Milicent Kormanos, V. Sean Cook

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 1, 2021
Docket81312-9
StatusUnpublished

This text of Milicent Kormanos, V. Sean Cook (Milicent Kormanos, V. Sean Cook) 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
Milicent Kormanos, V. Sean Cook, (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

MILICENT KORMANYOS, an individual, and MANAGED SOLUTIONS, INC. DIVISION ONE (“MSI”), a Washington corporation, No. 81312-9-I Appellants, UNPUBLISHED OPINION v.

SEAN M. COOK, an individual, and GROUP PURCHASING RESOURCES LLC (“GPR”), a Washington Business Entity,

Respondents.

DWYER, J. — Milicent Kormanyos and Managed Solutions, Inc. appeal

from the trial court’s order granting the defendants’ motion for summary

judgment. Kormanyos and Managed Solutions assert that the trial court entered

the order in error by (1) improperly narrowing the scope of the type of evidence

that can be offered to raise a genuine issue of material fact as to the existence of

damages, (2) failing to view the evidence in the light most favorable to the

nonmoving party, and (3) improperly making a credibility determination. Because

Kormanyos and Managed Solutions do not establish an entitlement to relief, we

affirm.

I

Milicent Kormanyos and Sean Cook were involved in a romantic

relationship. Cook was the owner of a company known as Group Purchasing No. 81312-9-I/2

Resources LLC. In October 2015, Kormanyos and Cook founded Managed

Solutions, Inc. According to a declaration filed by Kormanyos, Cook

subsequently informed Kormanyos that “he was seeing someone else.”

Sometime thereafter, Kormanyos declared, accounts related to a particular client

of Managed Solutions, Life Care Services, “were removed from [Managed

Solutions’] control to an unknown 3rd-party server.” As a result, Kormanyos

asserted, she “was not allowed or able to access or question invoicing, billing,

commissions, tax information, or any other information on financial matters

relating to [Managed Solutions].”

On April 2, 2019, Kormanyos and Managed Solutions filed a complaint

against Cook and Group Purchasing Resources in King County Superior Court. 1

According to the defendants’ motion for summary judgment, the complaint

alleged that “1) Cook appropriated critical assets of Plaintiff Managed Solutions,

Inc. (‘MSI’); 2) . . . Cook usurped [a] business opportunity of [a] Group

Purchasing Organization (‘GPO’) with which MSI conducted business; 3) . . .

Defendants were unjustly enriched by . . . their actions; . . . 4) Defendants

converted . . . assets which belonged to MSI; and 5) . . . Defendants’ actions

warrant the imposition of a constructive trust upon any alleged ill-gotten gains.” 2

On December 20, 2019, Cook and Group Purchasing Resources filed a

motion for summary judgment seeking dismissal of these claims.

1 The record on appeal does not contain a copy of the complaint. However, the

defendants’ motion for summary judgment states, “On April 2, 2019, . . . Plaintiff Kormanyos filed a lawsuit against Defendant Cook and [Group Purchasing Resources].” Given the inadequacy of the record, we rely on this assertion. 2 Because the record does not contain a copy of the complaint, we again rely on

defendants’ motion for summary judgment for a characterization of the claims that were alleged.

2 No. 81312-9-I/3

On March 6, 2020, the trial court heard the defendants’ motion for

summary judgment. During the hearing, plaintiffs’ counsel asserted that a

document entitled “2016 Vision” provided evidence that Kormanyos and

Managed Solutions had suffered damages as a result of the defendants’ alleged

wrongdoing. Notations on this document provided, in relevant part:

Managed Solutions, Inc. 2016 Vision $3,000,000 by end of 2016 in billable sales to company ... How to obtain the $3,000,000.00 ...  GPO[3] • [Life Care Services] (139 locations)  Savings approximately  $250.00 a month x 139 locations= $34,750.00 a month x 12 months- $417,000.00 year. – 3% to GPO= $404,490.00

Plaintiffs’ counsel argued that this document demonstrated that the

account associated with a particular company, Life Care Services, had a value of

$404,490. The trial court questioned this argument, reasoning that the document

itself did not provide evidence that Kormanyos and Managed Solutions had

suffered damages:

THE COURT: The document is not proof of anything other than they mapped out what some hopes were in 2016. [PLAINTIFFS’ COUNSEL]: Well -- THE COURT: You could try to argue at trial. I am not going to be your trial judge. You could try to argue at trial that that somehow represents damages -- [PLAINTIFFS’ COUNSEL]: All right. .... THE COURT: Well only because I am being generous . . . .

3 According to Kormanyos’s declaration, which was attached to the plaintiffs’ response to the defendants’ motion for summary judgment, “GPO means ‘Group Purchasing Organization.’ Th[is] is an internal reference for [a] client by the name of LCS – Life Care Services.”

3 No. 81312-9-I/4

I mean the more I’m thinking about it, you identified a single client. This vision statement is nothing. It is a nothing burger. [PLAINTIFFS’ COUNSEL]: Well sir, it is -- it is something that creates an issue of fact -- THE COURT: No. [PLAINTIFFS’ COUNSEL]: -- because it was created by both parties at the time. THE COURT: But that -- what creates an issue of fact as to damages is an account statement showing revenue taken from this client and then saying, [“]Whoops, now we don’t have that revenue anymore because that client went with him. He has taken that revenue.[”] We don’t have anything. This 2016 document, you could have written down $2 trillion. [PLAINTIFFS’ COUNSEL]: I did no such thing, your honor. I mean -- THE COURT: I know, but your client could have, right? I mean this could have been a moment from the Michael Myers’ movie where he says, [“]$1 million,[”] and then they say, [“]You know that’s actually not a lot of money anymore.[”] He goes, [“]$1 billion.[”] [PLAINTIFFS’ COUNSEL]: That’s the first time I have ever seen a judge do that -- THE COURT: Thank you, but you see my point? You can make up whatever number you wanted in that. [PLAINTIFFS’ COUNSEL]: Well I understand that, sir, but -- THE COURT: So it is not proof of anything. [PLAINTIFFS’ COUNSEL]: Except that these people were in business together and to the extent that either of them had functioning neurons, they would have been doing -- would have been acting in concert together to try to map out the business plan that made sense to them that they thought was reasonably executable. THE COURT: It is a business plan though, that’s not damages. That’s the whole problem. . . . .... THE COURT: . . . . This case shouldn’t go to trial on this. There is nothing there. The vision statement is just air. You could have written down anything that you wanted to. I need contracts, I need revenue, I need something that shows that they were actually going to make money off of this client until he stole it, and I don’t have that, so I am going to grant summary judgment after all on all claims.

Following the hearing, the trial court entered a written order granting the

defendants’ motion for summary judgment.

4 No. 81312-9-I/5

Kormanyos and Managed Solutions appeal.

II

Kormanyos and Managed Solutions contend that the trial court erred by

granting the defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Specifically, Kormanyos

and Managed Solutions assert that the trial court (1) improperly narrowed the

scope of the type of evidence that can be used to raise a genuine issue of

material fact as to the existence of damages, (2) failed to view the evidence in

the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, and (3) improperly made a

credibility determination. We disagree.

A

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Milicent Kormanos, V. Sean Cook, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milicent-kormanos-v-sean-cook-washctapp-2021.