Plese-Graham, LLC v. Loshbaugh

269 P.3d 1038, 164 Wash. App. 530
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 27, 2011
DocketNo. 29575-3-III
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 269 P.3d 1038 (Plese-Graham, LLC v. Loshbaugh) 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
Plese-Graham, LLC v. Loshbaugh, 269 P.3d 1038, 164 Wash. App. 530 (Wash. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Siddoway, J.

¶1 At issue in this case is the personal liability of Robert Loshbaugh, former president of a now-defunct construction company, for obligations arising out of company business that were discussed and documented with a creditor during a period when the company had ceased operations and was administratively dissolved. The trial court granted summary judgment against Mr. Loshbaugh and his marital community on grounds that he agreed to answer personally for the company’s obligation and, alternatively, that his promise that the company would pay could be enforced against him personally because it was made at a time when the corporation was de facto dissolved.

¶2 On appeal, Mr. Loshbaugh argues that because of an alleged failure to bring suit in the name of the real party in interest, neither the company’s creditor nor its principals can enforce his alleged agreement, a position we reject. But we agree that questions of material fact as to Mr. Loshbaugh’s personal liability made summary judgment inappropriate. We reverse the orders granting summary judgment and attorney fees and remand for trial.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶3 For several years up to and including 2008, Ed Loshbaugh & Sons Inc., a licensed general contractor, performed construction work for Plese-Graham LLC, a real estate developer. In 2008, Plese-Graham hired Loshbaugh & Sons to install the water and sewer system for its housing development known as Park Place Addition. In March 2009, after Loshbaugh & Sons underpaid one of its subcontractors, the subcontractor filed a lien against Plese-Graham’s property. Failure to pay the subcontractor was symptomatic of Loshbaugh & Sons financial difficulties at the time. After several claims were made against its bond, the bond was cancelled on May 24, the company lost its contractor’s license, and it ceased operations.

¶4 On June 24, Plese-Graham, which claims its principals were unaware of the extent of Loshbaugh & Sons’ [535]*535financial problems, paid the subcontractor $16,265.12 in exchange for release of its lien. Shortly thereafter, on June 30, Rod Píese, one of two members of Plese-Graham, secured the verbal agreement of Robert Loshbaugh—a Loshbaugh & Sons shareholder and director in addition to being its president—to sign a promissory note reimbursing Plese-Graham’s payment to the subcontractor.

¶5 Mr. Píese and Mr. Loshbaugh disagree as to the capacity in which Mr. Loshbaugh was asked and agreed to sign. Mr. Píese drafted and sent a proposed promissory note identifying “Bob Loshbaugh” as the payor, which Mr. Loshbaugh rejected, asking that Mr. Píese modify it to substitute the company as payor. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 88. Mr. Píese complied and sent a second note, which, apart from the named payor, was identical to the first. Both notes were payable to “Rod V. Píese and Linda A. Píese, husband and wife.” CP at 91. Following several e-mails sent by Mr. Píese in September and October asking whether Mr. Loshbaugh had signed and returned “the note,” Mr. Loshbaugh indicated in e-mails on October 5 and 19 that he had. CP at 69 (“Yes is on way”), 67 (“I mailed that note but if you haven’t received I can mail a copy.”). Mr. Píese denies ever receiving any signed note from Mr. Loshbaugh.

¶6 Loshbaugh & Sons’ corporate license had expired without renewal on June 30, 2009 and the company was administratively dissolved by the secretary of state on October 1, a few days before Mr. Loshbaugh’s written assurances that a note had been signed and returned. Upon dissolution, the company had no assets with which to pay Plese-Graham and other creditors.

¶7 In December 2009, Plese-Graham filed a complaint against Loshbaugh & Sons and Robert Loshbaugh and his wife, among others. The complaint alleged that the defendants had been overpaid as a result of Plese-Graham’s payment of the construction contract price and the additional cost of removing the lien.

[536]*536¶8 Plese-Graham’s claims were subject to mandatory arbitration. In July 2010, an arbitrator found Loshbaugh & Sons, Mr. Loshbaugh, and his marital community jointly and severally liable to Plese-Graham in the amount of $16,265.12, plus interest at 12 percent per annum from June 24, 2009.

¶9 Only Mr. Loshbaugh, individually, appealed the arbitrator’s ruling to superior court. He, and thereafter PleseGraham, moved the court for summary judgment. Both parties’ motions addressed Mr. Loshbaugh’s undisputed promise, although in a disputed capacity, to reimburse Plese-Graham’s payment of the subcontractor and to formalize the agreement with a promissory note payable to Mr. and Mrs. Píese. Plese-Graham alleged two theories of recovery against Mr. Loshbaugh personally: (1) breach by Mr. Loshbaugh of a verbal promise to deliver a personal promissory note and (2) even if his promise was to deliver a corporate note, individual liability based on RCW 23B.02-.040 or a theory of corporate disregard, where his promise was on behalf of a company that Plese-Graham argued was “de facto” dissolved. CP at 102.

¶10 Mr. Loshbaugh opposed Plese-Graham’s motion with his affidavit disputing that he ever agreed, personally, to reimburse Plese-Graham’s payment to the subcontractor. He also argued that enforcement of any such verbal promise, being a promise to answer for the debt of another, was barred by the statute of frauds. He disputed his alleged liability under RCW 23B.02.040 on alternative grounds that (1) Loshbaugh & Sons was not dissolved, de facto or otherwise, at the time he agreed to reimburse Plese-Graham’s payment to the subcontractor and (2) in any event, any such agreement was a permitted “winding up” of the corporation’s business under RCW 23B.02.050. CP at 114.

¶11 At the hearing on the cross motions for summary judgment, Mr. Loshbaugh’s lawyer pointed out for the first time that Plese-Graham, the only named plaintiff, was not the payee named by the promissory notes—something he [537]*537admitted having noticed only that morning. The trial court responded that “I will entertain a motion to join [the Pleses] as parties, if necessary” and the lawyer for Plese-Graham so moved; after hearing Mr. Loshbaugh’s objection, the trial court granted the motion. Report of Proceedings (RP) at 22.

¶12 The trial court granted Plese-Graham’s motion for summary judgment, denied Mr. Loshbaugh’s cross motion, entered an order joining the Pleses as parties, and entered judgment, including an award of fees and costs, in favor of Plese-Graham. Mr. Loshbaugh moved for reconsideration and when that was denied, timely appealed. He assigns error to the trial court’s (1) granting summary judgment to Rod and Linda Píese, who he argues were improperly joined; (2) granting summary judgment in favor of PleseGraham, which was not the designated payee of the promise relied upon for the court’s decision; (3) entering judgment against Mr. Loshbaugh individually absent a basis therefor; and (4) assessing fees and costs against Mr. Loshbaugh.

ANALYSIS

I

¶13 We first address Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
269 P.3d 1038, 164 Wash. App. 530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plese-graham-llc-v-loshbaugh-washctapp-2011.