In Re Se. Eye Ctr. (Ccsea v. Matthews)

2016 NCBC 57
CourtNorth Carolina Business Court
DecidedJuly 22, 2016
Docket15-CVS-1648
StatusPublished

This text of 2016 NCBC 57 (In Re Se. Eye Ctr. (Ccsea v. Matthews)) 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
In Re Se. Eye Ctr. (Ccsea v. Matthews), 2016 NCBC 57 (N.C. Super. Ct. 2016).

Opinion

In re Se. Eye Ctr. (CCSEA v. Matthews), 2016 NCBC 57.

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION COUNTY OF WAKE 15 CVS 1648

IN RE SOUTHEASTERN EYE CENTER- PENDING MATTERS ORDER AND OPINION ON PLAINTIFF’S MOTION TO DISMISS AND TO STRIKE AND DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS (CCSEA v. MATTHEWS)

{1} THIS MATTER is before the Court upon (i) Plaintiff Central Carolina Surgical Eye Associates, P.A.’s (“Plaintiff” or “CCSEA”) Motion to Dismiss Second Counterclaim and to Strike Second Counterclaim1 (“CCSEA’s Motion” or “CCSEA’s Motion to Dismiss”), and (ii) Defendant John D. Matthews, M.D.’s (“Defendant” or “Dr. Matthews”) Motion to Dismiss Plaintiff’s First and Second Claims for Relief (“Dr. Matthews’ Motion” or “Dr. Matthews’ Motion to Dismiss”).2 After considering CCSEA’s Motion and Dr. Matthews’ Motion, the briefs in support of and in opposition to each Motion, and the arguments of counsel at a hearing on June 14, 2016, the Court hereby DENIES Dr. Matthews’ Motion and GRANTS in part and DENIES in part CCSEA’s Motion. Law Offices of Richard M. Greene, by Richard M. Greene, for Plaintiff Central Carolina Surgical Eye Associates, P.A.

Teague Rotenstreich Stanaland Fox & Holt PLLC, by Lyn Broom and Steven B. Fox, for Defendant John D. Matthews, M.D.

1 For clarity, the Court will reference Dr. Matthews’ self-titled “Second Counterclaim” as his “Amended Counterclaims” in this Order and Opinion.

2 Dr. Matthews also moved to strike CCSEA’s Motion for violating Business Court Rule 15.2, contending that by including a motion to dismiss and a motion to strike in the same paper, CCSEA violated BCR 15.2’s requirement that “[e]ach motion shall be set out in a separate paper.” Although a technical violation of the Rule, the Court concludes, in the exercise of its discretion, that striking CCSEA’s Motion in these circumstances would serve no purpose other than to delay the consideration of the merits of the Motion. The Court denied Dr. Matthews’ motion to strike at the June 14, 2016 hearing and memorializes that oral ruling here. The Court advises all parties, however, that it will require full compliance with the Business Court Rules going forward in this case. Oak City Law LLP, by Robert E. Fields, III, for Receiver Gerald A. Jeutter, Jr.

Bledsoe, Judge. I. INTRODUCTION {2} This action is one of a number of related proceedings involving C. Richard Epes, M.D. (“Dr. Epes”) or various entities that he, alone or with others, owns or controls that contain common issues of fact and law and which the Court has consolidated into a single “Master File” proceeding captioned In re Southeastern Eye Center – Pending Matters, 15 CVS 1648 (Wake County) (the “Consolidated Matters”). {3} This specific lawsuit—CCSEA v. Matthews3—arises out of a dispute between CCSEA, formerly the operator of an ophthalmological practice in Greensboro, North Carolina principally owned and controlled by Dr. Epes, and Dr. Matthews, a physician who formerly worked at the practice and who remains a 25% shareholder of CCSEA. {4} The process by which the various related proceedings were consolidated in this Court and the procedures this Court has subsequently implemented to manage the Consolidated Matters are relevant to the determination of the pending Motions and thus will be discussed in some detail below. {5} The Court’s involvement in the Consolidated Matters began on October 27, 2014, when John T. Harriott, M.D. (“Dr. Harriott”) filed a complaint against CCSEA, Dr. Epes (a 75% shareholder of CCSEA), J. Mark McDaniel, Jr. (CCSEA’s principal officer) (“Mr. McDaniel”), Dr. Matthews,4 and Southeastern Cataract Laser Center, PLLC (“SCLC”) in a lawsuit captioned Harriott v. Central Carolina Surgical Eye Associates, P.A., 14 CVS 9982 (Guilford County) (the “Harriott Action”). The Harriott Action was designated a complex business case and assigned to the undersigned.

3 This action is captioned as Cent. Carolina Surgical Eye Assocs., P.A. v. Matthews, 15 CVS 7266 (Guilford County). The Court consolidated this action into the Consolidated Matters on November 23, 2015.

4 Dr. Harriott filed a Notice of Voluntary Dismissal as to Dr. Matthews on February 13, 2015. {6} On February 4, 2015, Old Battleground Properties, Inc. and Nivison Family Investments, LLC filed a complaint against CCSEA, SCLC, Dr. Epes, Dr. Epes’s wife, Bessie K. Epes (Dr. Epes and Bessie K. Epes collectively, the “Epeses”), Mr. McDaniel, and other related defendants in a lawsuit captioned Old Battleground Properties, Inc. v. Central Carolina Surgical Eye Associates, P.A., 15 CVS 1648 (Wake County) (the “Nivison Action”). The Nivison Action was also designated a complex business case and assigned to the undersigned. {7} The Harriott and Nivison Actions each alleged, among other things, that the Epeses and Mr. McDaniel had operated CCSEA and various other entities that some or all of them owned or controlled to advance their personal financial benefit at the expense of various creditors of the Epeses and the Epeses’ various entities. {8} On February 13, 2015, the Court entered an order in the Harriott Action finding substantial evidence that the Epeses’ and Mr. McDaniel’s conduct in connection with the operation of CCSEA and SCLC had been in furtherance of their efforts to defraud, avoid, and hinder creditors, and concluding that a receiver should be appointed with general authority to take fiscal and operational charge of CCSEA and SCLC for the benefit of Dr. Harriott and third-party creditors. {9} On February 25, 2015, the Court entered a similar order in the Nivison Action (the “Appointment Order”). The Appointment Order appointed Gerald A. Jeutter, Jr. (the “Receiver”) to serve as a receiver for CCSEA, SCLC, and three other related entities—HUTA Leasing, LLC, Southeastern Eye Management, Inc., and EMS Partners, LLC (collectively, the “Initial Corporate Defendants”). (Appointment Order ¶ 48.) {10} The Appointment Order vested the Receiver with all power and authority available to a receiver under North Carolina law, including the authority to take possession and control of the Initial Corporate Defendants’ assets and to assume full control and management of the Initial Corporate Defendants and any of their subsidiary entities. (Appointment Order ¶ 49.) The Appointment Order also enjoined all creditors of the Initial Corporate Defendants, including CCSEA, “from in any way interfering with or disturbing the property and assets” of the Initial Corporate Defendants. (Appointment Order ¶ 50(l).) {11} Through the Receiver’s investigation of the Initial Corporate Defendants, it became apparent that a number of lawsuits5 were pending in the North Carolina courts involving the Epeses, the Initial Corporate Defendants, and other entities that the Epeses owned or controlled (the “Pending Actions”). On May 13, 2015 and upon proper request, the Chief Justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court designated each of the Pending Actions (other than the previously-designated Harriott and Nivison Actions) as an exceptional case pursuant to Rule 2.1 of the General Rules of Practice for the Superior and District Courts, and assigned those cases to the undersigned. {12} On June 19, 2015, because each of the Pending Actions presented common issues of fact and law and the parties sought to establish interests in or the right to execute upon the same property, the Court entered an order consolidating all of the Pending Actions into the Consolidated Matters. The order directed parties in all the Pending Actions to file subsequent pleadings and documents in the Consolidated Matters, not in the individually-captioned Pending Actions. (Order on Mot. to Consolidate ¶ 5.) {13} On June 22, 2015, the Court entered a Master Case Management Order to govern case activity in the Consolidated Matters (the “Master CMO”). In particular,

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Bluebook (online)
2016 NCBC 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-se-eye-ctr-ccsea-v-matthews-ncbizct-2016.