IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
No. COA15-1219
Filed: 15 November 2016
Catawba County, No. 12 CVS 2832
BOLIER & COMPANY, LLC and CHRISTIAN G. PLASMAN, Plaintiffs,
v.
DECCA FURNITURE (USA), INC., DECCA CONTRACT FURNITURE, LLC,
RICHARD HERBST, WAI THENG TIN, TSANG C. HUNG, DECCA FURNITURE,
LTD., DECCA HOSPITALITY FURNISHINGS, LLC, DONGGUAN DECCA
FURNITURE CO. LTD., DARREN HUDGINS and DECCA HOME, Defendants,
v.
CHRISTIAN J. PLASMAN a/k/a BARRETT PLASMAN, Third-Party Defendant.
Appeal by plaintiffs and third-party defendant from order entered 26 May 2015
by Judge Louis A. Bledsoe, III in Catawba County Superior Court. Heard in the
Court of Appeals 12 May 2016.
The Law Offices of Matthew K. Rogers, PLLC, by Matthew K. Rogers, for
plaintiffs-appellants and third-party defendant-appellant.
McGuireWoods LLP, by Robert A. Muckenfuss, Jodie H. Lawson, and Andrew
D. Atkins, for defendants-appellees.
DAVIS, Judge.
Bolier & Company, LLC (“Bolier”), Christian G. Plasman (“Plasman”), and
Christian J. Plasman a/k/a Barrett Plasman (“Barrett”) (collectively “Plaintiffs”)
appeal from an order by the trial court enforcing a preliminary injunction previously
BOLIER & CO., LLC V. DECCA FURNITURE (USA), INC., ET. AL.
Opinion of the Court
entered against them in this action. After careful review, we dismiss Plaintiffs’
appeal.
Factual Background
Bolier is a closely held North Carolina company in the business of selling
furniture. Bolier was originally founded and owned by Plasman. On 31 August 2003,
Plasman entered into an operating agreement (the “Agreement”) with Decca
Furniture (USA), Inc. (“Decca USA”), which is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Decca
Contract Furniture, LLC (“Decca China”).1 Pursuant to the Agreement, Plasman
conferred a 55% ownership interest in Bolier to Decca USA while retaining a 45%
interest for himself. In return, Decca USA agreed to supply Bolier with furniture for
retail sale.
According to Plasman, Richard Herbst, the president of Decca USA, and Tsang
C. Hung, the chairman of Decca USA’s board of directors, represented to him prior to
the execution of the Agreement that while it was necessary for Decca to own a
majority ownership interest in Bolier “on paper” due to certain rules of the Hong Kong
Stock Exchange, Bolier would, in reality, be operated as a 50/50 partnership between
Decca USA and Plasman. Following the execution of the Agreement, Plasman served
as Bolier’s president and chief executive officer while his son, Barrett, worked as
Bolier’s operations manager. However, this arrangement ended on 19 October 2012
1In this opinion, we refer at times to Decca USA and Decca China collectively as “Decca” and
to Plasman and Barrett collectively as “the Plasmans.”
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when Herbst terminated the employment of both Plasman and Barrett because
Bolier’s revenues were no longer sufficient to support their annual salaries.
Although their employment had been terminated, Plasman and Barrett
continued to work regularly out of Bolier’s offices, ultimately causing Decca USA to
change the locks to the company’s offices. Plasman and Barrett also opened bank
accounts in Bolier’s name and diverted approximately $600,000.00 in customer
payments intended for Bolier to those accounts. They proceeded to pay themselves
at least $62,192.15 from those accounts as salaries, despite the fact that they were no
longer employed by Bolier.
On 22 October 2012, Plaintiffs filed the present action (the “Lawsuit”) in
Catawba County Superior Court alleging claims for dissolution; breach of contract;
fraud; constructive fraud; misappropriation of corporate opportunities; trademark,
trade dress and copyright infringement; conspiracy to defraud; and unfair trade
practices. On 24 October 2012, the Lawsuit was designated as a mandatory complex
business case and assigned to the North Carolina Business Court. Decca removed
the Lawsuit to the United States District Court for the Western District of North
Carolina on 29 October 2012. On that same date, Decca filed a motion for a temporary
restraining order and preliminary injunction against the Plasmans pursuant to Rule
65 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure seeking, among other things, to prohibit
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any additional diversion of Bolier funds and to recover the funds that had already
been diverted.
A hearing on Decca’s motion was held before the Honorable Richard L.
Voorhees. On 27 February 2013, Judge Voorhees entered an order (“Judge Voorhees’
Order”) granting Decca’s motion by entering a preliminary injunction that barred the
Plasmans from taking any further actions on Bolier’s behalf. Judge Voorhees’ Order
also directed them to return all diverted funds to Bolier within five business days and
to provide an accounting of those funds to Decca USA. The order also put in place
various mechanisms to safeguard Plasman’s rights as a minority owner of Bolier
during the pendency of the litigation.
Plaintiffs filed a document entitled “Plaintiffs’ and Third Party Defendant’s
Response to Court Order” on 6 March 2013. In this document, they represented that
they had “fully complied to the best of their ability with the Court Order signed on
February 27, 2013.” In addition, they stated that “Plaintiffs[’] response herein is
intended to comply with the spirit of the Court Order, and by complying herein,
Plaintiffs are not waiving Plaintiffs’ rights to request reconsideration or appeal.”
On 13 March 2013, Plaintiffs filed a document captioned “Supplemental
Motion for Preliminary Injunction Conditions and Plaintiff Safeguard Conditions” in
which they requested that the federal court impose additional obligations on Decca
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to protect Plasman’s status as a minority owner of Bolier — including the issuance of
an injunction bond.
Plaintiffs never made any attempt to appeal Judge Voorhees’ Order to the
United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit. Nor did they file a motion for
reconsideration of Judge Voorhees’ Order.
On 19 September 2014, Judge Voorhees entered an order dismissing Plaintiffs’
federal copyright claims and declining to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over
Plaintiffs’ state law claims. As a result, the Lawsuit was remanded to state court.
Upon remand, Plaintiffs filed in the Business Court a motion entitled
“Plaintiffs’ Motion to Amend Preliminary Injunction, to Dissolve Portions of the
Preliminary Injunction and Award Damages, and Motion for Sanctions.” In this
document, Plaintiffs asked the court, inter alia, to amend various aspects of the
preliminary injunction conditions set forth in Judge Voorhees’ Order and to dissolve
other portions of that order. In support of their motion, Plaintiffs asserted, in part,
that
since the Preliminary Injunction was entered, Plaintiff has
obtained significant evidence supporting that [sic] (1) the
Preliminary Injunction was improvidently granted, (2)
incorrectly entered without protection of an injunction
bond, as well as [sic] (3) the facts demonstrate changed
circumstances warranting amendment of the Preliminary
Injunction.
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Plaintiffs then requested the entry of an order containing the following
provisions:
1. Plasman and Barrett should be awarded at least
$574,660.36 in damages relating to improper termination.
2. Decca USA should be required to pay [a] cash bond of at
least $5,471,000.00 and up to $10,000,000.00 to reimburse
Bolier relating to Decca’s self-dealing, misappropriation of
Bolier’s corporate opportunities and other tortious conduct.
3. Decca USA should be required to pay for [an]
independent third party audit and accounting of Bolier,
Decca Home, Elan by Decca, Decca Contract Furniture,
and Decca Hospitality Furnishings to account for all sales
of Bolier designs, as well as sales of residential furniture
by Decca Home and Elan by Decca.
4. Sanctions as contemplated by Plaintiffs’ Motion for
Contempt . . . to defer [sic] similar conduct in the future.
Decca USA filed a document in the Business Court entitled “Defendant Decca
USA’s Motion to Enforce Order, Motion for Contempt, and Motion for Sanctions.” In
this motion, Decca USA asserted that the Plasmans had willfully violated Judge
Voorhees’ Order and, as a result, sought enforcement of the preliminary injunction.
Decca USA further requested that the Plasmans be held in contempt and that
sanctions be imposed against them.
On 26 March 2015, a hearing on the parties’ motions was held before the
Honorable Louis A. Bledsoe, III. On 26 May 2015, Judge Bledsoe entered an order
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(“Judge Bledsoe’s Order”) denying Plaintiffs’ motion and stating, in pertinent part, as
follows:
The federal court not only found that Chris Plasman had
interfered with Bolier’s business operations by diverting
Bolier’s funds to himself and others but that injunctive
relief was necessary to ensure management control would
be exercised by the Majority in Interest as provided under
the Bolier Operating Agreement. The federal court crafted
a thoughtful, well-reasoned, and narrowly-tailored
[Preliminary Injunction] Order that placed managerial and
operational control in Decca USA, the 55% owner, and
imposed numerous safeguards to protect Chris Plasman’s
45% minority interest in the company. This Court has not
been persuaded, by either evidence or argument, that the
federal court’s carefully drafted [Preliminary Injunction]
Order should be modified, amended, or dissolved in any
respect.
With regard to Decca USA’s motion, Judge Bledsoe declined to hold the
Plasmans in contempt. However, he granted Decca USA’s motion to enforce Judge
Voorhees’ Order and ordered that the Plasmans pay Decca USA $62,192.15 plus
applicable interest and provide to Decca USA the accounting that had been required
under Judge Voorhees’ Order.2
Plaintiffs filed notice of appeal from Judge Bledsoe’s Order on 25 June 2015.
On 30 December 2015, Decca filed a motion to dismiss Plaintiffs’ appeal.
Analysis
2 Judge Bledsoe’s Order also ruled on several other motions that had been made by the parties
upon remand of the Lawsuit. However, none of Judge Bledsoe’s rulings on those additional motions
are directly relevant to the present appeal.
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Decca has moved to dismiss Plaintiffs’ appeal on the ground that it is an
interlocutory appeal over which this Court lacks appellate jurisdiction. It is clear
that this appeal is interlocutory. “A final judgment is one which disposes of the cause
as to all the parties, leaving nothing to be judicially determined between them in the
trial court.” Duval v. OM Hospitality, LLC, 186 N.C. App. 390, 392, 651 S.E.2d 261,
263 (2007) (citation omitted). Conversely, an order or judgment is interlocutory if it
does not settle all of the issues in the case but rather “directs some further proceeding
preliminary to the final decree.” Heavner v. Heavner, 73 N.C. App. 331, 332, 326
S.E.2d 78, 80, disc. review denied, 313 N.C. 601, 330 S.E.2d 610 (1985).
Generally, there is no right of immediate appeal from an interlocutory order.
Paradigm Consultants, Ltd. v. Builders Mut. Ins. Co., 228 N.C. App. 314, 317, 745
S.E.2d 69, 72 (2013). The prohibition against interlocutory appeals “prevents
fragmentary, premature and unnecessary appeals by permitting the trial court to
bring the case to final judgment before it is presented to the appellate courts.” Russell
v. State Farm Ins. Co., 136 N.C. App. 798, 800, 526 S.E.2d 494, 496 (2000) (citation
and brackets omitted).
However, there are two avenues by which a party may
immediately appeal an interlocutory order or judgment.
First, if the order or judgment is final as to some but not
all of the claims or parties, and the trial court certifies the
case for appeal pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule
54(b), an immediate appeal will lie. Second, an appeal is
permitted under N.C. Gen. Stat. §§ 1-277(a) and 7A-
27(d)(1) if the trial court’s decision deprives the appellant
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of a substantial right which would be lost absent
immediate review.
N.C. Dep’t of Transp. v. Page, 119 N.C. App. 730, 734, 460 S.E.2d 332, 334 (1995)
(internal citations omitted).
Judge Bledsoe’s Order does not contain a certification under Rule 54(b).
Therefore, Plaintiffs’ appeal is proper only if Plaintiffs can demonstrate a substantial
right that would be lost absent an immediate appeal.
In order to analyze the question of whether this Court possesses jurisdiction
over this appeal, we must closely examine not only Judge Bledsoe’s Order but also
Judge Voorhees’ Order and Plaintiffs’ filings in response thereto. Judge Voorhees’
Order rejected Plasman’s arguments regarding his right to equal control of Bolier but
recognized the need for the imposition of safeguards to protect his rights as a minority
shareholder. The federal court proceeded to enter a preliminary injunction stating,
in pertinent part, as follows:
The protections afforded by Meiselman and its
progeny developed in light of the generally applicable
principle of majority rule. Bound by agreement, statute,
and doctrine, the majority in interest otherwise has the
right to control corporate affairs. See, e.g., Gaines v. Long
Mfg. Co., 67 S.E.2d 350, 354 (N.C. 1951) (“The majority has
the right to control; but when it does so, it occupies a
fiduciary relation toward the minority, as much so as the
corporation itself or its officers and directors.”); (see also
Doc. 7-2 at 11) (providing that “all decisions or actions of
the Company . . . or the Members shall require the
approval, consent, agreement, or vote of the Majority in
Interest”).
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Here, the prior conduct of Plaintiff Plasman in
continuing to manage and to control the operations of
Bolier & Co. has deprived the majority of this right.
However, in light of Plaintiffs’ claim that Defendants have
engaged in self-serving transactions, the imposition of
safeguards enabling Plaintiff Plasman to check the threat
of self-dealing would be appropriate.
Defendants have proposed the following conditions,
among others, to remain in effect pending the resolution of
this case:
(1) Plaintiff Plasman is to be enjoined from holding
himself out as President or CEO or Bolier &
Co.;
(2) Third-Party Defendant Barrett Plasman is to
have no further authority as an employee of
Bolier & Co.;
(3) The Plasmans are to be prohibited from
entering Decca USA or Bolier & Co. property
without Decca USA’s permission, and upon
reasonable request, Decca USA shall grant
such permission to Plaintiff Plasman in his role
as minority member-manager;
(4) The Plasmans are to be enjoined from removing
any property or fixtures from Bolier & Co.’s or
Decca USA’s premises without the written
authorization or permission of Decca USA;
(5) The Plasmans are otherwise enjoined from
interfering with Decca USA’s or Bolier & Co.’s
business operations;
(6) Within five business days of the entry of this
Order, the Plasmans are to return to Decca
USA’s Bank of America lockbox all of Bolier &
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Co.’s monies, including but not limited to
customer payments, diverted to them or to any
bank account under their control, and such
funds must be paid with a certified check;
(7) Within five business days of the entry of this
Order, the Plasmans are required to provide an
accounting to Decca USA, also to be filed with
the Court, of all funds that were diverted from
October 19, 2012, to the present, detailing who
made the payments, when the payments were
received, the payment amounts, and the
purpose of the payments;
(8) Decca USA shall provide Plaintiff Plasman
with copies of Bolier & Co.’s financial
statements on a monthly basis;
(9) At Plaintiff Plasman’s request, all of Bolier &
Co.’s books and records, including royalty and
licensing payments, may be inspected and
examined once every six months by an
accountant of Plaintiff Plasman’s choice at his
expense at the Decca USA office or at a
mutually agreeable location;
(10) Decca USA shall provide Plaintiff Plasman
with copies of Bolier & Co.’s federal, state, and
local income tax returns for each year
beginning with 2012;
(11) Decca USA shall provide Plaintiff Plasman with
any other information regarding Bolier & Co.’s
affairs as is just and reasonable, or otherwise
required by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 57C-3-04 or Bolier
& Co.’s Operating Agreement;
(12) A member-manager meeting shall be held bi-
annually, in April and October; in which
Plaintiff Plasman may provide Bolier & Co. with
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his input regarding the company’s management
and affairs; and
(13) With regard to these member-manager
meetings, Decca USA shall provide Plaintiff
Plasman with at least ten days’, and no more
than fifty days’, notice of the date, time, and
place of such meetings.
The Court so orders.
Judge Voorhees’ Order further provided that “[a]dditional conditions may be imposed
upon subsequent motion of Plaintiff Plasman, to be filed with the Court within
fourteen days of the date on which this Order is filed.”
Seven days after Judge Voorhees’ Order was entered, Plaintiffs filed a
“Response to Court Order,” which stated, in pertinent part, as follows: “Plaintiffs[’]
response herein is intended to comply with the spirit of the Court Order, and by
complying herein, Plaintiffs are not waiving Plaintiffs’ rights to request
reconsideration or appeal.” In this document, after expressing concerns with several
provisions of Judge Voorhees’ Order, Plaintiffs stated that “[a]s set forth herein,
Plaintiffs have fully complied to the best of their ability with the Court Order signed
on February 27, 2013.”
Seven days later, Plaintiffs filed a “Supplemental Motion for Preliminary
Injunction Conditions and Plaintiff Safeguard Conditions” in which they sought the
entry of “an order establishing Preliminary Injunction conditions to safeguard
Plaintiffs Chris Plasman and Bolier & Company, LLC pending final resolution of the
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merits.” Plaintiffs listed eleven specific requests for such safeguards. In this
document, Plaintiffs also requested that the federal court “clarify the . . . [Preliminary
Injunction] Order to specifically permit [the Plasmans] to retain funds paid to Chris
Plasman and Barrett Plasman for wages earned and Bolier . . . expenses paid
(including the $12,000.00 paid as reimbursement for legal expenses) prior to January
14, 2013 shall [sic] not be paid to Decca USA pending final outcome of the litigation[.]”
The federal court never issued an order directly responding to Plaintiffs’
motion. Instead, on 19 September 2014 the federal court dismissed Plaintiffs’ federal
claims and remanded the Lawsuit to state court.
In ruling on Decca’s motion to enforce Judge Voorhees’ Order, Judge Bledsoe
stated the following in his 26 May 2015 order:
[T]he evidentiary record before the federal court in
entering the [Preliminary Injunction] Order included
copies of each of eleven checks made payable to the
Plasmans in the total amount of $62,192.15, and the
federal court was advised that these checks were
purportedly for payment of the Plasmans’ wages, expenses,
and attorney’s fees incurred between their termination on
October 19, 2012 and when they were finally locked out of
Bolier on January 14, 2013. . . .
{33} Based on these facts, the Court concludes that the
federal court intended that the Funds at Issue paid from
the Bolier accounts to the Plasmans to constitute funds
covered by paragraph 6 of the [Preliminary Injunction]
Order, and therefore, that the federal court ordered that
these funds be returned to “Decca USA’s Bank of America
lockbox” within five days of the entry of the [Preliminary
Injunction] Order. The Court further concludes that the
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federal court required the Plasmans, within the same five-
day time period, to provide an accounting to Decca USA of
“all funds that were diverted from October 19, 2012, to the
present, detailing who made the payments, when the
payments were received, the payment amounts, and the
purpose of the payments,” . . . and rejected any contentions
by the Plasmans that they were unable to provide the
requested information. As a result, the Court concludes
that Defendant Decca USA’s Motion to Enforce Order, for
Contempt, and for Sanctions should be granted, in part, to
require the Plasmans to pay to Decca USA the Funds at
Issue in the amount of at least $62,192.15, plus interest at
the legal rate from March 6, 2013, and to provide the
accounting to Decca USA required under paragraph 7 of
the [Preliminary Injunction] Order.
With regard to Plaintiffs’ motion to dissolve and amend Judge Voorhees’ Order,
Judge Bledsoe ruled as follows:
{43} Finally, although Plaintiffs argue that Decca USA has
mismanaged the company since Chris Plasman was
removed as President and CEO, the Court finds that
Plaintiffs have failed to offer persuasive or compelling
evidence to show that Plaintiffs will suffer irreparable
harm if Chris Plasman is not returned to the chief
management position at Bolier, that Defendants can no
longer show a likelihood of success on the merits, or that
equity otherwise demands that the [Preliminary
Injunction] Order should be dissolved or amended at this
time. To the contrary, the Court is persuaded that the
continuation of the [Preliminary Injunction] Order — in
particular, management by Decca USA, Bolier’s Majority
in Interest — will not cause Chris Plasman irreparable
harm, is in the best interests of Bolier, and remains
necessary to protect Bolier from irreparable harm. The
federal court not only found that Chris Plasman had
interfered with Bolier’s business operations by diverting
Bolier’s funds to himself and others but that injunctive
relief was necessary to ensure management control would
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be exercised by the Majority in Interest as provided under
the Bolier Operating Agreement. The federal court crafted
a thoughtful, well-reasoned, and narrowly-tailored
[Preliminary Injunction] Order that placed managerial and
operational control in Decca USA, the 55% owner, and
imposed numerous safeguards to protect Chris Plasman’s
45% minority interest in the company. This Court has not
been persuaded, by either evidence or argument, that the
federal court’s carefully drafted [Preliminary Injunction]
Order should be modified, amended, or dissolved in any
respect.
(footnote omitted).
Having reviewed the relevant orders and filings by the parties, we conclude
that Plaintiffs have failed to establish the existence of appellate jurisdiction over this
appeal. Plaintiffs essentially make three arguments as to why appellate jurisdiction
exists despite the significant passage of time since the federal preliminary injunction
was entered. First, they contend that Judge Voorhees’ Order was not immediately
appealable because it did not contain a final preliminary injunction. Second, they
argue that even if his order would otherwise have been appealable, the documents
they filed in response to the order tolled their deadline for taking such an appeal.
Third, they assert that even assuming they have lost the opportunity to appeal Judge
Voorhees’ Order, Judge Bledsoe’s Order — which they have appealed — deprived
them of a substantial right such that it was independently appealable. We address
each of these arguments in turn.
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First, we conclude that Judge Voorhees’ Order was, in fact, appealable. It is
well settled that preliminary injunction orders issued by a federal court are
immediately appealable. See Nationsbank Corp. v. Herman, 174 F.3d 424, 427 (4th
Cir.), cert. denied, 528 U.S. 1045, 145 L.Ed.2d 481 (1999).
While Plaintiffs do not dispute the appealability of federal preliminary
injunctions as a general proposition, they contend that Judge Voorhees’ Order was
not yet final because it invited Plasman to move for additional safeguards to protect
his interest as a minority owner of Bolier. We are unable to agree with this
contention.
As shown above, the preliminary injunction contained in Judge Voorhees’
Order addressed the basic issues as to which the parties disagreed, including the
fundamental question of who was legally entitled to control Bolier. While the federal
court granted the Plasmans leave to seek additional procedural safeguards if they so
desired, this invitation did not render the preliminary injunction incomplete and,
therefore, unappealable.
Second, Plaintiffs contend that their subsequent filings in federal court tolled
their deadline for appealing Judge Voorhees’ Order. We disagree.
Plaintiffs’ “Response to Court Order” was not a motion to reconsider Judge
Voorhees’ Order. Indeed, they expressly stated therein that “Plaintiffs are not
waiving Plaintiffs’ rights to request reconsideration or appeal.” They further
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represented in this document that they had “fully complied to the best of their
abilities with [Judge Voorhees’ Order].”
Nor was the filing of Plaintiffs’ “Supplemental Motion for Preliminary
Injunction Conditions and Plaintiff Safeguard Conditions” sufficient to toll their
deadline for taking an appeal of Judge Voorhees’ Order. The bulk of this document
simply contained a request for the imposition of additional “reasonable condition[s]
and protections” to safeguard Plasman’s rights as a minority shareholder during the
pendency of the litigation. The document did not purport to be a motion for
reconsideration of Judge Voorhees Order, and we decline Plaintiffs’ invitation to treat
it as such. Had Plaintiffs intended to seek reconsideration of Judge Voorhees’ Order
so as to toll their deadline for appealing the preliminary injunction, they were
required to file a motion that unambiguously sought such relief. However, they failed
to do so. While Plaintiffs may have held out hope that the federal court would
nevertheless modify its preliminary injunction as a result of their motion, it was still
incumbent upon them to protect their appeal rights during the interim by taking an
appeal of Judge Voorhees’ Order to the Fourth Circuit within the thirty-day deadline
provided by Rule 4 of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure. See Fed. R. App. P.
4(a)(1)(A).
Finally, we reject Plaintiffs’ argument that Judge Bledsoe’s Order was
independently appealable. The specific aspects of Judge Bledsoe’s Order cited by
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Plaintiffs as depriving them of a substantial right are essentially identical to the
preliminary injunction terms contained in Judge Voorhees’ Order, which Plaintiffs
never appealed. Thus, because Judge Bledsoe’s Order merely enforces the
preliminary injunction entered by Judge Voorhees, our consideration of the
substantive issues raised by Plaintiffs in the present appeal would enable them to
achieve a “back door” appeal of Judge Voorhees’ Order well over three years after its
entry.
While Plaintiffs point in particular to the portion of Judge Bledsoe’s Order
directing them to pay to Decca USA $62,192.15 plus interest, they ignore the fact that
Judge Bledsoe was simply enforcing the ruling in Judge Voorhees’ Order ordering
them to return to Decca USA all of the funds that the Plasmans had diverted from
Bolier.3 Indeed, as referenced above, Judge Bledsoe’s Order carefully explained how
it arrived at the $62,192.15 figure, which was based on the total of eleven checks
made payable to the Plasmans purporting to represent payments for their wages,
expenses, and attorneys’ fees incurred between the date of their termination on 19
October 2012 and the date “they were finally locked out of Bolier on January 14,
2013.”
3We note that while Judge Voorhees’ Order directed Plaintiffs to return this money to Decca
USA within five business days of the entry of the order, over three and a half years have elapsed, and
Plaintiffs are still attempting to avoid this directive.
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As Judge Bledsoe’s Order noted, the record before the federal court at the time
Judge Voorhees’ Order was entered contained copies of these eleven checks.
Therefore, rather than imposing a new directive requiring the payment of money by
the Plasmans to Bolier, Judge Bledsoe’s Order simply quantified the amount of
money that the federal court had ordered Plaintiffs to pay Decca USA in light of the
documents that the parties had put before the federal court at the time the
preliminary injunction was entered.
Nor did Judge Bledsoe’s Order make any substantive modifications to the issue
of Bolier’s management. Instead, Judge Bledsoe’s Order merely reiterated the federal
court’s rulings on this subject.
The federal court not only found that Chris Plasman had
interfered with Bolier’s business operations by diverting
Bolier’s funds to himself and others but that injunctive
relief was necessary to ensure management control would
be exercised by the Majority in Interest as provided under
the Bolier Operating Agreement. The federal court crafted
a thoughtful, well-reasoned, and narrowly-tailored
[Preliminary Injunction] Order that placed managerial and
operational control in Decca USA, the 55% owner, and
imposed numerous safeguards to protect Chris Plasman’s
45% minority interest in the company. This Court has not
been persuaded, by either evidence or argument, that the
federal court’s carefully drafted [Preliminary Injunction]
Order should be modified, amended, or dissolved in any
respect.
(Emphasis added).
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In sum, Judge Bledsoe’s Order simply reiterates that Plaintiffs are bound to
comply with the federal preliminary injunction that was entered on 27 February
2013. Therefore, because Plaintiffs have failed to satisfy their burden of
demonstrating the loss of a substantial right absent immediate appeal of the order,
their appeal must be dismissed. See Robinson v. Gardner, 167 N.C. App. 763, 769,
606 S.E.2d 449, 453 (“Defendants have not demonstrated the existence of any
substantial right that would qualify them for immediate appeal. . . . We, therefore,
allow plaintiffs’ motions to dismiss the appeals.”), disc. review denied, 359 N.C. 322,
611 S.E.2d 417, 418 (2005).4
Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, Plaintiffs’ appeal is dismissed.
DISMISSED.
Judges DILLON and INMAN concur.
4 We also deny Plaintiffs’ alternative request that we reach the merits of their appeal by
treating the appeal as a petition for certiorari.
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