Nickel v. MB Industries, LLC

107 So. 3d 815, 12 La.App. 3 Cir. 557, 2013 WL 162737, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 44
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 16, 2013
DocketNo. 12-557
StatusPublished

This text of 107 So. 3d 815 (Nickel v. MB Industries, LLC) 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
Nickel v. MB Industries, LLC, 107 So. 3d 815, 12 La.App. 3 Cir. 557, 2013 WL 162737, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 44 (La. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinions

PETERS, J.

|1The three plaintiffs in this litigation, Milo Nickel, Mike LeBlanc, and BBG Partners, LLC (BBG), brought suit against the defendants, MB Industries, Inc. (MBI) and MBI Global, LLC (MBI Global), in an effort to redeem an assignment of litigious rights from MBI to MBI Global pursuant to the provisions of La.Civ.Code art. 2652. They now appeal the trial court’s grant of an exception of res judicata in favor of the defendants dismissing their suit. For the following reasons, we reverse the trial court’s grant of the exception and remand the matter to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

DISCUSSION OF THE RECORD

The facts before us are provided by the pleadings and the evidence presented by the litigants at the January 30, 2012 hearing on the exception of res judicata at issue in this appeal. In support of their exception, MBI and MBI Global offered all documents attached to its brief in support of the exception, including specifically, three documents comprising a part of the record of a suit filed in the 215th Judicial District Court of Harris County, Texas, designated as Docket Number 2008-50193 and identified as MBI Global, LLC v. Hunter Buildings & Mfg., LB, et al: (1) a September 26, 2011 filing designated as a SIXTH AMENDED PETITION;1 (2) a December 9, 2011 judgment of the Texas court; and (3) a January 9, 2012 motion for new trial and to modify the trial court judgment. In opposition to the exceptions, Nickel, LeBlanc, and BBG offered: (1) a transcript of an October 4, 2011 hearing in the Texas litigation; (2) documentation attesting to the status of the legal entities involved in the litigation; (3) a copy of the assignment at issue in this litigation; and (4) the testimony of Benjamin Foster, a lawyer licensed to practice pin Illinois, but who participated in the Texas litigation on a pro hac vice basis as trial counsel.

The record before us establishes that Nickel and LeBlanc are Louisiana residents and BBG is a Wyoming limited liability company authorized to do business in Louisiana. Both MBI and MBI Global are affiliated business entities and are subsidiaries of their parent company, Carmel Enterprises. MBI and MBI Global collectively design, engineer, and manufacture blast-resistant modular buildings, with MBI Global having the general responsibility of obtaining business for the entities. The market for the modular buildings is primarily the United States government, but other countries and companies are customers as well. The customers use the [818]*818buildings in perilous locations or extreme environments.

During 2008 and 2009, Nickel was President of MBI Global and was a member of the board of directors of Carmel Enterprises; and LeBlanc was an officer of MBI Global and was the Chief Analytical Officer of Carmel Enterprises. Both men were also responsible for giving legal advice to all of the Carmel Enterprises subsidiaries. When they began their employment relationship with MBI Global and Carmel Enterprises, both Nickel and LeBlanc executed non-competition and confidentiality agreements (employment agreements), and these documents are the basis for the beginning of the Texas litigation.

Litigation over the relationships existing between Nickel and LeBlanc on the one hand and MBI and MBI Global on the other began in state court in Harris County, Texas,2 and originated as a suit by Nickel and LeBlanc against MBI and MBI Global. At some point in the litigation, the plaintiffs nonsuited their claims, but the litigation continued through counterclaims filed by MBI and MBI Global.JJn their position as plaintiffs in this phase of the Texas litigation, MBI and MBI Global asserted that Nickel and LeBlanc had breached the employment agreements by negotiating and accepting positions with a group of business entities competing with them (the Hunter Group3) and by actively assisting the competitors in competition with MBI and MBI Global.

On August 9, 2011, while still a plaintiff in the suit against Nickel, LeBlanc, BBG, and the Hunter Group, MBI executed a document entitled “ASSIGNMENT” which purports to assign its rights in the litigation to MBI Global. The document reads as follows:

WHEREAS MBI and MBI Global have filed suit against Milo Nickel, Mike Leblanc, BBG, Hunter International, Hunter Buildings, Sam Lavergne and Mark Massey in cause number 2008-50193, pending in the 215th Judicial District of Harris County, Texas; and
WHEREAS the above referenced suit was necessitated because Nickel and Leblanc, while officers of MBI Global, and while Nickel was also a director of the parent company and legal counsel to the MBI entities, began diverting away and soliciting MBI’s customers, agents and contracts for their own personal financial gain and interests. Lavergne, Massey and the Hunter entities aided, abetted, assisted and encouraged them to do so for their own financial gain and with an intent to cause harm to the MBI entities; and
WHEREAS, any relief sought by MBI may be obtained by MBI Global in its own right; and
WHEREAS, the defendants in the above referenced case have requested on numerous occasions continuances and have threatened to purchase the debt of some of the creditors of MBI and then force them into bankruptcy which would result in an automatic continuance and for the further purpose of impairing MBI’s ability to obtain any work from the State Department; and
[819]*819WHEREAS, if MBI is not a party to the case any longer it would remove the threat of a forced bankruptcy continuing the case; NOW,
|4FOR AND IN CONSIDERATION of ten (10) dollars ($10.00) and other good and valuable consideration, MBI hereby assigns any cause of action it may have to MBI Global, including, but not limited to, its rights to an injunction and under the first non-compete, non-solicitation and confidentiality agreement.
Nothing in this assignment releases MBI Global from any obligations it has to reimburse MBI for any expenses or obligations it may owe to MBI or which MBI may owe to MBI Global.

This assignment contains the signature of Fred Gossen, who is identified as MBI’s CEO.

Even before the execution of the assignment, trial in the Texas litigation had been set for October 11, 2011. On September 16, 2011, MBI removed itself from the litigation by nonsuit, and at a pretrial hearing held September 23, 2011, Nickel, LeBlanc, and BBG became aware of the assignment. At the end of that pretrial hearing, the trial court instructed MBI Global to clarify in its pleadings which causes of action would belong to MBI and which would belong to MBI Global. MBI Global responded to this instruction from the trial court on September 26, 2011, when it filed the sixth amendment to the original petition.

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Bluebook (online)
107 So. 3d 815, 12 La.App. 3 Cir. 557, 2013 WL 162737, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nickel-v-mb-industries-llc-lactapp-2013.