Your co-owner is freezing you out. They’ve cut your distributions, shut you out of decisions, or started moving money in ways you were never told about. The Law Offices of Edward L. Hedrick, V represents minority shareholders and close corporation owners across Hickory, Taylorsville, Newton, and Catawba County. We handle minority oppression claims, derivative suits, fiduciary breach, and buy-sell disputes. The other side is already building their case. You should be too.
Call (828) 635-4168 now.

Shareholder disputes in North Carolina don't resolve themselves. A majority shareholder who cuts off your distributions, excludes you from decisions, or forces a below-market buyout is counting on you to do nothing. The longer you wait, the more leverage you lose. The Law Offices of Edward L. Hedrick, V handles these cases for business owners in Catawba and Alexander County. We know the local courts, we know the local judges, and we know what it takes to hold a majority shareholder accountable when they think they can act without consequences.
You own a piece of this company. That ownership came with rights: the right to share in profits, the right to vote on major decisions, the right to access financial records, the right to a fair exit if the relationship breaks down. Those rights aren't optional. They're written into North Carolina law and, likely, into your own shareholder agreement.
But right now, someone is ignoring them.
Maybe your co-founder stopped sending financials. Maybe the majority shareholder voted to eliminate your distributions while paying themselves a salary that happens to match what your cut would have been. Maybe they're refusing to honor the buy-sell agreement you all signed. Maybe you found out there's a competing business they set up on the side using company resources you helped build.
None of that is legal. All of it is worth fighting.
The problem is that minority shareholders in a close corporation have fewer natural protections than shareholders in a public company. There's no SEC filing to expose misconduct. There's no board of directors to appeal to. There's just you, the other shareholders, and whoever lawyers up first.
You're already behind if you're reading this and they're not.
We represent shareholders who are being pushed out, frozen out, bought out below fair value, or simply ignored. That covers a range of claims under North Carolina law: minority shareholder oppression, derivative suits on behalf of the company, breach of fiduciary duty by a controlling shareholder or officer, and enforcement of buy-sell agreements.
When you call us, we start by reviewing your shareholder agreement, operating agreement, or partnership documents. We look at what rights you have on paper and where they’re being violated in practice. Then we tell you straight: what your case looks like, what relief is realistic, and what the path forward requires.
In some cases, that path leads to negotiation and a fair buyout. In others, it leads to litigation in Catawba County Superior Court or Alexander County. Either way, we build your case from the first phone call.
We don’t string out your matter to bill more hours. We move.
Step 1. Call (828) 635-4168.
Tell us what’s happening. No intake form, no scheduling delays. Get Ed on the line.
Step 2. Case Review.
We review your shareholder or operating agreement, any relevant company records you have access to, and the facts of the dispute. We identify your strongest claims and the evidence that supports them.
Step 3. Strategy.
We map out the right approach: demand letter, direct negotiation, a petition for dissolution, a derivative action, or full litigation. The strategy depends on your goals (fair buyout vs. staying in the business vs. exposing misconduct) and on what the facts support.
Step 4. Filing and Litigation.
If litigation is necessary, we file. We pursue discovery, subpoena records, depose the parties responsible, and build the evidentiary case your claim requires. North Carolina courts take minority oppression seriously when it’s properly documented.
Step 5. Resolution.
Whether that’s a settlement that reflects the actual value of your ownership, a court judgment, or a forced buyout at fair market value, we push toward a defined end. This doesn’t drag on indefinitely.
Ed Hedrick is an NC State Bar member who has practiced in this area for years. He’s not a contract attorney brought in for overflow work. He’s not a name on a website who hands your matter off to a junior associate.
When you hire this firm, you get Ed. He handles your case. He knows the judges. He knows the clerks. He knows what a hearing in Catawba County actually looks like from the inside, because he’s been there.
Business dispute clients in this area choose The Law Offices of Edward L. Hedrick, V because they want someone with a file in hand and a working relationship with the courthouse, not someone billing travel time to learn where the parking lot is.
The firm has served Catawba and Alexander County clients through business disputes, contract enforcement, partnership breakdowns, and civil litigation. That track record matters when your equity is on the line.
Here’s what happens when you hire a big-city firm out of Charlotte or Raleigh for a shareholder dispute in Hickory.
You pay a high hourly rate. Your matter gets assigned to an associate. That associate learns your case by billing you. Every call to Newton or the Alexander County courthouse is travel overhead. Every local nuance takes time to explain. You’re three months in before anyone has a real strategy, and you’ve already spent what your ownership stake might be worth.
Here’s what happens when you hire The Law Offices of Edward L. Hedrick, V.
Ed reads your documents. He tells you what you have. He tells you what you need. He knows the local courts because he appears in them. He picks up the phone when you call, or he calls you back the same day. His rates reflect a Taylorsville firm, not a Charlotte address.
You only get one shot to protect your ownership interest before the other side completes the freeze-out. Don’t hand that shot to someone who has to MapQuest the courthouse.
| How Our Firm Compares | ||
|---|---|---|
| Alternative | The Limitation | Our Firm |
| Big-city firm (Charlotte, Raleigh) | High overhead, associate-heavy, travel costs, no local court relationships | Local attorney, direct access, knows the judges |
| Online legal services | No representation, no advocacy, no one fighting for your equity | Full litigation capability in NC state court |
| Waiting it out | Majority shareholders use the delay to move assets, change records, and build their case | Move first, build the record, protect your position |
| General practice attorney with no business litigation experience | Unfamiliar with shareholder oppression law, derivative suit procedure, and NC close corporation rules | Practice area focus in business and civil litigation |
Shareholder dispute litigation varies in cost depending on the complexity of the company’s structure, the number of parties, how far discovery goes, and whether the case settles or goes to trial. Here are the main factors that drive legal fees in these matters:
We’re transparent about costs from the first consultation. You’ll know what your matter is likely to involve before you commit.
Call (828) 635-4168 to get a real estimate based on your actual situation.
The Law Offices of Edward L. Hedrick, V handles shareholder disputes and business litigation for clients in:
If your company is based anywhere in Catawba or Alexander County, this firm can handle your case. Court appearances happen at the Catawba County courthouse in Newton and the Alexander County courthouse in Taylorsville. We don’t have to schedule a field trip to appear for you.
Minority oppression occurs when majority shareholders use their control to harm the interests of minority shareholders in a way that's unfair or abusive. In North Carolina, courts can grant relief to minority shareholders, including forced buyouts, injunctions, or in extreme cases, dissolution of the company. The majority doesn't have to do anything illegal. Systematic exclusion, frozen distributions, and denial of access to records can all support an oppression claim.
No. North Carolina law protects minority shareholders whether or not a formal agreement is in place. A written agreement strengthens your position, especially if the other side is violating specific terms, but the absence of one doesn't end your case. Corporate law and fiduciary duty obligations still apply.
A derivative suit lets a shareholder sue on behalf of the company itself when the people running the company have harmed it. If a majority shareholder is siphoning money, awarding themselves excessive compensation, or entering self-dealing transactions at the company's expense, a derivative action can hold them accountable and return those assets to the company.
You almost certainly have a legal right to inspect company records under North Carolina law, depending on your ownership stake and the company type. If those rights are being blocked, we can file to enforce access. We can also use the discovery process in litigation to compel production of financial records, bank statements, contracts, and internal communications.
It depends entirely on whether the other side negotiates or fights. Some cases resolve in a few months after a demand letter and direct negotiation. Others go to litigation and take a year or longer. The earlier you get an attorney involved, the more control you have over that timeline.
In certain circumstances, yes. North Carolina courts can order a buyout of a minority shareholder's interest when majority oppression is established. The valuation method matters significantly here. Courts look at the fair value of the minority interest, which isn't always the same number the majority shareholder wants to offer. We push for valuations that reflect what your ownership is actually worth.
That's the most common shareholder dispute scenario in a close corporation. It doesn't change your legal rights. It does affect strategy. We handle these situations with a clear eye toward the outcome you want, whether that's preserving a working relationship through a structured buyout or aggressive litigation when the relationship is already gone.

Your ownership interest isn’t something you can recover after the fact. Once the other side completes a freeze-out, transfers assets, or forces a low-ball exit, getting back to where you started is much harder. Act now.
Call: (828) 635-4168
Email: office@edhedrickattorney.com
Address: 22 West Main Avenue, Taylorsville, NC
We’re available to consult with shareholders in Catawba and Alexander County. Call today and speak directly with Ed.
The Law Offices of Edward L. Hedrick, V represents shareholders in Hickory, Taylorsville, Newton, Conover, Catawba, Maiden, Hiddenite, and Stony Point when the people running the business start acting like the rules don’t apply to them.
We know how these cases work in Catawba and Alexander County. We know the courts. We know what it takes to build a record that holds up.
Call (828) 635-4168.
We don’t blink.
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