K2HN Constr. NC, LLC v. Five D Contractors

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 3, 2019
Docket19-104
StatusPublished

This text of K2HN Constr. NC, LLC v. Five D Contractors (K2HN Constr. NC, LLC v. Five D Contractors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
K2HN Constr. NC, LLC v. Five D Contractors, (N.C. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

No. COA19-104

Filed: 3 September 2019

Mecklenburg County, No. 17-CVS-6914

K2HN CONSTRUCTION NC, LLC, Plaintiff,

v.

FIVE D CONTRACTORS, INC. a North Carolina Corporation and BRIAN DALTON an individual, Defendants.

Appeal by Plaintiff from summary judgment entered 18 April 2018 by Judge

Jesse B. Caldwell III in Mecklenburg County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of

Appeals 8 August 2019.

Wesley S. White for Plaintiff-Appellant.

Johnston, Allison & Hord, P.A., by Greg C. Ahlum and Kimberly J. Kirk, for Defendants-Appellees.

INMAN, Judge.

Plaintiff K2HN Construction NC, LLC, (“Plaintiff”) appeals from an order

granting summary judgment in favor of Defendants Five D Contractors, Inc. and

Brian Dalton (“Defendants”). Defendants seek dismissal of this appeal for violation

of various nonjurisdictional appellate rules. After careful review, we dismiss the

appeal because Plaintiff, in addition to committing numerous nonjurisdictional

defaults alleged in Defendants’ motion and independently identified by this Court on

review, abandoned its appeal by failing to cite any legal authority in support of its K2HN CONSTR., NC, LLC V. FIVE D CONTRACTORS, INC.

Opinion of the Court

arguments as mandated by Rule 28(b)(6) of the North Carolina Rules of Appellate

Procedure.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Plaintiff and Defendants are general contractors. In 2014, the parties orally

agreed to enter into a joint venture to build four commercial properties in Georgia

where, at the time of the agreement, only Plaintiff was licensed. The agreement

contemplated an even split of all profits realized on the projects.

Defendants commenced construction on the projects and Plaintiff provided its

Georgia contractor’s license and agents’ signatures on various contracts, permits, and

registration forms connected to the projects. At no point did Plaintiff provide labor

or materials. Its contributions to the projects consisted only of providing a license

number and signatures and unspecified administrative work that Plaintiff was

unable to describe at deposition.

The four projects were eventually completed, but Plaintiff never received any

compensation as contemplated by the joint venture agreement. Plaintiff filed suit

against Defendants on 12 April 2017, alleging claims for breach of contract, quantum

meruit, conversion, fraudulent misrepresentation, unfair and deceptive trade

practices, piercing the corporate veil, and punitive damages. Defendants filed their

combined motion to dismiss, answer, and affirmative defenses on 5 September 2017,

denying each of Plaintiff’s claims and asserting ten affirmative defenses. Following

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discovery, Defendants filed a motion for summary judgment. That motion was

granted by the trial court by order entered 18 April 2018 after a hearing on 29 March

2018. Plaintiff filed its notice of appeal on 17 May 2018.

Following service of its notice of appeal on 17 May 2018, Plaintiff procured a

transcript of the proceedings and prepared a proposed record on appeal. The reporter

certified delivery of the transcript on 30 September 2018, giving Plaintiff until 5

November 2018 to serve a proposed record on Defendants pursuant to Rule 11 of the

North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure. N.C. R. App. P. 11(b) (2018). Plaintiff

served a proposed record on Defendants a day late, on 6 November 2018.

The parties agreed to contents of the record on appeal via email on 16 January

2019,1 and it was filed with this Court on 18 January 2019. Plaintiff, however, failed

1 Plaintiff contends the record was settled by agreement on 15 January 2019. Defendants’ counsel filed an affidavit and exhibits with this Court alongside their motion to dismiss the appeal demonstrating that the record was not agreed to until 16 January 2019. In any event, we conclude that the record on appeal was settled well before 16 January 2019 by operation of Rule 11 of the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure. Plaintiff served the proposed record via hand delivery on 6 November 2018 and Defendants timely served their objections and amendments to the proposed record on 5 December 2018, one day before the 30-day deadline provided by Rule 11. N.C. R. App. P. 11(c) (2019). To avoid settlement of the record by operation of rule, if Plaintiff disagreed with Defendants’ objections and amendments, Plaintiff must have sought judicial settlement prior to 18 December 2018. See id. (“If any appellee timely serves amendments [or] objections . . . and no judicial settlement of the record is timely sought, the record is deemed settled as of the expiration of the ten-day period within which any party could have requested judicial settlement of the record on appeal under this Rule 11(c).”). No request for judicial settlement or agreement to the record’s contents appears in the record, so we therefore assume the record was settled by operation of Rule 11(c) on 18 December 2018. See N.C. R. App. P. 9(a)(1)i. (requiring an agreement, notice of approval, or judicial settlement order to be included in the record on appeal). Although Rule 11(c) provides that “nothing herein shall prevent settlement of the record on appeal by agreement of the parties at any time within the times herein limited for settling the record by judicial order[,]” that time expired on 8 January 2019. See id. (requiring entry of an order settling the record on appeal within twenty days of service of a request on a judge, which must have been made within ten days of the of the latest possible served objection or

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to post the appeal bond and pay the docketing fee at the time of filing as required by

our appellate rules. N. C. R. App. P. 6(c) and 12(b).2 This Court sent a letter

reminding Plaintiff of the required appeal bond and docketing fee and extended the

deadline for those payments by ten days, until 8 February 2019. Plaintiff did not post

the bond or pay the required fee until 28 February 2019, 20 days beyond the extended

deadline.

Plaintiff’s filing of the record on appeal on 18 January 2019 also meant that its

principal brief was due to be filed on or before 18 February 2019, i.e., within 30 days

as required by our rules. N.C. R. App. P. 13(a)(1). By 22 February 2019, Plaintiff

still had not filed its brief, and Defendants moved to dismiss the appeal. Plaintiff

responded by arguing that the time to file its brief had not begun to run because this

amendment by an appellee). After the record was settled by operation of Rule 11, the parties could not settle it by agreement. This discrepancy raises an additional rule violation not identified by Defendants—if the record on appeal was settled by rule on 18 December 2018, Plaintiff was required to file the final record on appeal on 2 January 2019. See N.C. R. App. P. 12(a) (requiring the record on appeal to be filed within fifteen days of settlement under Rule 11). The record on appeal, however, was not filed until 18 January 2019. 2 It is also unclear whether Plaintiff properly served the final record on appeal. See N.C. R.

App. P. 26(b)-(c) (requiring service of documents filed with this Court and enumerating valid methods of service).

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