Taylor v. Bettis

976 F. Supp. 2d 721, 2013 WL 5460755, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 140908
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 30, 2013
DocketNo. 7:09-CV-183-F
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 976 F. Supp. 2d 721 (Taylor v. Bettis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Bettis, 976 F. Supp. 2d 721, 2013 WL 5460755, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 140908 (E.D.N.C. 2013).

Opinion

ORDER

JAMES C. FOX, Senior District Judge.

This matter is before the court on the Motion to Dismiss [DE-45] filed by Defendants Lee W. Bettis, Jr., Pat Leigh Pittman, Joanne K. Partin, Robert L. Emanuel, Stephen A. Dunn, Raymond E. Dunn, Jr., Emanuel & Dunn, PLLC, and Bettis Dunn & Dunn (collectively, the “E & D Defendants” or “Defendants E & D”); the Motion to Dismiss [DE-52] filed by Defendants W. Andrew Arnold and the Law Offices of W. Andrew Arnold, P.C. (collectively, the “Arnold Defendants”); the Motion to Dismiss filed by Philip M. Manger [DE-91]; the Motion to Appoint Receiver filed by Plaintiffs Brenda Beasley, Dorman Beasley, William G. Harrison, Cathy Horton Hunt, Linda Sheryl Lucas, Sharon Southwood, and Chris W. Taylor (collectively, “Plaintiffs”); the Motion to Certify Class [DE-96] filed by Plaintiffs; the Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings [DE-98] filed by the E & D Defendants; the Motion to Stay the Motion to Appoint Receiver [DE-104] filed by Defendant Philip M. Manger, and the Motion to Expedite [DE-110] filed by the E & D Defendants. These motions have been pending for some time, and almost all are ripe for ruling.

I. FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS

One of the Plaintiffs in this potential class action, Sharon Southwood, is also the named Plaintiff in Southwood v. The Credit Card Solution, 7:09-CV-81-F (“the Southwood action”), also pending before the undersigned. In that action, South-wood alleges, inter alia, that Defendant CCDN, LLC, a limited liability company organized under Nevada law, along with other associated entities, ran a debt elimination and credit repair scheme which defrauded her and others. Southwood, and several other Plaintiffs, filed this action several months after the Southwood action was removed to this court, alleging claims against many of the same individuals and entities named as defendants in the South-wood action. Additional defendants are also named in this action, including several attorneys and law firms which have represented CCDN, LLC, and/or its affiliates, principals, or agents in litigation.

The allegations in the 158-page, 768-paragraph Amended Complaint include the following:

A. Parties

Defendants CCDN,.LLC and other associated entities1 (collectively, “CCDN”) ran a debt elimination and credit repair scheme. Amend. Compl. [DE-23] ¶¶ 1, 60. According to Plaintiffs, CCDN — and the entities and individuals it contracted with to market its “product” — promoted the credit repair scheme and solicited business through several websites and videos posted on the websites and unrelated video-sharing websites. Id. ¶¶ 102,106-09. One of CCDN’s top marketers was The Credit Card Solution (“TCCS”), a sole proprietorship of Defendant Robert Mitchell Lindsey, who contracted with R.K. Lock & [728]*728Associates to sell CCDN’s program. Id. ¶ 116. In the scheme, as represented by Plaintiffs, CCDN (or the individual marketing CCDN’s program) required an advance payment to enroll in their “process.” Id. ¶ 173. The CCDN marketer then required an enrollee to execute a power of attorney authorizing CCDN to “prepare and sign all documents written with the intent of researching, challenging, negotiating, and otherwise corresponding with creditors, debt buyers, debt collectors, lw[sie] firms, credit reporting bureaus, and government agencies” with respect to specified accounts. Id. ¶ 175. Plaintiffs allege that CCDN then sent letters to enrollees’ creditors demanding validation of enrollees’ accounts, and asking the creditors to execute an affidavit drafted by CCDN that gave certain “assurances” regarding the enrollees’ accounts. Id. ¶¶ 176-77. Plaintiffs also allege that CCDN informs enrollees they then do not have to repay debts. Id. ¶ 187. According to the Plaintiffs, enrollees are then encouraged to “provoke [] and allow creditors and collectors to abuse [enrollees] as much as possible in order to generate enough damages under fair debt collection law to offset the debt.” Id. ¶ 196.

All of the Plaintiffs allege that they paid specific amounts to marketers of the CCDN program. Id. ¶ 227 (Plaintiff Cathy Horton Hunt paid $2,500.00 to Lindsey), ¶ 267 (Plaintiff Linda Sheryl Lucas paid Federal Debt Relief System at least $8,000.00), ¶ 303 (Plaintiff William G. Harrison paid the Aegis Corporation $4,200.00), ¶ 344 (Plaintiff Southwood paid Lindsey $5,600.00), ¶ 387 (Plaintiff Chris W. Taylor paid $4,500.00 to TCCS), ¶ 468 (Plaintiffs Dorman and Brenda Beasley sent a $2,500.00 check to Everett Smith). Plaintiffs allege that some of those marketers who received their payment converted unspecified amounts to the marketer’s own use and remitted the remainder, if any, to CCDN. Id. ¶ 229 (Defendant Lindsey converted part of Plaintiff Hunt’s payment), ¶ 268 (alleging some or all of the money Plaintiff Lucas paid went to the benefit of CCDN), ¶ 303 (alleging that Defendant Aegis converted an unspecified amount to its own use and remitted the remainder to CCDN), ¶ 345 (alleging that Defendant Lindsey “kept part or all of [Plaintiff Southwood’s payment] for himself, and transmitted the rest (if any) across state lines to CCDN”).

B. Allegations against E & D Defendants

Plaintiffs Harrison, Hunt, Lucas and Southwood allege that after they became dissatisfied with CCDN, they hired counsel, Christopher Livingston (“Plaintiffs’ Counsel” or “Livingston”), “on a contingent basis to try to recover some measure of justice from CCDN” and various other entities and individuals. Am. Compl. ¶ 489 [DE-23]. On September 12, 2008, Livingston “commenced Hunt v. R.K. Lock & Associates, 08 CVD 883, Lucas v. R.K. Lock & Associates, 08 CVD 884, and Harrison v. Aegis Corp., 08 CVD 885 in Bladen County District Court.” Id. ¶ 492.

“In or around late November 2008, CCDN Defendants in file numbers 08 CVD 883, 884 and 885 retained E & D Defendants by paying a fee or retainer from the money they criminally derived from Plaintiffs.” Id. ¶ 512. According to Plaintiffs, “[t]hough E & D’s clients may not have satisfied their bill in full, neither E & D Defendants nor any sensible defense lawyer would remain on such a case for over a year without actually receiving a very substantial amount of money, and if they were not getting paid, E & D Defendants would have long ago resigned from the representation.” Id. ¶ 512. Plaintiffs assert “Defendants Pittman, Partin, Emmanuel, Steve Dunn and Raymond Dunn, [729]*729by virtue of their positions as owners and managers of Emmanuel & Dunn, PLLC, and as supervisors of their employee and agent Defendant Bettis, knew that (or their suspicions were aroused by what they learned during the representation, but then they failed to make further inquiry as to whether) their client’s sole business and sole source of revenue, proceeds, profit and earnings was and is a combination of wire fraud, mail fraud, bank fraud, obtaining property by false pretenses, and money laundering, and that it as wrong and illegal to accept money so derived.” Id. 11513. Plaintiffs therefore allege that “E & D Defendants are thereby engaged in a pattern of racketeering activity by laundering of monetary instruments, 18 U.S.C. § 1956

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
976 F. Supp. 2d 721, 2013 WL 5460755, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 140908, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-bettis-nced-2013.