Sanctuary Capital, LLC on Behalf of North Louisiana Bidco, LLC v. Richard D. Cloud, James Randolph Garner, and North Louisiana Bidco, LLC

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 20, 2019
Docket53,157-CA
StatusPublished

This text of Sanctuary Capital, LLC on Behalf of North Louisiana Bidco, LLC v. Richard D. Cloud, James Randolph Garner, and North Louisiana Bidco, LLC (Sanctuary Capital, LLC on Behalf of North Louisiana Bidco, LLC v. Richard D. Cloud, James Randolph Garner, and North Louisiana Bidco, 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
Sanctuary Capital, LLC on Behalf of North Louisiana Bidco, LLC v. Richard D. Cloud, James Randolph Garner, and North Louisiana Bidco, LLC, (La. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Judgment rendered November 20, 2019. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 2166, La. C.C.P.

No. 53,157-CA

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

*****

SANCTUARY CAPITAL, LLC, Plaintiffs-Appellants ET AL. ON BEHALF OF NORTH LOUISIANA BIDCO, LLC

versus

RICHARD D. CLOUD, JAMES Defendants-Appellees RANDOLPH GARNER, AND NORTH LOUISIANA BIDCO, LLC

Appealed from the Fourth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Ouachita, Louisiana Trial Court No. 2014-1379

Honorable Daniel Ellender, Judge

NELSON, ZENTNER, SARTOR Counsel for Appellants, & SNELLINGS, LLC Sanctuary Capital, LLC, By: George M. Snellings IV J. Bishop Johnston, W. David H. Nelson Clinton Raspberry, Jr., MCS Two, LLC, O. A. Cannon, Jr., Nelson D. Abell, III, R. Stewart Ewing, Jr., Carolyn W. Perry, Annette Williams Carroll, Molly Williams, and Clark M. Williams, III, Individually and on Behalf of North Louisiana Bidco, LLC BREITHAUPT, DUBOS, & WOLLESON, Counsel for Appellee, LLC Richard D. Cloud By: R. Alan Breithaupt James R. Close

HECK LAW FIRM, LLP Counsel for Appellee, By: Charles H. Heck, Sr. James Randolph Garner Charles H. Heck, Jr.

WHEELIS & ROZANSKI Counsel for Appellee, By: Stephen D. Wheelis North Louisiana Bidco, Richard A. Rozanski LLC Shawn M. Bordelon

Before GARRETT, STONE, and McCALLUM, JJ. GARRETT, J.

This is the third time this lawsuit has come before this court. The suit

began when members of a limited liability company (“LLC”) sought access

to the company’s financial records. They have now added claims for

damages against the LLC’s managers, Richard D. Cloud and James

Randolph Garner. This instant appeal was brought by the plaintiffs after the

trial court reversed an earlier ruling and granted exceptions of no cause of

action filed by the managers. We reverse the trial court judgment and

remand for further proceedings.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This matter is before us on exceptions of no cause of action.

Accordingly, all of the facts described below come solely from the

allegations in the petitions that are before us for review, together with the

attachments filed with those petitions. Since we are dealing with

peremptory exceptions that were originally denied but later reurged and

granted by the trial court, an explanation of the circuitous route this case has

taken is necessary to understand its current procedural posture.

North Louisiana Bidco, LLC (“NLB”), was organized in 1999 and

licensed as a Business Industry Development Corporation to provide

financing to small businesses in North Louisiana. In 2000, the members of

the company executed a detailed operating agreement, which addressed the

management and control of the company.1 The agreement named Cloud and

Garner as the company’s managers. It also contained the following

provisions pertaining to examination of the company’s books and records:

1 The operating agreement was attached to the plaintiffs’ original petition. ARTICLE VIII.

BOOKS, RECORDS, ACCOUNTING, AND TAX ELECTIONS

... B. Books and Records.

1. The Manager shall keep or cause to be kept complete and accurate books and records of the Company and supporting documentation of the transactions with respect to the conduct of the Company’s business. The records shall include, but not be limited to, complete and accurate information regarding the state of the business and financial condition of the Company for the last three most recent years; a copy of the articles of organization and operating agreement and all amendments to the articles and operating agreements; a current list of the names and last known business, residence, or mailing addresses of all Members; and the Company’s federal, state, and local tax returns for the last three most recent years.

2. The books and records shall be maintained in accordance with sound accounting practices and shall be available at the Company’s principal office for examination by any Member or the Member’s duly authorized representative at any and all reasonable times during normal business hours.

3. Each Member shall reimburse the Company for all costs and expenses incurred by the Company in connection with the Member’s inspection and copying of the Company’s books and records. ...

D. Reports. Within seventy-five (75) days after the end of each taxable year of the Company, the Manager shall cause to be sent to each Person who was a Member at any time during the taxable year then ended: (i) an annual financial statements [sic], prepared by the Company’s independent accountants in accordance with standards issued by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants; and (ii) a report summarizing the fees and other remuneration paid by the Company to any Member, the Manager, or any Affiliate in respect of the taxable year. In addition, within seventy-five (75) days after the end of each taxable year of the Company, the Manager shall cause to be sent to each Person who was an Interest Holder at any time during the taxable year then ended, that tax information concerning the Company which is necessary for preparing the Interest Holder’s income tax returns for that year. At the request of any Member, and at the Member’s expense, the Manager shall cause an audit of the Company’s books and

2 records to be prepared by independent accountants for the period requested by the Member.

In September 2013, NLB, Cloud, Garner and two other companies

affiliated with Cloud and Garner were sued by Craig Taylor, Inc. (“CTI”), a

company with which these defendants had engaged in business dealings.

CTI’s demands included a money judgment against NLB, Cloud and Garner.

CTI’s 185-paragraph petition alleged that Cloud and Garner had engaged in

various acts of corporate mismanagement, self-dealing, breaches of fiduciary

duty, fraud and forgery.2

In May 2014, 11 members of NLB filed the first petition in the matter

before us, which they captioned as a derivative action, the goal of which was

to enforce NLB’s right to investigate allegations of self-dealing and breach

of fiduciary duty by Cloud and Garner.3 This action was combined with a

demand for injunctive relief. The defendants included NLB, Cloud and

Garner. The plaintiffs asserted that they sought to enforce NLB’s own right

to examine the company’s “financial and other records,” an effort that had

been frustrated by Cloud and Garner’s refusal to make the records available

to them. The plaintiffs asserted that they wished to examine NLB’s records

due to CTI’s allegations of wrongdoing against Cloud and Garner, as well as

a $6 million bad debt expense on NLB’s 2013 financial statement.

The petition contained the following specific allegations pertaining to

Cloud and Garner:

2 The petition of the CTI lawsuit was attached to the plaintiffs’ original petition in the instant case. 3 The plaintiffs are: Sanctuary Capital, LLC; J. Bishop Johnston; W. Clinton Raspberry, Jr.; MSC Two, LLC; O.A. Cannon, Jr.; Nelson D. Abell, III; R. Stewart Ewing, Jr.; Carolyn W. Perry; Annette Williams Carroll; Molly Williams; and Clark M. Williams, III. They assert in the petition that they are a numerical majority of NLB’s members.

3 18.

Under Louisiana law, the manager of a limited liability company is “deemed to stand in a fiduciary relationship to the limited liability company and its members and shall discharge his duties in good faith, with the diligence, care, judgment, and skill which an ordinary prudent person in a like position would exercise under similar circumstances.” La. R.S. 12:1314.

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Sanctuary Capital, LLC on Behalf of North Louisiana Bidco, LLC v. Richard D. Cloud, James Randolph Garner, and North Louisiana Bidco, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanctuary-capital-llc-on-behalf-of-north-louisiana-bidco-llc-v-richard-lactapp-2019.