Wright v. Lorusso

Decision Date22 April 2022
Docket Number20 CVS 10612
Citation2022 NCBC 18
PartiesNANCY WRIGHT; GREG WRIGHT; and JODY STANSELL, individually and as members of LORUSSO VENTURES, LLC d/b/a CINCH.SKIRT, Plaintiffs, v. KRISTA LORUSSO, individually and as a member-manager of LORUSSO VENTURES, LLC d/b/a CINCH.SKIRT, Defendant, v. LORUSSO VENTURES, LLC d/b/a CINCH.SKIRT, Nominal Defendant.
CourtSuperior Court of North Carolina

Miller Law Group, PLLC, by W. Stacy Miller, II, and Law Office of Matthew I. Van Horn, PLLC, by Matthew I. Van Horn, for Plaintiffs Nancy Wright, Greg Wright, and Jody Stansell.

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

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

ORDER AND OPINION ON NOMINAL DEFENDANT LORUSSO VENTURES, LLC'S MOTION TO DISMISS SECOND AMENDED COMPLAINT

Adam M. Conrad, Special Superior Court Judge

1. LoRusso Ventures, LLC is a small business that makes bed skirts for use in hotels. It goes by the name Cinch.Skirt and has just four members. In this action, three members (Nancy Wright, Greg Wright, and Jody Stansell) joined together to sue the fourth (Krista LoRusso), asserting a mix of direct and derivative claims rooted in allegations of fraud and mismanagement. LoRusso responded with counterclaims for everything from breach of contract to computer trespass. Discovery is ongoing, and the merits of these claims and counterclaims are not yet at issue.

2. This decision concerns, instead, a procedural miscue. Cinch.Skirt appearing as a nominal defendant, contends that the Wrights and Stansell neglected to serve it with a summons in timely fashion. It has moved to be dismissed from the case as a result. (ECF Nos. 97, 98.)

3. Procedural missteps have stymied this litigation from its start in August 2020. Indeed, the original complaint was defective. (See ECF No. 3.) Because an LLC is "a necessary party to any litigation brought derivatively in its name," the Wrights and Stansell should have named Cinch.Skirt as a nominal defendant. Swenson v. Thibaut, 39 N.C.App. 77, 98 (1978). They didn't, necessitating an amendment.

4. After amending the complaint to add Cinch.Skirt, the Wrights and Stansell obtained a summons issued to the company but didn't immediately serve it. Sixty days elapsed, and the summons became "dormant." Valentine v. Solosko, 270 N.C.App. 812, 815 (2020) (quoting Dozier v. Crandall, 105 N.C.App. 74, 75 (1992)). At that point, the Wrights and Stansell could have bought more time by getting an endorsement from the clerk of court or obtaining an alias or pluries summons. See id. (discussing N.C. R. Civ. P. 4(d)). They did neither, inexplicably letting the summons expire. It was this expired summons that the Wrights and Stansell eventually served on Cinch.Skirt in May 2021-nearly six months after it was issued.

5. A series of motions followed. LoRusso (who apparently had received proper service of process) moved to dismiss most of the claims against her for failure to state a claim for relief. (See ECF Nos. 18, 19.) More pertinent here, Cinch.Skirt filed its own motion to dismiss based on the belated service of the expired summons. (See ECF Nos. 23, 24.) These motions were scheduled to be argued, but on the eve of the hearing, the Wrights and Stansell moved to amend their complaint a second time. (ECF No. 60.) With consent from LoRusso and Cinch.Skirt, the Court granted leave to amend, denied the motions to dismiss without prejudice as moot, and directed the Wrights and Stansell to file their second amended complaint by 3 December 2021. (ECF No. 64.) That deadline passed without a filing. Five days delinquent, the Wrights and Stansell filed the second amended complaint. (See 2d Am. Compl., ECF No. 65.) They did not obtain a new summons issued to Cinch.Skirt.

6. Renewing its motion to dismiss, Cinch.Skirt now contends that service of the expired summons in May 2021 was a nullity, that it has never received service of a valid summons, and that the action is therefore discontinued as to the company (but not LoRusso). It has a point. The Wrights and Stansell concede that they failed to serve the summons on time. Their only defense-waiver-is baseless. After accepting service of the expired summons through counsel, Cinch.Skirt objected to the sufficiency of process and moved for dismissal at the very first opportunity. That is hardly a waiver. Troubling too is that the Wrights and Stansell raised this defense in a late-filed brief, continuing a pattern of missed deadlines and disdain for procedural rules.

7. Even so, dismissal is the wrong remedy, at least in this case. Yes, failure to serve Cinch.Skirt within the time allotted means...

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