Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two
July 16, 2024
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
DIVISION II JANTON CONSTRUCTION, LLC, a No. 57776-3-II Washington limited liability company,
Respondents,
v.
ROYAL CONCENTRATES, LLC, a UNPUBLISHED OPINION Washington limited liability company; ROBERT DEGIDIO and KARIN L. DEGIDIO, wife and husband and their marital community,
Appellants.
GLASGOW, J.—Janton Construction LLC (Janton) and its principal, Anthony Dressor,
agreed to finance a cannabis-processing business, Royal Concentrates LLC, operated by Robert
and Karin DeGidio.1 In exchange, Robert DeGidio agreed to make Janton a member of Royal
Concentrates LLC. DeGidio would make Janton a 30 percent owner of Royal Concentrates LLC,
and Janton would receive 40 percent of the profits when the cannabis business became profitable.
DeGidio also agreed to repay the money Dressor would spend on equipment, rent, and operating
costs once the business became profitable. Dressor and DeGidio signed an agreement to this effect.
Janton purchased equipment, paid rent, and financed operating expenses for Royal
Concentrates LLC, but DeGidio and Royal Concentrates LLC failed to pay Janton back after the
business became profitable. Royal Concentrates LLC and DeGidio also failed to pay Janton 40
1 We refer to Robert DeGidio as “DeGidio,” and Karin DeGidio as “Karin,” to avoid confusion. No. 57776-3-II
percent of the profits as agreed. Janton sued DeGidio, his wife Karin and their marital community,
and Royal Concentrates LLC for breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, and unjust
enrichment.
After a bench trial, the trial court found Royal Concentrates LLC and both Robert and
Karin DeGidio jointly and severally liable to Janton for breach of contract, breach of fiduciary
duty, and unjust enrichment. The trial court entered a judgment against all of the defendants jointly
and severally.
The DeGidios appeal, arguing that the trial court erred when it excluded exhibits as well as
testimony from one witness that the DeGidios failed to disclose until just before trial. They also
argue that the findings of fact and conclusions of law are insufficient to support any personal
liability and breach of fiduciary duty.
We hold that any error in excluding exhibits and testimony was harmless. We also hold
that Royal Concentrates LLC and both Robert and Karin DeGidio are jointly and severally liable
based on breach of contract and breach of fiduciary duty in the amounts identified in the trial
court’s judgment. Therefore, we affirm.
FACTS
I. BACKGROUND
Anthony Dressor, Janton’s principal, met Robert DeGidio while working in the
construction business. DeGidio asked Dressor if he wanted to become a partner and invest in his
cannabis-processing business, Royal Concentrates LLC.
Dressor and DeGidio signed an agreement where Dressor, on behalf of Janton, would buy
equipment, pay rent, and pay operating costs until the business was “up and running and [could]
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support itself.” Ex. 1. In exchange, Janton would receive a 30 percent ownership interest in Royal
Concentrates LLC, 40 percent of the profits, and repayment of Janton’s expenditures for
equipment, rent, and operating costs.
Soon after the parties executed the agreement, Janton began fulfilling its obligation to
purchase equipment, provide a line of credit, and pay for rent, utilities, license fees, security, and
internet. In time, the business started processing cannabis, creating packaging for the goods, and
getting product ready for distribution.
Dressor eventually noticed that product was being stockpiled and not being sold. He asked
for financial records of Royal Concentrates LLC. Karin was involved in managing the bank
accounts for the LLC. The DeGidios refused to give Dressor access to the records, and Dressor
refused to continue funding the business indefinitely while unsold product, that seemed capable of
sustaining the business, built up. After a heated meeting, the DeGidios locked Dressor out of the
business, the two parties clashed about possession of equipment bought for the business, and the
parties stopped working together. DeGidio never fulfilled his obligation to make Janton a member
of Royal Concentrates LLC.
After the parties stopped working together, the DeGidios refused to return the equipment
Janton purchased or pay back Janton for the amounts expended on equipment, rent, and operating
expenses. In the meantime, the DeGidios had been generating profit from another limited liability
company called Prime Time Ventures N.C. LLC (Prime Time Ventures), doing business as Royal
Concentrates. Instead of applying for a cannabis processing license on behalf of Royal
Concentrates LLC, the DeGidios had applied for a license for Prime Time Ventures during the
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same time period. Despite operating a profitable cannabis business under the Royal Concentrates
name, the DeGidios did not pay Janton 40 percent of the profits.
Janton sued DeGidio, his wife Karin, their marital community, and Royal Concentrates
LLC for breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, and unjust enrichment. The DeGidios made
several counterclaims. Janton later filed an amended complaint adding a fraud claim.
II. UNTIMELY DISCLOSURE OF EVIDENCE AND WITNESSES
Janton filed its original complaint against the defendants on July 22, 2021. The initial
deadline for defendants’ disclosure of primary witnesses was February 10, 2022, with rebuttal
witnesses required by March 31, 2022. The discovery cutoff was set for June 2, 2022.
The defendants failed to disclose any witnesses. In June, the trial date was moved from
July 2022 to November 28, 2022. The new deadline for the defendants’ disclosure of primary
witnesses was July 20, 2022. The DeGidios failed again to disclose any primary witnesses before
this deadline.
On November 10, 2022, a little more than two weeks before trial, the DeGidios, whose
attorney had withdrawn, disclosed their third-party bookkeeper as a potential witness who could
speak to the financial state of Royal Concentrates LLC. The DeGidios also submitted a list of
documents they planned to present as exhibits at trial. Janton filed a motion to exclude all late
disclosed witnesses and exhibits. The DeGidios did not provide a written response or opposition
to the motion to exclude.
On the morning of the bench trial, the trial court heard oral arguments about the motion to
exclude. Janton’s counsel argued that he had attempted to contact the bookkeeper at the end of
September because DeGidio had signed a release allowing Janton to access Royal Concentrates
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LLC’s financial records. However, he received no response or documents from the bookkeeper.
Janton’s counsel argued that the late disclosure of records made him unable to adequately prepare
for trial.
DeGidio responded that the bookkeeper did not receive any communications from Janton’s
counsel initially, and she only found one e-mail in her junk folder promising a forthcoming letter
she never received. DeGidio argued that the financial documents were important evidence, despite
his mistake as an unrepresented litigant in missing the procedural deadlines for submitting the
documents.
The trial court explained that unrepresented litigants are still held to the same standard for
procedural deadlines because these deadlines are an important way to ensure all parties have time
to adequately prepare for trial and to avoid disadvantaging the other party with a late disclosure.
While recognizing that exclusion may seem harsh, the trial court excluded the records and the
bookkeeper’s testimony. The trial court reasoned that disclosing documents and a witness on the
day of trial did not give Janton the opportunity to prepare or depose the proposed witness. The trial
court further remarked that the late disclosure occurred despite a months-long delay in the trial
date, during which the defendants still failed to provide a list of witnesses and exhibits to Janton.
Finally, the trial court noted that the DeGidios could refer to or use exhibits that Janton had
submitted, and the DeGidios’ documents could still be offered for impeachment purposes if
necessary.
During trial, the court nevertheless considered several exhibits that DeGidio offered during
his own testimony. The parties discovered that some of the proposed exhibits were duplicates of
exhibits already admitted during the plaintiffs’ presentation of their case. The court admitted at
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least one of the DeGidios’ proposed exhibits and it considered others as illustrative exhibits or for
limited purposes. And the court determined that one of the DeGidios’ offered exhibits was
inadmissible hearsay and excluded it on that basis in addition to noting its late disclosure. Finally,
the trial court explained the DeGidios could still testify about the finances of Royal Concentrates
LLC without relying on exhibits.
III. TRIAL COURT’S FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS
After completion of the bench trial, the trial court entered written findings of fact and
conclusions of law, along with a judgment and order. The trial court found that DeGidio
approached Dressor about the partnership, represented that he had considerable expertise and
knowledge about the cannabis business, provided a spreadsheet of anticipated profits, and offered
a series of benefits to induce Janton to invest in Royal Concentrates LLC. DeGidio and Dressor
executed a written agreement establishing that in exchange for purchasing equipment, paying rent,
paying initial operating expenses, and extending a line of credit to Royal Concentrates LLC, Janton
would have a 30 percent interest in Royal Concentrates LLC and would receive 40 percent of the
profits. DeGidio and Dressor also agreed that Dressor would be reimbursed for the amount he
would spend on equipment, rent, and operating expenses.
The trial court found Janton performed its contractual obligations as described above,
including payment for equipment, payment for rent on the commercial space, and the opening of
a line of credit for operating expenses like employee payroll. The court found that the DeGidios
agreed Royal Concentrates LLC would not take ownership of the equipment that Janton purchased
until a certain amount of money was repaid, and that Royal Concentrates LLC would repay the
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line of credit once the business was profitable. The trial court also found that Dressor requested
Royal Concentrates LLC’s financial reports and records, but DeGidio refused to provide them.
The trial court found the DeGidios never applied for a cannabis processing license on
behalf of Royal Concentrates LLC as the agreement required. Instead, Prime Time Ventures (doing
business as Royal Concentrates), whose sole member was DeGidio, applied for and obtained a
cannabis processing license and a business license as a marijuana processor. Prime Time Ventures
was profitable, generating over $892,000 of gross revenue between April 2020 and November
2021.
Despite this success, the trial court found that the DeGidios and Royal Concentrates LLC
did not pay Janton its share of the profits and did not repay Janton for money spent on equipment,
rent, or operating expenses. The trial court found only DeGidio signed an operating agreement for
Royal Concentrates LLC, with no evidence of an agreement executed by all members. Janton
therefore was not added as a member of Royal Concentrates LLC as required under the contract.
The trial court found that when pressed, DeGidio refused to return the equipment Janton
purchased. The trial court found DeGidio failed to refund operating expenses, perform contractual
and other obligations, and formally make Janton a member of Royal Concentrates LLC or a
business partner. DeGidio also failed to secure a cannabis processing license for Royal
Concentrates LLC, the entity in which Janton should have had an interest.
The trial court found that Dressor believed and relied on DeGidio’s false representations
as inducements to invest in Royal Concentrates LLC. Finally, the trial court found that DeGidio
took steps to keep Janton and Dressor out of the business. DeGidio’s breach of the parties’
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agreement and the fiduciary duties owed to Janton cost Janton a significant amount, including
attorney fees.
The trial court also entered multiple conclusions of law. The trial court concluded that
Royal Concentrates LLC and its members breached a partnership agreement with Janton and
breached their fiduciary duty to Janton by failing to pay Janton 40 percent of profits and failing to
pay back the funds Janton spent on equipment, rent, and operating costs. Furthermore, the trial
court concluded that the defendants unjustly benefited from Janton’s purchase of equipment,
payment of rent, and contribution of funds. The trial court concluded that retaining this benefit
would be unjust without paying Janton its 40 percent of profits to date. But the trial court concluded
that Janton failed to prove DeGidio defrauded Janton.
The trial court concluded that all of the defendants’ counterclaims failed. The trial court
determined Janton was entitled to $92,660.01 as reimbursement for equipment, rent, and other
operating expenses. Janton was also entitled to $217,651.66, amounting to 40 percent of Prime
Time Ventures’ net profits with interest, and statutory attorney fees and costs under RCW
4.84.010.
The trial court also entered an order and judgment: it listed the DeGidios and Royal
Concentrates LLC as debtors, ordered that Janton was entitled to the damages stated above plus
prejudgment interest, and ordered that the defendants were jointly and severally liable for the
damages. In its oral ruling, the trial court further explained that joint and several liability was
appropriate, even though an LLC was involved that might otherwise protect the DeGidios from
personal liability, because DeGidio signed the agreement with Dressor personally, with nothing
suggesting he was acting on behalf of Royal Concentrates LLC rather than in his individual
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capacity. The concept of piercing the corporate veil was not mentioned in the trial court’s oral
ruling, nor was it mentioned in the trial court’s findings and conclusions.
The DeGidios and Royal Concentrates LLC appeal. They do not specifically assign error
to any of the trial court’s numbered findings of fact.
ANALYSIS
I. EXCLUSION OF THE DEGIDIOS’ PROPOSED EXHIBITS AND ONE WITNESS
The trial court excluded the DeGidios’ exhibits and the testimony of their bookkeeper
because they failed to disclose them until the day of trial. The DeGidios contend that before a trial
court can impose a harsh sanction, like exclusion of evidence under CR 37 for failure to meet
discovery deadlines, the court must first consider the three factors recited in Burnet v. Spokane
Ambulance, 131 Wn.2d 484, 494, 933 P.2d 1036 (1997). Specifically, the DeGidios contend that
“the trial court must make express findings regarding the Burnet factors on the record at the time
the sanction is imposed.” Appellants’ Opening Br. at 14 (emphasis omitted).
The DeGidios argue that the trial court failed to explicitly consider the Burnet factors
before granting Janton’s motion to exclude Royal Concentrates LLC’s financial documents and
the DeGidios’ primary witness, a bookkeeper. The DeGidios further contend that if the factors had
been considered, the trial court would have found a lack of willfulness; Janton was aware of the
potential witness and thus would not have been prejudiced; and a lesser sanction (like continuing
the trial) would have been sufficient.
In response, Janton contends that a trial court does not need to cite Burnet by name to
satisfy the requirement to discuss its factors. Janton argues that the trial court substantively
addressed the Burnet factors by explaining how the DeGidios failed to respond to Janton’s request
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for information about the bookkeeper and the financial documents and how admission of this
evidence would prejudice Janton because Janton did not have an opportunity to fully review the
documents or depose the bookkeeper prior to trial. Janton also contends that exclusion of the
witness and evidence was ultimately harmless because the DeGidios provided no offer of proof to
establish that the bookkeeper had financial knowledge about Royal Concentrates LLC that the
DeGidios themselves did not also have. The DeGidios ultimately testified in trial about the
financial condition of Royal Concentrates LLC, and the trial judge allowed the DeGidios to use
some of their proposed exhibits during their testimony and for impeachment purposes.
Although we agree with the DeGidios that at least one Burnet factor was not satisfactorily
considered on the record, we agree with Janton that the error was ultimately harmless.
A. Burnet Factors
The trial court has broad discretion to impose sanctions for violations of discovery orders.
Burnet, 131 Wn.2d at 494. However, before imposing the “‘harsher remedies’” for violations of
discovery orders, the trial court must explicitly consider the Burnet factors. Jones v. City of Seattle,
179 Wn.2d 322, 338, 314 P.3d 380 (2013) (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Burnet, 131
Wn.2d at 494). These factors ask whether a lesser sanction would probably suffice, whether the
violation at issue was willful or deliberate, and whether the violation “substantially prejudiced the
opponent’s ability to prepare for trial.” Burnet, 131 Wn.2d at 494.
Courts have previously determined that exclusion of a witness for untimely disclosure is a
harsh remedy that requires consideration of the Burnet factors before it is imposed. Jones, 179
Wn.2d at 343 (presuming that “late-disclosed testimony will be admitted absent a willful violation,
substantial prejudice to the nonviolating party, and the insufficiency of sanctions less drastic than
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exclusion”); see also Magaña v. Hyundai Motor America, 167 Wn.2d 570, 584, 220 P.3d 191
(2009) (applying Burnet where a party failed to respond to discovery requests).
The trial court must make findings regarding the Burnet factors on the record, either orally
or in writing. Teter v. Deck, 174 Wn.2d 207, 217, 274 P.3d 336 (2012). However, the trial court
may conduct a satisfactory Burnet analysis without citing the case name as long as the factors are
substantively considered. Jones, 179 Wn.2d at 344. Failure to consider the Burnet factors where a
Burnet analysis is required is an abuse of discretion. Blair v. TA-Seattle East No. 176, 171 Wn.2d
342, 348-49, 254 P.3d 797 (2011).
When a trial court fails to consider the Burnet factors, the appellate court may not substitute
its own analysis of the facts and the Burnet factors to cure the trial court’s error. Id. at 351 (rejecting
the premise that the appellate court may “consider the facts in the first instance as a substitute for
the trial court findings”).
B. The Trial Court Failed to Expressly Consider Lesser Alternatives
All three Burnet factors must be considered on the record. See Jones, 179 Wn.2d at 344
(finding error where the trial court only considered one Burnet factor). Here, the trial court failed
to expressly consider whether lesser alternatives to exclusion would have sufficed.
A “court should impose the least severe sanction that will be adequate to serve the purpose
of the particular sanction” while still protecting the discovery process and the other party involved.
Burnet, 131 Wn.2d at 495-96 (identifying that sanctions can serve the purposes of deterrence,
punishment, compensation, education, and preventing the wrongdoer from profiting from their
wrong). The trial court should explain why a lesser sanction, like a continuance or monetary
penalty, would not sufficiently satisfy the purpose of the sanction. See In re Dependency of M.P.,
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185 Wn. App. 108, 117-18, 340 P.3d 908 (2014) (holding that the lesser sanctions factor was not
satisfied when the trial judge did not adequately explain why lesser sanctions like continuing the
trial or attorney fees would fail to serve the deterrent and other purposes of a sanction); see also
Peterson v. Cuff, 72 Wn. App. 596, 602, 865 P.2d 555 (1994) (finding that the lesser sanctions
factor was satisfied when the trial court gave the plaintiff an additional chance to appear for a
deposition before ultimately dismissing the plaintiff’s complaint with prejudice).
Here, although Janton argued the Burnet factors in its motion to exclude the bookkeeper
and the defendants’ exhibits, the trial court did not explicitly mention the Burnet factors in its oral
ruling or its written order. And there is no discussion in the record to suggest that the trial court
explicitly considered whether any lesser sanctions—like a continuance, monetary sanctions, or
attorney fees—would still serve the purposes of discovery enforcement. Instead, like the trial court
in M.P., the trial court here explained that Janton would be prejudiced if the bookkeeper were to
testify and exhibits were admitted, but it then failed to articulate why a lesser sanction, like a
continuance, would not serve as a sufficient remedy to this prejudice.
Instead of expressly considering lesser sanctions, the trial court took time to clarify the
limitations of the exclusions. For example, the trial court explained that exclusion of the exhibits
did not prohibit the DeGidios from using the exhibits for impeachment purposes, and that
exclusion of the bookkeeper did not prohibit the DeGidios themselves from testifying about what
they knew of Royal Concentrates LLC’s finances. However, the trial court did not offer these
options as lesser sanctions, but as clarifications about the scope of the court’s exclusion to
unrepresented defendants. Although helpful information, this was not enough to satisfy the
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requirement that a trial court consider lesser sanctions before excluding evidence and witnesses.
Therefore, the trial court failed to satisfy the lesser sanctions factor as required under Burnet.
C. Harmless Error
The trial court’s exclusion of the witness and exhibits is nevertheless subject to a harmless
error analysis. Jones, 179 Wn.2d at 355-56; Lavington v. Hillier, 22 Wn. App. 2d 134, 148, 510
P.3d 373 (2022), review denied, 200 Wn.2d 1010, 518 P.3d 212. “Under the harmless error test in
civil cases, an error is harmless when it does not materially affect the outcome of the trial.”
Lavington, 22 Wn. App. 2d at 148.
Excluded testimony fails to materially affect the outcome of the trial when it is irrelevant,
unfairly prejudicial, or cumulative. Jones, 179 Wn.2d at 356-60. For example, in Jones, the court
found that excluded witnesses would have provided cumulative testimony because other witnesses
had already testified about some of the same topics, and others had already been excluded as
irrelevant. Id. at 360. Therefore, the court found exclusion of the witnesses was ultimately
harmless. Id.
Here, the trial court’s Burnet error was ultimately harmless because the excluded exhibits
and the excluded testimony of the bookkeeper were either cumulative or the DeGidios have not
explained how they would have changed the outcome.
When describing the financial documents, the DeGidios stated that the documents
concerned profit and loss and contained information from their tracking system about gross sales
that could be used to counter financial information provided by Janton. Most of the DeGidios’
documents and the contents they covered were ultimately introduced into evidence either through
Janton’s own exhibits or during the DeGidios’ case-in-chief. For example, Janton introduced the
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DeGidios’ sales reports into evidence. Janton also ultimately based its calculation of profits on an
exhibit that compiled financial information from the DeGidios’ financial documents along with
information from one of Janton’s own exhibits. Further, at the beginning of the DeGidios’ case-
in-chief, the trial court found that some of the DeGidios’ exhibits were duplicative of exhibits
already in the record. The trial court considered a few more of the non-duplicative exhibits for
illustrative or other specific purposes.
The trial court ultimately excluded Royal Concentrates LLC’s balance sheets, a “product
of [the DeGidios’] bookkeeper.” Verbatim Rep. of Proc. (VRP) at 391. The trial court excluded
this document as hearsay and as prejudicial to Janton, because Janton was prevented from seeing
the underlying financial information supporting the balance sheets due to the DeGidios’ failure to
respond to Janton’s discovery request.
However, the trial court emphasized that the DeGidios could still testify about the
information contained in Royal Concentrates LLC’s balance sheets. And during the trial, the
DeGidios did testify about the financial health of Royal Concentrates LLC. Karin testified that she
worked closely with the bookkeeper and that her role involved “[l]ooking at the banking daily
online, making sure all the bills were paid,” and managing check writing. VRP at 446. Although
Karin testified that the bookkeeper was the one who handled the books, Karin was still able to
testify about the financial health of Royal Concentrates LLC, stating that Royal Concentrates LLC
was “never doing well” and that the DeGidios “had to put a lot of [their] own funds into it.” VRP
at 446-47.
DeGidio also used exhibits, both illustrative and substantive, offered by both Janton and
the DeGidios to testify about the finances of Royal Concentrates LLC. For example, DeGidio
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identified periods of time when Royal Concentrates LLC was not licensed and thus, in his opinion,
was not making any profits despite what the graph in the exhibit may have indicated. DeGidio also
testified about toll processing, a type of buyback program that he believed was not reflected in the
current exhibits about Royal Concentrates LLC’s finances.
Thus, like in Jones, where the excluded witnesses would have only provided cumulative
information that was already covered by the other witnesses, the DeGidios have failed to identify
exactly what the bookkeeper would have testified about that was not already covered in other
testimony or in the admitted exhibits. Additionally, the DeGidios made no offer of proof to
establish that the bookkeeper had any expertise or qualifications beyond what the DeGidios could
provide. Finally, because the trial court admitted many of the originally excluded exhibits for some
purpose, and because the DeGidios have not specifically identified on appeal which exclusions
were prejudicial, we conclude that the trial court’s failure to address one of the Burnet factors was
harmless.
II. PERSONAL LIABILITY
The DeGidios contend that the trial court erred by failing to provide sufficient findings of
fact or conclusions of law supporting personal liability for the DeGidios. In particular, the
DeGidios contend that Royal Concentrates LLC was the entity involved in an agreement with
Janton, not the DeGidios personally. Thus, the DeGidios argue that to hold them personally liable
for the obligations of the company, the trial court needed to determine whether the corporate veil
could be pierced. The DeGidios conclude that because the trial court did not make any findings of
fact or conclusions of law about piercing the veil, they should not be personally liable.
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In response, Janton contends that this case was never about piercing the veil. Instead,
Janton always argued that the trial court could hold the DeGidios and Royal Concentrates LLC
jointly and severally liable. Janton argues that the record contains a contract DeGidio entered into
personally and then failed to perform. We agree with Janton.
A. Piercing the Corporate Veil
When an LLC itself incurs debts, obligations, or liabilities, the members of the LLC are
not usually personally liable when they have done nothing more than exist as members. See RCW
25.15.126(1). However, a court may use the equitable doctrine of piercing the corporate veil to
hold a member personally liable if allowing liability only for the business entity would “aid in
perpetrating a fraud or result in a manifest injustice.” E.g., Truckweld Equip. Co. v. Olson, 26 Wn.
App. 638, 644, 618 P.2d 1017 (1980).
However, there are other legal bases for finding a member of an LLC personally liable. For
example, a member or manager of an LLC is still personally liable for their own torts. RCW
25.15.126(3). The same is true for partners in a partnership: partners are also personally liable for
their own tortious acts. Gildon v. Simon Prop. Grp., Inc., 158 Wn.2d 483, 499, 145 P.3d 1196
(2006). Additionally, a partner may bring an action against another partner for breach of a duty to
the partnership or breach of the partnership agreement itself. RCW 25.05.170(2).
This case is like Parrott Mechanical, Inc. v. Rude, 118 Wn. App. 859, 78 P.3d 1026 (2003).
In Parrott, the Rudes argued that the trial court improperly pierced the veil to hold them personally
liable for failure to pay invoices for construction labor and materials per existing contracts. Id. at
862-63, 867. However, Division Three held that there was no evidence in the record to suggest
that the trial court considered a theory of piercing the veil. Id. at 867-68. Instead, the court held
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that in the trial court proceedings, Parrott Mechanical “sought judgment from the Rudes
individually, as well as from their corporate entities, and set forth its grounds for doing so.” Id. at
867.
The summons and complaint named the Rudes individually. Id. Parrott Mechanical alleged
that the Rudes acted as officers of their business entity, as well as “individuals and as a marital
community.” Id. The pleadings contained allegations, causes of action, and prayers for relief
against the Rudes personally, focusing on how they breached their fiduciary duties and obligations
to Parrott under their shared agreement. Id. Overall, “it was plain from the evidence and the
argument throughout that Parrott asserted a cause of action against the Rudes individually,” and
the trial court found the Rudes jointly and severally liable. Id. at 868. Thus, Division Three rejected
the argument on appeal that the trial court improperly pierced the corporate veil. Id.
B. Personal Liability Independent of Piercing the Veil
Here, the trial court held the DeGidios jointly and severally liable, along with Royal
Concentrates LLC, based on their personal actions, not based on piercing the veil. Thus, we reject
the DeGidios’ claim of inadequate findings of fact or conclusions of law.
First, just like the Rudes in Parrott, Janton also sued the DeGidios personally. Janton’s
summons and amended complaint both identify the DeGidios and their marital community as
individual defendants, in addition to the LLC. The amended complaint also states that “all actions
done by either of [the DeGidios were] for the benefit of themselves and for their marital
community,” as opposed to for the benefit of, or on behalf of, the LLC. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 673.
For example, the amended complaint states that DeGidio personally agreed to the division of the
profits and the ownership interest, and then he failed to pay the agreed upon profits. Karin was
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involved in Royal Concentrates LLC’s finances, she was aware of the financial condition of the
business, and she did not deny knowledge of the promises DeGidio made to Janton, and she would
have been aware of the failure to honor the agreement. Furthermore, Janton’s prayer for relief
separately identified bases for judgment against the DeGidios versus bases for judgment against
Royal Concentrates LLC.
Just like in Parrott, nothing in the trial court’s findings of fact, conclusions of law, nor
judgment and order suggests that the trial court considered the doctrine of piercing the corporate
veil. The trial court’s findings of fact focused on actions taken by DeGidio personally, including
signing an agreement with Dressor in his personal capacity and promising Dressor a certain
ownership percentage and profit interest in Royal Concentrates LLC, for example. The trial court’s
judgment and order clearly identify the DeGidios and their marital community as individual
judgment debtors in addition to Royal Concentrates LLC. The order then explicitly states that the
DeGidios and Royal Concentrates LCC are jointly and severally liable for the judgment amount.2
In sum, the record does not support the DeGidios’ contention that piercing the corporate
veil was implicated. The DeGidios’ claim of inadequate findings and conclusions fails.
III. BREACH OF FIDUCIARY DUTY
The DeGidios contend that although the trial court’s conclusion of law states that the
DeGidios breached their fiduciary duty, the findings of fact do not support that conclusion. In
particular, the DeGidios argue that the laws governing fiduciary duties in partnerships and LLCs
2 We note that the DiGidios’ arguments against personal liability focus on the couple and their marital community; neither DeGidio nor Karin argues that there was insufficient evidence to support personal liability for them separately from the other. Appellants’ Opening Br. at 18-22.
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provide for limited fiduciary duties, none of which are specifically mentioned in the trial court’s
findings of fact and conclusions of law.
In response, Janton contends that the DeGidios owed several fiduciary duties. First, Janton
argues that the DeGidios had a duty to account to the partnership for profit and loss information,
and they breached that duty by failing to provide the requested financial records when Janton asked
for them. Janton also argues that the trial court’s findings that the DeGidios made false
representations and refused to return Janton’s equipment support its conclusion that the DeGidios
violated the duty of good faith and fair dealing. Further, Janton argues that the failure to make
Janton an official member of the LLC does not negate the DeGidios’ fiduciary obligations because
partnership duties may arise without formal agreement.
Janton also contends that in general, the appellants’ brief does not challenge any specific
finding of fact or conclusion of law and thus the findings are verities on appeal and the conclusions
are the law of the case. The DeGidios reply that RAP 10.3(g) preserves a claimed error that is not
specifically asserted in the assignments of error as long as it is clear what is being challenged.
Here, that is the trial court’s finding of personal liability for breach of fiduciary duty.
We hold that the DeGidios breached their fiduciary duty to Janton.
A. Standard of Review
“When the trial court has weighed the evidence, our review is limited to determining
whether the court’s findings are supported by substantial evidence and, if so, whether the findings
support the court’s conclusions of law and judgment.” Panorama Vill. Homeowners Ass’n v.
Golden Rule Roofing, Inc., 102 Wn. App. 422, 425, 10 P.3d 417 (2000). The substantial evidence
standard requires “a sufficient quantum of evidence in the record to persuade a reasonable person
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that the declared premise is true.” Wenatchee Sportsmen Ass’n v. Chelan County, 141 Wn.2d 169,
176, 4 P.3d 123 (2000). Conclusions of law, as well as the application of the law to the facts, are
reviewed de novo. See In re Est. of Jones, 152 Wn.2d 1, 8-9, 93 P.3d 147 (2004); Tapper v. Emp.
Sec. Dep’t., 122 Wn.2d 397, 403, 858 P.2d 494 (1993).
B. Findings of Fact
“On review, unchallenged findings of fact are verities on appeal.” Est. of Jones, 152 Wn.2d
at 8. To properly challenge a finding of fact, RAP 10.3 requires the party’s brief to “present the
court with argument as to why specific findings of the trial court are not supported by the evidence
and to cite to the record to support that argument.” In re Est. of Lint, 135 Wn.2d 518, 532, 957
P.2d 755 (1998) (holding that the party had failed to properly challenge the trial court’s findings
when the party’s brief barely mentioned findings of fact by number, rarely cited to the record, and
largely consisted of reciting the party’s version of the facts).
Similar to the brief in Lint, the section of the DeGidios’ brief concerning breach of fiduciary
duty does not mention any finding of fact by number and only cites to the record once. The one
finding of fact that is identified with a page number from the record is not challenged by the
appellants as unsupported by the evidence, but instead, on its inability to support the conclusion
that a fiduciary duty exists.
Because no specific findings are challenged, we consider the findings of fact verities on
appeal, and we focus on whether the findings of fact support the trial court’s conclusions of law.
C. Existence of a Fiduciary Duty
To support a claim of breach of fiduciary duty, the plaintiff must establish (1) that a duty
is owed to them; (2) that the duty was breached; (3) that an injury resulted; and (4) that the breach
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was the proximate cause of the injury. Miller v. U.S. Bank of Wash., NA., 72 Wn. App. 416, 426,
865 P.2d 536 (1994). In their brief, the DeGidios only challenge the establishment of the first two
elements concerning the existence of a fiduciary duty and its breach.
Members of an LLC owe fiduciary duties of loyalty and care to the LLC and its members,
but not to nonmembers. RCW 25.15.038(1). Here, the trial court found that Dressor, on behalf of
Janton, was meant to acquire an interest in Royal Concentrates LLC and become a member.
However, the trial court also found that DeGidio never took the necessary steps to make Janton a
member of Royal Concentrates LLC.
But the trial court specifically found that Dressor, on behalf of Janton, entered into a
“Partnership Agreement” with DeGidio. CP at 851. Partners in a partnership are also “accountable
to each other and the partnership as fiduciaries.” RSD AAP, LLC v. Alyeska Ocean, Inc., 190 Wn.
App. 305, 319, 358 P.3d 483 (2015). Under RCW 25.05.165, partners owe each other and the
partnership duties of loyalty and care, as well as an obligation of good faith and fair dealing.
Here, the findings of fact support the conclusion of law that the DeGidios owed fiduciary
duties to Janton because the DeGidios and Janton entered into an agreement that established a
partnership.
A “partnership” is an “association of two or more persons to carry on as co-owners a
business for profit,” regardless of stated intent to form a partnership. RCW 25.05.005(6). Intent to
form a partnership can be inferred from the conduct of the parties when it appears that they are
combining their “‘property, labor, skill, and experience’” for a joint venture where the profits are
shared. In re Est. of Thornton, 81 Wn.2d 72, 79, 499 P.2d 864 (1972) (quoting Nicholson v.
Kilbury, 83 Wn. 196, 202, 145 P. 189 (1915)); see also Oriental Realty Co. v. Taylor, 69 Wn. 115,
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116-17, 120, 124 P. 489 (1912) (holding that a partnership existed where one party agreed to
provide money, the other party largely provided business management, and the two split profits
after a return of the initial investment).
Here, the parties engaged in activities to promote the joint business venture. The trial court
found that Janton agreed to buy equipment and contribute working capital to Royal Concentrates
LLC in return for a 30 percent interest in Royal Concentrates LLC and 40 percent of the profits.
The trial court also found that Mr. DeGidio would contribute his business expertise and ability to
generate profit to the partnership.
Therefore, the findings of fact support a conclusion that the DeGidios owed fiduciary duties
to Janton based on the existence of a partnership.
D. Breach of Fiduciary Duty
RCW 25.05.165 provides the standards fiduciary duties partners owe to each other. First,
partners owe a duty of care, defined as “refraining from engaging in grossly negligent or reckless
conduct, intentional misconduct, or a knowing violation of law” during the conduct of the
partnership. RCW 25.05.165(3).
Second, partners owe a duty of loyalty, which requires partners to “account to the
partnership” and hold as a trustee any property, profit, or benefit that the partner derived from the
conduct of the business; to refrain from dealing with the partnership on behalf of a party with an
adverse interest; and to “refrain from competing with the partnership in the conduct of the
partnership business.” RCW 25.05.165(2)(a)-(c); see also Bishop of Victoria Corp. Sole v. Corp.
Bus. Park, LLC, 138 Wn. App. 443, 457, 158 P.3d 1183 (2007) (stating that partners owe a duty
of loyalty to avoid conflicts of interest, such as competing with the partnership).
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Although a partner is not prohibited from furthering their own interests by using their
individual funds during the partnership, the duty of loyalty and good faith prevents partners from
profiting individually using partnership business or funds, or profiting from a business opportunity
that should have belonged to the partnership. See In re Est. of Wilson, 50 Wn.2d 840, 846-47, 315
P.2d 287 (1957). In Estate of Wilson, the court held that a breach of fiduciary duty occurred when
two partners purchased property with partnership funds instead of their personal funds without
informing the other partners. See 50 Wn.2d at 847. Additionally, this purchase was injurious to the
partnership because it cost the partnership funds to buy and to operate, while the partners (but not
the partnership) benefited in earnings from the property. Id.; see also J&J Celcom v. AT&T
Wireless Servs. Inc., 162 Wn.2d 102, 107, 169 P.3d 823 (2007) (noting that “a partner has a duty
to account for any benefit of profit held by the partner relating to any aspect of the partnership”).
Here, the trial court concluded that the DeGidios breached their fiduciary duty to Janton.
There are several findings of fact that support this conclusion. For example, the trial court found
that Janton was offered a chance to become a member of Royal Concentrates LLC, a business
focused on processing cannabis for sale to retailers. Janton performed its obligations under the
agreement by purchasing equipment for Royal Concentrates LLC and paying for rent, utilities,
security, internet, and licensing fees. Despite Janton’s investments into the partnership, including
the cost of licensing fees, the DeGidios never applied for a cannabis processing license for Royal
Concentrates LLC. The trial court found that Mr. DeGidio instead applied for, and obtained, a
cannabis license on behalf of another LLC that he was the sole member of, Prime Time Ventures,
doing business as Royal Concentrates. Prime Time Ventures was licensed to operate as a marijuana
processor and generated over $892,000 in gross revenue in just over a year.
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By taking the money and equipment Janton invested into the partnership on behalf of Royal
Concentrates LLC and using it to benefit a different cannabis-focused LLC, the DeGidios violated
the duty of loyalty by competing with the partnership and by representing an interest adverse to
that of the business. After all, testimony in the record stated that a cannabis license could take six
months to a year to acquire for a new business, so it may not have been an easy feat to get a second
license for Royal Concentrates LLC. Therefore, these findings serve as a basis for the conclusion
of law that there was a breach of fiduciary duty.
Second, like the partners in Estate of Wilson, the DeGidios also violated the duty of loyalty
by failing to act as trustees of the partnership’s property and profits. The DeGidios used partnership
funds to purchase the cannabis licensing fee for Prime Time Ventures instead of Royal
Concentrates LLC. Indeed, the cannabis license resulted in profits for Prime Time Ventures, while
at the same time, the DeGidios were refusing to pay Janton back for its financial investment. Thus,
by using the partnership’s property and funds in a way that injured the partnership and their partner
while benefiting themselves, the DeGidios violated the fiduciary duty of loyalty.
Therefore, the findings of fact support a conclusion that the DeGidios breached their
fiduciary duty to Janton.
CONCLUSION
Any error in excluding evidence was harmless. Robert and Karin DeGidio and Royal
Concentrates LLC are jointly and severally liable based on breach of contract and breach of
fiduciary duty in the amounts identified in the trial court’s judgment. Therefore, we affirm the trial
court’s findings and conclusions, as well as its judgment.
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A majority of the panel having determined that this opinion will not be printed in the
Washington Appellate Reports, but will be filed for public record in accordance with RCW
2.06.040, it is so ordered.
GLASGOW, J. We concur:
CRUSER, C.J.
CHE, J.