Frank Marshall Smith, II v. Gary Larrowe

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedDecember 2, 2025
Docket1722243
StatusPublished

This text of Frank Marshall Smith, II v. Gary Larrowe (Frank Marshall Smith, II v. Gary Larrowe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frank Marshall Smith, II v. Gary Larrowe, (Va. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Malveaux, Athey and Senior Judge Humphreys PUBLISHED

Argued at Lexington, Virginia

FRANK MARSHALL SMITH, II OPINION BY v. Record No. 1722-24-3 JUDGE CLIFFORD L. ATHEY, JR. DECEMBER 2, 2025 GARY LARROWE

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF ROANOKE David B. Carson, Judge

Thomas E. Strelka (L. Leigh Rhoads; Virginia Employment Law, on brief), for appellant.

Johneal M. White (Glenn Robinson Cathey Skaff & White PLC, on brief), for appellee.

On September 24, 2024, the Circuit Court of the City of Roanoke (“circuit court”)

entered a final order sustaining both a demurrer and a plea in bar of immunity to Frank Marshall

Smith, II’s (“Smith”) complaint against Gary Larrowe (“Larrowe”) in both his official and

individual capacity. Larrowe is a board member of the Roanoke Valley Broadband Authority

(“RVBA”), and Smith was employed by RVBA as president and CEO. Smith’s complaint

alleged that Larrowe tortiously interfered with Smith’s employment contract with RVBA and

further engaged in unlawful retaliation against Smith under Virginia’s Fraud and Abuse Whistle

Blower Protection Act (“FAWPA”). On appeal, Smith contends that the circuit court erred when

sustaining Larrowe’s demurrer and plea in bar because his complaint sufficiently pleaded facts in

support of his claims and Larrowe was not immune from those claims under Code

§ 15.2-5431.36. Finding that the circuit court did not err in determining that Larrowe was

immune from Smith’s claims, we affirm the circuit court’s judgment. I. BACKGROUND1

RVBA is a telecommunications partnership involving several local governments generally

located within the southwestern region of Virginia. The local governments currently comprising

RVBA include Botetourt County, Roanoke County, the City of Roanoke, and the City of Salem.

RVBA is a political subdivision of the Commonwealth created pursuant to the Virginia Wireless

Service Authorities Act2 (“WSAA”), which provides broadband services to customers residing in

the member localities. Larrowe is the County Administrator of Botetourt County. “[D]ue to his

role as County Administrator, the lead executive employee of Botetourt County,” he also served as

a board member of RVBA. Smith was hired by the RVBA board to serve as RVBA’s president and

CEO.

In January of 2020, Smith and Larrowe became involved in a fee dispute over the

“management fee” RVBA charged Botetourt County for the provision of broadband service. As

documented by Smith, “Botetourt County had long ago elected to be a ‘non-participating’

municipality regarding annual membership to RVBA,” meaning that the “County chose not to pay

annual participation fees to RVBA as other municipalities had agreed.” “Botetourt County had

intended to seek reimbursement of all project-related management fees from the Commonwealth of

Virginia,” but “a state agency informed Botetourt County that it would not be reimbursed for the fee

that had been rightfully assessed to Botetourt County by RVBA.” The imposition of the

management fee “angered . . . Larrowe.”

1 The circuit court dismissed the suit based solely on the pleadings. Accordingly, we presume the facts alleged in the complaint are true and grant Smith all reasonable inferences derived from those facts. See Fines v. Rappahannock Area Cmty. Servs. Bd., 301 Va. 305, 312 (2022). “Our recitation of the facts, of course, restates only factual allegations that, even if plausibly pleaded, are as yet wholly untested by the adversarial process.” A.H. ex rel. C.H. v. Church of God in Christ, Inc., 297 Va. 604, 614 (2019). 2 See Code § 15.2-5431.3. -2- Although that particular fee dispute was later resolved,3 Larrowe remained angry at Smith

and took “every opportunity to derogatorily criticize . . . Smith and RVBA leadership to other Board

Members.” Larrowe “seemingly felt politically burned by the affair and sought to wrongfully

blame . . . Smith,” “rehash[ing]” the fee dispute “many times.” Over the course of two phone calls

in the fall of 2021, Smith documented Larrowe making a series of statements to him, including:

• “You don’t know what you’re doing in broadband.”

• Botetourt County “had not properly procured” RVBA’s services for projects funded by government CARES Act funds.

• “I will make sure that RVBA will be dinged too if Botetourt County is going to get dinged.”

• “If I go down, you go down.”

• “I will implicate you in wrongdoing.”

Larrowe also made comments concerning Smith’s “character and reputation.” For example,

Larrowe falsely “stated to the Chair of the RVBA Board that . . . Smith had mismanaged CARES

funds and lied to other members of the Board,” in order “to harm . . . Smith.” Additionally,

Larrowe told a third-party contractor that Smith “mismanaged RVBA and did not utilize

transparency” and falsely told the “Chairman of the RVBA Board that . . . Smith had broken FOIA

laws and that . . . Smith had been intentionally misleading regarding a recent project.”

Furthermore, Larrowe “accused RVBA leadership (i.e., Mr. Smith) of ‘stealing’ funds from

Botetourt County by issuing the management fee” during a “meeting of other” RVBA board

members, and he falsely “stated to third parties throughout Southwest Virginia that RVBA’s

leadership had acted in a criminal fashion.” Smith “expressed that he believed that . . . Larrowe was

committing wrongdoing by using his public position to launch attacks.”

3 In June of 2022, RVBA and Botetourt County settled “the funding dispute that arose from the projects at issue.” -3- Smith queried whether Larrowe’s actions had violated the RVBA board’s code of ethics,

“report[ing] to the RVBA Board’s attorney that he believed . . . Larrowe was retaliating against

[him] for [his] legal actions as President of RVBA.” While Smith acknowledged that “[a]s a Board

Member, . . . Larrowe had a duty to serve Botetourt County’s interests as a Member of the RVBA

Board,” in Smith’s view, Larrowe’s actions “were taken far beyond any line of reason or call of

duty he may have possessed.” It appeared to Smith as though “Larrowe may have been motivated

to score political points by falsely and maliciously impugning others in a public fashion regardless

of the truth of the matter.”

Smith further noted that “[u]nder . . . Larrowe’s direction, Botetourt County managed a

website with content created by the County.” “On or about April 24, 2023,” a post purporting to

dispel “an alleged rumor that an ‘audit of Botetourt County budget uncovered over $210,000 of

misappropriated funds for broadband’” was published on the website. The post stated, in relevant

part:

During the pandemic, Botetourt County requested the Roanoke Valley Broadband Authority (RVBA) to assist with the management of two state-funded broadband deployment projects. . . .

The RVBA managed the two broadband deployment projects in Botetourt using state funds. At the end of the projects, the County conducted a review of the grant expenditures for both projects and identified some RVBA charges that required DHCD’s determination of whether they were allowed. Some of the RVBA charges were disallowed by the Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD). The County requested DHCD’s review of the expenditures to ensure grant funding compliance.

Botetourt County requested the return of the disallowed expenditures, which resulted in the RVBA and Botetourt County executing a settlement agreement to address the disallowed expenditures.

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