SL EC, LLC v. Ashley Energy LLC

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedDecember 26, 2019
Docket4:18-cv-01377
StatusUnknown

This text of SL EC, LLC v. Ashley Energy LLC (SL EC, LLC v. Ashley Energy LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
SL EC, LLC v. Ashley Energy LLC, (E.D. Mo. 2019).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MISSOURI EASTERN DIVISION

SLEC, LLC, et al., ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) VS. ) Case No. 4:18-cv-01377-JAR ) ASHLEY ENERGY, LLC, et al., ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER This matter is before the Court on Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss. (Doc. 39.) The motion is fully briefed and ready for disposition. (Docs. 40, 49, 54.) Also before the Court are a motion by Plaintiff law firm Davis & Garvin, LLC’s (“D&G”) Motion to Sever (Doc. 63), which Defendants oppose (Doc. 67), and a motion by Plaintiffs to take judicial notice (Doc. 61), which Defendants do not oppose. Finally, Plaintiffs move for leave to file a second amended complaint. (Doc. 82.) Defendants oppose. (Doc. 85.) Background! In July 2015, Plaintiff SLEC, LLC, acquired an option to purchase the Ashley Power Plant in St. Louis, Missouri, from Trigen-St. Louis Energy Corporation. SLEC and Plaintiff Michael Becker? hired Plaintiff law firm Davis & Garvin, LLC (“D&G”) to represent SLEC throughout the “negotiation, acquisition and closing” of the purchase “and such matters related

' The Court will grant Plaintiffs’ Motion to Take Judicial Notice. (Doc. 61.) Plaintiffs ask the Court to take notice of certain filings from Power Investments, LLC v. SLEC, LLC, No. 5:18-cv- 00466 (E.D. Ky 2019), and the facts contained therein. Under Federal Rule of Evidence 201, the Court may take judicial notice of facts not subject to reasonable dispute, including filings from other courts. Defendants do not oppose. 2 It is not clear from Plaintiffs’ complaint but the Court infers from their allegations that Becker is an officer of SLEC.

thereto.” (Doc. 25-1 at § 11.) SLEC signed a fee agreement with D&G that called for hourly compensation plus reimbursement for costs and expenses (the “Fee Agreement”). SLEC then formed Defendant Ashley Energy, LLC, (“Ashley”) for the purpose of buying the power plant and assigned to it SLEC’s purchase option. SLEC directed D&G to represent Ashley as the buyer. In May 2016, SLEC began communicating with Defendant Power Investments, LLC (“PI”), a Nevada corporation, about financing the purchase of the power plant in exchange for equity in its ownership. PI’s only member is Defendant Mason Miller, a lawyer living in Kentucky. PI obtained a term sheet from a private equity firm called Arena Investors, LP, and thereafter SLEC and Becker, represented by D&G, entered into a Membership Interest Purchase Agreement (“MIPA”) with PI. (Doc. 44.) PI agreed to purchase SLEC’s entire ownership interest in Ashley—including the right to purchase the power plant—in exchange for two payments totaling $1.7 million. (/d.) In addition, the MIPA provided for the release by PI of a separate, personal loan it had made to Becker. (/d.) On August 10, 2017, Ashley, whose sole member at this point was PI, closed on the acquisition of the power plant. As the sole person authorized to access Ashley’s bank account, Becker transferred nearly $480,000 to Miller and his Kentucky law firm Defendant Miller Wells, which represented PI in the purchase. Ashley borrowed approximately $8.5 million from Arena Investors to buy the plant. Following the sale of the power plant, the parties began arguing over money. In the weeks following the purchase, PI made two cash payments to Becker and delivered an unexecuted copy of the note for his personal loan, marked “paid in full,” which together represented the full amount of the initial payment due under the MIPA. Since then, no other payments have been made.

Plaintiffs argue that Defendants still owe the full amount of the second payment as well as legal fees for work D&G performed on behalf of Ashley Energy. Around the same time, Defendants came to believe that Plaintiffs had misrepresented the financial state of the power plant and that Becker had misused loan funds. On October 19, 2017, D&G partner Dan Davis emailed Miller, seeking to informally resolve their dispute. (Doc. 60-1.) He stated that, if the parties could not find a resolution by 5:00 p.m. on October 26, 2019, he intended to file the attached draft petition. (/d.) The next day, Miller responded, thanking Davis for his willingness to informally resolve the matter, expressing his hope that they could do so, and closing with “Litigation is just going to get messy, and I’d prefer to spend my time making the steam plant a success.” (Doc. 60-2.) Then, on October 25, 2017, the day before Davis’s stated deadline for an informal resolution, PI sued SLEC and Becker in Kentucky state court, advancing claims of fraud and unjust enrichment (the “Kentucky Action”). (See Doc. 15 at 2.) Two days later, on October 27, 2017, Plaintiffs filed suit in Missouri state court, arguing that Defendants had breached the MIPA and Fee Agreement (the “First Missouri Suit”). (Doc. 15 at 1.) Defendants removed the First Missouri Suit to this Court on November 22, 2017. (Doc. 1 in SLEC, No. 4:17-cv-02751-JAR [hereinafter SLEC I]). On December 5, 2017, the Fayette Circuit Court of Kentucky entered a default judgment in the Kentucky Action. (SLEC I, Doc. 1.) Roughly one month later, Defendants moved to dismiss the First Missouri Suit on the grounds that Plaintiffs failed to state a claim and that four of the five counts were barred by res judicata based on the default judgment in Kentucky state court. (SLEC I, Docs. 19, 20.) On May 14, 2018, Plaintiffs filed a motion in the First Missouri Suit to voluntarily dismiss Count J of their

3 Defendants do not challenge the authenticity or use of this or other communications in response to their motion to dismiss. (See Doc. 66.) 3

complaint and, that same day, this Court granted Defendants’ motion and dismissed the remaining claims without prejudice. (SLEC I, Docs. 32, 33.) In the interim, Plaintiffs had filed a motion to set aside the default judgment in the Kentucky Action. (See SLEC J, Doc. 29 at 1-2.) On June 22, 2018, the Fayette Circuit Court granted Plaintiffs’ motion to set aside the default and reinstated the Kentucky Action. (See Doc. 15 at 2.) Becker subsequently removed the suit to the Eastern District of Kentucky on July 24, 2018, and moved to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction. (See Doc. 15 at 2.) On July 30, 2018, Plaintiffs filed suit a second time in Missouri state court, alleging breach of contract and fraudulent conveyance and seeking to pierce the corporate veil and to force the imposition of a constructive trust. (Doc. 8.) Defendants removed to federal court on August 20, 2018, and the case is now before this Court. (Doc. 1.) In the interim, the District Court of the Eastern District of Kentucky dismissed the Kentucky Action for lack of personal jurisdiction. See Power Investments, LLC v. SLEC, LLC, No. 18-6098 (6th Cir. June 20, 2019). PI appealed. Jd. On June 20, 2019, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals issued an opinion reversing the district court’s dismissal, finding that Becker’s contacts with Miller and Miller Wells were sufficient to subject him to suit in Kentucky. Jd. The case was remanded to the Eastern District of Kentucky and is currently stayed pending the outcome of this motion to dismiss. (See Doc. 60-4.) Initially, Defendants argued that all of Plaintiffs’ claims are barred by the express language of the Fee Agreement or MIPA, or else fail on their merits as a matter of law. (/d.) In their supplemental briefing, Defendants add that, since the Kentucky Action has been reinstated, this Court need not reach the merits and can instead dismiss this case under the first-filed doctrine or the compulsory-counterclaim rule. (Doc. 59.)

Legal Standard To survive a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), “a complaint must contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to ‘state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.’” Ashcroft v.

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Bluebook (online)
SL EC, LLC v. Ashley Energy LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sl-ec-llc-v-ashley-energy-llc-moed-2019.