Koh v. Inno-Pacific Holdings, Ltd.
This text of 54 P.3d 1270 (Koh v. Inno-Pacific Holdings, Ltd.) 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.
Opinion
Kay Yew KOH, Appellant,
v.
INNO-PACIFIC HOLDINGS, LTD., Respondent.
Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 1.
Thomas R. Dreiling, Attorney at Law, Seattle, WA, for Appellant.
*1271 Richard J. Schroeder, Davies Wright Tremiane, Seattle, WA, for Respondent.
GROSSE, J.
Normally, personal property is found, for purposes of levy or attachment, where it is physically located or where the owner resides. The interest of a member in a limited liability company is personal property. Therefore, once it has been determined by a court of competent jurisdiction that a defendant is a debtor of the plaintiff, an action to realize on that debt in Washington, where the defendant has a property interest in a limited liability company, is proper whether or not Washington would have had jurisdiction to determine the existence of the debt as an original matter.
FACTS
Inno-Pacific Holdings, Ltd. (Inno-Pacific) is a Singapore public corporation with its principal place of business in Singapore. Inno-Pacific employed Kay Yew Koh (Koh) to conduct business activities on its behalf in California. Koh sued Inno-Pacific for wrongful termination in California, and prevailed receiving a money judgment against Inno-Pacific in the amount of $240,000 (Singapore dollars). Inno-Pacific had appeared through counsel to defend itself against Koh's claim.
In post-judgment discovery, Koh learned that Inno-Pacific owned a 50 percent interest in Sawyer Falls, a limited liability company, registered under the laws of the state of Washington as a domestic limited liability company. Sawyer Falls has an agent in Washington and owns 478 acres of undeveloped real property in Washington as a long-term development project. However, Sawyer Falls registered as its principal place of business an address in Malaysia and represents that its main office, officers, employees, books, and records are located in Malaysia.
Two years after the California judgment, Koh obtained a charging order in King County Superior Court against Inno-Pacific's interest in Sawyer Falls. Inno-Pacific filed a motion to quash the charging order based on lack of personal jurisdiction and lack of in rem jurisdiction, but did not contest the validity of the California judgment. The trial court quashed Koh's charging order holding that the "Court lacks jurisdiction over Defendant's membership interest in Sawyer Falls because the membership interest as personal property is located outside the state of Washington." Koh appeals.
DISCUSSION
Preliminary to the issue of jurisdiction is the location of Inno-Pacific's interest in Sawyer Falls. Clearly, Inno-Pacific's interest in Sawyer Falls is personal property to Inno-Pacific.[1] Inno-Pacific argues that an entity's interest in a limited liability company exists where the entity resides, in this case in Singapore. Thus, Inno-Pacific concludes that Washington courts have no jurisdiction over its personal property interest in Sawyer Falls. Koh counters that an entity's interest in a limited liability company is located where that company is formed.
Koh's position is the more accurate. The touchstone of Inno-Pacific's argument regarding jurisdiction is In re Estate of Grady.[2] That case does stand for the proposition that personal property is located where the owner is domiciled. Unquestionably, that is true for purposes of taxation. However, that proposition does not preclude jurisdiction over personal property where it is found.[3] Certainly the language of the statute appears to reflect that a partnership interest is located where the partnership is formally organized:
On application to a court of competent jurisdiction by any judgment creditor of a member, the court may charge the limited liability company interest of the member *1272 with payment of the unsatisfied amount of the judgment with interest. To the extent so charged, the judgment creditor has only the rights of an assignee of the limited liability company interest. This chapter does not deprive any member of the benefit of any exemption laws applicable to the member's limited liability company interest.[[4]]
Washington's Limited Liability Company Act is modeled substantially upon the Uniform Limited Liability Company Act, which was in turn based upon the Uniform Partnership Act and the Revised Uniform Partnership Act, adopted in full or in part by various states.[5] Therefore, although the comments to the Uniform Limited Liability Company Act, the Uniform Partnership Act, and the Revised Uniform Partnership Act do not directly discuss this issue, we can look to the few cases that do address the location of a partnership interest under one of these uniform acts.
In Rankin v. Culver, 16 years after Pennsylvania's enactment of its version of the Uniform Partnership Act, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania analyzed whether a creditor could attach the partnership interest of a nonresident debtor when the partnership was organized and doing business in Pennsylvania.[6] The Rankin court found that an interest of a partner in firm assets is personalty and subject to foreign attachment. Further, the court held that a partnership doing business in Pennsylvania constituted a property interest in Pennsylvania to those who owned an interest in the partnership, thus a writ of foreign attachment on the partnership interest was valid.[7]
In Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation v. Birchwood Builders, Inc., a plaintiff received a judgment in New York and learned that the debtor, a New York resident, owned 40 percent of a partnership organized in New Jersey under that state's version of the Uniform Partnership Act.[8] The partnership owned a tract of vacant land in New Jersey, although it earned no income. The plaintiff attempted to attach the partnership interest through a charging order in New Jersey. Although the New Jersey court did not discuss in detail the location of the partnership interest, it determined that even though the owner of the partnership interest resided in New York, the partnership was incorporated in New Jersey and thus the interest was subject to attachment in New Jersey.[9]
These cases illustrate at the least that where a partnership organizes under the laws of a state, the partnership interest is located within that state. Here, Sawyer Falls is registered under the laws of the State of Washington, maintains an office and registered agent in Washington, and owns a parcel of property in Washington. Therefore, the partnership interest is located here.
Koh correctly asserts that Washington's Limited Liability Company Act clearly allows him to reach Inno-Pacific's interest in Sawyer *1273 Falls through a validly entered foreign judgment and charging order entered in Washington by a court of competent jurisdiction.[10] Nevertheless, Inno-Pacific argues, or appears to argue, that this apparent jurisdiction and authority should not be exercised because it offends the Constitution, citing Shaffer v. Heitner[11] and Hanson v. Denckla.[12] But, a careful look at those cases convinces us that jurisdiction does lie.
At first glance, the action here does appear to be the type of quasi in rem action described in the case of Hanson v. Denckla,
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54 P.3d 1270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koh-v-inno-pacific-holdings-ltd-washctapp-2002.