King And Mockovak Eye Center, Inc. P.s., Et Ano, Resps v. Michael E. Mockovak, M.d., App

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 13, 2020
Docket79290-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of King And Mockovak Eye Center, Inc. P.s., Et Ano, Resps v. Michael E. Mockovak, M.d., App (King And Mockovak Eye Center, Inc. P.s., Et Ano, Resps v. Michael E. Mockovak, M.d., App) 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
King And Mockovak Eye Center, Inc. P.s., Et Ano, Resps v. Michael E. Mockovak, M.d., App, (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

KING AND MOCKOVAK EYE No. 79290-3-I CENTER, INC., P.S., a Washington professional service corporation; and DIVISION ONE CLEARLY LASIK, INC., a Nevada corporation, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Respondents, v.

MICHAEL MOCKOVAK, M.D., an individual,

Appellant.

LEACH, J. — Michael Mockovak appeals the trial court’s valuation of his shares of

cancelled stock in King & Mockovak Eye Center (KMEC). For the first time on appeal,

he claims the trial court should not have considered off-book surgical fees as debt in

this valuation. But, even had Mockovak preserved this claim for review, substantial

evidence supports the trial court’s findings that the off-book surgical fees were a debt

and the shares had a negative value. These findings support its conclusion that KMEC

did not owe Mockovak anything for his shares. We affirm.

Citations and pincites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material. No. 79290-3-I / 2

FACTS 1

Joseph King and Michael Mockovak practiced Lasik eye surgery together. By

2009, they held equal shares in several corporations, including KMEC, a Washington

professional service corporation, Clearly Lasik, Inc. (CLI), a Nevada corporation, and a

third corporation organized under the laws of British Columbia. KMEC owned and

operated three practices in Renton, Vancouver, and Kennewick, Washington. “The

other corporations owned and operated eye surgery practices in Canada.” Christian

Monea became the chief executive officer for KMEC and CLI in 2008.

The practices struggled during the 2008 and 2009 recession. To resolve conflict

between them, King and Mockovak scheduled an arbitration to divide the business

assets in late December 2009. On November 12, 2009, the FBI arrested Mockovak for

trying to arrange King’s murder. While released on bail, Mockovak withdrew $100,000

from the KMEC bank account, leaving the practices unable to pay their staff and bills.

After his arrest, Mockovak never practiced again and never contributed any funds to pay

the debts of KMEC and CLI. The Washington State Medical Quality Assurance

Commission (Commission) suspended his license in January 2010. In 2011, a trial

court convicted and sentenced Mockovak for attempted murder, attempted theft, and

other crimes. The Commission permanently revoked his license in March 2012.

1 This opinion adopts facts from the trial court’s unchallenged findings of fact. An appellate court treats unchallenged findings as true on appeal. Nelson v. Washington State Dept. of Labor and Industries, 175 Wn. App. 718, 723, 308 P.3d 686 (2013). It also adopts facts from King & Mockovak Eye Ctr., Inc., P.S. v. Mockovak, No. 74544-1-I slip op. at 26 (Wash. Ct. App. October 30. 2017) (unpublished) http://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/745441.PDF, rev. denied King & Mockovak Eye Ctr., Inc., P.S. v. Mockovak,190 Wn. 2d 1020, 418 P.3d 794 (2018).

-2- No. 79290-3-I / 3

After Mockovak’s arrest, King was KMEC’s only practicing surgeon. In January

2010, King stopped performing surgeries for KMEC and formed King Lasik. He was its

only shareholder. He used revenue from King Lasik to pay down KMEC and CLI’s

debts.

Procedural History

In November 2009, KMEC and CLI sued Mockovak, alleging, among other

things, breach of fiduciary duty. Mockovak counterclaimed and asserted third-party

claims against King and Monea for fraud. On behalf of CLI and KMEC, Mockovak also

asserted derivative claims of breach of fiduciary duty, conversion, unjust enrichment,

and conspiracy against King, Monea, and King Lasik.

The trial court made the following pretrial rulings:

(a) Mockovak and King each owned 50 percent of the shares in KMEC, (b) with the suspension of his medical license, Mockovak became ineligible to continue owning his shares in KMEC, and (c) Mockovak was to be paid the fair value of his cancelled shares as of January 27, 2011 (i.e., one year and one day after Mockovak’s medical license was suspended).

Mockovak did not challenge these decisions on appeal.

The trial court dismissed Mockovak’s derivative claims on behalf of KMEC on

partial summary judgment. It also dismissed King’s counterclaim of intentional injury to

others and King Lasik’s claim of unjust enrichment on partial summary judgment.

Finally, the trial court denied Mockovak’s request that the court bifurcate the trial and

value his cancelled KMEC shares before the jury considered the rest of the case.

The trial started in November 2015. The jury heard Mockovak’s claims of

fraud, conversion, unjust enrichment, and conspiracy, and KMEC and CLI’s claim of

-3- No. 79290-3-I / 4

breach of fiduciary duty. The trial court granted Mockovak’s motion to dismiss King’s

breach of contract claim, in part, as barred by the statute of frauds. 2

Both parties called expert witnesses to testify about the value of Mockovak’s

cancelled KMEC shares. King called Doug McDaniel, a forensic accountant and expert

in business valuation. He reviewed financial records, market transactions, and

depositions of other experts, owners, or buyers. He also interviewed Monea and King.

McDaniel used two valuation dates for KMEC. The first date was January 27,

2011, which was the statutory date of valuation. The second date was December 31,

2009, which was just after Mockovak’s arrest. McDaniel described the “net asset,”

“income,” and “market” approach methods used in business valuations. He testified he

used the “net asset” approach, which he considered “the only applicable approach,”

because KMEC was a “severely impaired business” and was not a going concern.

McDaniel included the off-book unpaid surgery fees accruing in 2009 because “they

were acknowledged as debt by . . . King and everyone that [McDaniel] had talked to”

including Monea. He valued KMEC at negative $474,110 on December 31, 2009. He

valued KMEC at negative $467,168 on January 27, 2011. Mockovak did not object to

McDaniel’s testimony.

On cross-examination, McDaniel testified about the good will component of the

valuation, “King had good will and . . . Mockovak was arrested and became a felon, and

so there was no good will.” And, he said that if “you take [ ] King out of it, the only value

related to those practices is net asset value.” McDaniel said he reviewed whatever was

2The court allowed King to try to prove the existence and termination of a partnership with Mockovak but did not allow him to request an award of damages for breach.

-4- No. 79290-3-I / 5

“considered to be an asset of the company . . . in the financial statements, or

acknowledged” to be an asset.

Mockovak called Lorraine Barrick, a forensic and certified public accountant,

and an expert in business valuation. She reviewed case pleadings, depositions,

financial information for the practices and holding companies, King’s tax returns,

publicly available sales documents for comparable practice and private transactions,

and communications between the parties and other third parties. Barrick also

conducted industry and economic research, interviewed King, and reviewed other

valuations.

Barrick used the “income” and “market” approaches to value the shares. She

calculated the value of Mockovak’s half-share in the combined businesses at

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