Mcclincy Brothers Floor Coverings Inc. v. Eric Zubel

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 5, 2019
Docket78283-5
StatusUnpublished

This text of Mcclincy Brothers Floor Coverings Inc. v. Eric Zubel (Mcclincy Brothers Floor Coverings Inc. v. Eric Zubel) 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
Mcclincy Brothers Floor Coverings Inc. v. Eric Zubel, (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

McCLINCY BROTHERS FLOOR ) COVERING INC. and TIM McCLINCY, ) No. 78283-5-I ) Appellants, ) DIVISION ONE ) v. ) ) ERIC ZUBEL and his marital community;) UNPUBLISHED OPINION and ERIC ZUBEL, P.C., ) ) FILED: August 5, 2019 Respondents.

SMITH, J. — As a general rule, if a bankruptcy debtor fails to report a

cause of action in bankruptcy and then obtains a discharge or confirmation, a trial

court may apply judicial estoppelto bar the action. In 2017, McClincy Brothers

Floor Covering Inc. (company) and its owner, Tim McClincy (together the

McClincy parties) sued their former attorney, Eric Zubel, for malpractice related

to Zubel’s representation of the McClincy parties in a 2013 lawsuit. Because

McClincy did not disclose his malpractice claims during his intervening

bankruptcy and because he has not established that any exception to the general

rule applies here, the trial court did not err when it dismissed McClincy’s claims.

But the company is a separate legal entity from McClincy, and Zubel has not

established that the company’s separate legal entity status should be ignored.

Therefore, the trial court did err by dismissing the company’s claims against

Zubel solely because McClincy is the company’s sole owner. We affirm in part,

reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings. No. 78283-5-1/2

FACTS

In 2013, the company sued its former clients, Trish and Collin Carpenter,

and a former project manager, Randall Brooks (underlying lawsuit). The

Carpenters filed a third party complaint against McClincy. Zubel represented

both the company and McClincy in the underlying lawsuit until September 2014,

when the McClincy parties terminated Zubel and hired a new attorney.

Brooks and the Carpenters prevailed in the underlying lawsuit.

Specifically, the court dismissed the company’s claims in their entirety and

entered judgment against the McClincy parties in February 2015. Some

components of the judgment were entered against the company and McClincy

individually, while others were entered against the company and McClincy jointly

and severally.

The McClincy parties appealed the judgment to this court. While that

appeal was pending, and after attempts to negotiate a stay of the judgment were

unsuccessful, McClincy (but not the company) filed a voluntary chapter 11

bankruptcy in January 2016. In the section of McClincy’s bankruptcy schedules

asking whether he had any “[c]laims against third parties, whether or not you

have filed a lawsuit or made a demand for payment,” McClincy responded no.

McClincy also responded no to the section of his schedules directing him to list

any “[o]ther contingent and unliquidated cLaims of every nature, including

counterclaims of the debtor and rights to set off claims.” McClincy later amended

his schedules to list the then-pending appeal of the underlying lawsuit as well as

a “Bad Faith/Insurance Coverage Claim.” But his amended schedules still

2 No. 78283-5-1/3

responded no when asked to list any other “contingent and unliquidated claims of

every nature, including counterclaims . . . and rights to set off claims.”

In his schedule of creditors with unsecured claims, McClincy listed Zubel’s

claim for fees arising out of the underlying lawsuit and indicated that the claim

was disputed.1 Zubel timely filed a proof of claim on March 4, 2016, indicating

that the amount of his claim as of that date was $96,954.24. McClincy did not

object to Zubel’s proof of claim.

On April 28, 2016, McClincy filed a First Amended Disclosure Statement

(disclosure statement) and a proposed First Amended Plan of Reorganization

(plan). The purpose of the disclosure statement was to explain the proposed

plan and provide creditors with material needed to decide whether to vote to

accept the plan. The disclosure statement explained how the proposed plan

classified each creditor’s claim into 1 of 10 classes. Zubel’s claim was classified

as part of class 10, the “Allowed General Unsecured Claims.” The disclosure

statement also summarized how the claims within each class would be treated

under the proposed plan and whether each class would be impaired or

unimpaired by the plan.2 As relevant to Zubel’s claim, class 10 claims were

impaired under the proposed plan. Class 8, which consisted solely of the

Carpenters’ and Brooks’ claims arising from the judgment in the underlying

1 Under Fed. R. Bankr. P. Rule 3003(c)(2), a creditor whose claim is scheduled as disputed must timely file a proof of claim to be treated as a creditor with respect to that claim for purposes of voting and distribution. 2 Generally, a class of claims is “impaired” under a plan if the plan alters the legal, equitable, or contractual rights of the holder of any claim within the class. 11 U.S.C. § 1124. 3 No. 78283-5-1/4

lawsuit, was the only other impaired class.

Class 10, including Zubel, voted to accept the proposed plan, but class 8

voted to reject it. Objections to confirmation of the plan were later resolved in a

Second Amended Plan of Reorganization, and on June 29, 2016, the bankruptcy

court confirmed that plan. The bankruptcy court later approved certain

postconfirmation modifications to the plan and confirmed a Fourth Amended Plan

of Reorganization (confirmed plan).

On July21, 2017, the McClincy parties filed this malpractice lawsuit

against Zubel. Zubel moved for summary judgment, arguing that the McClincy

parties’ claims were barred (1) by judicial estoppel because McClincy did not

disclose them as potential assets in his bankruptcy case and (2) by res judicata

because McClincy did not object to Zubel’s proof of claim.

The McClincy parties opposed the motion, arguing among other things

that (1) Zubel failed to establish that the elements of judicial estoppel had been

satisfied; (2) Zubel’s judicial estoppel theory did not apply to chapter 11, as

opposed to chapter 7, bankruptcy cases; (3) judicial estoppel could not apply to

the company; (4) res judicata was inapplicable because McClincy marked

Zubel’s claim as “disputed” in his bankruptcy schedules; and (5) the trial court

should impose CR 11 sanctions against Zubel’s counsel for filing “a summary

judgment motion with no evidence and no authority.” In reply, Zubel submitted a

declaration from Charles Robinson, a bankruptcy attorney who opined among

other things that McClincy could not have obtained plan confirmation without

Zubel’s vote. Additionally, Zubel argued for the first time in his reply that

4 No. 78283-5-1/5

because McClincy did not “specifically and unequivocally” retain the right under

the confirmed plan to pursue his malpractice claim against Zubel, McCIincy

lacked standing to bring the claim, and the trial court lacked jurisdiction to hear it.

The trial court granted Zubel’s motion for summary judgment. The

McClincy parties then moved for reconsideration. They argued that the trial court

erred by considering the Robinson declaration and reinforced their arguments

regarding judicial estoppel and res judicata. The trial court denied

reconsideration but indicated in its order that it did not consider Robinson’s

opinion that McClincy lacked standing. The McClincy parties appeal.

ANALYSIS

Judicial Esto~pel of McClincy’s Claims

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