Wright v. Lorusso

2026 NCBC 24
CourtNorth Carolina Business Court
DecidedMarch 18, 2026
Docket20-CVS-10612
StatusPublished
AuthorAdam M. Conrad

This text of 2026 NCBC 24 (Wright v. Lorusso) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Carolina Business Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wright v. Lorusso, 2026 NCBC 24 (N.C. Super. Ct. 2026).

Opinion

Wright v. LoRusso, 2026 NCBC 24.

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION MECKLENBURG COUNTY 20CVS010612-590

JODY STANSELL, individually and as a member of LORUSSO VENTURES, LLC d/b/a CINCH.SKIRT,

Plaintiff,

v.

KRISTA LORUSSO, individually and as a member-manager of LORUSSO FINDINGS OF FACT, CONCLUSIONS VENTURES, LLC d/b/a OF LAW, AND FINAL JUDGMENT CINCH.SKIRT, FOLLOWING BENCH TRIAL Defendant,

LORUSSO VENTURES, LLC d/b/a CINCH.SKIRT,

Nominal Defendant.

1. This case arises from a dispute among the members of LoRusso Ventures,

LLC. In late February 2026, the Court held a bench trial on claims asserted by Jody

Stansell and counterclaims asserted by Krista LoRusso and LoRusso Ventures.

Having considered all relevant evidence, the Court enters the following findings of

fact, conclusions of law, and final judgment.

Jody Stansell, pro se.

Leonard G. Kornberg, P.A., by Leonard G. Kornberg, for Defendant Krista LoRusso.

Higgins & Owens, PLLC, by Sally Higgins, for Nominal Defendant LoRusso Ventures, LLC.

Conrad, Judge. I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY

2. This case began nearly six years ago. Since that time, the Court has issued

many orders faulting Stansell and his onetime fellow plaintiffs, Nancy and Greg

Wright, for delays, procedural miscues, rule violations, and failures to comply with

orders. See, e.g., Wright v. LoRusso, 2023 NCBC LEXIS 66, at *2–3 (N.C. Super. Ct.

May 4, 2023) (observing that plaintiffs had “failed to comply with procedural rules

throughout this case, wasting judicial resources and unnecessarily prolonging the

litigation”); Wright v. LoRusso, 2022 NCBC LEXIS 69, at *5 (N.C. Super. Ct. June 9,

2022) (“Time and again, the Wrights and Stansell have shirked their responsibilities

as litigants by disregarding deadlines established in the North Carolina Rules of Civil

Procedure, the Business Court Rules, and this Court’s orders.”); Wright v. LoRusso,

2022 NCBC LEXIS 33, at *2–3 (N.C. Super. Ct. Apr. 22, 2022) (cataloging the

plaintiffs’ “[p]rocedural missteps” that “stymied this litigation from its start”).

3. In June 2025, on the eve of a scheduled jury trial, the Wrights settled their

disputes with LoRusso and LoRusso Ventures and dismissed their claims. Citing a

conflict, Stansell’s counsel then withdrew. As a result, the Court continued the trial

and gave Stansell a reasonable period to try to retain new counsel. Stansell did not

retain new counsel and now represents himself.

4. The Court reset the jury trial for February 2026 and issued a pretrial

scheduling order that established deadlines for the parties to exchange exhibit and

witness lists, serve objections, and file a proposed pretrial order. LoRusso and

LoRusso Ventures complied with the pretrial scheduling order. Stansell, however, did not timely serve his exhibit and witness lists, nor did he join in the submission of

the proposed pretrial order.

5. Before trial, LoRusso filed a motion in limine that sought, among other

things, to bar Stansell from offering any exhibits and calling any witnesses not

identified within the time allowed by the pretrial scheduling order. Stansell did not

submit a response to the motion in limine, and he failed to appear at the pretrial

hearing on 6 February 2026. As a result, the Court treated the motion in limine as

an uncontested motion and granted it. (See ECF No. 302 (observing that “Stansell

has imposed on himself a heavy, self-inflicted penalty by failing to comply with the

pretrial scheduling order, to respond to LoRusso’s motion in limine, and to appear at

the pretrial hearing”).)

6. Following this, Stansell sent a series of trial-related questions to the Court

via email. 1 The Court informed Stansell that it would not address his questions

through an exchange of emails, noting that he could have and should have asked

them in open court during the pretrial hearing. To avoid wasting prospective jurors’

time with these issues, the Court scheduled a conference to take place at 9:00 A.M.

on 23 February 2026, the morning of trial. (See ECF No. 305 (notice of conference).)

7. When the Court called the conference to order on the morning of 23 February

2026, counsel for LoRusso and LoRusso Ventures were present, but Stansell was not.

Unsure whether Stansell had decided not to appear for trial (just as he had not

1 In the same email, Stansell also stated that he had contacted or would be contacting the

Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Mecklenburg County District Attorney to pursue criminal charges against LoRusso. appeared for the pretrial hearing), the Court began discussing how to proceed with

counsel in attendance. Midway through this discussion, Stansell arrived. After

informing Stansell that his tardiness was disrespectful to the opposing parties, the

Court reiterated its ruling on the motion in limine and explained the consequences.

Because Stansell had not timely identified any exhibits or witnesses that he intended

to offer, the Court stated that it would not allow him to offer any evidence other than

his own testimony.

8. At the end of the conference and before the start of jury selection, all parties

requested to forgo a jury trial in favor of a bench trial. The Court allowed that

request.

9. Ten claims went to trial. Stansell asserted direct and derivative claims for

breach of contract, as well as a claim for declaratory judgment. He also asserted

vaguely defined claims for unjust enrichment and so-called oppression of minority

members. In response, LoRusso asserted counterclaims for defamation, breach of

contract, and declaratory judgment, and LoRusso Ventures asserted counterclaims

for tortious interference with contract and prospective business relations.

10. During trial, Stansell testified in support of his own case in chief. In light

of the Court’s order on LoRusso’s motion in limine and his own failures to comply

with the pretrial scheduling order, Stansell called no witnesses other than himself

and offered no exhibits.

11. After Stansell rested, counsel for LoRusso moved to dismiss the claims

against her. The Court orally granted the motion as to Stansell’s claims for unjust enrichment and oppression of minority members but allowed the other claims to

proceed.

12. In their cases in chief, LoRusso and LoRusso Ventures called LoRusso as a

witness, recalled Stansell, and offered excerpts of Nancy Wright’s deposition

testimony. They also offered several documentary exhibits, all but one of which were

admitted without objection.

13. At the conclusion of trial, the Court ordered each side to submit proposed

findings of fact and conclusions of law on or before 11 March 2026. See BCR 12.11

(“The Court may require each party in a non-jury matter to file proposed findings of

fact and conclusions of law.”). LoRusso and LoRusso Ventures timely filed their joint

proposal. (See ECF No. 309.) Stansell filed his proposal one day late. (See ECF No.

310.)

II. FINDINGS OF FACT

14. Readers be warned: these findings of fact contain references to vulgarities

and coarse language not typically found in judicial opinions. These references are,

unfortunately, necessary to understand the relevant events and to provide context

and support for the Court’s judgment.

15.

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Bluebook (online)
2026 NCBC 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-lorusso-ncbizct-2026.