The managing member and president of an LLC could not be liable for tortious interference with contract for firing the Plaintff. "A party to a contract, including the party’s managing agent, cannot be liable for wrongful interference of the contract." The defendant was not an outsider to the contract, and therefore could not be liable
Mack Sperling
I’m a business litigator in North Carolina, with Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard, LLP.
I grew up in New York, went to college there (at Union College in Schenectady), and then came to North Carolina to law school at UNC-Chapel Hill. I clerked for United States District Judge Frank Bullock of the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina after graduating, and then joined Brooks Pierce.
Tortious Interference Claim Against Lender Dismissed By North Carolina Business Court
Today in Torres v. The Steel Network, Inc., 2009 NCBC 19 (N.C. Super. Ct. July 27, 2009), the Business Court dismissed a tortious interference claim against Bank of America, ruling that the Bank couldn’t be sued under that theory for exercising its rights under its loan documents.
Plaintiff, a shareholder in the Defendant The…
“Juridical Link” Leads To Certification Of Class Action By The North Carolina Business Court
The Business Court made two novel rulings last week in its certification of a class action in Clark v. Alan Vester Auto Group, Inc., 2009 NCBC 17 (N.C. Super. Ct. July 17, 2009). First, it adopted the the concept of a "juridical link," which it used to determine the scope of the class claims. …
Spoliation Results In Sanctions From NC Business Court
The Business Court sanctioned the Defendants in Clark v. Alan Vester Auto Group, Inc., 2009 NCBC 18 (N.C. Super. Ct. July 17, 2009) for spoliation of evidence.
The destruction of evidence involved "Cover Sheets" that the Defendants prepared whenever they sold a car. The Plaintiff contended that an entry on a Cover Sheet referring…
Clark v. Alan Vester Group, Inc., July 17, 2009 (Jolly)(unpublished)
The Court determined that it could rule on a dispositive motion in a putative class action before ruling on class certification. It held "in appropriate cases it is neither unusual nor inappropriate for a court of jurisdiction to consider merits issues prior to determining class certification matters."
The Court granted summary judgment on a Fair…
The Law Of The Case And Dead And Stinky Fish
An appellate decision has to be really, really wrong before the same Court will decide that it shouldn’t be treated as the "law of the case." In fact, the wrongness has to be as overpowering as a very old and very dead fish, per the Fourth Circuit’s opinion today in TFWS, Inc. v. Franchot.…
Rotation Of North Carolina Superior Court Judges To Be Suspended Due To State Budget Crisis
North Carolina’s Chief Justice Sarah Parker has suspended the rotation of Superior Court Judges, effective beginning July 20, 2009 and continuing through August 28, 2009, due to the State’s budget crisis. There’s an Amended Master Calendar Of Superior Courts available which shows where Judges will be holding court during the suspension period.
Rotation of…
You Can Count On This Case For A Good Discussion Of The Law Of Agency
The Business Court’s decision yesterday in Leiber v. Arboretum Joint Venture, LLC, 2009 NCBC 16 (N.C. Super. Ct. July 8, 2009) involved the law of agency: whether a German Count named Spreti had been acting as Plaintiff’s agent when the Defendant LLCs and partnerships sent Plaintiff’s share of distributions to Spreti. A large chunk of the money was then stolen by Spreti.
Plaintiff Leiber, a German citizen, had put money at the urging of Spreti in a number of United States investments (the "AAC entities"). The AAC entities were operated by two other Germans, Count and Countess Arco. Over a fifteen year period, the AAC entities sent hundreds of thousands of dollars of Leiber’s distributions and tax refunds to Spreti.
Spreti paid some of the money he received to Leiber, but kept hundreds of thousands of dollars of Leiber’s money for himself. Leiber knew that his payments were sent to Spreti, but he never objected to this practice and apparently wasn’t very attentive to his investment. Leiber began to suspect Spreti’s misconduct, but Spreti committed suicide the night before the two were to meet to discuss matters.
The specific distributions at issue in the case were payments to Leiber for redemption of his interests in two of the AAC entities. Spreti received both of these payments. One was a Wachovia Bank check for $151,274 and the other a Bank of America check for $254,858. Spreti forged Leiber’s indorsement on the checks, cashed them, and kept the money.
After Spreti’s suicide, Leiber sued the AAC entities, alleging that they had improperly sent the checks to Spreti. He also sued Wachovia and Bank of America, alleging that they had improperly paid the checks over Spreti’s forged indorsement.
Agency Issues
The defense of the AAC entities was that Spreti had been acting as Leiber’s agent, and they therefore had acted appropriately in sending Leiber’s distributions to Spreti. The opinion contains a thorough discussion of the law of agency, including actual authority, apparent authority, apparent agency, agency by estoppel, and ratification.
Judge Tennille determined that although Leiber had not expressly authorized Spreti to act as his agent, there were a number of legal theories on which Spreti would be deemed to be Leiber’s agent:
- Spreti had implied actual authority to act for Leiber, because Spreti had acted as Leiber’s only contact with the AAC entities for 15 years; and Leiber knew that his checks were being sent to Spreti and had never objected to that practice.
- Spreti had apparent authority to act on Leiber’s behalf, because Leiber had held Spreti out to the AAC entities as having authority to act for him by using Spreti to manage his investments in the AAC entities for 15 years.
- An apparent agency relationship existed between Leiber and Spreti, because Leiber’s silence regarding the checks sent to Spreti caused the AAC entities "to believe an agency relationship existed" and the AAC entities had relied on Leiber’s action to their detriment.
- Because Spreti was the general partner of two of the AAC partnerships, he was deemed to be Leiber’s agent.
The Court further determined that even if there were no agency relationship, Leiber’s fifteen year silence regarding the checks was a ratification of Spreti’s unauthorized acts. The Court granted summary judgment on all of Leiber’s claims against the AAC entities, as they all depended on the argument that Spreti had not been authorized to receive checks on Leiber’s behalf.Continue Reading You Can Count On This Case For A Good Discussion Of The Law Of Agency
North Carolina Court Of Appeals Rulings, Plus One
There weren’t any earthshaking decisions yesterday from the North Carolina Court of Appeals, but there are a couple of cases worth a quick mention, one on arbitration and one on discoverability in a medical malpractice case of a letter to a "medical review committee." There was also a copyright case yesterday from the Fourth Circuit…
Donovan v. Huffman, July 6, 2009 (Diaz)(unpublished)
The Court partially granted an LLC member’s motion for an accounting, ordering the LLC to provide the member with periodic "(1) information regarding the status of the business and the financial condition of [the LLC] including a summary of all funds disbursed and spent and all revenue generated from 1 January 2009 to the present, and…