Otr Associates v. Ibc Services
This text of 801 A.2d 407 (Otr Associates v. Ibc Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
OTR ASSOCIATES, Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
IBC SERVICES, INC. a/k/a International Blimpie Corporation, a/k/a Blimpie International, Inc. and Garden State Blimpie, INC., Defendants-Appellants.
Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.
*408 David Scott Lafferty, Hackensack, argued the cause for appellants (Lafferty, Suh & Herlinsky, attorneys; John F. Verhey and Julie Garvey Davis of the Chicago firm of Seidler & McErlean, of counsel; Mr. Lafferty, on the brief).
Lawrence H. Wertheim, Woodbridge, argued the cause for respondent (Greenbaum, Rowe, Smith, Ravin, Davis & Himmel, attorneys; Mr. Wertheim, of counsel and on the brief).
Before Judges PRESSLER, CIANCIA and FUENTES.
The opinion of the court was delivered by PRESSLER, P.J.A.D.
The single dispositive issue raised by this appeal is whether the trial court, based on its findings of fact following a bench trial, was justified, as a matter of law, in piercing the corporate veil and thus holding a parent corporation liable for the debt incurred by its wholly owned subsidiary. We are satisfied that the facts, both undisputed and as found, present a textbook illustration of circumstances mandating corporate-veil piercing.
Plaintiff OTR Associates, a limited partnership, owns a shopping mall in Edison, New Jersey, in which it leased space in 1985 for use by a Blimpie franchisee, Samyrna, Inc., a corporation owned by Sam Iskander and his wife. The franchise agreement, styled as a licensing agreement, had been entered into in 1984 between Samyrna and the parent company, then known as International Blimpie Corporation, whose name was changed in 1985 to Astor Restaurant Group, Inc., and again in 1991 or 1992 to Blimpie International, Inc. Thus the three names denote the *409 same corporation at different stages of its existence, and we refer to it hereafter as Blimpie. Blimpie was the sole owner of a subsidiary named IBC Services, Inc. (IBC), created for the single purpose of holding the lease on premises occupied by a Blimpie franchisee. Accordingly, it was IBC that entered into the lease with OTR in July 1985 and, on the same day and apparently with OTR's consent, subleased the space to the franchisee. The history of the tenancy was marked by regular and increasingly substantial rent arrearages, and it was terminated by a dispossess judgment and warrant for removal in 1996. In 1998 OTR commenced this action for unpaid rent, then in the amount of close to $150,000, against Blimpie under both its present name and its former name, International Blimpie Corporation. It also joined as defendants the leasing subsidiary, IBC, as well as Garden State Blimpie, Inc., another wholly-owned leaseholding subsidiary of Blimpie to whom IBC had assigned the lease in 1991 without notice to the landlord in violation of the terms of the lease requiring such notice.[1] The action was tried in December 2000, and judgment was entered in favor of OTR against Blimpie as well as the two judgment-proof subsidiaries in the full amount of the rent arrearages plus interest thereon, then some $208,000. Blimpie appeals, and we affirm.
We consider the facts in the context of the well-settled principles respecting corporate-veil piercing. Nearly three-quarters of a century ago, the Court of Errors and Appeals, in Ross v. Pennsylvania R.R. Co., 106 N.J.L. 536, 538, 539, 148 A. 741 (E.& A.1930), made clear that while "ownership alone of capital stock in one corporation by another, does not create any relationship that by reason of which the stockholding company would be liable for torts of the other," nevertheless "[w]here a corporation holds stock of another, not for the purpose of participating in the affairs of the other corporation, in the normal and usual manner, but for the purpose of control, so that the subsidiary company may be used as a mere agency or instrumentality for the stockholding company, such company will be liable for injuries due to the negligence of the subsidiary." The conceptual basis of the rule enunciated by Ross, which is equally applicable to contractual obligations, is simply that "[i]t is where the corporate form is used as a shield behind which injustice is sought to be done by those who have control of it that equity penetrates the [corporate] veil." Irving Inv. Corp. v. Gordon, 3 N.J. 217, 223, 69 A.2d 725 (1949). And, as the Supreme Court phrased it in State, Dep't. of Envtl. Prot. v. Ventron Corp., 94 N.J. 473, 500, 468 A.2d 150 (1983), "[t]he purpose of the doctrine of piercing the corporate veil is to prevent an independent corporation from being used to defeat the ends of justice, ... to perpetrate fraud, to accomplish a crime, or otherwise to evade the law." See also Tung v. Briant Park Homes, Inc., 287 N.J.Super. 232, 239-240, 670 A.2d 1092 (App.Div.1996).
Thus, the basic finding that must be made to enable the court to pierce the corporate veil is "that the parent so dominated the subsidiary that it had no separate existence but was merely a conduit for the parent." Ventron, supra, 94 N.J. at 501, 468 A.2d 150. But beyond domination, the court must also find that the "parent has abused the privilege of incorporation by using the subsidiary to perpetrate a fraud or injustice, or otherwise to circumvent the law." Ibid. And the hallmarks of that abuse are typically the engagement *410 of the subsidiary in no independent business of its own but exclusively the performance of a service for the parent and, even more importantly, the undercapitalization of the subsidiary rendering it judgment-proof. Ibid.
Finally, we point out that these principles are hardly novel to New Jersey, constituting rather a fundamental doctrine of corporate jurisprudence. See, e.g., cases collected in J.A. Bryant, Annotation, Liability of Corporations for Contracts of Subsidiaries, 38 A.L.R.3d 1102 (1971), and Supplementary Case Service. See also Adolf A. Berle, Jr., The Theory of Enterprise Entity, 47 Colum. L.Rev. 343 (1947); Note, Piercing the Corporate Law Veil: The Alter Ego Doctrine Under Federal Common law, 95 Harv. L.Rev. 853 (1982). And see Restatement (Second) of Agency § 14M appendix, Reporter's Notes (1984).
Blimpie concedes that it formed IBC for the sole purpose of holding the lease on the premises of a Blimpie franchisee.[2] It is also clear that IBC had virtually no assets other than the lease itself, which, in the circumstances, was not an asset at all but only a liability since IBC had no independent right to alienate its interest therein but was subject to Blimpie's exclusive control. It had no business premises of its own, sharing the New York address of Blimpie. It had no income other than the rent payments by the franchisee, which appear to have been made directly to OTR. It does not appear that it had its own employees or office staff. We further note that Blimpie not only retained the right to approve the premises to be occupied by the franchisee and leased by IBC, but itself, in its Georgia headquarters, managed all the leases held by its subsidiaries on franchisee premises. As explained by Charles G. Leaness, presently Executive Vice President of Blimpie and formerly corporate counsel as well as vice-president and secretary of IBC, in 1996, the year of IBC's eviction for non-payment of rent, he was Blimpie's Corporate Counsel Compliance Officer.
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801 A.2d 407, 353 N.J. Super. 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/otr-associates-v-ibc-services-njsuperctappdiv-2002.