Victor Daniel Medina-Tratel v. Christopher Holloway

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 5, 2024
DocketM2022-01640-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Victor Daniel Medina-Tratel v. Christopher Holloway (Victor Daniel Medina-Tratel v. Christopher Holloway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Victor Daniel Medina-Tratel v. Christopher Holloway, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

04/05/2024 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE February 7, 2024 Session

VICTOR DANIEL MEDINA-TRATEL v. CHRISTOPHER HOLLOWAY, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Wilson County No. 2022-CV-154 Charles C.K. Smith, Chancellor ___________________________________

No. M2022-01640-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

The dispositive issue on appeal concerns a forum selection clause in the LLC Agreement of Catch22Nashville, LLC (“the LLC Agreement”). Catch22Nashville, LLC initially had four members who owned equal membership interests. The principal business of the LLC was a restaurant operating under the name Catch22 Gastropub. A dispute arose when one of the four members, Christopher Holloway (“Mr. Holloway”), purchased the membership interests of two other members, Richard Miley (“Mr. Miley”) and Justin Kamishlian (“Mr. Kamishlian”), resulting in Mr. Holloway owning three-fourths of the membership interests in the LLC. The fourth member, Victor Daniel Medina-Tratel (“Mr. Medina”), claims that Mr. Holloway promised to transfer the interest portion belonging to Mr. Kamishlian to Mr. Medina upon his payment of $40,000, so that Mr. Holloway and Mr. Medina would own Catch22Nashville, LLC in equal interests. Instead, Mr. Holloway transferred a one-fourth membership interest in the LLC to his wife Melanie Holloway (“Ms. Holloway”). Two years later, the landlord of Catch22 Gastropub terminated its lease and evicted the restaurant from the premises, forcing it to cease business. On the day of the eviction, Mr. Medina obtained a cashier’s check in the amount of $100,000 from the LLC’s bank account that was made payable to the Clerk and Master of Wilson County. Mr. Medina then filed a complaint in the Chancery Court of Wilson County against Mr. Holloway and Ms. Holloway (hereinafter “the Holloways”) for fraud, negligent misrepresentation, and conversion related to the transfer of Mr. Kamishlian’s membership interest in the LLC. Mr. Medina also filed a motion to interplead into court the $100,000 that he withdrew from the LLC’s corporate account. The LLC then motioned to intervene as a party with a vested interest in the interpleaded funds. The trial court granted both Mr. Medina’s motion for interpleader and the LLC’s motion to intervene. The LLC and the Holloways (hereinafter “Defendants”) then filed motions to dismiss based on the forum selection clause in the LLC Agreement. Section 1.09 of the LLC Agreement states “[v]enue for any dispute arising under this LLC Agreement or any disputes among any Members or the Company will be in the county of the Company’s Registered Office.” The trial court ruled that, under the forum selection clause in the LLC Agreement, exclusive venue for Mr. Medina’s claims

-1- was in Oconee County, Georgia, the county of the company’s registered office, and dismissed the case without prejudice for lack of proper venue. Mr. Medina filed a timely appeal. For the reasons discussed below, we affirm the decision of the trial court.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed

FRANK G. CLEMENT, JR., P.J., M.S., delivered the opinion of the court, in which KRISTI M. DAVIS and JEFFREY USMAN, JJ., joined.

B. Keith Williams and James R. Stocks, Lebanon, Tennessee, for the appellant, Victor Daniel Medina-Tratel.

Miles T. Martindale, Brentwood, Tennessee, for the appellee, Catch22 Nashville, LLC.

David M. Rich, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellees, Christopher Holloway and Melanie Holloway.

OPINION

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In July 2018, Catch22Nashville, LLC (“the LLC”), opened a restaurant in Mt. Juliet, Tennessee under the name Catch22 Gastropub (hereinafter “the Restaurant”). At that time, the LLC had four members, each with equal 25% interests: Mr. Medina, Mr. Holloway, Mr. Miley and Mr. Kamishlian. Mr. Medina was the onsite manager and head chef for the Restaurant, while Mr. Holloway served as the bookkeeper. Mr. Miley and Mr. Kamishlian took no part in any operational or bookkeeping activities of the LLC or the Restaurant.

In December 2020, Mr. Holloway purchased the membership interests of Mr. Miley and Mr. Kamishlian in the LLC. According to Mr. Medina, Mr. Holloway had stated that he would transfer the 25% membership interest previously held by Mr. Kamishlian to Mr. Medina upon Mr. Medina’s payment of $40,000, which would result in Mr. Holloway and Mr. Medina having equal membership interests in the LLC. Although Mr. Medina claimed to have the $40,000 available to fulfill his end of the agreement, Mr. Holloway transferred the 25% interest portion to his wife, Ms. Holloway.

Two years later, 615 Construction, LLC (“615 Construction”), the landlord for the property that housed the Restaurant, claimed that the LLC had breached its lease agreement. Then, on July 13, 2022, 615 Construction evicted the LLC, and the Restaurant was forced to shutter. Later that day, Mr. Medina secured a cashier’s check from the LLC’s corporate bank account in the amount of $100,000 made payable to the Clerk and Master of Wilson County, leaving $20,500 in the account to cover payroll of the Restaurant.

-2- On July 14, 2022, Mr. Medina filed a complaint in Wilson County Chancery Court against the Holloways, alleging tort claims for fraud, negligent misrepresentation, and conversion. Mr. Medina claimed that Mr. Holloway had made fraudulent representations regarding the transfer of Mr. Kamishlian’s 25% ownership interest, and that Mr. Medina had detrimentally relied on these representations in agreeing to allow the purchase and transfer of Mr. Miley and Mr. Kamishlian’s interests. Mr. Medina further claimed that Mr. Holloway had misappropriated funds while acting as bookkeeper for the Restaurant, stating that Mr. Holloway had “erroneously paid his wife[’s] . . . owner’s draws and other monies amounting to conversion of said funds.”

That same day, Mr. Medina filed a motion for interpleader with the Wilson County Chancery Court, seeking to interplead the $100,000 that he had withdrawn from the LLC’s corporate bank account, and requesting that the court pay all current obligations of the Restaurant.1 On August 17, 2022, the LLC motioned to intervene as a defendant as it related to the interpleader action. On August 25, 2022, the trial court entered an order granting both the LLC’s motion to intervene and Mr. Medina’s motion for interpleader.

Defendants then filed separate motions to dismiss, arguing, inter alia, that Wilson County was not the proper venue for Mr. Medina’s claims under a forum selection clause contained within the LLC Agreement. Section 1.09 of the LLC Agreement (“the Forum Selection Clause”) states that “Venue for any dispute arising under this LLC Agreement or any disputes among any Members or the Company will be in the county of the Company’s Registered Office.” Section 1.07 of the LLC Agreement further states that “[t]he Company’s…registered office is at 115 Southland Drive, Watkinsville, Georgia 30677,” which is located in Oconee County, Georgia. Accordingly, Defendants argued that Mr. Medina is “precluded from bringing any action against Catch22 or its members in Wilson County, Tennessee. The mandated forum under the LLC agreement is Watkinsville, Oconee County, Georgia.”

Defendants’ motions to dismiss came on for hearing on October 17, 2022. After hearing arguments from counsel on the issue of venue, the trial court ruled from the bench, granting Defendants’ motions to dismiss solely on the grounds of improper venue.

On October 28, 2022, the trial court entered its written order of dismissal without prejudice, finding that

Section 1.09 of the LLC agreement of Catch22 LLC is a choice of venue provision that provides “[v]enue for any dispute arising under this LLC Agreement or any disputes among any Members or the Company will be in

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Victor Daniel Medina-Tratel v. Christopher Holloway, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/victor-daniel-medina-tratel-v-christopher-holloway-tennctapp-2024.