Humphrey Industries, Ltd. v. Clay Street Associates, LLC

170 Wash. 2d 495
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 2010
DocketNo. 82687-1
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 170 Wash. 2d 495 (Humphrey Industries, Ltd. v. Clay Street Associates, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Humphrey Industries, Ltd. v. Clay Street Associates, LLC, 170 Wash. 2d 495 (Wash. 2010).

Opinions

J.M. Johnson, J.

¶1 Humphrey Industries Ltd. by means of its principal, George Humphrey (collectively Humphrey), and with business partners Joseph and Ann Lee Rogel, Scott Rogel, and ABO Investments, by means of its principal, Gerald Ostroff, created Clay Street Associates LLC (Clay Street) to hold a single real estate asset located in Auburn, Washington. In order to break a deadlock with Humphrey regarding the sale of the property in late 2004, the other members of Clay Street agreed to merge the company into a new limited liability company with a different voting structure that could facilitate the sale. Humphrey dissented from the merger and demanded payment pursuant to the dissenters’ rights provisions of the Washington Limited Liability Company Act (LLC Act or the Act), chapter 25.15 RCW. As required by the Act, Clay Street paid Humphrey what Clay Street calculated as the fair market value of Humphrey’s interest in Clay Street as of the effective merger date in December 2004; however, Clay Street did not pay until the property sold in May 2005.

¶2 Humphrey rejected Clay Street’s value calculation and filed suit. Clay Street subsequently filed a petition for [498]*498judicial determination of the property’s value as of the effective merger date. The trial court consolidated the actions and heard testimony over several days in June 2007. It found that the property was worth more as of the merger date than Clay Street had calculated and accordingly awarded Humphrey the difference plus interest. However, the court also awarded Clay Street and the Rogéis attorney fees based on its finding that Humphrey had acted arbitrarily, vexatiously, and not in good faith in pursuing the litigation. Humphrey appealed, and the Court of Appeals affirmed in an unpublished opinion. Humphrey Indus., Ltd. v. Clay St. Assocs., LLC, noted at 147 Wn. App. 1045 (2008). Humphrey then petitioned this court for review. Humphrey Indus., Ltd. v. Clay St. Assocs., LLC, 166 Wn.2d 1014, 210 P.3d 1019 (2009). We reverse the Court of Appeals and remand for reconsideration of the attorney fee award.

Facts and Procedural History

¶3 Humphrey, Scott Rogel, Joseph and Ann Lee Rogel, and ABO Investments formed Clay Street in May 1997 to purchase and manage a single parcel of real property located in Auburn, Washington. Clay Street’s “LLC Agreement” specified that the property “shall not be sold, conveyed, and/or assigned without the mutual consent of each of the members . . . .” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 54. The LLC Agreement also provided for binding arbitration should a controversy or dispute related to the company’s business arise.

¶4 Such a dispute occurred in 2004 when Scott Rogel, in order to implement a property settlement reached during his divorce, sought to sell the property and dissolve Clay Street. Humphrey refused to consent to the sale, and the other members of Clay Street sought the advice of an attorney as to how they might circumvent the unanimity requirement of the LLC Agreement and sell the property notwithstanding Humphrey’s veto. The attorney advised [499]*499them that, since further negotiations were futile, the sale could “be accomplished most quickly through a merger procedure which eliminates the dissenting vote.” CP at 62.

¶5 Pursuant to this suggestion, the remaining members of Clay Street formed a new limited liability company in August 2004 and merged it with Clay Street. The members gave Humphrey notice of its statutory right to dissent to the merger, and Humphrey exercised this right on October 1, 2004, demanding payment of the fair value of its interest in the company. The merger became effective on December 7, 2004.

¶6 Because it had not yet sold the property and had no other assets, Clay Street lacked funds with which to pay Humphrey the fair value of its interest within 30 days of the effective merger date, as required by statute. Later, on May 27, 2005, Clay Street paid Humphrey $181,192.64 — which it calculated to be the fair value of Humphrey’s interest as of the merger date, plus interest for the delay — following the sale of the property earlier that month for $3.3 million. Humphrey immediately disputed the value calculated by Clay Street and demanded an additional $424,607.00 based on its own estimate of fair value. Clay Street refused to pay the additional sum and Humphrey filed suit on June 21, 2005. One month later, Clay Street offered to settle Humphrey’s claims for $325,376.00. Humphrey rejected the offer. Clay Street subsequently filed a formal petition to determine the fair value of the company; the two cases were consolidated to resolve that issue and those raised by Humphrey in its derivative suit. In another effort to resolve the litigation, Clay Street made a CR 68 offer of judgment for an additional $165,275.59 in September 2006,1 but Humphrey refused that offer as well.

[500]*500¶7 After several delays,2 a six-day bench trial was held in June 2007.3 The court heard evidence from several different appraisers and experts, along with testimony from Clay Street members Scott Rogel, George Humphrey, and Gerald Ostroff.4 The court found that the pattern and magnitude of offers made for the property “did not indicate a distressed, forced or fire sale” and that the final sale price reflected the fair value of Clay Street as of May 2005.5 CP at 1667. The court deemed this price to be highly relevant to the fair value of the company five months earlier and accordingly adopted as the most accurate measure of Clay Street’s value as of December 7, 2004, the $3.15 million valuation of the only appraiser who had considered it. The court ordered Clay Street to pay Humphrey an additional $60,588.22 based on this valuation.6

¶8 The trial court also found that Clay Street violated the LLC Act by failing to pay Humphrey the fair value of its interest within 30 days of the effective merger date as required by RCW 25.15.460. Nevertheless, it concluded that Clay Street had substantially complied with the Act “given that [it] lacked any funds to make the payment to Humphrey, that it could not obtain the requisite funds [501]*501without a sale of the property, and that it was willing to pay the statutorily required interest during the period of delay.” CP at 2315. The court also declined to award Humphrey attorney fees as provided under RCW 25.15.480(2)(a)7 and instead awarded fees and expenses to Clay Street and Joseph and Ann Lee Rogel under subsection (b) of the same provision based on its finding that Humphrey acted arbitrarily, vexatiously, and not in good faith in pursuing its dissenter’s rights claim.

¶9 The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s determination of fair value and interest and its attorney fee award. Humphrey Indus., Ltd., noted at 147 Wn. App. 1045. Humphrey subsequently petitioned this court for review of the latter issue, which we granted. Humphrey Indus., Ltd., 166 Wn.2d 1014.

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Bluebook (online)
170 Wash. 2d 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/humphrey-industries-ltd-v-clay-street-associates-llc-wash-2010.