Plаintiff Bruce Roemmich brought an action against defendants Eagle Eye Development, LLC (“Eagle Eye”), Leland Bertsch, Jane Bertsch, and Jon Wagner, alleging various violations of his rights as an Eagle Eye minority shareholder. He now appeals the district court’s
2
partial
I. Background
In early 1995, Leland and Jane Bertsch, husband and wife, began to bid on projects to construct and lease three post office buildings to the United States Postal Service (“USPS”), one in Minnesota and the other two in Cocoa Beach and Mims, Florida. During thе Spring of 1995, after Leland secured the bids on the Florida projects, the Bertsehs and Jane’s brother, Roemmich, agreed that Roemmich would oversee the construction and development of the Florida projects in exchange for a 30 percent ownership interest in those projects, as well as a $400 per week salary.
The Bertsehs formed Eagle Eye on June 12, 1995. According to the Member Control Agreement signed on that date, Leland made a 95 percent capital contribution and therefore retained a 95 percent financial and voting interest. Jane made the remaining contribution and retained a 5 percent financial and voting interest in Eagle Eye. Shortly therеafter, on June 28, 1995, Jane assigned her interest in Eagle Eye to Roemmich. Leland also conveyed a 25 percent ownership interest to Roemmich “for value added,” namely, the current and future performance of his job duties, resulting in 70 percent ownership by Leland and 30 percent ownership by Roemmich. Roemmich also became a Secretary, Treasurer, and Governor of Eagle Eye. Later that year, the parties agreed to name Wagner as Secretary of Eagle Eye in place of Roemmich.
Around this time, Roemmich was aware that Eagle Eye planned to rely on another of the Bertsehs’ companies, Bertsch Construction, Inc. (“Bertsch Construction”) to prоvide support services including accounting, secretarial support, and office space and equipment. Further, although it is undisputed that Leland told Roemmich that he had made arrangements for interim financing, Leland never represented that he would cover costs beyond what was originally contemplated as being necessary for financing the projects. Financing became an issue for the Cocoa Beach project when the city refused to approve initial plans submitted by the USPS, resulting in project delays and change orders that drove up the cost. As a result, the Berstchs and Roemmich secured additional financing through personal loans, which were evеntually satisfied. These financial difficulties contributed to Roemmich’s decision to leave the Florida projects in June of 1996.
When Roemmich left Florida, physical construction of the Mims site was virtually complete, and the USPS was scheduled to conduct a walk-through inspection the following week. The Cocoa Beach project was about a month behind the Mims project, and required further construction, resolution of claims with contractors, preparation and negotiation of change orders with the USPS, and amendment of the lease agreement. After Roemmich left, Leland hired Donald Haynes, the contractor of record for both the Mims and Cocoa Beach рrojects, to complete Roemmich’s tasks.
Although relations between Roemmich and the other officers of Eagle Eye had
Throughout the remainder of 1996, Roemmich received Eagle Eye’s financial statements. In late November 1996, Roemmich began expressing his view that Leland and Eagle Eye were committing fraud, tax violations, and other criminal conduct. Roemmich contacted Eagle Eye’s bank, suggesting that litigation wmild be imminent if the bank did not place a freeze on Eagle Eye’s accounts and only allow withdrawals accompanied by his signature. The acrimony carried over to an annual meeting held on May 17, 1997. At that meeting, Roemmich had the opportunity to inspect the 1995 and 1996 financial reports, review mortgage and lease information concerning the post office properties, and ask about certain payables and compensation to Leland. The parties again squabbled over Roemmich’s threatened legal challenges.
Although Roemmich was provided with notice of a February 23, 1998, annual meeting, he did not attend. Thereafter, the string of meetings came to a stop, and Eagle Eye’s documentatiоn of corporate decisionmaking grew sparse. The February 23, 1998, meeting was the last members’ meeting held, and there has not been a formal meeting of the board of governors since March 1999. Aside from repairs occasioned by hurricanes in 2004, the primary activity of Eagle Eye after 1999 has been to collect rents, pay bills, file tax returns, and perform necessary maintenance and repairs. Moreover, starting in 1999, at Leland’s instruction, Wagner stopped forwarding any financial information to Roemmich, except for Schedule K-1 tax information forms. Although Roemmich has the right to request regular and special member meetings under Eagle Eye’s Operating Agreement, he has never exеrcised it. Similarly, since 1999, he has not requested detailed financial information.
In the meantime, several events occurred that anchor Roemmich’s claims of self-dealing against defendants. In April 1997, Eagle Eye received $152,247.35 from the USPS as part of the renegotiation of the Cocoa Beach lease agreement. Most of the money was paid to Bertsch Construction as reimbursement for various expenses, and Roemmich learned about that disbursement at the May 17, 1997, annual meeting. Bertsch Construction also charged Eagle Eye approximately 3 percent of project costs to provide support services including accounting and secretarial support. Although there is no evidence that the 3 percent management fee was formally approved by Eagle Eye’s board of governors or members, Roemmich knew of this expenditure by the May 17, 1997, meeting. Sometime after Roemmich was removed as Governor, Leland instructed Wagner to retroactively compensate him (Leland) for his services beginning in April 1995, at the rate of $400 a week. These
Based on this conduct, Roemmich filed suit against defendants on April 13, 2004, claiming that their actions were unfairly prejudicial, breached fiduciary duties and a duty to act in good faith owed to Roemmieh in his capacity as a member and minority shareholder, and denied his right to vote as a member of Eagle Eye. Roemmich sought damages, dissenter’s rights, equitable remedies including a buy-out of his share of the LLC, and costs and attornеy’s fees. Defendants brought a counterclaim based on Roemmich’s decision to leave the Florida projects. Considering the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court held that North Dakota’s six-year statute of limitations for tort, contract, and statutory causes of action barred Roemmich’s claims accruing prior to April 13, 1998, as well as defendants’ counterclaim. It also allowed Roemmich’s suit against defendants in their individual capacity to go forward.
See Roemmich v. Eagle Eye Dev., LLC,
II. Discussion
The district court had jurisdiction based on the complete diversity of the parties.
See
28 U.S.C. § 1332. “In diversity cases, we apply the substantive law of the state in which the district court sits.”
Gen. Elec. Capital Corp. v. Union Planters Bank, NA,
A. Statute of Limitations
We review
de novo
the district court’s grant of partial summary judgment in favor of the defendants on the issue whether Roemmich’s claims accruing prior to April 13, 1998, were barred by the statute of limitations.
See Angelo Iafrate Constr., LLC v. Potashnick Constr., Inc.,
Roemmich contends that the district court erred in treating defendants’ allegedly wrongful conduct as a series of discrete acts, rather than as a continuing violation. Because some of the conduct occurred after April 13,1998, he argues that none of it is time-barred. He argues in the alternative that defendants’ conduct amounted to a shareholder freeze-out and, as such, falls under the ten-year statute of limitations applicable to claims of relief otherwise not provided for in North Dakota’s statute of limitations chapter.
See
N.D. Cent.Code
We must first identify the appropriate statute of limitations for the causes of action Roemmich pleads, and then, if necessary, determine whether the underlying acts complained of constitute a continuing wrong, thus tolling the statute of limitations as to those acts that would otherwise be time-barred. Although Roemmich variously describes his action as one for breach of fiduciary duty or freeze-out, the North Dakota Supreme Court has suggested that they are essentially the same.
See Schumacher v. Schumacher,
The North Dakota Limited Liability Company Act (the “Act”) does not establish a limitations period for claims arising thereunder, and, to our knowledge, no reported North Dakota case has yet determined the appropriate statute of limitations to apply to a breach of fiduciary duty claim arising under the Act. For the reasons that follow, we conclude that the district court correctly applied the six-year limitations period laid out in Title 28 of the Century Code, see N.D. CentCode § 28-01-16, rather than the ten-year provision. See § 28-01-22. First, an action for breach of fiduciary duty falls within the plain language of § 28-01-16. That provision requires the following actions to be commenced within six years after the claim for relief has accrued:
2. An action upon a liability created by statute, other than a penalty or forfeiture, when not otherwise expressly provided.
5. An action for criminal conversation or for any other injury to the person or rights of another not arising upon contract, when not otherwise expressly provided.
N.D. CentCode § 28-01-16.
Roemmich’s breach of fiduciary duty claim appears to fall within both of these provisions. He grounds his breach of fiduciary duty claim in the provisions of the Act creating both the duty of good faith on the part of defendants, as well as the equitable remedies he seeks.
See
N.D. CentCode § 10-32-119. Further, the Act does not expressly provide a separate statute of limitations to govern claims arising thereunder. Therefore, his claim meets
An action for breach of fiduciary duty also falls within subsection (5), because it involves an alleged injury to Roemmieh not arising from contract, and also not provided for in the alternative by any other provision. Although thеre is no North Dakota case on point, the Missouri Supreme Court interpreted a similar provision to encompass breach of fiduciary duty claims.
See Creative Mktg.
Assocs.
v. AT & T,
We now turn to the question whether the district court should have applied the continuing wrong doctrine to the conduct established by Roemmieh at the summary judgment stage. Under North Dakota law, “[t]he statute of limitations for a continuing tort does not begin to run until the tortious acts cease.”
Beavers v. Walters,
Roemmieh has failed to point to any case identifying freeze-out, or a series of breaches of fiduciary duties, as a continuing wrong. In fact, several decisions have held the opposite. In
Thorndike v. Thorndike,
Thorndike
and
Houle
do not necessarily settle this matter, however, because myriad wrongful acts may trigger a freeze-out claim, and some could conceivably be continuing wrongs.
Cf. Schumacher,
Although it is possible that the district court erred in rejecting the continuing wrong doctrine as applied to Roemmich’s claim that defendants engaged in commingling of personal and Eagle Eye funds, we need not reach that question because Roemmich failed to рrovide any evidence establishing that the conduct occurred after April 13, 1998. 8 Therefore, the continuing wrong doctrine would not toll the statute of limitations as to this series of actions. For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the district court correctly barred recovery based on acts and events occurring before April 13, 1998.
B. Limitations Period and the Availability of Equitable Relief
Roemmich contends that the district court erred in barring his claims for equitable relief based on actions occurring outside the six-year limitations period, then turning around and considering pre-April 13, 1998, conduct when determining an appropriate remedy under N.D. Cent.Code § 10-32-119. We review these legal issues
de novo. See Pritchett v. Cottrell, Inc.,
As to thе first part of Roemmich’s contention, we agree with the district court that the six-year statute of limitations applies to Roemmich’s causes of action, regardless of whether the relief requested is legal or equitable. The North Dakota Supreme Court has previously applied a similar statute of limitations to claims for equitable relief arising out of actions falling within the statute.
See Diocese of Bismarck Trust v. Ramada, Inc.,
[I]n determining whether to order relief under this section and in determining what particular relief to order, the court shall take into consideration the duty that all members in a closely held limited liability company owe one another to act in an honest, fair, and reasonable manner in the operation of the limited liability company and the reasonable expectations of the members as they exist at the inception and develop during the course of the members’ relationship with the limited liability company and with each other.
N.D. Cent.Code § 10-32-119(4). Based on the language of the statute, the district court correctly allowed both parties to present evidence of events occurring prior to April 13, 1998, for the purpose of crafting a remedy. Roemmich fails to point to any pre-April 13, 1998, evidence that was either admitted for some improper purpose, such as determining liability, 10 or excluded despite its relevance under § 10-32-119. 11 Therefore, the district court did not err in its treatment of pre-April 13, 1998, evidence.
C. District Court’s Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law
“When the district court conducts a bench trial as it did here, we review the district court’s fact finding for clear error, and we review legal conclusions and mixed questions of law and fact de novo.”
Eckert v. Titan Tire Corp.,
Roemmich contends that the district court erred by looking at each alleged violation as a separate act, rather than considering the totality of the conduct and asking whether it constituted a frеeze-out.
For example, the district court found that Roemmich had no reasonable expectation of continued employment beyond the development of the Florida projects, and that his abandonment of those projects justified the cessation of his salary; he had no reasonable expectation of immediate or regular financial distributions; the Bertschs did not engage in improper self-dealing; and that he never had a reasonable expectation of an equal say in the decisionmaking of Eagle Eye. Id. at *29. Further, the district court found that although there was a mutual understanding that Roemmich would be actively involved in managing Eagle Eye, and that he had a reasonable expectation that he would be provided with Eagle Eye’s financial information, his own inequitable conduct justified his removal as governor. Id. at *29-*30.
The district court’s order provides ample indication that the court considered the totality of the conduct. Moreover, we are unaware of case law prohibiting the district court from first ascertaining what happened in given instances before drawing conclusions about their cumulative effect. In fact, the case law suggests that the district court proceeded properly.
See, e.g., Brandt,
Roemmich also contends that the district court’s findings of fact are contrary to the weight of the evidence presented at trial. However, the trial transcripts and exhibits indicate at least some support for every challenged material finding. Because we must give ample regard to the district court’s credibility determinations, as well as its choice between two permissible views of the evidence, we hold that the district court’s findings of fact were not clearly erroneous.
See Richardson,
D. Attorney’s Fees and Expenses
Roemmich appeals the district court’s decision to award defendants reasоnable expenses, including attorney’s fees, under § 10-32-119(8) of the Act. The Act provides that “[i]f a court finds that a party to a proceeding brought under this section has acted arbitrarily, vexatiously, or otherwise not in good faith, it may in its discretion award reasonable expenses, including attorney’s fees and disbursements, to any of the other parties.” N.D. Cent. Code § 10-32-119(8). The district court based its decision on Roemmich’s pre-litigation conduct, specifically emphasizing his use of allegations of fraud and illegal conduct against Leland and Wagner as a sword in his dealings with them and Eagle Eye’s banks. “We review
de novo
the legal issues related to the award of attorney’s fees and costs and review for abuse of discretion the actual award of attorney’s
North Dakota case law has not yet delineated what types of acts are arbitrary, vexatious, or not otherwise in good faith for purposes of the statute. Roemmich contends that because he prevailed on portions of his claim, and he did not engage in bad faith litigation conduct, he could not have “acted” in bad faith under the statute. Yet, the authorities he cites do not create a per se rule that prevailing on some portion of the claim prevents the district from finding that he acted arbitrarily, vexatiously, or in bad faith.
Bloom v. Northern Pacific Beneficial Association,
for example, involved interpretation of a statute аllowing the court to award fees for the refusal of an insurance company to provide coverage to an insured if “it appears to the court that such refusal was vexatious and without reasonable cause----”
Bloom v. N. Pac. Beneficial Ass’n,
Belfer v. Merling,
III. Conclusion
Based on the foregoing, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. The Honorable Daniel L. Hovland, Chief United States District Judge for the District of North Dakota.
. The Honorable Charles S. Miller, Jr., United States Magistrate Judge for the District of North Dakota.
. The North Dakota Limited Liability Company Act, N.D. Cent.Code §§ 10-32-01-156, imposes a duty to act in good faith on mеmbers,
see id.
§ 10-32-69, governors,
see id.
§ 10-32-86, and managers,
see id.
§ 10-32-96. Further, it empowers the court to fashion equitable remedies when “[t]he governors or those in control of the limited liability company have acted fraudulently, illegally, or in a manner unfairly prejudicial toward one or more members....”
Id.
§§ 10-32-119(l)(b)(2), (4). The North Dakota Supreme Court has previously interpreted similar language in the North Dakota Business Corporation Act as creating an action for breach of fiduciary duty.
See Brandt v. Somerville,
. The only detailed discussion of this subsection can be found in Sheets v. Graco, Inc., 292 N.W.2d 63 (N.D.1980), where Justice Sand, specially concurring and dissenting, interpreted the provision to require that the liability be exclusively created by statute, in other words, not available at common law. Id. at 69. The parties do not argue this point, and it is doubtful that a cause of action for breach of fiduciary duty existed independent of any statutory scheme, because the limited liability company is a relatively recent creation.
. Because the statute of limitations issue was decided on summary judgment, these facts are taken from the record available to the district court when ruling on the cross-motions.
. Roemmieh also identifies two other actions that he alleges constitute a continuing violation: (1) he claims that the defendants continually obtained refinancing before and after April 13, 1998, with the goal of using the money to make preferential payments to Bertsch Construction or the Bertschs; and (2) he raised the possibility that Leland improperly used loans for a separate post office pro
. Agаin, Roemmich's brief suffers from its failure to point to specific facts in the record that might support his claims. The most our search discloses is deposition testimony by Wagner that Leland wrote checks from Eagle Eye accounts for his personal expenses. We cannot conclude that these events took place after the April 13, 1998, cutoff, however, because the only date discussed in this line of questioning was 1996. The only reasonable inference to be drawn is that these transactions took place that year.
. Roemmich relies on
Musto v. Vidas,
. Although Roemmich argues that the district court made a substantive determination that Leland and Wagner did not submit fraudulent change orders to the USPS prior to April 13, 1998, even assuming the truth of his observations, we fail to see how this finding of no liability harmed him, given that claims based on these change orders were barred by the statute of limitations.
. Roemmich contends that the district court improperly excluded evidence that Leland and Wagner submitted fraudulent change orders to.the USPS. Such evidence, he argues, would have further established the wrongfulness of defendants' conduct. By implication, defendants’ conduct might have justified more favorable relief. However, he fails to cite any instance in the record where the district court prevented him from introducing evidence for this purpose.
. Roemmich does not contend in his opening brief that relief under § 10-32-119(8) is limited to arbitrary, vexatious, or bad faith litigation conduct, nor does he provide any authority that suggests this interpretation of the statute. Therefore, we have no occasion to decide whether the district court erred in basing its award on pre-litigation conduct.
See United States v. McAdory,
