Monroe v. Monroe

CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 20, 2023
Docket211071
StatusPublished

This text of Monroe v. Monroe (Monroe v. Monroe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Monroe v. Monroe, (Va. 2023).

Opinion

PRESENT: All the Justices

JOSEPH MONROE, DERIVATIVELY ON BEHALF OF MEPCO MATERIALS, INC. OPINION BY v. Record No. 211071 JUSTICE D. ARTHUR KELSEY JULY 20, 2023 LISA WAY MONROE, ET AL.

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF STAFFORD COUNTY J. Bruce Strickland, Judge

In 2018, Joseph Monroe filed a shareholder-derivative suit against his wife, Lisa Monroe,

the majority shareholder of a closely held corporation. The trial court rejected the derivative

claim and sanctioned Joseph Monroe for pursuing it. On appeal, we vacate the sanctions order,

finding that it violated Rule 1:1 and that Joseph Monroe was the proper party to appeal it.

I.

Lisa Monroe and Joseph Monroe were married co-owners of MEPCO Materials, Inc.,

with 51% and 49% ownership stakes, respectively. Joseph Monroe filed for divorce in October

2018. A week later, Joseph Monroe, as the sole director at that time, caused MEPCO to file a

civil action against Lisa Monroe, the majority shareholder, for conversion and breach of

fiduciary duty, alleging that she had used MEPCO funds for personal use.

The following year, Joseph Monroe resigned his position at MEPCO and then sought to

convert the action against Lisa Monroe to a shareholder-derivative action pursuant to Code

§ 13.1-672.1. He filed a petition to intervene, a motion to convert the existing suit to a derivative

action, and a motion to amend the complaint. The trial court granted the motions, ordering that

“Joseph Monroe is hereby made a plaintiff in this case,” 1 J.A. at 41, and that the suit be

converted to a derivative action. Joseph Monroe’s amended complaint, ostensibly asserted on behalf of the corporation, again alleged conversion and breach of fiduciary duty against Lisa

Monroe.

In April 2021, the trial court held a two-day trial. At the end of the plaintiff’s case, Lisa

Monroe moved to strike the evidence. The court found the evidence insufficient, granted the

motion to strike, and opined that it was “apparent . . . based on the totality of the circumstances

that Mr. Monroe did not bring this action to benefit the corporation. This suit, it’s very clear,

was filed for his benefit alone.” 2 id. at 802. “That will conclude this matter,” the court

remarked after its ruling, “unless either of you has something else I need to address.” Id. at 804.

Lisa Monroe’s counsel then requested “leave to file for post-judgment sanctions.” Id.

Acknowledging that the trial court “remains in jurisdiction over this matter for 21 days after it

rules,” counsel stated, “I think we can get in here before then.” Id. at 806. The trial court told

Lisa Monroe’s counsel to “file whatever motion you need.” Id. at 810. “I’m not saying I’m

going to grant it,” the trial court clarified, “I’m not saying I’ll even grant a hearing on it, but

we’ll address it that way.” Id.

On May 12, 2021, the trial court memorialized its ruling in a “Final Order” drafted by

Lisa Monroe’s counsel. 1 id. at 178-80. The Final Order granted Lisa Monroe’s motion to strike

and dismissed the complaint and the remaining counterclaim with prejudice. The Final Order

concluded by stating:

Defendants are free to file post judgement [sic] motions for sanctions against Plaintiff and his witness Kristine Williams. Any such motion filed is to be set at the discretion of the Court. The Court makes no finding of the validity of any such motion at this time; and This matter is final.

Id. at 179.

2 On May 18, 2021, Lisa Monroe filed a post-judgment motion for sanctions. The trial

court did not enter any subsequent orders modifying, suspending, or vacating the May 12, 2021

Final Order, and Lisa Monroe did not request any such orders. The trial court held a hearing on

the sanctions motion on August 16, 2021. After the hearing, in an order dated August 31, 2021,

the trial court granted the motion for sanctions pursuant to Code § 13.1-672.5 and ordered Joseph

Monroe to pay $70,097.11 to MEPCO and Lisa Monroe. 1

II.

On appeal, Joseph Monroe argues that the trial court’s sanctions award against him

should be vacated for two reasons. First, the court entered the sanctions order after the

expiration of Rule 1:1’s mandatory 21-day period. Second, the court’s finding of bad faith was

unwarranted. Lisa Monroe disagrees with both assertions and adds that we need not address

either of them because Joseph Monroe, in his individual capacity, is not a proper party to this

appeal.

A.

We first address Lisa Monroe’s assertion that the appeal should be dismissed outright

because Joseph Monroe “is a separate and independent entity from Appellant.” Appellee’s Br. at

11. The notice of appeal, she points out, identifies the Appellant as “Joseph Monroe,

derivatively on behalf of MEPCO Materials, Inc.,” 1 J.A. at 304 (altering capitalization), but the

trial court only sanctioned Joseph Monroe in his individual capacity. The appeal should be

summarily dismissed, she reasons, because Joseph Monroe in a derivative capacity appealed but

1 Joseph Monroe represents on appeal that the circuit court entered a final divorce decree on May 5, 2022. Appellant’s Br. at 5 n.1. Neither Lisa nor Joseph Monroe suggests that the divorce decree has any effect on the issues raised in this appeal.

3 was not sanctioned, and Joseph Monroe in his individual capacity was sanctioned but did not

We appreciate the premise underlying this argument and, in other contexts, accept it as

settled law. It is generally true that absent special circumstances, “[a] person who sues or is sued

in his official or representative capacity is, in contemplation of law, regarded as a person distinct

from the same person in his individual capacity and is a stranger to his rights or liabilities as an

individual.” Reineck v. Lemen, 292 Va. 710, 722 (2016) (citation omitted). 2 This distinction

applies to various capacities in which a litigant can appear in court. See generally Restatement

(Second) of Judgments § 36 cmts. a-g (1982) (describing different consequences of such

capacities). 3

The case before us, however, is a shareholder-derivative action. At its inception, what we

now call a derivative action was an “invention of equity,” 12B William Meade Fletcher & Carol

A. Jones, Fletcher Cyclopedia of the Law of Corporations § 5908, at 536, 539 (rev. ed. 2017),

that “courts of equity” employed to vindicate a corporation’s legal interests against the

2 In Reineck, the curator of an estate filed suit on behalf of the estate, but the circuit court awarded attorney fees against him in his individual capacity. We vacated the award because the curator had been previously appointed to represent the estate and had not at any time appeared in an individual capacity during the estate litigation. Reineck, 292 Va. at 722-24. We also expressly declined to consider “what other avenues may be available for sanctions and attorney’s fees when a party in a representative capacity has filed a frivolous suit or one for vindictive or harassing purposes.” Id. at 723 n.4. 3 See, e.g., Hawthorne v. VanMarter, 279 Va. 566, 575-76 (2010) (concluding that administrators of an estate “did not become aggrieved parties in the case merely by virtue of their desire to recover the fees purportedly owed to them” and that they were “not entitled to file the present appeal in a pro se capacity”); Kone v. Wilson, 272 Va. 59, 62-63 (2006) (concluding that the personal representative of a decedent was authorized to file a wrongful-death action only in his representative capacity and not “pro se”); cf. Vaughn v.

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