Heard v. Perkins

441 B.R. 701, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 139375, 2010 WL 5490828
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedOctober 12, 2010
DocketCV 10-PT-1194-NE
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 441 B.R. 701 (Heard v. Perkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heard v. Perkins, 441 B.R. 701, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 139375, 2010 WL 5490828 (N.D. Ala. 2010).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

ROBERT B. PROPST, Senior District Judge.

This cause comes before the court on the defendants’ appeal from an order of the Bankruptcy Court of the Northern District of Alabama, Northern Division as established by the Motion for Leave to Appeal filed on May 7, 2010; Stipulation and Joint Motion for an Order Granting Motion for Leave to Appeal and Setting Appellate Briefing Schedule filed on May 20, 2010; and this court’s order dated May 21, 2010.

The court has considered the Amended Complaint filed by the trustee (or plaintiff); the Motion to Dismiss filed by the defendants; the Order of the bankruptcy court dated April 19, 2010; a partial transcript of a hearing before the bankruptcy court attached to a Submission Sheet filed in this court on May 7, 2010; the Recommendation of the bankruptcy court dated May 4, 2010 and filed in this court on May 7, 2010; a hearing before this court on August 23, 2010; 1 the briefs and special submissions of the parties; and other data before the court. 2

*703 The parties agree that Georgia law provides the applicable substantive law. 3 The parties have not agreed as to what that law is. The parties also agree that the Supreme Court of Georgia would find Delaware law to be persuasive if there is no previously established law on the matters at issue here. 4

Claims & Issues Before This Court

There are some claims pending before the bankruptcy court which are not before this court. 5 The appellants have stated that the issues are the following:

1. Do the claims in the Amended Complaint that are based on Defendants’ business strategy assert an impermissible “deepening insolvency” cause of action?
2. In light of recent Supreme Court authority in Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 545, 127 S.Ct. 1955, 167 L.Ed.2d 929 (2007), and Ashcroft v. Iqbal, — U.S. —, 129 S.Ct. 1937, 1949, 173 L.Ed.2d 868 (2009), is the Amended Complaint required to set forth well-pled allegations sufficient to rebut the presumptions of the Business Judgment Rule in order to avoid dismissal under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6).

William F. Perkins, Chapter 11 Trustee for Bill Heard Enterprises, Inc. (“BHE”), is listed as the plaintiff in the Amended Complaint. The named defendants in the Amended Complaint are:

• William T. Heard, Jr. — President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director of BHE.
• Richard M. Young — Corporate Controller, Vice President, and Director of BHE.
• Leigh M. Feldner, as administrator of the estate of Ronald Feldner — Chief Financial Officer, Corporate Secretary, and Director of BHE.
• Edward Heard — An officer and director of Landmark Chevrolet, Ltd. and Bill Heard Chevrolet, Ltd.
• William T. Heard, III — President of the Bill Heard Chevrolet Company. 6

While nine counts are asserted in plaintiffs Amended Complaint, only three are at issue in this appeal. The following counts are at issue:

Count I: Breach of Fiduciary Duties, which is asserted against all defendants. (Am.Compl. ¶¶ 102-10).
Count II: Aiding and Abetting Breach of Fiduciary Duty, which is asserted against defendants Young and Feld-ner. (Am.Compl. ¶¶ 111-15).
Count VIII: Waste of Corporate Assets/Ultra Vires Acts, which is asserted against all defendants. (Am.Compl. ¶¶ 147-49).

Plaintiffs subject allegations now before this court all revolve around “defendants’ business strategy.” Plaintiff claims that Heard, Jr. continued to pursue a faulty business strategy after it proved to be a failure. Further, plaintiff claims that *704 Young and Feldner did not stand up against Heard, Jr.’s insistence to follow the failed business strategy.

Regardless of the legal issues relating to defendant Heard, Jr., this court will grant the Motion to Dismiss on the issues before this court as to the remaining defendants who joined in said motion. The court will do so based on the trustee’s acknowledgments at this court’s August 23, 2010 hearing, and the briefs, etc. of said trustee. 7

At the August 23, 2010 hearing before this court, the trustee’s attorney stated:

Mr. Heard was the controlling member. He was the 99.9 percent shareholder. He was the CEO. He was the chairman of the board, and his word was law. And if he said we’re doing something, everybody else said okay, even if they thought it was irrational and stupid; they said we’re going to do it because that’s what the boss wants. And so the controller, he, in his testimony says, we were spending all this money and we shouldn’t have been.

(Emphasis added). 8

Counsel for the trustee summarized the issues before the court as:

Let me boil it down to you, I mean ultimately, really, the only issue that you need to decide is that the officers and directors breached their fiduciary duty or not by squandering corporate assets pursuing a business strategy that they knew had failed and had no chance of success.

In sum, the trustee explained that the fiduciary duty claims were “[essentially” the only claims before the court, other than “potentially ... one aspect of the waste claim.”

And in regards to the trustee’s allegations of Heard, Jr.’s insistence on following the failed business strategy, counsel stated:

For example, two of the directors, they realize that the cost of this operational marketing subprime strategy was killing the company. So they wanted to cut costs .... Mr. Heard ... who dominated the company went behind their back ....
There was no vote....
... Mr. Heard goes behind their back and says to district managers, rise those costs right back to where they were, and he doesn’t discuss his plan with Mr. Young and Mr. Feldner. (Emphasis added).

This belies an aiding and abetting theory. Also, the trustee claims that he is “not necessarily challenging the fact that [defendants] decided to go to subprime borrowers. Everybody went to subprime borrowers. That’s what happened....

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
441 B.R. 701, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 139375, 2010 WL 5490828, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heard-v-perkins-alnd-2010.