Columbia Asset Recovery Group, Llc v. Joseph R. Kelly, Et Ano.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 4, 2013
Docket69365-4
StatusPublished

This text of Columbia Asset Recovery Group, Llc v. Joseph R. Kelly, Et Ano. (Columbia Asset Recovery Group, Llc v. Joseph R. Kelly, Et Ano.) 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
Columbia Asset Recovery Group, Llc v. Joseph R. Kelly, Et Ano., (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

COLUMBIA ASSET RECOVERY GROUP, LLC, a Washington DIVISION ONE limited liability corporation,

Appellant, No. 69365-4-1 CO

v. PUBLISHED OPINION

JOSEPH R. KELLY, as the Successor Personal Representative of THE ESTATE OF WILLIAM D. PHILLIPS, SR., deceased,

Respondent. FILED: November 4, 2013

Dwyer, J. — Columbia Asset Recovery Group, LLC (CARG) appeals from

the trial court's order dismissing its complaint for lack of personal jurisdiction.

Timothy Kennedy, CARG's sole member, was the guarantor of a one million

dollar Business Loan Agreement and Promissory Note executed by William

Phillips and Atlantic Frost Holdings, LLC (AFH). The Agreement contains jurisdiction and venue provisions permitting the lender, Columbia State Bank, to bring a collection action in King County. After Phillips died, neither his estate nor AFH paid the balance of the Note. Accordingly, the lender demanded payment

from Kennedy. In response, Kennedy formed CARG and caused CARG to No. 69365-4-1/2

purchase the lender's rights under the Agreement and Note, which the lender

assigned to CARG. CARG then filed suit in King County against the Estate of

Phillips (the Estate). However, the trial court dismissed CARG's complaint for

lack of personal jurisdiction. Because there is a genuine issue of material fact as

to whether CARG and the lender intended CARG's payment to constitute a

discharge of the Estate's payment obligation, the trial court erred by granting the

Estate's motion to dismiss. We reverse and remand for further proceedings

consistent with this opinion.

I

In June 2009, Phillips and AFH executed a Commercial Line of Credit

Agreement and Promissory Note (Note) in the principal amount of $1,000,000,

payable to Columbia State Bank (the Bank), and a Business Loan Agreement

(Agreement). Phillips and AFH were the primary obligors. However, Timothy

Kennedy personally guaranteed payment of the Note in the event that Phillips

and AFH failed to pay. The Note contains a provision providing for payment to

be made in Seattle. The Agreement includes a jurisdiction provision providing

that Phillips and AFH "agree to waive any objection to jurisdiction or venue on the

ground that [they] are not residents of [the Bank's] locality"—which was Seattle.

Phillips died in an airplane crash in 2010. Subsequently, the personal

representative of the Estate negotiated two extensions of the Note. The Estate

paid interest on the AFH loan through February 2011 but, by March 17, 2011, the

Estate informed the Bank that it could no longer pay the interest on the AFH loan

-2- No. 69365-4-1/3

pursuant to Maryland probate law.1 When the Agreement and Note became due in April 2011, neither AFH nor the Estate paid.

Meanwhile, on October 22, 2010, the Bank demanded that Kennedy make

good on his guaranty.2 On April 13, 2011, Kennedy spoke with a representative of the Bank regarding "options for enforcement of [the AFH Loan]." Kennedy

subsequently formed CARG, a Washington limited liability company. Kennedy's

counsel later told the Estate's counsel that "Mr. Kennedy formed [CARG] to

facilitate his satisfying the guaranty."

Kennedy filed a counterclaim for indemnity against the Estate in the

Delaware Court of Chancery on July 25, 2011. In his counterclaim, Kennedy

claimed that Phillips "is the primary obligor on the debt owed to Columbia Bank.

Kennedy, as guarantor, is entitled to be indemnified for any amounts he is

required to pay to Columbia Bank."

On August 4, 2011, the Bank and CARG entered into the Loan Purchase

and Assignment Agreement (LPA Agreement). In the LPA Agreement, the Bank

and CARG agreed to several provisions that the parties highlight in disputing

whether the Bank and CARG intended the LPA Agreement to operate as an

assignment rather than a discharge:

• "The Bank has made demand on Kennedy for payment of the amounts

1Maryland law bars an apparently insolvent estate from making a preferential payment to one claimant over another, and the Estate informed the Bank that continuing to pay interest on the loan would be viewed as preferential. See Md. Code Ann. § 8-105(b). 2The parties refer to Kennedy's obligation as both a "guarantee" and a "guaranty." For purposes of this opinion, the difference in spelling does not affect the nature of Kennedy's obligation.

-3- No. 69365-4-1/4

owing under the Loan pursuant to the Commercial Loan Guaranty.

Kennedy has instead proposed to purchase the Loan through a new entity

he has established for that purpose, [CARG]."

• "The purchase price will be funded by a loan from Bank to Kennedy, the

proceeds of which Kennedy will loan to [CARG]."

• "Subject to the terms and conditions of this Agreement, the Bank also

hereby agrees to assign to [CARG] all of the Bank's interests, rights and

obligations under the Cooperation Agreement

CARG then paid the Bank $1,026,071.94.

On February 3, 2012, Kennedy's counsel stated in a letter to the Estate's

counsel that Kennedy had been "forced to honor his personal guarantee" of the

obligation owed by Phillips and AFH. One week later, the Estate's counsel asked Kennedy's counsel to confirm that the LPA Agreement "satisfied Mr. Timothy

Kennedy's personal guarantee." Kennedy's counsel provided a letterfrom the

Bank to Kennedy stating that "[f]rom the bank's perspective, your purchase of the

loan for full face value certainly satisfied all of your obligations to the Bank under

your personal guaranty, and we therefore view you to have honored your

guaranty in full." Additionally, Kennedy's counsel—during a hearing before the

Delaware Court of Chancery—stated that "Mr. Kennedy used [CARG] as the

vehicle to satisfy his personal guarantee." Finally, Kennedy submitted a

declaration to the United States District Court for the Western District of

Washington that stated, "Since the filing of the Complaint, I have been required

-4- No. 69365-4-1/5

to make good on my guarantee of that debt by Columbia State Bank."

On March 15, 2012, CARG brought suit to enforce the Agreement and

Note against the Estate in King County Superior Court. On June 8, 2012, the

Estate, pursuant to CR 12(b)(2), moved to dismiss the complaint for lack of

personal jurisdiction. In its motion, the Estate argued that Kennedy and CARG

were alter egos and that Kennedy had fulfilled his obligation as guarantor by

virtue of the Bank's assignment to CARG, which had thereby discharged the

Agreement and Note. It followed from this, the Estate contended, that the King

County jurisdiction and venue provisions were also discharged and could no

longer provide a contractual basis for exercising personal jurisdiction over the

Estate in Washington.

CARG opposed the Estate's motion to dismiss, contending that

assignment of the Note and Agreement did not constitute a discharge, especially

where the parties did not intend such a discharge to occur. CARG further

asserted that, if it was an alter ego of Kennedy, it would be subrogated to the

Bank's rights under the Agreement and Note. CARG also moved for summary

judgment in a separate motion. However, instead of ruling on CARG's motion for summary judgment, the trial court granted the Estate's motion to dismiss for lack

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