Sovereign Holdings, Inc. v. Deck

CourtDistrict Court, D. South Dakota
DecidedSeptember 17, 2018
Docket4:17-cv-04105
StatusUnknown

This text of Sovereign Holdings, Inc. v. Deck (Sovereign Holdings, Inc. v. Deck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. South Dakota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sovereign Holdings, Inc. v. Deck, (D.S.D. 2018).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF SOUTH DAKOTA SOUTHERN DIVISION

SOVEREIGN HOLDINGS, INC., 4:17-CV-04105-KES

Plaintiff,

vs. ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART MOTION TO PAUL W. DECK, JR. and SCOTT A. COMPEL HINDMAN,

Defendants, and MARY ELLEN KISTING, Interested Party.

Plaintiff, Sovereign Holdings, Inc., moves to compel defendant Paul W. Deck, Jr., to produce documents associated with Deck’s representation of Sovereign during previous litigation. Docket 42. Deck opposes the motion, arguing that the documents are privileged because they contain confidential communications between Deck and Mary Ellen Kisting, the former president and 75% owner of Sovereign, when Mark Nylen, the current owner of Sovereign, was adverse to Sovereign. Docket 56. Following a telephonic hearing on the motion (Docket 70), Deck produced the documents identified in his privilege logs to the court for an in-camera review. On May 1, 2018, the court held an evidentiary hearing on the merits of Sovereign’s motion to compel. Docket 81. The court permitted Sovereign, Deck, and Kisting, an interested party, to submit supplemental briefing following the hearing. See Dockets 89, 92, 94, 95, 97. For the reasons that follow, the court grants Sovereign’s motion in part and denies Sovereign’s motion in part.

BACKGROUND Sovereign Holdings was incorporated as a South Dakota corporation in 2007 by Mary Ellen Kisting, formerly Mary Ellen Nylen.1 Docket 57-1, Docket 81 at 20. Kisting created Sovereign from the assets of a previous company she owned, and she ran the business with her husband at the time, Mark Nylen. Docket 81 at 20-21. Kisting was a 75% shareholder, president, and treasurer of Sovereign until June 21, 2017. Id. at 23. Nylen was vice president and secretary of Sovereign until March 2015, and, as trustee for two family trusts,

was a 25% shareholder until June 21, 2017. Id.; Docket 57-2. Sovereign’s primary assets consisted of transportation equipment, such as an airplane,2 semi-trucks, tankers, and some processing equipment. Docket 81 at 21. Kisting and Nylen also started Hepar BioScience, LLC,3 which was a company that bought and sold animal by-products. Id. at 22. Sovereign leased

1 The facts are derived from the March 7, 2018 telephonic hearing, May 1, 2018 evidentiary hearing, the parties’ submitted briefs, attachments, and the memorandum decisions and other filings from the dissolution court in Nylen v. Nylen, that were submitted to the court under a protective order (Docket 22) and supplemental protective order (Docket 69). 2 Kisting testified that the airplane was owned by Hepar LLC, a holding company created to keep insurance liability of the assets separate. While she mentioned that Sovereign owned Hepar LLC, Kisting did not detail when Hepar LLC was created or when the airplane was transferred to Hepar LLC. See Docket 81 at 29. 3 Kisting was a 99% shareholder and Nylen a 1% shareholder in Hepar BioScience, LLC. Docket 81 at 22. its transportation equipment and airplane to Hepar BioScience to transport Hepar BioScience’s by-products. Id. Sovereign employed two truck drivers as its only employees and did not lease its equipment to any company other than

Hepar BioScience. Id. at 22-23. In December 2011, January 2012, and May 2013, Sovereign guaranteed Hepar BioScience loans from Northwest Bank, formerly known as First National Bank. Docket 57-7. The guaranties were signed by Mark Nylen as vice president and secretary of Sovereign. Id. Kisting testified she “found out afterwards,” sometime in 2011 or 2012 that Sovereign had guaranteed a loan of Hepar BioScience. Docket 81 at 24-25. Nylen also personally guaranteed the Hepar BioScience loans, but Kisting did not. Docket 57-5; Docket 81 at 26.

On January 1, 2014, Nylen filed for divorce from Kisting. Docket 81 at 24. In May 2014, Nylen sent Kisting a letter notifying her that Hepar BioScience was discontinuing its lease of the equipment from Sovereign and would no longer do business with Sovereign. Docket 57-6. As a result, Sovereign no longer received income and did not have the money to maintain the transportation equipment. Docket 81 at 34. Kisting testified that Nylen, as part of the dissolution proceeding, proposed selling the Sovereign assets. Id. at 34-35. But because Northwest Bank used Sovereign’s assets to guarantee its

loan, Kisting was worried that Northwest Bank would come after the proceeds of the assets once Sovereign sold them. Id. at 35. The bank represented that it agreed to the sale and waived any interest it may have in the proceeds, so Kisting agreed to sell the airplane and other equipment. Id. at 104-05. The proceeds of the airplane and other transportation equipment, which totaled approximately $10 million, were ultimately placed in a marital escrow account. Docket 81 at 38-39. At some point the dissolution court ordered the

proceeds to be transferred back to Sovereign’s account. Id. at 39-40. Kisting contested the transfer through “both” her divorce attorneys and Deck. Id. at 40. Q. When you say “both,” what do you mean?

A. I contacted Mr. Deck. Because he was the one that was involved, too, with getting the release from the bank to not get those proceeds. So it was – no, he did not appear in front of Judge Jensen, but I contacted him, and I contacted my attorneys who appeared before Judge Jensen.

Q. So you spoke to both your personal divorce attorneys and spoke to Mr. Deck who was still representing Sovereign at that time?

A. Correct.

Id. at 40:10-20. Deck testified that as general counsel for Sovereign, he advised on whether Northwest Bank waived its claim to the proceeds of Sovereign’s airplane sale. Id. at 97. He also advised that he believed the bank waived its claim when the bank agreed to the transfer of the proceeds out of the Sovereign account to the marital escrow account. Id. Deck believed his communications with Kisting, as president of Sovereign, were privileged because: [a]t the time I didn’t know whether or not [Kisting] was going to retain – what the divorce court was going to do. But it was obvious that if the divorce court gave the company to her former husband, given the animosity that was between the two, that it was a very hostile relationship, and a severing of that relationship, that my communications with her would have to be privileged. Id. at 98:17-24. After the proceeds were transferred to Sovereign’s account, Northwest Bank tried “to seize that account.” Id. at 40:21-24.4 Northwest Bank sued

Sovereign, Hepar LLC, and Kisting for the outstanding debt as provided in the loan guarantees. See Northwest Bank v. Sovereign Holdings, Inc. et al., CV 15- 4066. Kisting retained Paul Deck and Scott Hindman to represent Sovereign in the lawsuit brought by the bank. Docket 81 at 41.5 Northwest Bank dismissed the claims against Hepar LLC and Kisting, but continued with its claim against Sovereign. See CV 15-4066 Docket 38. In February 2016, the court granted Northwest Bank’s motion for partial

4 The sale of Sovereign’s assets, particularly the airplane, resulted in significant tax liabilities for Kisting as the 75% owner of an S corporation. See Docket 92 at 5-6; Nylen Divorce 0056 (dissolution court memorandum decision dated 12- 07-15). Kisting also owed interest and late filing penalties. Id. In a memorandum decision, the dissolution court granted Kisting’s request to release approximately $5.2 million to pay her tax liabilities, plus an additional $400,000 to pay Kisting’s interest and penalties. Id.

After the taxes and penalties, approximately $5 million remained in Sovereign’s account, which is the money Northwest Bank tried to seize. Docket 81 at 57.

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Sovereign Holdings, Inc. v. Deck, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sovereign-holdings-inc-v-deck-sdd-2018.