Richardson v. Frontier Spinning Mills, Inc.

2011 NCBC 39
CourtNorth Carolina Business Court
DecidedOctober 6, 2011
Docket10-CVS-4660
StatusPublished

This text of 2011 NCBC 39 (Richardson v. Frontier Spinning Mills, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Carolina Business Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richardson v. Frontier Spinning Mills, Inc., 2011 NCBC 39 (N.C. Super. Ct. 2011).

Opinion

Richardson v. Frontier Spinning Mills, Inc., 2011 NCBC 39.

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION COUNTY OF LEE 10 CVS 4660

CLAY VANCE RICHARDSON, et al., ) Plaintiffs ) ) v. ) ) FRONTIER SPINNING MILLS, INC., et al., ) Defendants )

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION COUNTY OF LEE 10 CVS 8307

MURRAY C. GREASON, JR., et al., ) Plaintiffs ) ) v. ) ) FRONTIER SPINNING MILLS, INC., et al., ) Defendants )

ORDER ON PLAINTIFFS' MOTION TO COMPEL

THESE MATTERS, consolidated for discovery and pretrial purposes, are before

the court on the captioned respective Plaintiffs' Motion to Compel Compliance with

Subpoena and Compel Production of Documents (the "Motion"), filed on July 27, 2011,

and

THE COURT, having reviewed and considered the Motion and the respective

briefs propounded in support of and opposition to the Motion, FINDS and CONCLUDES

that: 1. These civil actions arise from the sale (the "Sale") of Frontier Spinning

Mills, Inc. ("Frontier"), a closely-held corporation in which Plaintiffs were minority

shareholders. Frontier was sold to Sun Capital ("Sun"), a private equity firm.

2. Among other things, the Plaintiffs allege that the Defendants wrongfully

caused the Sale to be structured so that shareholders of a single class of Frontier

common stock were divided into two classes for sale and pricing purposes – the

Plaintiffs ("Outside Shareholders") and the shareholding Defendants ("Inside

Shareholders"). The Plaintiffs complain about the fact that the Outside Shareholders

were paid less per share than the similarly situated Inside Shareholders when the Sale

closed.

3. The Plaintiffs further allege that Defendants failed to disclose certain

material facts concerning the Sale and affirmatively made materially misleading

statements in order to create a sense of desperation about Frontier's financial condition

prior to the Sale. They allege that this induced the Plaintiffs to accept a

disproportionately lower share of the purchase price from the Frontier Sale.

4. Defendants contend that the Plaintiffs were informed fully about how the

Sale was structured, including the disparate pricing of the shares held by Outside

Shareholders and Inside Shareholders. Further, they contend that by signing a Stock

Purchase Agreement ("SPA") and a separate release relative to the Sale, the Plaintiffs

knowingly ratified and approved the very things they now are complaining about.

Defendants further point out that the SPA contained a specific acknowledgement by

Plaintiffs that they were approving the Sale knowing that they lacked certain "Seller

Excluded Information" that either then was or later might come into the possession of Sun and the Inside Shareholders. Defendants also contend that Plaintiffs should not

be heard to complain because any Outside Shareholders who did not want to approve

the Sale had a right to dissent and receive "fair value" for their shares pursuant to N.C.

Gen. Stat. §55-11-04. 1

5. In responding to the substantive allegations of the Complaint, the

Defendants have pled a number of affirmative defenses. One of those defenses is that

Defendants were relying on the advice of counsel with regard to material parts of how

the Sale was structured, including but not limited to the provision of two disparate

purchase prices for the respective Frontier shares held by the Outside Shareholders

and the Inside Shareholders. This defense has been raised both in the context of

answers by one or more Defendants during oral depositions 2 and by the formal filing of

a Sixth Affirmative Defense ("Sixth Defense"), allowed as an amendment to Defendants'

Answer by Order of this court on June 29, 2011. 3 The Sixth Defense states that:

In response to all Plaintiffs' claims based on allegations of illegal disparate treatment of "Outside Shareholders" and the "Inside Shareholders" and all Plaintiffs' Claims based upon allegations of insufficient material disclosures in the Stock Purchase Agreement and otherwise, which Defendants specifically deny, and if it is determined that there was illegal disparate treatment of the "Outside Shareholder[s]" and the "Inside Shareholders" or insufficient material disclosure in the Stock Purchase Agreement and otherwise, which the Defendants specifically deny, then Defendants assert that in

1 None of the potential dispositive substantive issues raised by Defendants' contentions are formally before the court at this time. 2 See testimony given by former Frontier CEO, George R. Perkins ("Perkins"), Perkins Dep. 125:23 – 126:11; and by former Frontier CFO, Barbara F. Walton ("Walton"), Walton Dep. 161:15-16. 3 Defendants have argued that the defense is not raised formally, and therefore no waiver is effected, by the act of a Defendant-deponent providing an answer that in substance says the Defendant relied upon the advice of counsel in undertaking certain actions with regard to the Sale. Rather, they argue that a privilege waiver can only arise when the advice of counsel is relied upon formally, and then only in the narrow context of the issue(s) raised by that reliance. The reported cases Defendants rely upon do not appear supportive of Defendants' position. However, in the context of this matter, given the broad form of the Sixth Defense, the court concludes that Defendants' position makes a distinction without a difference. the discharge of any legal responsibilities with respect to these allegations, they relied on the advice of counsel. 4

6. The Plaintiffs contend that by raising the defense that Defendants relied

upon the advice of counsel, Defendants have waived any attorney-client privilege or

work-product privilege between them and counsel with regard to all aspects of the

Sale. 5 Specifically, Plaintiffs seek to discover information and to depose the

Defendants and Frontier counsel, Jamie Clarke, Esq. ("Clarke"), of the firm Moore &

Van Allen, PLLC ("MVA"), free of attorney-client or work-product privilege constraints.

7. In response, the Defendants argue that any such waivers must be very

narrowly limited in scope. They contend that any waiver of the attorney-client privilege

arising from the advice of counsel defense must be confined to specific communications

that are related to the subject matter for which the defense is asserted. Further,

Defendants argue in substance that a waiver of the attorney-client privilege does not

constitute a waiver of the work-product privilege, since the latter involves mental

processes of the attorney and is not necessarily communicated to the client. Among

other things, they contend that unless work product was communicated to the client, it

could not have been relied upon by the client and should not be discoverable as part of

an attorney-client waiver.

8. The deposition testimony of Perkins and Walton reflects broad reliance by

Defendants upon the advice of counsel in the context of defending Plaintiffs' allegations

in this civil action. The Sixth Defense formally raises the advice of counsel defense in

4 Am. Answer, Sixth Def. (emphasis added). 5 Plaintiffs also contend that an "advice of counsel" defense, as apparently contemplated by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 55-8-42, is not available to all or some of the Defendants here. Although that issue is not formally before the court at this time, for the limited purposes of this Order the Sixth Defense is deemed to be viable as to all Defendants.

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