MAX HERRING, as assignee of
BRANCH BANKING & TRUST CO., Plaintiff, v. BENNETT M. KEASLER, JR.,
Defendant. NO. COA01-1000 COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA 150 N.C. App. 598;563 S.E.2d
614;2002 N.C. App. LEXIS 585 May 14, 2002, Heard in the Court
of Appeals June 4, 2002, Filed PRIOR
HISTORY: [**615] [*599]
[***1]
Wake County No. 94 CVS 7235. Appeal by plaintiff from order filed 16 May
2001 by Judge Jack W. Jenkins in Wake County Superior Court. COUNSEL: Michael W. Strickland & Associates, P.A., by
Nelson G. Harris, for plaintiff-appellant. Hunton
& Williams, by John D. Burns, for defendant-appellee. JUDGES: GREENE, Judge. Judges HUDSON and BIGGS concur. OPINION
BY: GREENE OPINION: GREENE,
Judge. Max
Herring (Plaintiff), as assignee of Branch Banking & Trust Company
(BB&T), appeals an order filed 16 May 2001 enjoining Plaintiff from seizing
or selling Bennett M. Keasler, Jr.s (Defendant) membership interests
in various limited liability companies. On 3
January 1996, BB&T obtained a default judgment (the judgment) against
Defendant and his wife in the amount of $ 29,062.57 plus interest. n1 On 12
December 2000, BB&T assigned its interest in the judgment to Plaintiff, and
Plaintiff obtained a writ of execution against Defendant on 19 March 2001. Subsequently,
on 19 April 2001, Defendant filed an emergency motion seeking an order to
restrain [***2] Plaintiff from attempting to have
Defendants membership interests in several limited liability
companies seized and sold. In Defendants affidavit, he stated he had
a 20% membership interest in several limited liability companies, including
River Place I, LLC; River Place II, LLC; River Place III, LLC[;] and River
Place IV, LLC [(collectively, the LLCs)], which were created for the purpose of
developing real estate in Wake County, North Carolina. - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - Footnotes - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - n1 The
judgment as to Defendants wife was subsequently vacated. - - -
- - - - - - - - - End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - In an
order dated 20 April 2001, the trial court temporarily restrained Plaintiff
from seeking the seizure and sale of Defendants membership interests
in the LLCs. Thereafter, Plaintiff filed a motion on 23 April 2001 seeking an
order under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-362 directing Defendants
membership interests in the LLCs be sold and the proceeds applied towards the
judgment. Pending the sale of Defendants membership interests in the
LLCs, Plaintiff requested an [*600]
order directing [***3]
any distributions and allocations of those interests to be applied
towards the satisfaction of the judgment (charging order). On 16 May 2001, the
trial court filed an order: enjoining Plaintiff from seeking the seizure or
sale of Defendants membership interests in the LLCs; denying
Plaintiffs motion, insofar as he sought to have Defendants
membership interests in the LLCs sold or transferred; and granting Plaintiffs
motion for a charging order. With respect to the charging order, the trial
court directed: Defendants membership interests in the LLCs to be
charged with payment of the judgment, plus interest; the LLCs to deliver to
Plaintiff any distributions and allocations that Defendant would be entitled to
receive on account of his membership interests in the LLCs; Defendant to
deliver to Plaintiff any allocations and distributions he would receive; and
Plaintiff to not obtain any rights in the LLCs, except as those of an assignee
and under the respective operating agreement. The
dispositive issue is whether N.C. Gen. Stat. § 57C-5-03 permits
a trial court to order a judgment debtors membership interest in a
limited liability company seized and
[***4] sold and the proceeds applied towards the satisfaction of a
judgment. Generally,
a trial court may order any property, whether subject or not to be sold under
execution (except the homestead and personal property exemptions of the
judgment debtor), in the hands of the judgment debtor or of any other person,
or due to the judgment debtor, to be applied towards the satisfaction of [a]
judgment. N.
C.G.S. § 1-362 (2001). North Carolina General Statutes § 57C-5-03,
however, provides that with respect to a judgment debtors membership
interest in a limited liability company, a trial court may charge the
membership interest of the member with payment of the unsatisfied amount of the
judgment with interest. N. C.G.S. § 57C-5-03
(2001). This charge entitles the judgment creditor [**616] to receive
the distributions and allocations to which the [judgment debtor] would be
entitled. N. C.G.S. § 57C-5-02 (2001). The charge
does not dissolve the limited liability company or entitle the
[judgment creditor] to become or exercise any rights of a member. Id.
Furthermore, [***5]
because the forced sale of a membership interest in a limited liability
company to satisfy a debt would necessarily entail the transfer of a members
ownership interest to another, thus permitting the purchaser to become a
member, forced sales of the type permitted in [*601] section
1-362 are prohibited. See N. C.G.S. § 57C-3-03 (2001) (except
as provided in the operating agreement or articles of organization, consent of
all the members of a limited liability company required to admit any
person as a member). In
this case, despite Plaintiffs attempts to have Defendants
membership interests in the LLCs seized and sold, his only remedy is to have
those interests charged with payment of the judgment under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 57C-5-03.
Accordingly, the trial court did not err in ordering that the judgment be
satisfied through the application of the distributions and allocations of
Defendants membership interests in the LLCs and in denying Plaintiffs
motion to have Defendants membership interests seized and sold. Affirmed. Judges
HUDSON [*6] and BIGGS concur. |