Lockerman v. S. River Electric Membership Corp.

794 S.E.2d 346, 2016 N.C. App. LEXIS 1234, 2016 WL 7094063
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 6, 2016
DocketCOA15-1113
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 794 S.E.2d 346 (Lockerman v. S. River Electric Membership Corp.) 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
Lockerman v. S. River Electric Membership Corp., 794 S.E.2d 346, 2016 N.C. App. LEXIS 1234, 2016 WL 7094063 (N.C. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

BRYANT, Judge.

Where defendant, an electric cooperative, did not owe plaintiffs a fiduciary duty with regard to the discounting of capital credits and plaintiffs' claims are otherwise barred by the statute of limitations or were released pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 28A-25-6(e), the trial court did not err in granting defendant's motions for summary judgment, and we affirm the orders of the trial court.

Defendant South River Electric Membership Corporation ("SREMC", or "the Cooperative"), is a nonprofit electric membership cooperative organized and existing pursuant to the laws of the North Carolina Rural Electrification Authority. Headquartered in Harnett County, North Carolina, SREMC provides electric service to members in Sampson, Harnett, Cumberland, Johnston, and Bladen Counties.

SREMC sets a retirement cycle for capital credits, "annually allocat[ing] to each Member ... Operating Margins from the Cooperative Service in proportion to the value or quantity of the Cooperative Service used, received, or purchased by each member during the applicable fiscal year ('Capital Credits')." SREMC makes capital credit retirements nineteen years after the year in which the credits were assigned. SREMC's Board (the "Board") "determine[s] the method, basis, priority, and order of retiring and refunding Capital Credits...." There is no fixed time by which capital credits must be retired and all members and former members have a personal property interest in their accumulated capital credits.

When a member or former member dies owning capital credits, that member's accumulated capital credits become property of the deceased member's estate. A deceased member's personal representative may request, and the Board may authorize, a special retirement of the deceased member's accumulated capital credits. Prior to a 2001 resolution, SREMC had made special retirements of capital credits to the estates of deceased former members on a non-discounted basis. In March 2001, the Board unanimously passed a resolution "that all capital credits to estates of members dying after June 30, 2001, shall be calculated based on a 6% discount rate and a discount period equal to the number of years of patronage capital then outstanding." On 4 June 2001, the Board amended the Cooperative's bylaws (the "2001 bylaws") and approved a policy of discounting special retirements to the estates of deceased former members, to be "calculated on a discount rate equal to the Wall Street Journal Prime Rate as of December 31 of each applicable year ...." As a result, from August 2001 until December 2002, SREMC discounted special or early retirements of capital credits using a 6% annual discount rate. Then, in January 2003, SREMC began using a discount rate based on the Wall Street Journal Prime Rate as of 31 December of the previous year.

The 2001 bylaws allowed the Board to authorize the Cooperative to wholly or partially retire and refund capital credits to members and former members. SREMC does not notify members on each occasion when changes are made to the bylaws and it did not provide notice concerning the 4 June 2001 changes.

On 4 May 1976, J.J. (Jay) Faircloth died intestate, a citizen and resident of Cumberland County, North Carolina, survived by his widow, Lillie M. Faircloth, who inherited Jay's capital credits. Lillie M. Faircloth McLelland ("McLelland") died testate on 8 December 1999, prior to the changes made to SREMC's discounting policy. At the time of her death in 1999, McLelland, then citizen and resident of Lenoir County, North Carolina, owned accumulated capital credits of $1,117.17.

On 8 October 2002, SREMC paid the sum of $1,117.17 to the Lenoir County Clerk of Court for McLelland. SREMC did not apply a discount to McLelland's capital credits, nor did it retain any portion of them. This is the only instance in which a deceased former *350 member's capital credits were not discounted once SREMC began its discounting program.

From January 2003 onwards, the annual discount rate was based on the WSJ Prime Rate as of December 31 of the previous year. During calendar year 2003, SREMC used a 4.25% annual discount rate for discounting capital credits to the estates of deceased members.

Ellen Dudley Spell ("Ellen"), deceased, was a citizen and resident of Sampson County and a member of SREMC at the time of her death on 3 October 2002. She owned $695.22 of capital credits. On 22 October 2002, Ellen's daughter applied for Ellen's capital credits. SREMC prepared a form titled "Request for Refund of Capital Credit Allocation to Estate of Deceased Member," which stated as follows:

I understand that this Application represents a request for an early retirement of the stated capital credits and that a discount factor (as approved by the Cooperative's Board of Directors) will apply to this requirement and refund. The present discount factor is 6%.

SREMC discounted the $695.22 in capital credits by $398.66 at retirement, using the 6% annual discount rate in effect at that time. As a result, SREMC returned $296.56 of the $695.22 in accumulated capital credits to Ellen's estate (the "EDS Estate"), and accrued $398.66 to its "net savings."

Sulie Daniels Spell ("Sulie"), also deceased, was a citizen and resident of Sampson County and a member of SREMC at the time of her death on 28 April 2009. She owned $221.55 of capital credits. Sulie's son applied for Sulie's capital credits, using the same form described above, except the "present discount factor" was listed as "3.25%." SREMC discounted Sulie's capital credits by $94.79, leaving $126.76 to be paid to the clerk of court for Sulie's estate (the "SDS Estate"). As a result, SREMC accrued $94.79 to its "net savings."

On 7 February 2011, plaintiff Andrew M. Jackson, a citizen and resident of Sampson County, North Carolina, was appointed Administrator of both the EDS and SDS Estates by the Clerk of Superior Court of Sampson County, North Carolina. On 9 February 2011, Jackson filed a complaint in Sampson County against SREMC. Styled as a class action, plaintiffs are the EDS and SDS Estates. The complaint included claims for declaratory judgment, breach of fiduciary duty, conversion, unjust enrichment, unfair or deceptive trade practices ("UDTP"), and breach of contract, 1 all related to SREMC's retirement of capital credits. On 25 August 2011, Ted B. Lockerman was substituted as Administrator of the EDS and SDS Estates and as plaintiff in this action. Thereafter, SREMC removed the case to the Business Court, where it was assigned to the Honorable James L. Gale. On October 21, 2011, Judge Gale entered a Phase One Case Management Order.

In December 2011, SREMC filed and served two motions for partial summary judgment, both of which were granted. In granting its first motion, the trial court acknowledged that SREMC could legally discount capital credits of deceased members when the credits are retired early. Plaintiffs do not appeal this ruling.

In granting SREMC's second motion, the trial court concluded that SREMC has no "fiduciary duty" to its members when retiring capital credits. Plaintiffs' initial appeal of that ruling was dismissed as interlocutory per opinion of this Court on 6 August 2013. Lockerman v. S. River Elec. Membership Corp. , No. COA12-1450, 2013 WL 4006997

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794 S.E.2d 346, 2016 N.C. App. LEXIS 1234, 2016 WL 7094063, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lockerman-v-s-river-electric-membership-corp-ncctapp-2016.