Rawoot v. Bynum

21 Va. Cir. 100, 1990 Va. Cir. LEXIS 286
CourtFairfax County Circuit Court
DecidedMay 22, 1990
DocketCase Nos. (Chancery) 113738 and (Law) 93497
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Va. Cir. 100 (Rawoot v. Bynum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Fairfax County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rawoot v. Bynum, 21 Va. Cir. 100, 1990 Va. Cir. LEXIS 286 (Va. Super. Ct. 1990).

Opinion

By JUDGE JACK B. STEVENS

The Court has had these cases under advisement in connection with several motions filed by the parties. For the reasons stated below, the Rawoots’ Motion to Consolidate is granted, the Bynums’ Plea in Bar is denied, the Bynums’ Demurrer is overruled, and the Bynums’ Motion to Quash is granted in part and denied in part.

Briefly, the background of these cases for purposes of decision is that the Rawoots purchased a restaurant located in Shenandoah County from the Bynums on May 8, 1989. Payment of the $475,000 purchase price was structured as (1) a nominal cash payment, (2) assumption of existing obligations, and (3) execution of five promissory notes of varying principal and due dates totalling $286,000. Each of those notes contained acceleration clauses which provided that default under one would constitute default under all five.

Sometime following the sale, the Rawoots apparently formed a corporation known as the Edinburg Mill Corporation, to which ownership of the subject real and personal property was transferred. The Rawoots thereafter missed the first payment on September 1, 1989 ($50,000 of principal under Note One), and the Bynums filed a lawsuit (At Law No. 93497) seeking damages, costs, and attorneys’ fees as provided in the notes.

[101]*101The Rawoots admit having executed the notes but raise assorted defenses including fraud, constructive fraud, and fraud in the inducement of the underlying sales contract. Rather than resting on these defenses, the Rawoots have also filed a separate chancery suit (In Chancery No. 113738) in which they affirmatively plead these various frauds together with an allegation of civil conspiracy. The Rawoots seek (1) rescission of the sales contract, deed, bill of sale, and promissory notes; (2) indemnification under the contract for the expenses related to David Bynum’s unemployment claim; (3) compensatory damages of $500,000 (treble $150,000 under the conspiracy count); (4) punitive damages of $200,000; and (5) costs and fees.

Simultaneously with the filing of the Bill of Complaint, the Rawoots initiated the issuance of a subpoena to the Bynums’ accountant. This subpoena request was allegedly not mailed to the Bynums’ counsel or to the Bynums. Indeed, the Bynums claim they only learned of the existence of the chancery suit when their accountant asked them how to respond to the subpoena.

The Bynums have filed a Motion to Quash the subpoena. The Bynums have also filed a Plea in Bar in which they argue that the chancery case must be submitted to arbitration in Shenandoah County pursuant to the contract. They have also demurred to each count of the chancery action.

Counsel for the Bynums has requested that portions of their Demurrer be treated as a Motion for Summary Judgment, relying in part on certain Requests for Admission served on the Rawoots some time after the Demurrer was filed. The Rawoots properly object to this style of pleading. The Demurrer shall be treated as just a Demurrer.

The motion which takes precedence is the Bynums’ Plea in Bar. The Court will treat this plea as (1) a Motion to Compel Arbitration under | 8.01-581.02 and (2) a Motion to Stay these proceedings. Arbitration clauses such as the one included at para. 23 of the instant contract are generally enforceable pursuant to 8 8.01-581.01:

[A] provision in a written contract to submit to arbitration any controversy thereafter arising between the parties is valid, enforceable, and irrevocable, except upon such grounds as [102]*102exist at law or in equity for the revocation of any contract. (Emphasis added.)

The term "revocation" in contract law is generally associated either with offers or with letters of credit and not with entire contracts. The Court has found no reported cases enumerating the grounds for "revoking” a contract, whether under Virginia law or under the Uniform Law from which this provision . was derived. The factual allegations of the Rawoots’ Bill of Complaint are that:

(1) the Bynums exaggerated the restaurant’s earning capacity by roughly $100,000 per year (paras. 15, 16, and 17);

(2) they misrepresented David Bynum’s intentions to terminate his employment with the restaurant (paras. 16 and 20(B));

(3) they misrepresented the identity of the true owners of the property (paras. 19 and 20(A)); and

(4) they misrepresented the condition of a certain piece of kitchen equipment (a deep fat fryer that turned out to leak oil) (paras. 19 and 20(C)).

These allegations amount at most to fraud in the inducement. Nevertheless, the contract in question would be voidable at the Rawoots* option if they succeed in proving these allegations. See Restatement 2d Contracts sects. 7, 162, and 164; and 17 Am. Jur. 2d Contracts sect. 151.

The Court is satisfied that fraud in the inducement does constitute a ground for "revoking" a contract as that term is employed in § 8.01-581.01. See generally 11 A.L.R. 4th 774. The arbitration clause is therefore not enforceable as to the fraud here alleged. The Bynums’ Plea in Bar will accordingly be denied. Lastly, the Rawoots’ decision to resist arbitration is taken as a waiver of their rights under para. 23. If the Rawoots fail to avoid the contract, they will not be permitted to compel arbitration as to any remaining issues.

The Rawoots have also filed Motions to Consolidate the Law and Chancery actions. The Bynums oppose this Motion, claiming that the law action seeks to enforce promissory notes while the chancery suit involves different parties and seeks unrelated relief from a sales contract. This argument is buttressed by § 8.3-803, which permits a note-[103]*103holder to maintain an action "on either the instrument or the obligation.”

The U.C.C. provision just cited does offer the note-holder a choice of alternative proceedings, but it does not purport to tie the obligee’s hands. The Rawoots have chosen to challenge the underlying contract by invoking the equitable remedy of rescission. Consolidation of these two matters is entirely appropriate, and the Court so orders since avoidance of the contract is a good defense to the notes. The cases being consolidated, it is unnecessary to address the Bynums' contention that the default is not within the scope of the arbitration agreement.

The next matter concerns the Bynums’ multi-faceted Demurrer. Their first contention is that the Rawoots may not invoke this Court’s equitable jurisdiction because they have a full and adequate remedy at law. As explained in 16 M.J. Rescission, Cancellation and Reformation sect. 3, however, the equitable remedy of rescission is within the exclusive jurisdiction of equity, notwithstanding that the facts which support rescission may also be available as a legal defense. The Court is unwilling at this stage to conclude that rescission is an inappropriate remedy.

The Bynums then contend that the alleged misrepresentations are, as a matter of law, wholly immaterial to the substance of the contract and therefore cannot form the basis of fraud. As before, this theory must be rejected as an attempt to draw conclusions from facts which are either in dispute or as yet unproven.

The next two grounds for the Demurrer concern alleged deficiencies as to the identity of the plaintiffs.

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Bluebook (online)
21 Va. Cir. 100, 1990 Va. Cir. LEXIS 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rawoot-v-bynum-vaccfairfax-1990.