The Green Trading Company, LLC v. Shy

CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedApril 29, 2025
Docket1:20-cv-01787
StatusUnknown

This text of The Green Trading Company, LLC v. Shy (The Green Trading Company, LLC v. Shy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Green Trading Company, LLC v. Shy, (D. Or. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF OREGON MEDFORD DIVISION

THE GREEN TRADING COMPANY, LLC, Civ. No. 1:20-cv-01787-CL An Oregon limited liability company, Plaintiffs, OPINION AND ORDER v. BARRY SHY, Defendant.

CLARKE, Magistrate Judge. This case comes before the Court on the Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF 69). Full consent to magistrate jurisdiction was entered on November 6, 2023 (ECF 55) An oral argument hearing was held on March 4, 2025 (ECF 98). For the reasons below, the Motion (ECF 69) is GRANTED. BACKGROUND The facts of this case are somewhat convoluted and hard to follow. Plaintiff alleges that, on November 14, 2019, Leesa Horton, on behalf of Plaintiff, the Green Trading Company LLC, delivered 200 bales of hemp to a facility located at 2251 NE Spalding Ave., Grants Pass, OR (the “Facility”), which was being leased by BT Ventures, LLC (“BT Ventures”). Defendant Barry

Page 1 - OPINION AND ORDER

Shy is the father of Rommy Shy, one of the owners of BT Ventures. Plaintiff intended the hemp at the Facility to be processed into raw hemp oil and then into CBD Delta 8 hemp distillate by another entity with rights to use the facility, Farmer Choice, LLC (“Farmer Choice”). Decl. Horton J 6. At some point in the Spring of 2020, Ms. Horton became worried that Farmer Choice would not be able to perform its hemp processing contract and that she may have to pick up the hemp bales to prevent them from spoiling and attempt to have them processed into distillate somewhere else. Decl. 7. It is generally undisputed that Ms. Horton went to the Facility on June 3, 2020, with several trucks to begin picking up her company’s bales of hemp. While she was there, a man named John Riccio, who she believed to be an owner or employee of Farmer Choice, refused to allow her to pick up the hemp bales. Decl. 7 8. Plaintiff claims that Mr. Riccio informed Ms. Horton that Defendant Barry Shy instructed Riccio over the telephone not to release the hemp bales to Horton. Decl. 9. Horton then witnessed Riccio calling the Grants Police Department and later requesting that the police force Horton to unload the already-loaded hemp bales from her trucks and to vacate the Facility. Decl. 4 10. The phone call resulted in a Trespass Incident Report being filed against Horton. Decl. Horton, Ex. 3. Plaintiff claims that, later in the day of June 3, 2020, Mr. Riccio asked Ms. Horton to sign a release of claims against BT Ventures, on behalf of Jupiter Seed Company (“Jupiter”), before Barry Shy of Farmer Choice would release the hemp bales to Ms. Horton. Decl. 411. Jupiter was another entity involved in hemp processing at the Facility. Ms. Horton told both Barry Shy and John Ricco over the telephone that she would sign a release of claims against Barry Shy and BT Ventures on behalf of her company, The Green Trading Company LLC, in exchange for their releasing the hemp bales to her, but that she would not sign any release on behalf of Jupiter.

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Decl. § 12. Plaintiff claims that Riccio and Shy refused to release the bales to her unless she signed a release of claims against Jupiter. Decl. ¥ 13. Defendant Shy claims that he merely advised his son, and his son’s company BT Ventures, to make sure that Ms. Horton was really the proper owner of the hemp bales before allowing her to remove them. Decl. Barry Shy (ECF 70). Shy believed that Jupiter might have a claim or an interest in the bales. Shy asserts that, after he learned that Jupiter released any interest in the hemp bales, Shy affirmatively requested that Ms. Horton pick up her bales, via an email sent at 3:08 PM that same day, June 3, 2020. Jd., Ex. 2. Plaintiff does not dispute this □ allegation. Mr. Shy’s email stated that he wanted Ms. Horton to sign a release on behalf of the Green Trading Company, and Plaintiff claims this was an unreasonable request. Mr. Shy sent one last email on June 3 at 3:37 PM, stating that “if she will not pick up the material within seven business days then we will set the material to sell in a public auction.” Jd., Ex. 2. Plaintiff claims that on June 6, June 20, and July 8, 2020, Ms. Horton telephoned Barry Shy and requested that he release Plaintiff's hemp bales and request dismissal of the trespass order against her. Decl. 414. Defendant disputes that these calls were ever made, and he submits phone records to show that Ms. Horton did not call him on these dates. Plaintiff asserts that she used a different phone, but she does not submit any corroborating evidence, such as phone records, nor does she identify the telephone number with which she called Shy on these dates. Plaintiff also claims that she sent e-mails to Barry Shy and John Riccio on July 10 and 11, 2020, requesting permission to come pick up the bales, but the copies of the emails she submits do not include any responses from Shy. PIf. Resp. Ex. 4. (ECF 88-6). Defendant Shy claims that he does not have a record of any follow-up demand concerning the pick-up of the bales. Shy Decl. EVIDENTIARY OBJECTIONS

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Defendant Shy raises several evidentiary objections to the exhibits attached to Plaintiff's Response (ECF 88). ! The Court finds that the string of emails from Jupiter attorney Mark Fields to Barry Shy (Ex. 1, ECF 88-3), are hearsay because they are an out of court statement by a non- party and non-witness, except for the portion from Shy, who is a party. However, these emails are admissible explain Ms. Horton’s state of mind, though the Court does not find them relevant to the parties’ dispute in this case. The same ruling applies to Ms. Horton’s declaration explaining this string of emails from Mark Fields. Paragraph 9 of Ms. Horton’s declaration states: “Mr. Riccio informed me that he was told over the telephone by Barry Shy that he should not release the bales to me.” This is a double hearsay statement, offered for the truth of the matter asserted. It is not admissible under FRE 802, and it is stricken from the record. Defendant claims that Exhibit 4 to Horton’s declaration, (ECF 88-4), which includes the emails from Horton to Shy and Riccio following up about releasing the bales, was not produced until after the close of discovery in this matter. Defendant claims that the late production is prejudicial to Defendant because he was not able to ask Horton about them during the discovery process. The Court agrees. However, because consideration of these emails does not affect the outcome of this case, the Court does not strike them from the record. Paragraph 16 of Ms. Horton’s declaration states: “the Grants Pass Police Department representative I spoke with . . . told me that I would be arrested if it was reported that I was on the premises owned or controlled by Barry Shy where my hemp bales were still being stored.” The Court agrees that this is hearsay and inadmissible, and additionally there is no foundation for

' Plaintiff submitted multiple amended Responses. In making evidentiary objections Defendant cites to the exhibits as submitted to the Plaintiff's First Amended Response (ECF 77), but the Court will evaluate the exhibits as submitted with the final, operative Second Amended Response (ECF 88). These appear to be substantively the same documents. Page 4 - OPINION AND ORDER

the representative to be able to give an opinion as to whether the premises was owned or controlled by Barry Shy. This statement is stricken from the record. STANDARD Summary judgment shall be granted when the record shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material of fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a); Anderson v.

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Bluebook (online)
The Green Trading Company, LLC v. Shy, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-green-trading-company-llc-v-shy-ord-2025.