HUIMING SONG v. EGPS SOLUTIONS I, INC.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 1, 2026
DocketA26A0493
StatusPublished

This text of HUIMING SONG v. EGPS SOLUTIONS I, INC. (HUIMING SONG v. EGPS SOLUTIONS I, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
HUIMING SONG v. EGPS SOLUTIONS I, INC., (Ga. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

SECOND DIVISION DOYLE, P. J., DAVIS, J., AND SENIOR JUDGE FULLER

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. https://www.gaappeals.us/rules

June 1, 2026

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A26A0493. SONG v. EGPS SOLUTIONS I, INC. et al.

FULLER, Senior Judge.

In this action with derivative claims for breach of fiduciary duty and a direct

claim for breach of contract, plaintiff Huiming Song appeals from the trial court’s

orders awarding attorney fees to nominal defendant Champion Instruments, LLC, and

defendants eGPS Solutions I, Inc., and Travis Pruitt, Jr.1 For the reasons that follow,

we affirm the award of attorney fees to Champion, vacate the award of attorney fees

to eGPS and Pruitt Jr., and remand the case with direction.

1 The original defendant, Travis Pruitt, Sr., (“Pruitt”) passed away during the pendency of the litigation, and his son, Travis Pruitt, Jr., (“Pruitt Jr.”) was substituted as the named defendant in his capacity as trustee of the Travis Pruitt, Sr., 2012 Gift Trust. This Court previously affirmed the trial court’s dismissal of Song’s derivative

action and affirmed in part and reversed in part the grant of summary judgment to

eGPS and Pruitt. Song v. eGPS Solutions I, Inc., 371 Ga. App. 357 (899 SE2d 530)

(2024). As relevant here, Pruitt and Lonnie Sears owned eGPS, which sells surveying

equipment and supplies. Id. at 358. In 2010, Pruitt, Song, Sears, and another person

formed Champion, “a limited liability company, in order to purchase and import

surveying instruments from China and then act as a wholesaler to eGPS and other

dealers.” Id. (citation modified). Ultimately, the fourth original member sold his

entire interest in Champion to Song, such that Pruitt owned 41.2 percent, Song owned

41.2 percent, and Sears owned 17.6 percent. Id. The members elected Pruitt to serve

as Champion’s sole manager, id. at 359, and Champion’s operating agreement

provided that the manager was responsible for its day-to-day business and affairs and

was granted “full and complete power, authority, and discretion to take such action

for and on behalf of” Champion as he deemed necessary to carry out its functions.

However, the operating agreement also required the manager to obtain the approval

of a majority of the members’ interest to take action under certain circumstances,

2 including selling, conveying, or otherwise transferring “all or any substantial part” of

Champion’s assets, “other than in the ordinary course of business.”

Champion’s largest customer was eGPS, which provided Champion with

employees and office and warehouse space. Song, 371 Ga. App. at 359. Champion

often gave discounts of 25 to 40 percent to high-volume customers, and Pruitt “had

the discretion to set these discounts as part of the ordinary course of business.” Id. As

Champion’s largest customer, eGPS received a 40 percent discount. Id. But in 2016,

upon learning that Champion’s competitors were offering discounts of up to 50

percent, Pruitt authorized an increase in Champion’s discount from 40 to 50 percent,

retroactive to 2010. Id. This increased discount pushed Champion’s net annual loss

for the 2017 fiscal year from approximately $575 to over $300,000. Id. While this loss

was borne by all of Champion’s members, the credit benefitted Pruitt and Sears as the

owners of eGPS. Id.

Also in 2016, Pruitt discovered that Song was promoting his own company,

Shanghai HowayGIS Infotech Co., Ltd., to Champion’s dealers, potentially poaching

customers, and the relationship between Song and Champion began to deteriorate.

Song, 371 Ga. App. at 360. “In January 2019, Song filed a derivative action against

3 Pruitt and eGPS, but because he failed to send a written demand notice, the complaint

was dismissed without prejudice in February 2019.” Id. Champion thereafter filed its

own action in state court alleging breach of contract and breach of fiduciary duty

against Song.2 Song then refiled this action, seeking judicial dissolution of Champion

and asserting derivative claims that Pruitt breached his fiduciary duty to Champion

and that eGPS aided and abetted that breach, and a direct claim that Pruitt breached

his contractual duties under the operating agreement by failing to act in good faith and

failing to obtain the approval of the majority of the members prior to issuing the

retroactive discount. Id. at 360 & n.3.

In response to the derivative action, Champion created a Special Litigation

Committee (“SLC”), Song, 371 Ga. App. at 360, which issued a report in September

2020 concluding that Pruitt had acted diligently, in good faith, and within his

authority to set prices and discounts. The SLC determined that Pruitt did not breach

his fiduciary duty to Champion and, due to the “unique relationship” between

2 That case ultimately proceeded to a jury trial, the jury awarded significant damages to Champion, and the trial court thereafter granted Song’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and conditionally granted Song a new trial as to damages. Those cross-appeals are currently pending before this Court in Champion Instruments, LLC v. Song; and vice versa, Cases No. A26A0901 and A26A0902 . 4 Champion and eGPS, had no conflict of interest. Consequently, the SLC also

determined that eGPS did not aid and abet a breach. Nevertheless, the SLC found that

Pruitt and Sears, as shareholders of eGPS, received “indirect benefits” from the

credit issued to eGPS, and it recommended that Champion reverse the credit and

reinstate eGPS’s accounts receivable in the amount of approximately $300,000.

Subject to this adjustment, the SLC determined that the derivative action was without

merit and recommended that Champion seek its dismissal.

Champion thereafter moved to dismiss Song’s derivative action,3 and eGPS and

Pruitt moved for summary judgment on the derivative claims and direct breach-of-

contract claim. Song, 371 Ga. App. at 362.

The trial court granted Champion’s motion to dismiss the derivative proceedings after concluding that the SLC acted independently and that Champion did what the SLC instructed. The trial court granted eGPS’s and Pruitt’s motion for summary judgment after concluding that Pruitt, as Champion’s manager, did not breach any fiduciary duties owed to Song, that eGPS did not aid and abet Pruitt, and that the breach of contract claim against Pruitt directly failed as a matter of law.

3 Although the motion to dismiss was filed in September 2020, Song asserts that Champion did not actually reinstate the accounts receivable until July 2022. 5 Id. On appeal, this Court held that the trial court did not err in granting Champion’s

motion to dismiss Song’s derivative action or in granting Pruitt and eGPS summary

judgment on Song’s claims of breach of fiduciary duty and aiding and abetting. Id. at

362–71(1)–(4). However, this Court reversed, in part, the grant of summary judgment

to Pruitt on Song’s claim for breach of contract based on Pruitt’s obligation to obtain

prior approval, concluding “that genuine issues of material fact remain[ed] as to

whether Pruitt’s issuance of the credit memoranda implicated” this contractual duty

“and, if so, whether Song waived the right to object.” Id. at 372(5)(a). Finally, this

Court affirmed the grant of summary judgment on Song’s breach-of-contract claim

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