Mitchell v. K & B Fabricators, Inc.

274 So. 3d 251
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedSeptember 28, 2018
Docket1170021
StatusPublished

This text of 274 So. 3d 251 (Mitchell v. K & B Fabricators, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mitchell v. K & B Fabricators, Inc., 274 So. 3d 251 (Ala. 2018).

Opinion

MENDHEIM, Justice.

Aqua Marine Enterprises, Inc. ("AME"), and Brent Mitchell appeal from a judgment of the Morgan Circuit Court in favor of K & B Fabricators, Inc. ("K & B"), following a bench trial in a dispute alleging the usurpation of corporate opportunities in the business of fabricating storm shelters. We affirm in part and reverse in part the judgment of the trial court and remand the case.

I. Facts

Brent Mitchell is, according to his own affidavit in this case, the chief operating officer for AME, and he is also its vice president. Mitchell testified that he is "the day-to-day operations ... guy" for AME. AME is an Alabama closely held corporation with four shareholders who each own 25 percent of AME's stock. AME's shareholders are Mitchell, his wife, his father, and his mother. According to Mitchell, AME was incorporated in 1988 and entered the business of selling storm shelters in 1995 under the trade name Safe-T-Shelter. AME carries on other business not related to storm shelters, the nature of which is not specified in the record.

Storm shelters are structures fabricated from raw steel that are designed to withstand high winds and flying debris typical of tornadoes and hurricanes. There are two general types of storm shelters: community shelters and residential shelters. Community shelters are large structures designed to hold many people; they contain lights and fans and are installed outdoors beneath an earthen berm. Community shelters are typically purchased by cities, counties, or even the Federal Emergency Management Agency ("FEMA"), and contracts *254to build community shelters generally go through a public-bidding process. Eligibility to sell and install community shelters requires three licenses: a retail license, a manufacturing license, and an installation license. AME has all three licenses; K & B has never had such licenses. The steel residential shelters are smaller structures installed inside houses and bolted to the concrete foundation in new homes or installed in a garage, workshop, or carport in existing homes. These residential shelters ordinarily do not contain lights or fans, and no licensing is required to install them.

Fabricating storm shelters involves taking raw steel and cutting and welding it into the shape and structure of a storm shelter. When AME began selling storm shelters in 1995, it did not fabricate them. Instead, it used an Ohio-based company, HB Products, to fabricate the shelters, which AME would then install.

In 2006, Mitchell began discussions with Kendall Blaxton, who owned a welding-supply company used by AME, about starting a storm-shelter-fabrication business in Alabama because Mitchell believed it would be more efficient to deal with a local shelter fabricator. Those discussions led to the formation of K & B, a closely held corporation with three shareholders, in 2006. Those shareholders were brothers Kenneth Blaxton and Kendall Blaxton, who each owned 45 percent of K & B's stock, and Mitchell, who owned 10 percent of its stock. K & B was incorporated on August 2, 2006.

The articles of incorporation for K & B show that the initial directors of K & B were Kenneth Blaxton, Kendall Blaxton, and Mitchell. Mitchell's signature appears on the articles of incorporation, along with those of the Blaxton brothers. Kendall Blaxton testified that the reason Mitchell wanted to be a shareholder and a director of K & B was so that K & B "would prioritize [AME's] work. If [K & B] went out and got any other work and it got in the way of [AME's] work, [Mitchell] didn't want that. So there was a gentleman's agreement that [K & B] take [AME's] work before anything else. So that's what we always did."

It is undisputed that from 2006 to mid 2014, all of AME's steel storm-shelter orders were fabricated by K & B. The testimony of several witnesses at trial indicated that the process for producing storm shelters between AME and K & B changed little over those years. AME obtained the customer orders for storm shelters, and AME would then order the fabrication of the shelters from K & B. From 2006 to late 2011, K & B would directly order the raw materials for the fabrication orders from AME's steel suppliers. From late 2011 through 2014, after Mitchell hired Sylaina Hinkle as AME's project manager for its storm-shelter business, AME purchased and ordered the raw materials for fabrication from AME's steel suppliers, which were then delivered directly to K & B. The raw materials consisted of steel, paint, and paint supplies. After K & B received the materials, it would fabricate a shelter according to the specifications in the order. K & B then delivered the fabricated shelter to AME, at which point AME would pay K & B for its fabrication work. If the order was for a community shelter, AME would then have an electrical company install wiring, lighting, and fans in the shelter. AME would then take the shelter to the customer's location for installation. If the order was for a residential shelter, AME would simply take the shelter to the customer's location for installation.

Kendall Blaxton testified that initially his brother, Kenneth, ran K & B's day-to-day operations. On July 5, 2006, AME entered into a "Non-competitive/Non-Disclosure/Non-Circumvention *255Agreement" with "K & B Fabrication and Kenneth Blaxton" ("the noncompetition agreement"). Among other things, "K & B Fabrication" agreed that "during the term of this Agreement, it will not perform the same or similar services for itself or for any competitor of AME if such services performed are in any way related to design, development, manufacture, assembly, purchase and/or sale of similar items." The noncompetition agreement was signed by Mitchell as vice president of AME and by Kenneth Blaxton, though it did not specify in what capacity Kenneth signed the agreement.

Kendall Blaxton testified that in 2009 he and his brother had a dispute about how K & B was being managed, and Kendall ended up buying out Kenneth's ownership interest in K & B. Kendall Blaxton (hereinafter "Blaxton") then owned 90 percent of K & B's stock and Mitchell owned 10 percent. From that point, Blaxton, along with K & B's fabrication-shop foreman, Joel Carroll, began running the day-to-day operations of K & B.

Blaxton testified that, despite being a shareholder and director in K & B, Mitchell "never wanted any money out of K & B. He said that many, many times. He just wanted [K & B] to give his business top priority, which we always did." As a result, Mitchell never received any distributions from K & B. Mitchell did not directly dispute this testimony. Blaxton testified that, during a month in 2013, he was not going to be able to make payroll for K & B employees and, therefore, he came to Mitchell for a loan. Mitchell gave Blaxton $20,000 to meet the payroll, but instead of requesting repayment of the loan, he requested more stock in K & B. Consequently, Mitchell received 15 percent more of the stock in K & B in exchange for the $20,000, bringing Mitchell's total ownership interest in K & B to 25 percent, while Blaxton owned 75 percent.

Both Mitchell and Blaxton testified that between 2006 and early 2011 AME and K & B's storm-shelter-business activity was slow.

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274 So. 3d 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-k-b-fabricators-inc-ala-2018.