Global Textile Alliance, Inc. v. TDI Worldwide, LLC ( 2020 )


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  •                   IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NORTH CAROLINA
    No. 279A19
    Filed 14 August 2020
    GLOBAL TEXTILE ALLIANCE, INC., Plaintiff
    v.
    TDI WORLDWIDE, LLC, DOLVEN ENTERPRISES, INC., TIMOTHY DOLAN,
    individually and in his capacity as an officer, shareholder and director of Dolven
    Enterprises, Inc. and an officer and owner of TDI Worldwide, LLC; JAMES DOLAN,
    individually and in his capacity as an officer, shareholder and director of Dolven
    Enterprises, Inc., STEVEN GRAVEN, individually and in his capacity as an officer,
    shareholder and director of Dolven Enterprises, Inc., RYAN GRAVEN, individually
    and in his capacity as an officer, shareholder and director of Dolven Enterprises, Inc.,
    GARRETT GRAVEN, individually, GFY INDUSTRIES LIMITED, GFY, LIMITADA
    de CAPITAL VARIABLE, GFY COOPERATIVE, U.A., 上海冠沣源贸易有限公司 a/k/a
    GFY SH, and FRESH INDUSTRIES, LTD., Defendants
    Appeal pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7A-27(a)(3) from the order compelling discovery
    entered on 26 February 2019 by Judge Gregory P. McGuire, Special Superior Court
    Judge for Complex Business Cases, in Superior Court, Guilford County, after the case
    was designated a mandatory complex business case by the Chief Justice pursuant to
    N.C.G.S. § 7A-45.4(b). Heard in the Supreme Court on 16 June 2020.
    Hagan Barrett PLLC, by J. Alexander S. Barrett, Charles T. Hagan III, and
    Kurt. A. Seeber, and Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP, by Stanley E.
    Woodward, Jr., for plaintiff-appellant.
    Ellis & Winters LLP, by Jon Berkelhammer, Steven A. Scoggan, and Scottie
    Forbes Lee, for defendant-appellee Steven Graven, K&L Gates LLP, by A. Lee
    Hogewood III, John R. Gardner, and Matthew T. Houston, for defendant-
    appellees Dolven Enterprises, Inc., Ryan Graven, and GFY Cooperative, U.A.,
    James McElroy & Diehl, P.A., by Fred B. Monroe and Jennifer M. Houti, for
    defendant-appellees TDI Worldwide, LLC and Timothy Dolan, Morningstar
    Law Group, by Shannon R. Joseph and Jeffrey L. Roether, for defendant-
    appellee Garrett Graven, and Brooks, Pierce, McLendon, Humphrey & Leonard
    LLP, by Eric M. David and Shepard D. O’Connell, for defendant-appellee
    GLOBAL TEXTILE ALLIANCE, INC. V. TDI WORLDWIDE, LLC, ET AL.
    Opinion of the Court
    James Dolan.
    NEWBY, Justice.
    This case is about whether a one-hundred percent shareholder of a corporation
    is that corporation’s alter ego for the purposes of privilege against discovery.
    Specifically, we must decide whether communications with someone who is an agent
    of the sole shareholder, but not of the corporation, fall under the corporation’s
    attorney-client privilege or the work-product doctrine. They do not. Once a corporate
    form of ownership is properly established, the corporation is an entity distinct from
    the shareholder, even a shareholder owning one-hundred percent of the stock. An
    agent of the shareholder is not automatically an agent of the corporation. We also
    must decide whether the Business Court should have conducted an exhaustive in
    camera review of all relevant communications, even though plaintiff invited the court
    to conduct a more limited review of a sample of documents. The Business Court’s
    limited review in this case was appropriate. Because the Business Court did not
    abuse its discretion either by ordering production of the relevant communications or
    by conducting a limited review of those communications, that court’s decision is
    affirmed.
    Global Textile Alliance, Inc. (GTA), the sole plaintiff, is a North Carolina
    corporation with its principal place of business in Reidsville, North Carolina. Luc
    Tack is GTA’s only shareholder. Remy Tack, Luc Tack’s son, is GTA’s Chief Executive
    Officer. As a corporation, GTA is governed by a board of directors. GTA filed this
    GLOBAL TEXTILE ALLIANCE, INC. V. TDI WORLDWIDE, LLC, ET AL.
    Opinion of the Court
    lawsuit in the Business Court against defendants, alleging that defendants engaged
    in several improper acts during the formation and operation of Dolven Enterprises,
    Inc.
    During discovery, defendants asked GTA to identify Stefaan Haspeslagh as a
    custodian required to provide electronically stored information (ESI). Haspeslagh is
    Luc Tack’s longtime friend, financial advisor, and advisor to some of Luc Tack’s
    businesses. GTA did not comply with defendants’ request, asserting that Haspeslagh
    is not an employee, officer, or director of GTA. Both Luc Tack and Remy Tack testified
    that Haspeslagh has no role with GTA and that Haspeslagh has not advised GTA
    about this lawsuit.
    On 24 July 2018 the Business Court heard oral argument on the custodial
    issue. GTA’s counsel argued that Haspeslagh was “a third-party consultant not
    retained by GTA, [but] retained by the Tacks.” Based on this assertion, the Business
    Court determined that Haspeslagh was not a custodian of GTA documents. Thus, it
    did not require GTA to name Haspeslagh as a custodian required to provide
    defendants with ESI during discovery.
    Months later, GTA produced a privilege log that identified categories of
    documents that GTA had withheld from defendants during discovery. One category
    of documents was described as “[c]onfidential correspondence between GTA and/or
    its outside counsel and Stefaan Haspeslagh conveying and/or summarizing legal
    advice regarding the matters giving rise to the instant litigation.” GTA claimed that
    GLOBAL TEXTILE ALLIANCE, INC. V. TDI WORLDWIDE, LLC, ET AL.
    Opinion of the Court
    these communications were protected on the grounds of the attorney-client privilege
    and the work-product doctrine. GTA’s attorneys instructed witnesses not to answer
    questions about their discussions with Haspeslagh.
    Defendant Steven Graven filed a motion with the Business Court to compel
    GTA to produce the communications involving Haspeslagh and to instruct the
    witnesses to answer questions about their discussions with Haspeslagh. Defendant
    argued that GTA waived the attorney-client privilege by including Haspeslagh on
    communications with GTA’s counsel.
    GTA responded that its attorney-client privilege extends to communications
    involving Haspeslagh. It argued that Haspeslagh is GTA’s agent because Luc Tack is
    GTA’s sole shareholder and because Haspeslagh works for some of Luc Tack’s
    businesses. GTA also asserted privilege on two other special bases: (1) Haspeslagh is
    the functional equivalent of Luc Tack’s employee, and (2) communications with
    Haspeslagh are privileged under the Kovel doctrine.
    The motion to compel was submitted to a special discovery master. The special
    master heard oral argument on 5 February 2019, and on 7 February 2019
    recommended that the Business Court grant defendant’s motion to compel.
    The Business Court conducted a de novo review of the special master’s
    recommendation. As part of its review, the Business Court asked GTA to submit all
    disputed documents for in camera review. GTA responded that it would “gather the
    correspondence as requested and submit the documents.” When GTA failed to
    GLOBAL TEXTILE ALLIANCE, INC. V. TDI WORLDWIDE, LLC, ET AL.
    Opinion of the Court
    produce the documents promptly, the Business Court requested that GTA provide a
    timeframe for the documents’ production. GTA responded that it “hoped to review the
    [documents] before providing them to the Court” and that it wanted more time to do
    so. The Business Court accommodated GTA by instead allowing it to submit “a
    reasonable sampling of such communications.” GTA agreed and submitted twelve
    emails involving Haspeslagh for in camera review. After this review, GTA did not ask
    the Business Court to review additional documents.
    On 26 February 2019 the Business Court issued an order granting the motion
    to compel. GTA filed a motion for reconsideration with the Business Court. In its brief
    supporting the motion for reconsideration, GTA quoted selected portions from the
    allegedly privileged materials. After denial of its motion for reconsideration, GTA
    appealed to this Court.
    GTA raises three issues on appeal. First, GTA argues that the Business Court
    erred by determining that communications involving Haspeslagh are not protected
    by the attorney-client privilege. Second, it argues that the Business Court erred by
    determining that communications involving Haspeslagh are not protected under the
    work-product doctrine. Third, it argues that the Business Court erred by not
    conducting an exhaustive in camera review of all communications involving
    Haspeslagh. Because we conclude that the Business Court did not abuse its discretion
    regarding any of these issues, we affirm.
    First, the Business Court did not abuse its discretion by determining that
    GLOBAL TEXTILE ALLIANCE, INC. V. TDI WORLDWIDE, LLC, ET AL.
    Opinion of the Court
    communications involving Haspeslagh are not privileged under the attorney-client
    privilege. This Court reviews a trial court’s application of the attorney-client privilege
    for abuse of discretion. Friday Invs., LLC v. Bally Total Fitness of the Mid-Atl., Inc.,
    
    370 N.C. 235
    , 241, 
    805 S.E.2d 664
    , 669 (2017). As the party asserting the attorney-
    client privilege, GTA has the burden of establishing that privilege. See State v.
    McNeill, 
    371 N.C. 198
    , 240, 
    813 S.E.2d 797
    , 824 (2018). Communications do not merit
    the attorney-client privilege when they are made in the presence of a third party.
    State v. Murvin, 
    304 N.C. 523
    , 531, 
    284 S.E.2d 289
    , 294 (1981). GTA has asserted
    several arguments that communications including Haspeslagh are protected under
    the attorney-client privilege. In essence, each of GTA’s arguments improperly treat
    Haspeslagh as an agent of GTA who merits protection under the attorney-client
    privilege for conversations with GTA’s attorneys.
    GTA argues that Luc Tack and GTA are the same entity for the purpose of
    establishing the applicability of the attorney-client privilege; in other words, that
    GTA is Tack’s alter ego. This argument ignores clearly established North Carolina
    corporate law. This Court has long acknowledged that “[a] corporation is an entity
    distinct from the shareholders which own it.” Bd. of Transp. v. Martin, 
    296 N.C. 20
    ,
    28, 
    249 S.E.2d 390
    , 396 (1978) (citing Troy Lumber Co. v. Hunt, 
    251 N.C. 624
    , 627,
    
    112 S.E.2d 132
    , 134 (1960)). Even a corporation owned by a “single individual” is a
    distinct entity from its shareholder. 
    Id.
     at 28–29, 
    249 S.E.2d at
    396 (citing Huski-Bilt,
    Inc. v. Trust Co., 
    271 N.C. 662
    , 669–670, 
    157 S.E.2d 352
    , 358 (1967); Acceptance Corp.
    GLOBAL TEXTILE ALLIANCE, INC. V. TDI WORLDWIDE, LLC, ET AL.
    Opinion of the Court
    v. Spencer, 
    268 N.C. 1
    , 8–9, 
    149 S.E.2d 570
    , 575–576 (1966)). This rule ensures that
    a shareholder who forms a corporation “to secure its advantages” cannot “disregard
    the existence of the corporate entity” to avoid its disadvantages. Martin, 
    296 N.C. at 29
    , 
    249 S.E.2d at 396
    . We decline to overturn this long-established precedent, which
    has informed North Carolina corporate law for over half a century. And GTA has not
    shown that circumstances exist which would require a court to disregard the
    corporate form. Accordingly, at best, Haspeslagh is Luc Tack’s agent as to some of
    Tack’s personal affairs, but Haspeslagh is not GTA’s agent. The corporation could
    have made Haspeslagh its agent, but it did not do so. Regarding the custodian issue,
    GTA had specifically argued to the trial court that Haspeslagh had no role with
    respect to GTA. Because Haspeslagh is not GTA’s agent, the Business Court did not
    abuse its discretion by concluding that GTA does not merit the attorney-client
    privilege for conversations which included Haspeslagh.
    GTA’s argument for specialized applications of the attorney-client privilege
    likewise fails because Haspeslagh is not GTA’s agent. GTA claims that
    communications involving Haspeslagh are entitled to protection under the
    “functional[-]equivalent” test or, in the alternative, the Kovel doctrine. See In re Bieter
    Co., 
    16 F.3d 929
    , 939 (8th Cir. 1994) (establishing the functional-equivalent test for
    federal courts in the Eighth Circuit); United States v. Kovel, 
    296 F.2d 918
    , 921–22 (2d
    Cir. 1961) (establishing the Kovel doctrine for federal courts in the Second Circuit).
    Neither of these specialized applications has been recognized under North Carolina
    GLOBAL TEXTILE ALLIANCE, INC. V. TDI WORLDWIDE, LLC, ET AL.
    Opinion of the Court
    law. See, e.g., Technetics Grp. Daytona, Inc. v. N2 Biomedical, LLC, No. 17 CVS
    22738, 
    2018 WL 5892737
    , *3–5 (N.C. Bus. Ct. Nov. 8, 2018).
    Yet, even if these specialized attorney-client privilege applications were
    recognized under North Carolina law, the Business Court did not abuse its discretion
    by determining that these specialized applications do not apply in this case. Under
    the functional-equivalent test, an individual is the functional equivalent of a
    company’s employee when his communications with counsel “fell within the scope of
    his duties” for the company. In re Bieter Co., 
    16 F.3d at 940
    . This specialized
    application does not apply because Haspeslagh lacks any sort of agency relationship
    with GTA and thus cannot have “duties” at GTA.
    Under the Kovel doctrine, communications involving a third party are
    privileged when the communications are “necessary, or at least highly useful, for the
    effective consultation between the client and the lawyer which the privilege is
    designed to permit.” Kovel, 
    296 F.2d at 922
    . GTA does not argue that Haspeslagh’s
    presence was necessary for GTA to communicate with its attorneys; rather, GTA
    argues that Haspeslagh’s presence was highly useful for Luc Tack to communicate
    with GTA’s attorneys. This argument, again, improperly assumes that Tack and GTA
    are the same entity. Therefore, communications involving Haspeslagh are not
    protected under either specialized application GTA requests.
    Because GTA would not merit privilege even if these specialized applications
    of the attorney-client privilege were recognized under North Carolina law, this Court
    GLOBAL TEXTILE ALLIANCE, INC. V. TDI WORLDWIDE, LLC, ET AL.
    Opinion of the Court
    need not and does not address whether these specialized applications should be
    recognized under North Carolina law. Therefore, the Business Court did not abuse
    its discretion by determining that GTA does not merit a specialized application of the
    attorney-client privilege under the functional-equivalent test or Kovel doctrine.1
    Next, the Business Court did not abuse its discretion by determining that
    communications involving Haspeslagh are not protected under the work-product
    doctrine. The work-product doctrine only protects communications when they are
    “prepared in anticipation of litigation” by a person acting as a company’s “consultant
    . . . or agent.” N.C.G.S. § 1A-1, Rule 26(b)(3) (2019); see also Willis v. Duke Power Co.,
    
    291 N.C. 19
    , 35–36, 
    229 S.E.2d 191
    , 201 (1976). Here, Haspeslagh has no role at GTA
    and has not been retained by GTA to work on this lawsuit. Indeed, Luc and Remy
    Tack both testified that Haspeslagh did not advise GTA about this lawsuit at all.
    Communications involving Haspeslagh therefore cannot be said to have been
    “prepared in anticipation of litigation” by Haspeslagh acting as GTA’s consultant or
    agent. The Business Court did not abuse its discretion by determining that GTA does
    not merit protection under the work-product doctrine for the communications
    involving Haspeslagh.
    Finally, the Business Court did not abuse its discretion by not conducting an
    exhaustive in camera review of all communications involving Haspeslagh for which
    1 Because we hold that no privilege exists protecting the disputed documents from
    discovery, we need not address defendants’ argument that GTA waived its right to assert
    such a privilege.
    GLOBAL TEXTILE ALLIANCE, INC. V. TDI WORLDWIDE, LLC, ET AL.
    Opinion of the Court
    GTA sought protection. GTA cannot assert any argument for exhaustive in camera
    review because it failed to promptly provide all documents necessary for a full review,
    and because it welcomed a more limited one. When the appellant fails to raise an
    argument at the trial court level, the appellant “may not . . . await the outcome of the
    [trial court’s] decision, and, if it is unfavorable, then attack it on the ground of
    asserted procedural defects not called to the [trial court’s] attention.” Nantz v. Emp’t
    Sec. Comm’n, 
    28 N.C. App. 626
    , 630, 
    222 S.E.2d 474
    , 477, aff’d, 
    290 N.C. 473
    , 484,
    
    226 S.E.2d 340
    , 347 (1976).
    Here GTA challenges the Business Court’s decision to adopt a limited in
    camera review procedure instead of an exhaustive in camera review procedure,
    apparently because the Business Court’s ruling that came after that limited review
    is unfavorable to GTA. Significantly, the Business Court adopted this limited review
    to accommodate GTA. The court initially proposed an exhaustive in camera review,
    but GTA indicated that it needed more time for an internal review before it would
    comply. The Business Court then permitted GTA to submit a “reasonable sampling”
    of the documents for a limited in camera review as an accommodation to GTA. GTA
    agreed to this procedure and submitted twelve emails for review. After the limited
    review, GTA did not ask the Business Court for a more exhaustive review. Because
    GTA did not promptly comply with the court’s request as necessary for an exhaustive
    review, and because the Business Court’s limited review was an accommodation
    which GTA welcomed, GTA cannot now claim that the Business Court’s
    GLOBAL TEXTILE ALLIANCE, INC. V. TDI WORLDWIDE, LLC, ET AL.
    Opinion of the Court
    accommodation constitutes reversible error.
    Even if GTA could properly raise an in camera review argument, the Business
    Court did not abuse its discretion by conducting a limited in camera review. A trial
    court acting in its discretion may require an in camera review of documents to assist
    in ascertaining whether certain materials are entitled to privileged status. Duke
    Power Co., 
    291 N.C. at 36
    , 
    229 S.E.2d at 201
    ; see also In re Miller, 
    357 N.C. 316
    , 336–
    37, 
    584 S.E.2d 772
    , 787 (2003). Though this Court has not directly addressed the issue
    of limited in camera reviews, courts in this state and around the nation have
    consistently permitted limited in camera reviews as a substitute for exhaustive in
    camera reviews. See, e.g., In re Vioxx Prods. Liab. Litig., Nos. 06-30378, 06-30379,
    
    2006 WL 1726675
    , at *3 (5th Cir. May 26, 2006); Wachovia Bank, National Ass’n v.
    Clean River Corp., 
    178 N.C. App. 528
    , 531–32, 
    631 S.E.2d 879
    , 882 (2006). In Clean
    River Corporation, our own Court of Appeals rejected an argument claiming that the
    trial court had abused its discretion because the “[a]ppellants could have, but chose
    not to, produce the documents for in camera inspection.” 178 N.C. App. at 532, 
    631 S.E.2d at 882
    . We find that court’s reasoning persuasive here because GTA asserts
    that the Business Court erred by accommodating GTA with a limited in camera
    review instead of an exhaustive review, which the Business Court originally intended
    to conduct. Both limited and exhaustive reviews were thus within the Business
    Court’s discretion.
    Furthermore, the fundamental issue presented to the Business Court was
    GLOBAL TEXTILE ALLIANCE, INC. V. TDI WORLDWIDE, LLC, ET AL.
    Opinion of the Court
    whether communications which included Haspeslagh were privileged. The Business
    Court properly considered the twelve emails GTA selected for its consideration as
    well as the other evidence. It determined, as previously discussed, that no privilege
    exists. Therefore, the court had no need to review additional emails.
    In sum, we hold that the Business Court did not abuse its discretion by
    determining that GTA’s conversations in which Haspeslagh participated do not merit
    protection under the attorney-client privilege or the work-product doctrine. Nor did
    the Business Court abuse its discretion by conducting a limited in camera review of
    the contested communications. The decision of the Business Court is affirmed.
    AFFIRMED.