Mathis v. ERA FRANCHISE SYSTEMS, INC.

25 So. 3d 298, 2009 Miss. LEXIS 535, 2009 WL 3765545
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 2009
Docket2008-CA-00620-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 25 So. 3d 298 (Mathis v. ERA FRANCHISE SYSTEMS, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mathis v. ERA FRANCHISE SYSTEMS, INC., 25 So. 3d 298, 2009 Miss. LEXIS 535, 2009 WL 3765545 (Mich. 2009).

Opinion

KITCHENS, Justice,

for the Court.

¶ 1. This is a case involving the attempt of a shareholder in a closely-held corporation to bring derivative claims as a direct action. Finding that the trial judge did not err in dismissing the plaintiffs derivative claims for lack of standing, we affirm.

Facts and Procedural History

¶ 2. In 2000, Vennit B. Mathis, II, purchased a fifty percent equity interest in Real Estate Professionals, LLC (“REP”), a real estate brokerage firm. At the time of Mathis’s acquisition, REP was a licensed ERA franchise. In connection with a franchise agreement between REP and ERA Franchise Systems, Inc., Mathis executed a personal guaranty covering REP’s obligations to ERA.

¶ 3. The remaining fifty percent stake in the company belonged to Chip and Pamela Hill. According to Mathis’s complaint, Chip Hill induced Mathis to lend large sums of money to Mr. Hill and REP, and also induced Mathis to pledge his personal assets as security for loans that Mr. Hill and REP had obtained from third parties.

*300 ¶ 4. Mathis alleged that in March 2002, the Hills transferred their fifty percent equity interest in REP to H. Stuart Irby but remained REP employees. According to Mathis, in an attempt to exclude him from the business, Chip Hill and Irby fraudulently transferred all of REP’s assets to two other companies, Real Estate Professionals of the Pine Belt (REP-Pine Belt) and Real Estate Professionals of Central Mississippi, LLC (REP-Central). These entities were owned by Chip Hill, Irby, and Mark Warren, another REP employee. Mathis alleged that the Hills, Irby, and Warren induced REP’s real estate agents to terminate their contracts with REP and become agents for REP-Central and/or REP-Pine Belt. He also alleged that REP-Central and REP-Pine Belt began utilizing the ERA trademark and thereby misappropriated REP’s franchise rights.

¶ 5. In May 2003, Mathis filed suit against Chip and Pamela Hill, Irby, Warren, REP-Central, REP-Pine Belt, and ERA in the Chancery Court of Covington County, alleging several causes of action and seeking various forms of recovery. Recognizing that some of his claims were of a derivative nature and belonged to the corporation, Mathis sought to obtain an individual recovery to the exclusion of Irby, the other shareholder.

¶ 6. All of the defendants, with the exception of the Hills, timely filed answers to Mathis’s complaint. ERA, Warren, and REP-Central all asserted affirmative defenses that Mathis lacked standing. All of the defendants also disputed Mathis’s claim that he owned a fifty percent equity interest in REP. According to Irby, Irby had purchased Mathis’s interest in the company for $250,000. According to ERA, Warren, and REP-Pine Belt, Mathis had sold his interest in the company to the Hills.

¶ 7. ERA also filed counterclaims against Mathis and cross-claims against the Hills and Irby. ERA alleged that Mathis had sold his interest to the Hills and that Mathis was disputing the validity of the sale in an attempt to obtain a favorable settlement of a separate business dispute with Chip Hill. ERA also claimed that it was owed more than $300,000 by REP and that its members were personally liable for this amount. In the event that the court determined that Mathis had not sold his interest in REP, ERA alleged that it had a cause of action against the Hills and Irby for fraud, negligent misrepresentation, and fraudulent conveyance. 1

¶8. Irby and REP-Pine Belt also filed various counterclaims against Mathis arising from the alleged sale of Mathis’s one-half interest in REP to Irby. These claims included tortious interference with business relations, breach of contract, fraud, negligent misrepresentation, and trademark dilution and infringement.

¶ 9. In November 2003, a dispute arose over jurisdiction. The Hills had filed a Chapter 11 petition in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Mississippi. ERA attempted to have the action removed, but the bankruptcy court declined to exercise jurisdiction and remanded the case to chancery court. Following remand, ERA filed a motion to transfer the case to the Coving-ton County Circuit Court. The motion was denied, and this Court agreed to consider the issue on interlocutory appeal. In June 2006, this Court held that jurisdiction *301 was proper in the circuit court. ERA Franchise Systems, Inc. v. Mathis (Mathis I), 931 So.2d 1278 (Miss.2006).

¶ 10. In July 2007, more than four years after Mathis commenced this litigation, ERA filed a Motion to Dismiss for Lack of Standing, pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure, citing the derivative nature of Mathis’s claims. In due course, each of the appellees joined the motion. 2 Mathis responded by arguing that, under Derouen v. Murray, 604 So.2d 1086 (Miss.1992), as a shareholder in a closely-held limited liability corporation, he was entitled to bring claims of a derivative nature in a direct action. On March 10, 2008, the trial judge held that Mathis “lack[ed] standing to pursue any claims against any Defendant that are in the nature of derivative claims belonging to Real Estate Professionals, LLC, and that all of [Mathisjs claims against ERA are ... derivative.”

¶ 11. From that judgment, Mathis timely filed this appeal, raising several points of error. Mathis’s main argument is that he should be allowed to pursue derivative claims in a direct action and obtain recovery personally. In the alternative, should this Court find that Mathis lacked standing to pursue derivative claims, Mathis argues that the defendants waived their right to assert that Mathis lacked standing or that he should be allowed to amend his complaint to assert a derivative action. Finally, Mathis argues that not all of his claims against ERA are derivative in nature, and he should be allowed to pursue those claims that belong to him individually-

I.

¶ 12. In general, “an action to redress injuries to a corporation, whether arising in contract or in tort cannot be maintained by a stockholder in his own name, but must be brought by the corporation because the action belongs to the corporation and not the individual stockholders whose rights are merely derivative.” Longanecker v. Diamondhead Country Club, 760 So.2d 764, 768 (Miss.2000) (quoting Bruno v. Southeastern Servs., Inc., 385 So.2d 620, 622 (Miss.1980)). However, Mathis argues that such of his claims as are derivative in nature may be brought in a direct action under the doctrine announced in Derouen v. Murray, 604 So.2d 1086 (Miss.1992). In Derouen, this Court determined that an action by one shareholder against another was a derivative action even though the plaintiff did not label it as such. Id. at 1090-91. Although the Court found that the action was derivative, the opinion stated in a footnote that it could have been brought as a direct action. Id. at 1091 n. 2. According to Derouen,

In the case of a closely-held corporation ..

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 So. 3d 298, 2009 Miss. LEXIS 535, 2009 WL 3765545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mathis-v-era-franchise-systems-inc-miss-2009.