R.E. DeMarr Property Management, LLC v. Edwin Jacobsen

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedDecember 16, 2025
Docket1455244
StatusUnpublished

This text of R.E. DeMarr Property Management, LLC v. Edwin Jacobsen (R.E. DeMarr Property Management, LLC v. Edwin Jacobsen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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R.E. DeMarr Property Management, LLC v. Edwin Jacobsen, (Va. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Beales, Causey and White UNPUBLISHED

Argued at Alexandria, Virginia

R.E. DEMARR PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, LLC, ET AL. MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 1455-24-4 JUDGE DORIS HENDERSON CAUSEY DECEMBER 16, 2025 EDWIN JACOBSEN

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF LOUDOUN COUNTY Stephen E. Sincavage, Judge

Roy R. Shannon, Jr. (Marc E. Pasekoff; Shannon Peak; Shannon & Wright LLP, on briefs), for appellants.

Thomas K. Plofchan, Jr. (Jacqueline A. Kramer; Westlake Legal Group, PLLC, on brief), for appellee.

Appellants R.E. DeMarr Property Management, LLC, Robert DeMarr, and Lisa DeMarr

(collectively, the DeMarrs) appeal the circuit court’s judgment denying their motion for

reconsideration after the court granted the quiet title on real property (herein Lot 21) to appellee

Edwin Jacobsen. The DeMarrs contend that the circuit court supplanted the LLC Act,1

erroneously focused only on the parties’ operating agreement, and incorrectly allowed Jacobsen

to claim an interest in Lot 21 although he was judicially estopped from doing so. Finding no

error, we affirm the circuit court’s judgment.

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). 1 The “LLC Act” refers to the Virginia Limited Liability Company Act, Code § 13.1-1000 et seq. BACKGROUND

Since 2003, Robert and Lisa DeMarr co-owned Mercure, LLC with Edwin Jacobsen.

Mercure was governed by an operating agreement, wherein Jacobsen owned a 50% membership

interest and Robert and Lisa DeMarr collectively co-owned the other 50% membership interest.2

The operating agreement contains terms that governed what would happen to Mercure in the

event of a bankruptcy filing by either Jacobsen or Robert and Lisa DeMarr, under a section titled

“Termination or Dissolution.” (“The Company shall be terminated in the event any Member . . .

files a petition or answer seeking for himself any reorganization, arrangement, composition,

readjustment, liquidation, dissolution, or similar relief under any statute, law or regulation”).

Article V, Section 5.5 of the operating agreement requires that operating managers3 unanimously

consent to any “contracts of sale.” Article X, Section 10.4(A) contemplates the distribution of

Mercure’s assets following termination: “any Member entitled to any interest in such assets shall

receive such interest therein as a tenant-in-common with all other Members so entitled.”

After the execution of its operating agreement, Mercure acquired a piece of property in

Dulles, Virginia referred to as Lot 21. Mercure then obtained a loan secured by a personal guaranty

from both Jacobsen and Robert and Lisa DeMarr.

Jacobsen filed for bankruptcy in October 2012. Weeks later, in November 2012, the

DeMarrs transferred ownership of Lot 21 to a separate company, appellant R.E. DeMarr Property

Management, without Jacobsen’s consent. Jacobsen did not learn about the transfer to R.E. DeMarr

2 Jacobsen was also the registered agent of Mercure. 3 Pursuant to Article I, Section 1.1(F), “‘Operating Managers’ shall mean the Member or Members selected by the Members at a meeting of Members duly called and held for such purpose to serve as Operating Manager or Operating Managers of the Company.” Jacobsen testified that he was an operating manager of Mercure. Robert and Lisa DeMarr signed the deed conveying Lot 21 from Mercure to R.E. DeMarr Property Management as operating managers of Mercure. -2- Property Management until 2021. Jacobsen’s bankruptcy action was dismissed in late 2012 due to

his failure to comply with that court’s order. He refiled in 2013. During the 2013 action, Jacobsen

failed to disclose his ownership interests in either Lot 21 or Mercure. Upon his own motion, the

bankruptcy court dismissed Jacobsen’s case with prejudice in December of 2013.

Mercure failed to pay its licensing fee to the Commonwealth in December 2013. In 2015,

Jacobsen emailed Robert and Lisa DeMarr, asking for an update about his $185,000 investment

in Lot 21. The parties did not further address the status of Mercure or Jacobsen’s ownership at

that time.

In 2021, Jacobsen filed for quiet title on Lot 21. After a three-day bench trial, in August

2024, the circuit court found that Jacobsen’s October 2012 bankruptcy filing terminated Mercure

pursuant to the terms of the operating agreement. The circuit court also held that Mercure was

dissolved by operation of law in December of 2013 when the LLC failed to pay its licensing fee to

the Commonwealth. Moreover, the circuit court said that a decision by the LLC would have

required approval by all members pursuant to the Mercure operating agreement. Because Jacobsen

never formally separated from Mercure, and did not agree to the transfer of Lot 21 to R.E. DeMarr

Property Management, the circuit court found that the transfer was unauthorized. Lastly, the circuit

court decided that there was no proof of judicial estoppel because the 2013 bankruptcy filing

occurred after the unauthorized transfer of Lot 21. Ultimately, the circuit court granted quiet title to

the “entities determined by the operation of law” upon the termination of Mercure (pursuant to the

“Termination or Dissolution” provisions) and invalidated the deed transferring Lot 21 to Robert and

Lisa DeMarr’s other business.

The circuit court denied the DeMarrs’ subsequent motion for reconsideration. The DeMarrs

appealed, asserting that the operating agreement allowed for a majority of members to agree to a

transfer of property. They also argued that Jacobsen was estopped from claiming an interest

-3- because of his inconsistent statements made during the 2013 bankruptcy filing and the 2021 quiet

title action.

ANALYSIS

I. Standard of review

The judgment of the circuit court will only be set aside if “it appears from the evidence

that such judgment is plainly wrong or without evidence to support it.” Callison v. Glick, 297

Va. 275, 287 (2019) (quoting Code § 8.01-680). Factual findings are reviewed in the light most

favorable to the prevailing party below, Jacobsen. Id.

The circuit court’s application of law to facts is reviewed de novo. Chamberlain v.

Marshall Auto & Truck Ctr., 293 Va. 238, 242 (2017). Like contract law, the appellate court’s

interpretation of an operating agreement presents a question of law subject to de novo review.

Sch. Bd. of Newport News v. Commonwealth, 279 Va. 460, 467 (2010). De novo review also

applies to the interpretation of statutory definitions and their plain meanings. Sarafin v.

Commonwealth, 288 Va. 320, 324 (2014); Miller v. Commonwealth, 64 Va. App. 527, 537

(2015). Additionally, interpretations of Rules 5A:18 and 5A:20 requires de novo review as

questions of law. Brown v. Commonwealth, 279 Va. 210, 217 (2010) (5A:18); Jay v.

Commonwealth, 275 Va. 510, 517 (2008) (5A:20).

An abuse of discretion standard applies to the issue of judicial estoppel. Bentley Funding

Group, LLC v. SK&R Group, LLC, 269 Va. 315, 323-24 (2005) (noting that “judicial estoppel is

an equitable doctrine, ‘invoked in the discretion of the [trial] court’” (alteration in original)

(quoting King v. Herbert J. Thomas Mem. Hosp., 159 F.3d 192, 196 (4th Cir. 1998))).

II. The circuit court did not err by rejecting the DeMarrs’ argument that Jacobsen’s membership rights were restricted by his dissociation from Mercure.

The DeMarrs first contend that the circuit court was plainly wrong in finding that

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