Plаintiffs appeal from the order dismissing their complaint with prejudice pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted. The dispositive question is whether a limited partner can bring suit in his personal capacity for injuries to the partnership when he does not sufficiently allege a special duty or a separate and distinct injury. Because we conclude that he cannot, we affirm.
I. Background
Plaintiffs’ complaint, which must be “taken as true” at this stage of the proceedings,
Rowlette v. State,
Revenues for the apartment complex began to decline in 2004. The limited partners recommended that the general partners take steps to reduce expenses but the general
On 16 May 2007 plaintiffs filed a complaint in Superior Court, Mecklenburg County. The complaint alleged that the general partners in the partnership, defendants Paul R. Leonard, Jr. and John S. Proctor, Jr. 1 injured plaintiffs by breach of fiduciary duty, negligence, breach of contract, and constructive fraud. Specifically the complaint alleged that Proctor and Leonard
operated] Tryon Hills in a manner calculated to enrich Defendant The J.S. Proctor Company, LLC, at the expense of Plaintiffs; [2] discontinued] mortgage payments in or about August 2005; [3] conceal[ed] from Plaintiffs their discontinuation of mortgage payments for a period of approximately nine months; [4] fail[ed] to take steps available to ensure that the assets of Tryon Hills were protected and maximized; [5] enter[ed] into continuing negotiations for months with a party who on the most superficial inquiries, would have been shown to have no ability to purchase the property; and [6] fail[ed] to explore or pursue available options to protect Plaintiffs’ interest in Tryon Hills.
The complaint further alleged that the same acts and injuries were attributable to the negligence of corporate defendant The J.S. Proctor Company, LLC. The complaint sought compensatory and punitive damages.
On 20 June 2007, The J.S. Proctor Company LLC, and the executors of the estate of John S. Proctor, Jr. (collectively “the Proctor defendants”) moved to dismiss the action pursuаnt to Rule 12(b)(6), alleging that plaintiffs lacked standing to bring the action and alternatively that defendant The J.S. Proctor Company, LLC, owed no duty to plaintiffs. The case was designated as a complex business case on 29 June 2007. Defendant Leonard moved to dismiss on 30 July 2007. The trial court granted both motions to dismiss on or about 7 January 2008. 2 Plaintiffs appeal.
II. Standard of Review
“The standard of review on a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) is whether, if all the plaintiff’s аllegations are taken as true, the plaintiff is entitled to recover under some legal theory.”
Rowlette,
III. Analysis
The general rule of partner standing to sue individually is stated in
Energy Investors-.
“It is settled law in this State that one partner may not sue in his own name, and for his benefit, upon a cause of action in favor of a partnership.”
A. The Purported “Additional Exception” of Norman
Plaintiffs first contend despite the general rule and the recognition of only two exceptions in
Energy Investors,
that
Norman v.
Nash Johnson & Sons’ Farms, Inc.,
Plaintiff is correct in stating Norman purports to create an additional exception:
Generally speaking, our decision[] in . . . Barger parallels] the majority view among our sister states that a shareholder can maintain an individual action against a third party only if he can show a special relationship with the wrongdoer and also show an injury peculiar to himself. During the last quarter of the Twentieth Century, however, there has been an “evolution” in the development of, and protection for, the rights of minority shareholders in closely held corporations.
We first note that Norman misstated Barger, which held that
a shareholder may maintain an individual action against a third party for an injury that directly affects the shareholder, even if the corporatiоn also has a cause of action arising from the same wrong, if the shareholder can show [1] that the wrongdoer owed him a special duty or [2] that the injury suffered by the shareholder is separate and distinct from the injury sustained by the other shareholders or the corporation itself.
Finally, and most important, Norman expressly found standing to bring an individual lawsuit on its facts based not on the “evolution” of minority shareholder protection, but based squarely on one of the two exceptions to the shareholder/limited partner standing rule found in Energy Investors and Barger.
Even if we assume, however, that plaintiffs must show that they have standing to maintain a direct action against the business defendants under the rule set out in . . . Barger, and the recent decision of our Supreme Court in Energy Investors Fund, . we hold that plaintiffs have alleged facts which bring them within the requirements of those cases.
[P]laintiffs[’] . . . allegations are sufficient to give rise to a fiduciary relationship between plaintiffs and the defendants and establish that defendants owed plaintiffs a “special duty" within the meaning of the Barger decision.
Norman,
We therefore conclude that Norman’s extensive discussion of the closely held nature of the company and the pоwerlessness of the minority shareholders offers tools for a careful examination of the particular facts of a case to determine if a special duty or distinct injury exists within the meaning of Barger and Energy Investors rather than “an additional exception.”
In examining the facts to find that a special duty was owed by majority shareholders to those in the minority,
Norman
relied on the presence of two indicators of powerlessness: (1) the difficulty faced by minority shareholders in dissolving the entity, either because of legal impediments to dissolving the corporation or because of the complex relationships involved in a family business; and (2) whether recovery would be left in control- of the alleged wrongdoers.
Because there were only six limited partners, the “closely held” nature of the limited partnership sub judice is undeniable. However, beyond that fact, the limited partnership sub judice has little factual similarity to the closely held corporation in Norman. The complaint sub judice does not allege and the record does not reflect that plaintiffs hold only a minority of shares in the limited partnership. Rather, plaintiffs collectively own ninety percent (90%) of the shares in the limited partnership.
Furthermore, while defendants, as the general partners, do contrоl the “board of directors,”
see Energy Investors, 351
N.C. at 334-35,
There is also no evidence
sub judice
that plaintiffs and defendants are in a family business where “close relationships . . . [have] tragically brfoken] down[.]”
Additionally,
Norman
cautioned that even if а special duty might otherwise be found to exist based on majority ownership in a closely held corporation, a court should consider the potential impact of a direct or individual lawsuit on third-party creditors, and the potential impact of such a suit on the legal system, i.e., danger of multiple lawsuits, before concluding that a plaintiff has standing to sue individually.
In sum, plaintiffs have not alleged facts consistent with the Norman analysis by which we could conclude that plaintiffs were owed a “special duty” by defendants sufficient to convey standing. Accordingly, this argument is without merit.
B. Contractual Duties
Plaintiffs argue that even if the Norman “exception” does not apply, a special duty arises from two contractual agreements plaintiffs entered into with defendants: (1) “each limited partner appointed each general partner as its ‘true and lawful attorney in fact’ with regard to certain partnership functionsf;]” and (2) “[t]he partnership agrеement and the amendments thereto ... govern the details of the management of the partnership and constitute a contract between the general and limited partners. This contract creates contractual duties as contemplated by Barger[.]”
Plaintiffs reliance on Barger is misplaced, as the type of contractual duties created in this case are not distinct from those in any limited partnership.
To support the right to an individual lawsuit, the duty must be one that the alleged wrongdoer owed directly to the shareholder as an individual. The existence of a special duty thus would be established by facts showing that defendants owed a duty to plaintiffs that was personal to plaintiffs as shareholders and was separate and distinct from the duty defendants owed the corporation.
Barger,
The power of attorney granted in the partnership agreement gave the general partners authority to “execute, sign, acknowledge, deliver and file” certain documents related to the partnership. There is no duty in the power of attorney grant which is not owed to the partnership. Furthermore, absent a specific statutory exception not relevant sub judice, “[ejvery partner is an agent of the рartnership for the purpose of its business[.]” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 59-39(a) (2007) (emphasis added); see also N.C. Gen. Stat. § 59-403(a) (2007) (“Except as provided in this Article or in the partnership agreement, a general partner of a limited partnership has the rights and powers ... of a partner in a partnership without limited partners.”). Contrary to plaintiffs’ argument, the general partners’ duty as plaintiffs’ attorneys in fact was exactly the sаme as the duty owed the partnership — to conduct the business of the partnership. To hold that a contractual provision appointing the general partners as legal agents or attorneys in fact with regard to certain partnership functions creates a “special duty” would expand the exception to the point that it would entirely swallow the rule. We decline plaintiffs’ invitation to do so.
Likewise, every limited partnership is based on an agreement or contract between the partners. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 59-102(7) (2007) (“ ‘Limited partner’ means a person who has been admitted to a limited partnership as a limited partner in accordance with the partnership agreement.”); N.C. Gen. Stat. § 59-102(10) (2007) (“ ‘Partnership agreement’ means any valid agreement of the partnеrs as to the affairs of a limited partnership, the conduct of its business, and the responsibilities and rights of its partners. The term ‘partnership agreement’ includes any written or oral agreement, whether or not the agreement is set forth in a document referred to by the partners as a ‘partnership agreement!)]’ ”). To hold that the existence of a partnership agreement creаtes a “special duty” would also expand the exception to the point that it would entirely swallow the rule. This argument is overruled.
C. Separate and Distinct Injury
Defendants further rely on
Norman
to argue that when a complaint alleges that “individual defendants and the business entities they controlled] diverged] assets and business opportunities from the Company to
[A]n injury is peculiar or personal to the sharеholder if a legal basis exists to support plaintiffs’ allegations of an individual loss, separate and distinct from any damage suffered by the corporation. In applying this rule of shareholder-law to that of limited partnerships, we find that the complaint shows [the limited partner plaintiff’s] injury is the loss of its investment, which is identi cal to the injury suffered by the other limited partners and by the partnership as a whоle.... [H]opes for profits are hardly unique.
All the injuries complained of by plaintiffs — (1) operation of the apartment complex in a manner calculated to enrich Defendant The J.S. Proctor Company, [LLC,] at the expense of Plaintiffs; (2) discontinuation of mortgage payments which led to loss of the partnership’s primary asset; (3) concealment of the discontinuation of mortgage payments; (4) failure to ensure that the assets of the apartment complex — were protected and maximized; (5) failure to be diligent to quickly find a buyer for the apartment complex, and (6) failure to protect the value of• plaintiffs’ investment in the apartment complex would have equally affected all of the limited partners, not just plaintiffs. Plaintiffs alleged no facts which would support the existence of an injury to themselves apart from diminutiоn in the value of their investment, a circumstance which would have similarly affected the partnership and all the partners, both limited and general.
Jackson,
D. The J.S. Proctor Company, LLC
Plaintiffs lastly contend that they may bring an individual suit against The J.S. Proctor Company based on their ability to bring suit against the other defendants, because The J.S. Proctor company is “inextricably wedded” to the other defendants. We disagree.
The general rule of partner standing is the same regardless of whether the plaintiff is seeking to.recover from another partner within the partnership, or a third party unrelated to the partnership.
Compare Barger
IV. Conclusion
Plaintiffs’ complaint alleged no special duty or separate and distinct injury to themselves.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. John S. Proctor, Jr. died in December 2006. Plaintiffs’ complaint sought recovery from Mr. Prоctor’s estate.
. Defendant Marsh was voluntarily dismissed from the.case without prejudice on 8 November 2007.
. These two exceptions are sometimes conflated in case law because they are “often overlapping.”
Barger v. McCoy Hillard & Parks,
