Matthew Lacas v. Monroe Credit, LLC, Willys Gerald, Patrick Herring, and Richard W. Huye, Jr.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 15, 2021
Docket54,170-CA
StatusPublished

This text of Matthew Lacas v. Monroe Credit, LLC, Willys Gerald, Patrick Herring, and Richard W. Huye, Jr. (Matthew Lacas v. Monroe Credit, LLC, Willys Gerald, Patrick Herring, and Richard W. Huye, Jr.) 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
Matthew Lacas v. Monroe Credit, LLC, Willys Gerald, Patrick Herring, and Richard W. Huye, Jr., (La. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Judgment rendered December 15, 2021. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 2166, La. C.C.P.

No. 54,170-CA

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

*****

MATTHEW LACAS Plaintiff-Appellee

versus

MONROE CREDIT, LLC, Defendants-Appellants WILLYS GERALD, PATRICK HERRING, AND RICHARD W. HUYE, JR.

Appealed from the Fourth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Ouachita, Louisiana Trial Court No. 2018-3750

Honorable Robert C. Johnson, Judge

WATSON, McMILLIN & STREET, LLP Counsel for Appellants, By: David Carlton McMillin Monroe Credit, LLC, William Michael Street Willys Gerald, Patrick Herring, Richard W. Huye, Jr., and Pamela Gerald

HUDSON, POTTS & BERNSTEIN, LLP Counsel for Appellee By: G. Adam Cossey

Before MOORE, GARRETT, and THOMPSON, JJ. GARRETT, J.

The defendants, Monroe Credit, LLC (“Monroe Credit”), Willys

Gerald1, Patrick Herring, and Richard W. Huye, Jr., appeal from a trial court

ruling that granted a partial summary judgment in favor of the plaintiff,

Matthew Lacas.2 The trial court found that the resignation, in 2011, of

Ronnie Ridgdell, a former member of the LLC, constituted a terminating

event for the company and any activities unrelated to the winding up of the

business that occurred after Ridgdell’s resignation, including the expulsion

of Lacas, were nullities. The court ordered the liquidation of Monroe Credit.

For the following reasons, we reverse the trial court judgment and remand

for further proceedings.

FACTS

Monroe Credit commenced operations on May 1, 2008, pursuant to

Articles of Organization (“AO”) filed with the Louisiana Secretary of State.

The company is engaged in making consumer loans and selling insurance.

Many of the issues in this litigation stem from the parties’ use of an outdated

form to establish an LLC and their failure to obtain legal advice on the front

end. Also, the parties never formulated a separate operating agreement.

Despite the deficiencies in setting up the LLC, the parties operated what

appears to be a successful business enterprise.3

1 During the course of this litigation, Gerald died and a motion to substitute his widow, Pamela Gerald, as a proper party defendant was granted by this court on September 1, 2021. 2 At some points in this record, the plaintiff’s last name is spelled “Lacas” and, at other points, it is spelled “LaCas.” “Lacas” is the most frequent spelling and will be used in this opinion. 3 In paragraph seven of his petition, the plaintiff alleged, in part: The five original members were Lacas, Ridgdell, Gerald, Herring, and

Huye. Each owned a 20% share in the company. Effective December 31,

2011, Ridgdell resigned as a member and was paid for his 20% membership.

His shares were equally redistributed among the four remaining members,

giving each a 25% membership in the LLC. The company continued its

business operations. Ridgdell left some investments in the LLC and

received a return on them.

In addition to being a member of the LLC, Lacas was also employed

as the manager. At some point, the other members suspected that Lacas was

mismanaging the company. Lacas acknowledged that he was indebted to

Monroe Credit in the amount of $48,661.35. In September 2017, he

executed a promissory note for the debt. The holder and owner in due

course of the note was GHH Enterprises, LLC (“GHH”), another credit

company owned by the members of Monroe Credit. Lacas failed to make

the payments on the note. On March 13, 2018, all four members of Monroe

Credit met and, in a 3 to 1 vote, revoked Lacas’s membership in the

company. Lacas joined in the execution of the minutes memorializing the

meeting. A “Change of Membership of Monroe Credit” was executed by

Gerald, Herring, and Huye. Lacas signed stating he was against the action.

Throughout its 10-year history, the company has been a profitable endeavor, generating revenues from loans issued to its customers as well as commissions on insurance that is used for all loans.

In paragraph eight, the plaintiff alleged:

Due to the Company’s success, it has consistently paid disbursements to its members in the form of cash payments, in addition to benefits that include automobile and insurance benefits paid by the Company for the benefit of the members.

2 On November 15, 2018, Lacas filed suit against the defendants for

declaratory judgment, damages, and injunctive relief. The suit alleges a

myriad of different causes of action and seeks different forms of relief.

Lacas claimed his suit concerned a declaration of the membership and

ownership interests of Monroe Credit. In his petition, Lacas first sought a

declaratory judgment that the attempted revocation of his membership was

not authorized in the company’s operating agreement or by law. He claimed

the revocation was null and that he remained a 25% owner of the company.

Second, Lacas argued that, if the revocation was valid, it constituted a

terminating event for the company; the company automatically terminated

and ceased to exist at that time. He sought to have the company ordered to

wind up affairs and pay him his 25% membership interest. Third, Lacas

sought an injunction prohibiting the company from any further operations.

Fourth, Lacas argued that, because his revocation was a nullity, he was

entitled to the fair market value of his 25% share of the company, as well as

his share of the distributions, profits, and benefits that had accrued since his

attempted revocation. Fifth, Lacas claimed that the defendants committed

the tort of conversion. Sixth, Lacas urged that the defendants breached their

fiduciary duty to the company and to him. Therefore, he was entitled to

damages and attorney fees. Finally, Lacas maintained that the defendants

violated the Louisiana Unfair Trade Practices Act (“LUTPA”) of La. R.S.

51:1401, et seq. for ejecting him from membership in bad faith and without

just compensation. He sought damages. Notably, nowhere in the petition

did Lacas ever contend that the company had terminated in 2011 when

Ridgdell withdrew.

3 On August 5, 2019, the defendants filed peremptory exceptions of no

right and no cause of action. They claimed that Lacas had no right to

demand liquidation of the company or injunctive relief because he was no

longer a member.4 According to the defendants, Lacas had no right of action

under LUTPA because that action is limited to consumers and business

competitors. The defendants acknowledged that Lacas had a right of action

to assert a claim for recovery of the value of his interest in the LLC.

However, they alleged that any amount he would be entitled to would be

offset by his debt to the LLC and damages owed for breach of his fiduciary

duty to the company. They maintained that Lacas had no cause of action

against the individual members of the company.

A hearing on the exceptions was held on November 13, 2019. Lacas

argued that he was only seeking recovery against the LLC and not against

the individual members in their personal capacity. That rendered moot the

exception of no cause of action. Lacas asserted that he did have a right of

action in this matter and there was either no authority to expel him under the

LLC’s AO or, in the alternative, if there was authority to expel him, the LLC

owed him for his membership interest.

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Bluebook (online)
Matthew Lacas v. Monroe Credit, LLC, Willys Gerald, Patrick Herring, and Richard W. Huye, Jr., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matthew-lacas-v-monroe-credit-llc-willys-gerald-patrick-herring-and-lactapp-2021.