Kirk T. Schroder v. Lori Schelin, n/k/a Lori Lynn

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedApril 14, 2026
Docket0326252
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kirk T. Schroder v. Lori Schelin, n/k/a Lori Lynn (Kirk T. Schroder v. Lori Schelin, n/k/a Lori Lynn) 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
Kirk T. Schroder v. Lori Schelin, n/k/a Lori Lynn, (Va. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Record No. 0326-25-2

KIRK T. SCHRODER v. LORI SCHELIN, N/K/A LORI LYNN

Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges Malveaux and Duffan Argued at Richmond, Virginia Opinion Issued April 14, 2026*

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF GOOCHLAND COUNTY Timothy K. Sanner, Judge

Bradley P. Marrs (Marrs & Henry, on briefs), for appellant.

Scott D. Cardani (Critzer Cardani, PC, on brief), for appellee.

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE KEVIN M. DUFFAN

Kirk T. Schroder appeals the trial court’s judgment dismissing his complaint against Lori

Lynn1 seeking payment on two alleged promissory notes. Finding no error, we affirm.

BACKGROUND2

Lynn and Schroder were both members of a “Mystery School” operated out of the

Aquarian Bookshop in Richmond, Virginia, owned by John Oliver. Schroder was an attorney

who “did a lot of pro bono work for members” of the school. According to Lynn, Schroder

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). 1 Lynn was previously known as Lori Schelin. 2 “[W]e review the facts in the light most favorable to [Lynn], the prevailing party below.” Mintbrook Devs., LLC v. Groundscapes, LLC, 76 Va. App. 279, 283 (2022). “help[ed her] with different court matters” and sometimes gave her legal advice. Lynn never

paid Schroder for legal services, and he never asked her to.

Lynn separated from her husband in June 2017, which led to protracted divorce

proceedings. Oliver asked members of the school to help pay Lynn’s attorney fees, and about ten

members agreed to help. Members gave money to a trust account controlled by Schroder, who

wrote checks from the account to pay Lynn’s fees. According to Schroder, when the trust “fund

got low, there was a request for people to replenish it,” which members willingly did.

In June 2017, Schroder wrote to Lynn’s attorney that Lynn “ha[d] a benefactor who [was]

sending funds to [Schroder’s] law firm’s trust account” to pay the fees. Lynn testified that

Schroder told her “not to worry about . . . [her] legal fees” because “they would be taken care

of.” She interpreted that statement to mean that she “wasn’t going to have to pay any of [her]

legal fees.” She claimed that she offered to pay her own fees “many times” but that Schroder

consistently told her “no, no, I got it. I’ll take care of it.” She claimed that she “never

communicated with anybody that donated funds” and “never asked anyone for a dime.”

Accordingly, she viewed the payments as gifts, not loans.

Schroder admitted that he and other group members gave Lynn “funds that were just

considered gifts and were not documented as loans” but testified that “it just got to a point where

the dollar amount was getting so high that, then, it was understood that these needed to be loans.”

He also claimed that Lynn wanted the payments to be documented as repayable loans and that he

acceded to her request.

Schroder drafted two promissory notes and sent them to Lynn to sign.3 The first note,

dated July 7, 2017, reflects that Lynn promised to pay Schroder $2,000 plus interest in

3 Although the notes were dated more than nine months apart, Schroder testified that he sent both notes to Lynn together. Schroder also drafted promissory notes for other members who had paid into the trust, none of which are part of this lawsuit. -2- installments starting “no later than six months after the final divorce decree [was] entered.” The

second note, dated March 20, 2018, was substantially the same but was for $7,154.47 plus

interest. Lynn signed both notes but did not return them to Schroder.

Lynn and Schroder provided different rationales for the notes. Schroder testified that

Lynn asked him to draft the notes. He believed she wanted “to confirm the loan” and “use them

in the divorce case in the circuit court.” Lynn did in fact produce the notes during discovery in

her divorce case as evidence of her debts. She testified during this litigation that she

misrepresented the notes during her divorce—presumably to inflate her debts—and that the

money was always intended as gifts, not loans.

According to Lynn, Schroder told her that she needed to sign the promissory notes “for

the file.” She did not know what he meant but signed them anyway. She “found out later” that

he wanted to use the notes as “[o]ptics for [a] defamation suit” he had filed against her husband.

The defamation trial occurred on October 31, 2018. Lynn testified at the defamation trial that

she “owe[d] a lot of money to a lot of different people . . . related to [her] attorney’s fees,” that

“[p]eople donated, loaned [her] money in different increments,” and that she signed several

promissory notes.4

According to Lynn, Schroder told her after the defamation suit ended “that the [notes]

could go in the trash,” that she “could shred them,” and that “[o]bviously, [she did not] have to

pay them.” So, she shredded the originals. Schroder denied telling her that she could do so. He

testified that he was not concerned about getting the originals back but “it was something that

[he] knew was still outstanding.”

4 Schroder unsuccessfully objected at the defamation trial to Lynn’s testimony about the promissory notes. -3- Lynn obtained a final divorce decree in September 2018. Schroder did not ask Lynn for

repayment at that time, nor did any other Aquarian member who gave funds. As time went on,

however, Lynn’s relationship with Oliver and the school became strained. Lynn withdrew from

the school in July 2022 and rebuffed several invitations to a “roundtable” with Oliver, the last of

which came in August 2023.

After obtaining copies of the notes from the file in Lynn’s divorce case, Schroder wrote to

Lynn in September 2023, demanding that she repay the notes within 14 days. When Lynn did

not repay, Schroder filed a warrant in debt in the general district court, which he later appealed to

the circuit court.

The circuit court held a bench trial in December 2024. Schroder argued in closing that

“[t]he only legally cognizable defense . . . would be to allege fraudulent inducement.” The court

responded that Lynn was “not declaring fraud[]” or claiming that “she was misled into signing”

the notes but was instead claiming that the notes were “just a sham from the word go, really.”

Schroder persisted in arguing that Lynn had failed to demonstrate fraud. In closing, Lynn

clarified that she was “not claiming that she was fraudulently induced” and that “the real

question is, was there assent to this contract?”

The circuit court found the evidence presented referred to the payments as “fundraising,

donations[,] and contributions, which implies that they [were] gifts” and not loans. The court

further noted that the details of the notes were not determined until after the contributions were

made. Finally, the court found it significant that Schroder demonstrated no concern that the

notes be signed and returned to him and made no effort to collect the notes until after the

relationship soured between Lynn and the school. “In the end, the court [was] unconvinced that

the[] notes represented true obligations to pay” and found that they were “more likely created for

-4- the purpose of hiding gifts and to aid [Lynn] in her defense case in which [Schroder] was

substantially involved.”5 Accordingly, the trial court dismissed the case.

ANALYSIS

Schroder’s five assignments of error are best examined in two general categories: The

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Kirk T. Schroder v. Lori Schelin, n/k/a Lori Lynn, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirk-t-schroder-v-lori-schelin-nka-lori-lynn-vactapp-2026.