Chadwick Farms Owners Ass'n v. FHC, LLC

160 P.3d 1061
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 18, 2007
Docket58796-0-I
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 160 P.3d 1061 (Chadwick Farms Owners Ass'n v. FHC, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chadwick Farms Owners Ass'n v. FHC, LLC, 160 P.3d 1061 (Wash. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

160 P.3d 1061 (2007)

CHADWICK FARMS OWNERS ASSOCIATION, a Washington nonprofit corporation, Appellant,
v.
FHC, LLC, a Washington limited liability company, Respondent/Cross-Appellant,
v.
America 1st Roofing & Builders, Inc., a Washington corporation; Cascade Utilities, Inc., a Washington corporation; Milbrandt Architects, Inc., P.S., a Washington corporation; Pieroni Enterprise, Inc., d/b/a Pieroni's Landscape Construction, a Washington corporation; Tight is Right Construction, a Washington corporation; Gutter King, Inc., a Washington corporation, Third Party Defendants/Cross-Respondents.

No. 58796-0-I.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 1.

June 18, 2007.

*1062 Bryan Patrick Harnetiaux, Spokane, WA, for Amicus Curiae on behalf of Washington Defense Trial Lawyers.

Paul Hamilton Beattie, Jr., Robert Dean Welden, Seattle, WA, for Amicus Curiae on behalf of WA State Bar Assoc.

Mary H. Spillane, John Phillip Evans, Seattle, WA, for Chadwick Farms.

Robert Scott Fallon, Seattle, WA, for America 1st Roofing and Builders, Inc.

Jonathan Dirk Holt, Scheer & Zehnder LLP, Seattle, WA, for Cascade Utilities.

John Patrick Hayes, Viivi Vanderslice, Seattle, WA, for FHC LLC.

David Jesse Bierman, Alexander & Bierman, Seattle, WA, for Gutter King.

Martin T. Crowder, Michaelanne Ehrenberg, Seattle, WA, for Milbrandt Architects Inc.

William Scott Clement, John E. Drotz, Seattle, WA, for Pieroni Enterprise, Inc. Pieroni Landscape.

GROSSE, J.

¶ 1 A 2006 amendment to the statutory framework to limited liability companies providing a three-year survival period within which to commence actions against a dissolved limited liability company (LLC), applies retroactively and permits actions against an LLC even when that company's certificate of formation has been cancelled. The amendment only applies to actions against the company and not to actions brought by a company. Thus, FHC, a dissolved and cancelled LLC, lacks standing to prosecute a claim for its own benefit.[1]

*1063 FACTS

¶ 2 FHC was formed as a limited liability company on December 23, 1999. Its purpose was to construct the Chadwick Farms condominiums. Once the project was completed, FHC ceased operations. The company did not submit the required annual report and renewal fee to the secretary of state. After providing the required notice to the company, the secretary issued a Certificate of Administrative Dissolution on March 24, 2003.

¶ 3 One August 18, 2004, Chadwick Farms Homeowners Association (Chadwick) brought suit against FHC alleging that it was responsible for a number of construction defects. Seven months later, on March 24, 2005, the secretary cancelled FHC's certificate of formation because two years had passed since the secretary issued the notice of dissolution to FHC.

¶ 4 In May 2005, FHC filed third party claims against several subcontractors. Yet, on August 24, 2005, FHC moved for summary judgment to dismiss Chadwick's claims on the grounds that FHC was no longer a legal entity. Chadwick moved to amend the complaint to include specific members of the LLC. The trial court granted summary judgment to FHC. For the same reasons, the trial court dismissed FHC's third party claims against the subcontractors. The trial court did not specifically address Chadwick's motion to amend the complaint.

ANALYSIS

¶ 5 The Washington Limited Liability Companies Act (LLCA)[2] governs the formation, operation, and dissolution of limited liability companies. Unlike the statutes governing business corporations, the LLCA did not provide for survival of a claim after the company's affairs wound up and a certificate of cancellation had been filed. The legislature recently amended the Act to provide for a three-year period after dissolution within which to commence actions against a dissolved limited liability company.[3]

¶ 6 In its amicus brief, the Washington State Bar Association (WSBA) summarizes the genesis of LLCs ably and succinctly as follows:

LLCs are recent legal constructs, with a majority of states having only enacted LLC legislation in the 1990s. Washington's Act took effect on October 1, 1994, and Washington case law construing the Act is sparse. "Since limited liability companies have only recently become popular, the law is still evolving." Unhelpfully, courts and scholars routinely comment that LLCs share some qualities of corporations and other qualities of partnerships; they cite by analogy to state corporation acts, to state partnership acts, or to the common law, often without meaningful explanation. From the WSBA's perspective, the only relatively sure footing here is the language of the Act itself. The LLC is a creature of statute, not of common law, and our courts of appeals are expert at construing statutes. That is the only way to unravel this puzzle, even if the solution is not fully satisfying.[[4]]

¶ 7 Although an LLC can be dissolved in several ways, only administrative dissolution is relevant here.[5] The secretary of state can administratively dissolve a limited liability company if the company fails to pay its license fees or fails to file its required annual reports.[6] Once the secretary gives notice that administrative dissolution is pending, the company has 60 days to correct the grounds for dissolution, and, if it fails to do so, the company is dissolved.[7] Then, if the company does not apply for reinstatement within two years of the administrative dissolution, the secretary of state "shall" cancel the certificate of formation.[8] Once cancelled, *1064 an LLC is no longer a separate legal entity.[9] That is what occurred here.

2006 Amendment of RCW 25.15.303

¶ 8 Effective May 6, 2006, the legislature amended the Act[10] by adding the following section:

The dissolution of a limited liability company does not take away or impair any remedy available against that limited liability company, its managers, or its members for any right or claim existing, or any liability incurred at any time, whether prior to or after dissolution, unless an action or other proceeding thereon is not commenced within three years after the effective date of dissolution. Such an action or proceeding against the limited liability company may be defended by the limited liability company in its own name.

Statutory amendments are generally prospective, but can act retroactively if the legislature so intended or the amendment is remedial or curative.[11] This provision was enacted at the same time as a similar amendment to the Business Corporation Act (BCA).[12] That amendatory Act provides a maximum three-year survival period for claims against business corporations.[13] The legislative histories of both survival statutes indicate that these amendments were passed to address the result of this court's opinion in Ballard Square Condo. Owners Ass'n v. Dynasty Constr. Co.[14] In Ballard Square, this court held that absent a survival statute claims against a corporation arising after the dissolution of the corporation abate.[15]

¶ 9 In its decision in Ballard Square, the Supreme Court affirmed this court's ruling, but on different grounds.[16]

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Bluebook (online)
160 P.3d 1061, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chadwick-farms-owners-assn-v-fhc-llc-washctapp-2007.