Karm Enterprises, Inc. v. Blue Ace, Llc

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 22, 2013
Docket68843-0
StatusUnpublished

This text of Karm Enterprises, Inc. v. Blue Ace, Llc (Karm Enterprises, Inc. v. Blue Ace, Llc) 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
Karm Enterprises, Inc. v. Blue Ace, Llc, (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

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IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

KARM ENTERPRISES, INC., a Washington corporation, and JOHN No. 68843-0- SJONG, an individual and resident of the State of Washington,

Appellants, DIVISION ONE v.

BLUE ACE, LLC, a Washington limited liability corporation, and MICHAEL BURNS, and his marital community, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Respondents. FILED: July 22, 2013

Spearman, A.C.J. — Karm Enterprises, Inc. and John Sjong (collectively,

"Karm") appeals the trial court's summary dismissal of their unjust enrichment

claim against Blue Ace, LLC and Michael Burns, (collectively "Blue Ace"). Karm's

claim is based on allegations that Blue Ace, after buying Karm's fishing vessel,

wrongfully benefited from the use of catch history associated with Karm's fishing

license to obtain "harvest shares" from a private fishing cooperative. Where

Karm's appeal relies on arguments it did not make below, and where the trial

court properly applied the cited legal authority to the claim before it, we affirm. No. 68843-0-1/2

FACTS

On June 30, 2004, Karm sold its fishing vessel, the Storfjord (now the Blue

Ace), to Blue Ace for $500,000.00. The terms of the sale were set forth in a

written agreement titled "FA/ Storfjord Purchase and Sale Agreement"

("Purchase Agreement"). The Purchase Agreement incorporated an option for

Blue Ace to purchase from Karm its Federal License Limitation Program (LLP)

license LLG4513 and all catch history associated with the license for

$2,000,000.00, if the license ever became transferable. At the time, LLG4513

was nontransferable and Karm's administrative appeal, seeking transferability of

the license, was pending with the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS). In

light of the uncertainty as to the license, Blue Ace acquired license LLG4508

from a third party in 2004 to maintain eligibility to participate in Bering Sea and

Aleutian Islands groundfish fisheries.

Blue Ace is a member of the Freezer Longline Conservation Cooperative

(FLCC), a voluntary fishery cooperative. Around January 2007, FLCC members

met to negotiate terms on which to cooperatively harvest Pacific cod amongst

themselves. Each year, NMFS allocated a certain percentage of the total

allowable catch of Pacific cod to the FLCC's subsector. 50 C.F.R. §

679.20(a)(7)(ii)(A) (2011). While that allocation was unavailable to participants in

other subsectors, FLCC members still had to compete against each other for the

fish allocated to the FLCC subsector. No. 68843-0-1/3

FLCC had previously hired Tagart Consulting to compile NMFS catch

history data for FLCC members' vessels for an unrelated "Capacity Reduction

Program." Clerk's Papers at 113. Those data were used by the FLCC in

allocating available catch of Pacific cod by "harvest shares" to its members. Id.

Blue Ace's harvest share allocation was negotiated in connection with the

admission of the Blue Ace, and Blue Ace was tentatively assigned a harvest

share of 1.39% of the FLCC subsector's Pacific cod allocation. Id.

Sometime afterthe January 2007 FLCC meeting, Thor Tollessen1 and Sjong of Karm met with Burns of Blue Ace. By that time, the parties considered it

unlikely that Karm would prevail in its appeal regarding LLG4513. At that

meeting, according to Tollessen, Burns acknowledged that Blue Ace stood to

receive a FLCC harvest share of 1.39% and that the share was largely derived

from Tagart's calculations, which incorporated catch history of the Blue Ace

associated with Karm's ownership of the vessel. Tollessen stated that the catch

history did not belong to Blue Ace and proposed that the parties take the fair

market value of Blue Ace's FLCC harvest shares, pay Karm and Sjong

$2,000,000 for the catch history associated with LLG4513, reimburse Blue Ace

for certain costs, and split the remainder evenly. Burns responded that part of the

catch history supporting the harvest share allocation had been generated while

Blue Ace owned the vessel, justifying an adjustment to the payment amount.

1Tollessen is the sole owner and manager of Karm.

3 No. 68843-0-1/4

According to Tollessen, he and Sjong agreed with and shook hands with Burns.

Blue Ace denies making any such oral agreement.

In late 2007, NMFS denied Karm's appeal as to LLG4513 and that license

expired effective January 1, 2008. Because the license never became

transferable, Blue Ace did not purchase it under the option in the Purchase

Agreement. Upon termination of LLG4513, Karm was ineligible to participate in

the FLCC.

Harvest share allocations of FLCC members were finalized on February 1,

2010, when members entered into a "Freezer Longline Conservation Cooperative

Membership Agreement." That agreement lists Blue Ace's harvest share for

Pacific cod as 1.4%. CP at 95. Subsequently, Karm alleged, Blue Ace fished its

quota but did not provide an accounting to Karm of sales revenue or honor its

oral agreement with Karm.

Karm filed suit against Blue Ace in September 2011. In its complaint,

Karm alleged a breach of oral contract claim and, in the alternative, an unjust

enrichment claim. As to the latter, the complaint stated:

20. Alternatively, the Court should find a constructive contract or contract implied at law between the plaintiffs and defendants, as the defendants have been unjustly enriched by obtaining individual fishing quota based on a wrongful presentation to NMFS of catch history belonging to the plaintiffs.

21. The catch history and quota share belonging to the plaintiffs were conferred on the defendants. Defendants had a knowledge and appreciation of these benefits being conferred on them. The defendants accepted these benefits under circumstances that make it inequitable for them to receive the benefits. No. 68843-0-1/5

CP at 4-5.

Blue Ace moved for summary judgment. With respect to the unjust

enrichment claim, Blue Ace cited Young v. Young, 164 Wn.2d 477, 191 P.3d

1258 (2008) and argued that Karm was required to show that Blue Ace was

enriched through a benefit obtained from Karm. Blue Ace argued that Karm could

not make such a showing where (1) upon termination of LLG4513, no federal

fishing right could be issued on the basis of LLG4513 and its associated fishing

history; (2) no party could have gained admission to the FLCC on the basis of

LLG4513; (3) Blue Ace could not have obtained any benefit in connection with

LLG4513 and its fishing history because no interest in that license and fishing

history could be transferred by Karm; and (4) even if Blue Ace obtained its FLCC

harvest share allocation by a claim of ownership of LLG4513 or its catch history,

that benefit was a result of its private negotiations with FLCC members and was

not conferred by or obtained from Karm.

In opposition, Karm asserted that Blue Ace was unjustly enriched because

it used Karm's catch history to obtain FLCC harvest shares, even if no NMFS

regulation prevented Blue Ace from doing so.

The trial court granted Blue Ace's motion and dismissed both claims.2 As to the unjust enrichment claim, the court concluded that Karm did not confer a

benefit on Blue Ace for which the law would require Blue Ace to pay. The court

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