Navigating Fiduciary Disputes in North Carolina Small Business
People come to Fiduciary Litigation Group when the foundation of trust inside a business begins to crumble. Perhaps money has disappeared, decisions no longer make sense, or insiders have started helping themselves while everyone else pays the price. If you feel blindsided, angry, or unsure of whom to trust next, those reactions are valid. In North Carolina, a fiduciary relationship must rest on three non-negotiable pillars: loyalty, honesty, and care.
The Weight of Corporate Leadership
In the eyes of the law, corporate leaders hold power that does not belong to them. Directors and officers manage other people’s money, livelihoods, and futures. North Carolina law demands more than just competence; it requires good faith, informed judgment, and an unwavering loyalty to the company itself—never to personal gain.
Think of a fiduciary like a pilot flying a plane full of passengers. Skill and judgment are essential, but loyalty to the people on board matters most of all. A pilot who flies for personal thrill rather than passenger safety commits more than a simple mistake; that pilot betrays a fundamental trust.
Understanding Breaches of Loyalty and Care
Small business owners are leaders, and leaders stand in positions of trust. Under North Carolina fiduciary law, these duties are typically violated in two common ways:
Conflict of Interest
Conflicts of interest sit at the center of many corporate betrayals. North Carolina law does not automatically erase a deal just because a director or officer benefited, but it does demand honesty and fairness. Leaders must fully disclose conflicts and obtain approval from disinterested decision-makers, or prove the deal treated the company fairly. We dig into emails, board minutes, and bank records to uncover the real story and the real harm.
Corporate Opportunity: “Theft in a Suit and Tie”
A director or officer cannot spot a company opportunity, grab it for themselves, and leave the business with the scraps. The law treats this conduct as theft in a suit and tie. Courts can order wrongdoers to hand over these profits, treating them as company property rather than personal winnings. This remedy is vital because insiders often hide damage behind paper “losses” while pocketing very real gains
LLCs, Partnerships, and Power Dynamics
North Carolina imposes loyalty and care duties on managers in LLCs and partners in partnerships. However, because operating agreements and partnership contracts can alter these duties, the paperwork matters immensely.
Control dynamics are equally critical. In closely held businesses, majority owners can abuse their power to:
We build these cases around the lived reality of the business: who controlled the money, who controlled the information, and who used power to silence dissent.
Remedies and Legal Relief
When a breach occurs, the North Carolina legal system provides several paths to restoration for Small Businesses:
Insurance and Indemnification
Charter provisions and insurance often shape the “endgame” of litigation. While some companies limit personal liability for ordinary carelessness or provide insurance for defense costs, these tools affect who pays, not whether the act was wrong. Courts still decide if leadership broke faith and will order remedies that restore value to the rightful owners.
The Fiduciary Litigation Group Approach: Strategy and Mediation
We recognize that the best outcome in trust litigation is often one that preserves relationships.
As part of our strategic advocacy, we frequently utilize mediation to reach creative settlements that avoid the public nature of a trial. However, we built our reputation on being uncompromising in the face of injustice. If the other side refuses to act reasonably, our deep experience in North Carolina courts becomes your greatest asset.
