DREW, J.
Plaintiffs, Sanctuary Capital, LLC, and a group of other members of North Louisiana
NLB was organized in 1999 and licensed as a Business Industry Development Corporation to provide financing to small businesses in North Louisiana. Soon after the company was formed, its members executed a detailed operating agreement. This agreement provides, in part, for the management and control of the company; the agreement named defendants Richard Cloud and James Garner as the company's managers. Cloud, his son, and Garner control a majority ownership interest in NLB.
In September 2013, NLB, Cloud, Garner and two other companies affiliated with Cloud and Garner were sued by Craig Taylor, Inc. ("CTI"), a company with which these defendants had engaged in business dealings. CTI demanded, among other things, a money judgment against NLB, Cloud and Garner. CTI's 185-paragraph petition alleged that Cloud and Garner had engaged in various acts of self-dealing with NLB as well as fraud and forgery.
On May 2, 2014, 11 members of NLB filed a petition which they captioned as a derivative action; this action was combined with a demand for injunctive relief. The defendants in this action included NLB, Cloud and Garner. Plaintiffs urged that they sought to enforce NLB's own right to examine the company's "financial and other" records, an effort that had been thwarted by Cloud and Garner's refusal to make the records available to them. Plaintiffs asserted that CTI's allegations of wrongdoing against Cloud and Garner, along with a $6 million bad debt expense on NLB's 2013 financial statement, were behind their efforts to scrutinize NLB's records.
In response, NLB, Cloud and Garner raised an exception of prematurity. They cited the provisions of NLB's operating agreement requiring members of the LLC to mediate their disputes and, if mediation failed, to submit disputes to arbitration. Article IX of the operating agreement provides, in part:
The plaintiffs opposed the exception, arguing that the dispute was not one among members but instead was between NLB itself and managers Cloud and Garner.
The trial judge heard the exception of prematurity on July 7, 2014, found that this was a dispute among members, and sustained the exception. The judge signed a judgment on July 25, 2014, dismissing the plaintiffs' action, and the plaintiffs took a timely appeal.
The parties have framed the issue in this case as whether this is a true derivative action by the LLC, thus avoiding the mediation/arbitration agreement, or an individual action between members that they presume to be subject to that agreement. Although this appears to be a hybrid of a derivative action and an action by individual members, we conclude that the action here is fundamentally a demand by members of the LLC against the company itself. In other words, the members are attempting to enforce their rights to see the company's records against the company, not against other members. Moreover, we believe that this dispute does not "relat[e] to" the agreement in a sense that triggers the mediation/arbitration clause.
In Davis v. Russell, 44,909 (La. App.2d Cir. 12/9/09), 26 So.3d 950, 952, this Court explained:
However, where the meaning of a contract is to be determined solely from the words upon its face, without the necessity of extrinsic evidence, the appellate courts are as competent to review the evidence as the trial court, and no special deference is usually accorded the trial court's findings. Schroeder v. Board of Sup'rs of La. State Univ., 591 So.2d 342, 345 (La. 1991).
Louisiana law favors arbitration, La. R.S. 9:4201, and the supreme court has instructed that:
Aguillard v. Auction Mgmt. Corp., 2004-2804 (La. 6/29/05), 908 So.2d 1, 18. Typically
Article VIII of the NLB operating agreement provides, in part:
G. Title to the Company.
As Article VIII, Section G makes clear, all property acquired by the company is held by the company in its name. This property includes the company's books and records, which are not the personal property of the managers or members; plainly, these materials are the property of the company itself. Although the company may act only through its managers or, where authorized, its members, the books and records nevertheless are the company's own property.
Thus, the right of members to view the company's books and records is fundamentally a question of the rights of the members vis-a-vis the company and not a dispute between members and managers even though the managers may be the parties charged with acting on behalf of the company. Accordingly, this dispute is neither a dispute between members nor a true derivative action to enforce the company's rights. The plaintiff members are seeking to enforce their own rights against
Moreover, in order to trigger the arbitration/mediation clause of the operating agreement, the action must be a "dispute aris[ing] between them relating to this Agreement." (Emphasis added.) The provisions of the operating agreement are similar to the default provisions of Louisiana law regarding access to LLC records, La. R.S. 12:1319.
In this case, the parties appear to agree that the operating agreement is the contract among the members and none deny that the agreement, including the agreement allowing examination of the company's books and records, governs their conduct. In the absence of a dispute relating to the agreement, the arbitration clause is again inapplicable.
Accordingly, the judgment of the trial court is hereby reversed, and this matter is remanded for further proceedings at appellees' cost.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.