Rainbow Mountain, Inc. v. Terry Begeman

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMarch 23, 2017
Docket10221-VCMR
StatusPublished

This text of Rainbow Mountain, Inc. v. Terry Begeman (Rainbow Mountain, Inc. v. Terry Begeman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rainbow Mountain, Inc. v. Terry Begeman, (Del. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

RAINBOW MOUNTAIN, INC., a ) Delaware corporation, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) C.A. No. 10221-VCMR v. ) ) TERRY BEGEMAN, ) ) Defendant. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: December 23, 2016 Date Decided: March 23, 2017

Brian T.N. Jordan, JORDAN LAW, LLC, Wilmington, Delaware; Attorney for Plaintiff Rainbow Mountain, Inc.

Terry Begeman, Montebello, Virginia; Pro se Defendant.

MONTGOMERY-REEVES, Vice Chancellor. This action arises from a dispute among the members of Rainbow Mountain,

Inc., a Delaware nonstock corporation, (“Rainbow Mountain”). Plaintiff Rainbow

Mountain seeks a declaratory judgment that Defendant Terry Begeman was

effectively removed as a director, officer, and member of the corporation and as a

result has no right to occupy land owned by Rainbow Mountain. Terry,1 as

Counterclaim Plaintiff, seeks a declaratory judgment that he remains a member,

director, and officer of Rainbow Mountain and is entitled to continue to occupy

Rainbow Mountain’s land. Both parties in this case have moved for summary

judgment and have stipulated to a decision on the paper record. I hold that Terry

was not properly removed as a director in 2008 or as a member in 2009, but Terry

was effectively removed as Secretary of Rainbow Mountain in 2009. As a member

of Rainbow Mountain, Terry is entitled to continue to live on Rainbow Mountain’s

real property under the Rainbow Mountain bylaws.

I. BACKGROUND

The facts in this opinion derive from the documents that the parties have

submitted with their pleadings and briefs in this case. Both parties have moved for

summary judgment and have stipulated to a decision on the paper record.2

1 This memorandum opinion refers to the relevant individuals by first name because many of them share the same last names. No familiarity or disrespect is intended. 2 Letter from Brian Jordan, Esquire, to the Court, Rainbow Mountain, Inc. v. Begeman, C.A. No. 10221-VCMR (Del. Ch. Nov. 29, 2016).

1 A. Parties

Rainbow Mountain owns approximately 97 acres of land in Virginia.

Sheridan and Barbara formed Rainbow Mountain, and they and their natural children

were the original members of the corporation.

Terry is one of Sheridan and Barbara’s six children. He currently lives in a

cabin on the land owned by Rainbow Mountain. Before the events that gave rise to

this litigation, Terry was a director, a member, a Senior Vice-President, and the

Secretary of Rainbow Mountain.

Mark Begeman, Laurie Larimar, Cindy Dallwig, Jeffrey Begeman, and Todd

Begeman are Terry’s five siblings. Susan Begeman, Roger Dallwig, and Bonnie

Begeman are Terry’s siblings-in-law. Jason Begeman, Melanie Ketchum, and Justin

Begeman are Terry’s niece and nephews. Eric Ketchum is Melanie’s husband.

B. Facts

1. The Rainbow Mountain bylaws

Both parties have submitted a set of bylaws of Rainbow Mountain that was

originally adopted on February 10, 2003 (the “2003 Bylaws”).3 Plaintiff and

3 Pl.’s Mot. for Summ. J. Ex. A; First Am. Answer & Countercl. Ex. T.

2 Defendant also have submitted another version of the bylaws that first appears in the

record in a 2005 Rainbow Mountain resolution (the “2005 Bylaws”).4

On January 21, 2003, Thomas W. Aldous of the law firm Skeen & Zobrist

sent Terry a letter attaching the 2003 Bylaws for him to send to the members of

Rainbow Mountain.5 By February 10, 2003, six of the ten individuals thought to be

members of Rainbow Mountain on that date6 had signed a written consent of

members adopting the 2003 Bylaws.7

On July 29, 2004, Judge J. Michael Gamble of the Twenty-Fourth Judicial

Circuit of Virginia published an opinion in a case arising out of Sheridan’s attempt

to transfer Rainbow Mountain’s real property to himself (the “Virginia Litigation”).8

4 Compl. Ex. A; First Am. Answer & Countercl. Ex. V. The version of the 2005 Bylaws that Rainbow Mountain submitted as Exhibit A to the Complaint is formatted differently from the version of the 2005 Bylaws that Terry submitted as Exhibit V to the First Amended Answer and Counterclaim, but the substance is the same. 5 First Am. Answer & Countercl. Ex. T. 6 The written consent adopted on February 10, 2003, lists the current members of Rainbow Mountain as Sheridan, Jeffrey, Susan, Cindy, Roger, Todd, Bonnie, Laurie, Terry, and Mark. Jeffrey, Susan, Todd, Bonnie, Laurie, and Terry signed the written consent. 7 First Am. Answer & Countercl. Ex. U. 8 Terry seems to suggest that the Virginia court may not have had jurisdiction to decide the questions resolved in the July 29, 2004 opinion because in 2011, a Virginia court held that it did not have jurisdiction to decide the membership of Rainbow Mountain. In the interest of comity among the states and without full 3 Judge Gamble held that Rainbow Mountain had no written bylaws and rather had

bylaws only by custom, acquiescence, and course of conduct. Judge Gamble found

that the members acquiesced in a procedure under which Barbara made all decisions

for the corporation and appointed directors, officers, and members. Further, Judge

Gamble held that the members of Rainbow Mountain were Sheridan, Barbara, and

their six children.9 Barbara passed away before the Virginia Litigation began,10 and

Sheridan died during it.11 Thus, when Judge Gamble’s opinion was issued, the

surviving members of Rainbow Mountain were Mark, Laurie, Cindy, Jeffrey, Todd,

and Terry.

On July 7, 2005,12 Laurie, Jeffrey, Todd, and Terry signed and delivered a

written consent in lieu of an annual meeting of members, (1) recognizing the six

members as determined by the July 29, 2004, Virginia court order, (2) electing as

briefing on this issue, however, I consider the Virginia court’s July 29, 2004 opinion as preclusive on the issue of membership in Rainbow Mountain as of that date. 9 First Am. Answer & Countercl. Ex. K, at 3. 10 Id. 11 Oral Arg. Tr. 25. 12 Throughout this opinion, the dates on which written consents are found to be signed and delivered are the dates that the last signatory signed and delivered the written consent. All members signing written consents upon which this opinion relies signed and delivered within 60 days of the earliest dated consent that was delivered, as required by the Rainbow Mountain bylaws and the Delaware General Corporation Law. 8 Del. C. § 228(c); 2003 Bylaws art. III, ¶ 4.

4 directors Jeffrey, Susan, Jason, Melanie, Todd, Bonnie, Justin, Laurie, and Terry,

and (3) adopting a set of bylaws.13 The July 7, 2005 written consent of members

stated, in part, as follows:

[T]he Bylaws for the regulation of the affairs of the Corporation, a copy of which is attached hereto as Exhibit F and incorporated herein by reference, are hereby approved and adopted and ordered to be filed in the minute book of the Corporation to be effective immediately, and all previous bylaws are hereby superceded [sic], effective immediately.14

The record does not indicate which version of the bylaws was attached as “Exhibit

F” to the July 7, 2005 written consent. Terry stated at oral argument that the 2003

Bylaws have been the operative bylaws since they were ratified in the July 7, 2005

written consent of members.15 Rainbow Mountain appears to agree because it cites

to and includes as an exhibit to its opening summary judgment brief the 2003

Bylaws.16 Rainbow Mountain does not offer any proof or argue that the 2005

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