Federal Real Estate & Investment Corp. v. Carl Frye's Mobile Home & Modular Housing, Inc.

5 Va. Cir. 11, 1980 Va. Cir. LEXIS 13
CourtFrederick County Circuit Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1980
DocketCase No. (Law) 3579
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Va. Cir. 11 (Federal Real Estate & Investment Corp. v. Carl Frye's Mobile Home & Modular Housing, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Frederick County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Federal Real Estate & Investment Corp. v. Carl Frye's Mobile Home & Modular Housing, Inc., 5 Va. Cir. 11, 1980 Va. Cir. LEXIS 13 (Va. Super. Ct. 1980).

Opinion

By JUDGE ROBERT K. WOLTZ

This letter opinion concerns various responsive pleadings filed by the defendants to an "Amended Motion for Judgment" allowed to be filed in this Court by the plaintiff.

Plaintiff sued the defendant corporation and Carl E. Frye individually in the Fairfax County General District Court for $2,229.50 claimed due from the defendants as a real estate brokerage commission due the plaintiff on the sale of certain real estate belonging to the defendant corporation. By order of that Court, venue was transferred to the Frederick County General District Court, where the plaintiff filed a Bill of Particulars as to his claim, and the defendants filed Grounds of Defense. Judgment in that Court was granted the plaintiff against both defendants, and they appealed to this Court.

Thereafter, the plaintiff was granted leave to file an Amended Motion for Judgment seeking the same amount [12]*12of compensatory damages for breach of contract but, in addition, alleging that the defendant corporation was "the mere alter ego" of the individual defendant, alleging fraud and seeking punitive damages therefor in the amount of $10,000.00.

The first issue to be decided, raised by the defendants’ Motion to Strike, is with respect to the jurisdiction of this Court concerning the punitive damages claimed. Defendants say first that the jurisdiction of this Court is derivative from the General District Court and, as a consequence, first that the under the provisions of § 16.1-77, which confers civil jurisdiction on courts not of record, such courts are not given jurisdiction over punitive damages and as the jurisdiction of this Court is derivative from the court not of record, this Court cannot in this appealed action entertain the question of punitive damages.

This precise question with regard to punitive damages in courts not of record appears not to have been decided in this jurisdiction. A General District Court being a court of limited jurisdiction deriving all of its jurisdiction by virtue of statute cannot exercise any jurisdiction unless expressly conferred by the statute upon it. Addison v. Salyer, 185 Va. 644 (1946). Section 16.1-77 is the statute conferring civil jurisdiction on General District Courts, and subject to limitations on the amount in controversy it confers in pertinent part "jurisdiction of any claim to specific personal property or to any debt, fine or other money, or to damages for breach of contract or for injury done to property, real or personal, or for any injury to the person, which would be recoverable by an action at law or suit in equity." This is a very broad and general grant of jurisdiction with respect to the particular claims mentioned. The language "any claim. . . to any debt, fine or other money. . . which would be recoverable by action at law or suit in equity" (emphasis added) is wide enough to encompass a claim for punitive damages as there is no other language in this section which can fairly be construed to eliminate punitive damages. In addition, it would be unreasonable to believe that the legislature, in cases in which the General District Courts and the Circuit Courts have concurrent jurisdiction, could have intended that in the former courts punitive damages could not be recovered, though admittedly they could be in the latter.

[13]*13The second jurisdictional attack on the Amended Motion for Judgment is that it seeks damages in excess of the $5,000.00 jurisdictional amount-in-controversy limitation imposed by § 16.1-77. Addison, supra, is authority that on appeal from a court not of record to a Circuit Court the jurisdiction of the latter Court is derivative, and that if the court not of record did not have jurisdiction of the subject matter then the appeal of that matter will not confer jurisdiction on the Circuit Court, even though the subject matter is something over which the Circuit Court generally does have jurisdiction. In such cases, it is as though there were nothing in the first instance to appeal to the Circuit Court.

On the same principle of derivative jurisdiction, Stacy v. Mullins, 185 Va. 837 (1946), is direct authority that on appeal of a civil action from a court not of record the plaintiff may not amend in the Circuit Court to claim an amount in excess of the jurisdiction of the court not of record. The appeal is considered a continuation of the original case, and if the .General District Court did not have jurisdiction of the amount sued for, the appellate court will acquire none by the appeal. Though the trial is one de novo, the entire proceeding is not de novo, nor is there an action de novo. While amendments can be made in the Circuit Court so long as the jurisdictional limits of the inferior court are not exceeded and while the case is heard independent and disregardful of any judgment of the inferior court, and while the appellate court hears evidence anew and may hear new evidence, yet it is the same case, the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court to hear it being derivative from that of the court below. Addison and Stacy. Defendant’s Motion to Strike is sustained on this ground.

Defendants also demur to the allegations of the Amended Motion for Judgment with respect to claim for punitive damages in this action ex contractu. The Demurrer is sustained on the basis of Wright v. Everett, 197 Va. 608 (1956), to the effect that punitive damages are not allowed for breach of contract, except perhaps where the breach is an independent willful tort which is well pleaded. In any event, the fraud alleged as a basis for awarding damages is alleged in such general and non-specific terms that it cannot withstand demurrer; the allegations "are too vague, indefinite and conclusory to state a cause of action." Tuscarora v. B.V.A., 218 Va. 849 (1978).

January 13, 1984

The defendants further move to dismiss the individual defendant as a party. The plaintiff alleges that the corporate defendant owned the real estate, the sale of which gave rise to the claimed real estate commission, that the individual defendant was the president of the corporation, and that the property was conveyed by the defendant corporation. The Amended Motion for Judgment alleges certain other activities by the individual defendant which could easily have been in his capacity as agent for the corporation. With those allegations, the additional allegation that the corporation was "the mere alter ego" of the individual defendant is insufficient to attach liability to the individual. None of the other allegations are sufficient to "pierce the corporate veil" and reach the individual defendant, and this allegation alone, to use the language of Tuscarcra, is "too vague, indefinite and conclusory.” Use of a corporation so as to justify the "alter ego" allegation and the piercing of the corporate veil are matters tantamount to alleging a species of fraud, and a high degree of specificity is as a consequence required to make and retain on that basis an individual as co-defendant with a corporation. The motion to dismiss him is sustained.

At stake in this action are the real estate commissions claimed by the plaintiff (Federal) from the Defendant (Frye). Essentially Federal claims that it rendered services under a "listing" contract with Frye to obtain a purchaser for certain of the latter’s real estate and that it was the procuring cause in obtaining the purchaser to whom Frye sold the property.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Va. Cir. 11, 1980 Va. Cir. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/federal-real-estate-investment-corp-v-carl-fryes-mobile-home-modular-vaccfrederick-1980.