operations manager. Plaintiff Johnson was director of operations

and managing agent of the office. All had substantial tenure and experience in their respective positions in the natural gas marketing industry. Garlock, Jacobs, and Johnson are collectively referred

to as “plaintiffs.”

{4} A natural gas marketing company is an intermediary which works to meet the supply and pricing

needs for natural gas of commercial, industrial, and municipal customers who have contracted with the company for it to meet their gas needs rather than their local gas utility. Natural gas is transported

through interstate pipelines and then delivered to consumers by local distribution companies (LDCs).

Most of the gas shipped to North Carolina comes through the Transco Pipeline, an 1,832 mile pipeline which runs from the Gulf Coast of Texas up the east coast to New York City.

{5} In the 1980s, the distribution and sale of natural gas was deregulated to increase competition.

Before deregulation, LDCs were the exclusive suppliers and transporters of gas to customers. After

deregulation, consumers could purchase gas directly from producers, pipelines, LDCs and marketing

companies. Recently, the price of natural gas has been volatile. Marketing companies, such as

Southeastern, are able to use this volatility to their advantage in that they can use hedging to offer a better price to their customers than the LDCs, which price gas by the use of stated tariffs that do not

change as frequently. A marketing company, however, cannot sell to all potential users of natural gas

because the LDCs set minimum limits for the volume of gas demand a client must have in order to

purchase gas from other entities. This practice has the effect of prohibiting very small commercial,

industrial, and institutional users from shopping for gas and using marketing companies.

{6} El Paso was restructuring its retail gas marketing operations, such that Hilliard and the plaintiffs

were prompted to consider alternative business and employment opportunities. There was a distinct possibility that El Paso would relocate back office customer support functions to Houston, Texas.

Johnson met in April 1997 in Texas with a representative of Fina Natural Gas Co. (“Fina”) to discuss

terms for an agency agreement under which a new venture would market natural gas on Fina’s behalf.

Shortly thereafter Hilliard became involved in the discussions with Fina, which ultimately progressed

to the point of agreement. Hilliard also had discussions to which plaintiffs were not privy with other

companies and individuals concerning his future.

{7} Plaintiffs and Hilliard discussed seriously the formation of a corporation in late summer and fall 1997. On the strength of his customer contacts, Hilliard negotiated with plaintiffs to own 50 percent

of the equity of the company to be formed, plus another 10 percent which he represented would be

used either to provide incentives to future sales employees or to share with Hilliard’s long-time friend and gas commodity market pricing consultant, Larry Marshall. For even divisibility of the minority

shares, it was agreed that Hilliard would receive 61 percent of the stock, and the remaining 39 percent

would be evenly divided (13 percent each) among plaintiffs. Hilliard or those selected by him would

control a majority of the voting stock of the corporation. {8} Plaintiffs and Hilliard jointly made various formative operating decisions concerning the

proposed business, including its name, Southeastern Gas & Power, Inc. Hilliard arranged for a lawyer

to incorporate Southeastern on October 2, 1997. Hilliard was designated in the articles of

incorporation as the sole initial director “until the first meeting of shareholders.” Of the plaintiffs,

only Johnson may have seen the articles of incorporation, and he attached no particular significance to

Hilliard’s designation as sole director because it appeared to be a temporary condition and because of

the other circumstances described herein. The parties had no discussion or agreement concerning Hilliard being the sole director on an ongoing basis.

{9} Each of the plaintiffs expected that he or she would participate actively in the management of the

business of Southeastern, and Hilliard knew and concurred in this expectation. All four shareholders

contemplated that they would all be employed by Southeastern in roles substantially equivalent to their

pre-existing employment by El Paso.

{10} In late November 1997, plaintiffs and Hilliard agreed to a specific methodology for allocating

among them the expected earnings of Southeastern. As set forth in a written pro forma spreadsheet, the individual parties agreed that of the 70 percent of margins to be earned by Southeastern on any gas

sales (after Fina’s take of 30 percent), 50 percent would be allocated to Hilliard’s sales department. The remaining 20 percent would be allocated to the plaintiffs, through the financial and operations

departments, which they operated. Any revenues from “agency fees” earned for providing natural gas operations services for municipalities would be allocated solely to the financial and operations departments. General and administrative expenses were allocated 25 percent to each shareholder.

Under this arrangement, the sales department was responsible for all expenses incurred in developing customer contacts; any revenues generated, however, were distributed among the shareholders.

{11} Plaintiffs and Hilliard capitalized Southeastern in November and December 1997.

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