Kibodeaux v. Harrison

640 So. 2d 503, 93 La.App. 3 Cir. 1361, 1994 La. App. LEXIS 1390, 1994 WL 164715
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 4, 1994
DocketNo. 93-1361
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 640 So. 2d 503 (Kibodeaux v. Harrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kibodeaux v. Harrison, 640 So. 2d 503, 93 La.App. 3 Cir. 1361, 1994 La. App. LEXIS 1390, 1994 WL 164715 (La. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

| iLABORDE, Judge.

One individual joined forces in a business enterprise with another who was related by marriage. The company failed. Plaintiff now seeks reimbursement of the money she posted at the firm’s inception, plus penal damages and attorney fees. The trial judge found no fraud or bad faith on defendants’ parts, and no failure to comply with various securities registration requirements owing to the nature of the enterprise. We affirm.

Facts

By the end of 1984, Louisiana’s construction industry had slowed. Among the victims of the downturn were Barbara and Charles Kibodeaux who, to their credit, tried to find a business in which Charles might participate. Charles was underemployed due to the economic slowdown; Barbara was a guidance counselor at a middle school and therefore largely recession proof.

Barbara Kibodeaux and her husband learned that Ms. Harrison’s enterprise, Motion Cargo International, Inc., sold Mitsubishi forklifts and that Mitsubishi was interested in having a branch opened in Lake Charles. Ultimately, the two women agreed to open a minority-owned venture named Motion Cargo International of Lake Charles, Inc. Ms. Kibodeaux would pay $40,000 and Ms. Harrison would provide expertise.

After the Kibodeauxs learned that the Lake Charles company would not actually own any real assets at the end of the company’s | ¿first year, they threatened to withdraw from negotiations. At this point, Harrison offered them to withdraw their $40,000 investment and cancel the deal; alternately, she offered them four forklifts for inventory, at cost or less, to operate the Lake Charles business independently of defendants. They opted for neither course, choosing instead to forge ahead with the original deal.

Papers were drawn up and signed by the parties. Ms. Harrison would serve as president of the fledgling entity; Ms. Kibodeaux would serve as vice president, and Mr. Kibo-deaux would serve as secretary-treasurer. Additionally, Charles Kibodeaux would be the full-time day-to-day general manager of the business under the terms of his one year employment contract with the company. Although Ms. Harrison originally sought a controlling interest of the company, ownership was eventually divided evenly between the women, with each to have an option to buy out the other for $50,000 one year after the date of their agreement.

Arguments and Posture on Appeal

Plaintiff alleges that defendant Catherine Harrison did not honor her end of the bargain requiring assistance to the fledgling Lake Charles company, converted to her personal use plaintiff’s $40,000 investment which was intended for the joint enterprises’s bene[505]*505fits, and did not comply with various securities laws designed specifically for her protection.

The trial court found no merit in any of these contentions, and our exhaustive review of the record reveals no basis for reversal. The trial judge was not manifestly erroneous.

Breach of Contract

In her first argument, plaintiff complains that defendant did not honor her end of the bargain.

The minutes of the first board meeting indicates that the shares of stock issued to each of the women were paid for “in cash or in kind.” The buy-sell agreement between them required Ms. Kibodeaux to pay $40,000 and for Ms. Harrison to provide expertise and to induce the Baton Rouge entity to provide the new concern “a subfranehise dealership with Mitsubishi Forklift.”

IsThe trial judge noted that defendant Harrison provided a fleet of forklifts, spare parts, and a mechanic, guaranteed a lease on the building for a year, provided Mr. Kibodeaux a salary and expenses, loaned her experience, and was to provide all operating funds for the business for a year. These conclusions were not clearly wrong; indeed, each was conceded by Ms. Kibodeaux, who further admitted that defendants would pay for the forklifts showcased on the Lake Charles premises, yet the Lake Charles company would receive half or all of the rental income from them. Moreover, Mr. Kibodeaux stated that he had visited Baton Rouge for training purposes at least three or four times and that Ms. Harrison had ventured to Lake Charles on several occasions to market forklifts, sometimes in the company of Mr. Kibodeaux.

Finally, although the contractual term “subfranchise dealership” was perhaps inart-fully used, we cannot say the trial judge erred in determining that Ms. Harrison made a reasonable effort to comply with her obligation to plaintiff, regardless of whether it went so far as to offer to assist plaintiff in one day becoming a dealer independent of defendants. A former representative of Mitsubishi familiar with the transaction testified that he personally flew to Louisiana to confirm that the Kibodeauxs knew that the Lake Charles company would operate as a branch to Ms. Harrison’s Baton Rouge outlet and that they could not be guaranteed an independent dealership. They, like Ms. Harrison and many other dealers before them, would be free to apply for one in a year or two. We cannot say that the trial judge erred in accepting this testimony over the Kibo-deauxs, particularly since the Mitsubishi representative has no interest in the outcome of this litigation.

Conversion of Funds

Of the $40,000 invested by the Kibo-deauxs, Harrison placed $20,000 into the Baton Rouge corporation, $10,000 into a C.D., and used $10,000 personally. Plaintiff argues that Ms. Harrison’s failure to place the entire sum into the Lake Charles corporation amounts to conversion for which she is entitled to damages.

UThe Kibodeauxs maintain that they did not know defendant Harrison had appropriated the money for her personal use until the summer of 1985, when they were summoned to Baton Rouge and informed that the business was failing. According to Ms. Kibo-deaux, they did not ride out the year (and thereby at least receive Mr. Kibodeaux’s guaranteed salary) because they left the meeting with the definite impression that Ms. Harrison was trying to close the business. Becoming suspicious, at that time they demanded an opportunity to review the company’s records. This conflict arose following that disclosure.

We cannot say that the trial court erred in finding that Ms. Harrison in fact honored her end of the bargain and did not usurp the funds. Each of the parties to the enterprise conceded that the Lake Charles company was to maintain only $2,500 in its name and remit the balance to Baton Rouge, where the parties agreed all accounting was to occur. This is precisely what occurred. When the Lake Charles company needed cash or credit, it routinely turned to Baton Rouge for cash or credit enhancement. We do not find clearly erroneous the trial judge’s conclusion that the remittances between Lake Charles and Baton Rouge cancelled each other out, the result of hemorrhages in the Lake Charles business: regardless of where Ms. [506]*506Kibodeaux’s $40,000 was initially placed, it or a like sum was found to have winded its way back to the Lake Charles endeavor.

Importantly, it is obvious that the Lake Charles company would have fared no better even had the $40,000 been placed directly into the Lake Charles accounts. The report of the corporation’s liquidator indicated that Ms. Harrison had invested some $37,000 in the Lake Charles enterprise during its first six months alone, to cover Mr. Kibodeaux’s monthly salary ($2,000) and expenses ($250), rental expenses ($600), secretarial and mechanic’s salaries.

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Bluebook (online)
640 So. 2d 503, 93 La.App. 3 Cir. 1361, 1994 La. App. LEXIS 1390, 1994 WL 164715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kibodeaux-v-harrison-lactapp-1994.