Saint Paul Building LLC v. Commonwealth Properties Incorporated, John Rupp, ...

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedMay 28, 2024
Docketa231580
StatusPublished

This text of Saint Paul Building LLC v. Commonwealth Properties Incorporated, John Rupp, ... (Saint Paul Building LLC v. Commonwealth Properties Incorporated, John Rupp, ...) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Opinion

This opinion is nonprecedential except as provided by Minn. R. Civ. App. P. 136.01, subd. 1(c).

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A23-1580

Saint Paul Building LLC, Respondent,

vs.

Commonwealth Properties Incorporated, Defendant,

John Rupp, Appellant.

Filed May 28, 2024 Affirmed Ede, Judge

Ramsey County District Court File No. 62-CV-20-4031

Richard C. Landon, Kristin M. Stock, Lathrop GPM LLP, Minneapolis, Minnesota (for respondent)

Jack E. Pierce, Matthew D. Goldfine, Bernick Lifson, P.A., Minneapolis, Minnesota (for appellant)

Considered and decided by Ede, Presiding Judge; Reyes, Judge; and Larson, Judge.

NONPRECEDENTIAL OPINION

EDE, Judge

In this appeal from an amended judgment in a commercial lease dispute, appellant

challenges the district court’s decision to pierce the corporate veil and add him as judgment

debtor. Because we conclude that appellant forfeited any procedural-due-process argument and that the district court did not abuse its discretion in piercing the corporate veil and

adding appellant as judgment debtor, we affirm.

FACTS

Appellant John Rupp is the sole owner and shareholder of Commonwealth

Properties Incorporated (Commonwealth). Rupp owns several ventures and various real

estate, as his business is the acquisition, renovation, and management of historic properties.

Rupp holds each property in an individual limited liability company (LLC). During the

events relevant to this case, Commonwealth’s function was to deal with the administration

and bookkeeping of Rupp’s LLCs.

Beginning in 2010, Commonwealth operated from the ninth and tenth floors of the

Saint Paul Building, which is owned by respondent Saint Paul Building LLC (SPB). Rupp

owned SPB until he sold it to a third party in 2018. In September 2018, following Rupp’s

sale of SPB, Commonwealth entered into a three-year commercial lease agreement with

SPB. In January 2020, SPB informed Commonwealth that it was in default under the lease

for failure to pay rent “from and after June 2019, totaling $48,355.57.” In July 2020, after

pursuing a successful eviction action to vacate Commonwealth from the premises, SPB

filed suit against Commonwealth for breach of the lease agreement. Rupp was not a named

party in the lawsuit at that time.

After taking Rupp’s deposition, SPB moved for summary judgment against

Commonwealth. The parties later notified the district court that they had reached a

settlement agreement. Consistent with the parties’ settlement agreement, the district court

entered judgment against Commonwealth in the amount of $443,166.29. SPB later filed an

2 affidavit of identification of judgment debtor and then requested that the district court order

Commonwealth to complete a financial disclosure form, as SPB claimed that

Commonwealth had not satisfied the judgment. In connection with that effort, SPB deposed

Rupp again.

Following those proceedings, SPB moved to amend the judgment to pierce the

corporate veil and add Rupp as judgment debtor. SPB attached transcripts from Rupp’s

depositions as exhibits in support of the motion. Commonwealth opposed SPB’s motion,

including by arguing that Rupp was neither served an amended pleading nor afforded an

opportunity to answer and defend against SPB’s claims.

The district court continued a hearing on SPB’s motion to amend the judgment to

afford SPB an opportunity to serve Rupp personally. At the later hearing, citing its multiple

unsuccessful attempts to complete personal service upon Rupp, SPB moved the district

court to allow service by publication. The district court granted SPB’s motion. SPB then

served Rupp with the motion to amend the judgment via publication. The parties later

appeared before the district court for another hearing, at which they argued the merits of

SPB’s veil-piercing claim. After filing an order and memorandum granting SPB’s motion

to amend the judgment to add Rupp as judgment debtor, the district court entered an

amended judgment.

Rupp appeals.

3 DECISION

I. Rupp forfeited any procedural-due-process argument.

Rupp contends that it was procedurally improper and a violation of due process for

the district court to add him as judgment debtor. Noting that SPB first moved under

Minnesota Rule of Civil Procedure 52.02—which governs amendment of district court

findings—Rupp maintains that the district court erred in granting SPB’s motion because

there were “no findings to amend” and because “[SPB’s] motion on its face was untimely.”

In response, SPB questions whether Rupp sufficiently preserved this issue for appeal. We

agree with SPB that Rupp has forfeited his procedural-due-process argument.

It is true that SPB initially moved to amend the judgment to pierce the corporate

veil and add a judgment debtor under rule 52.02, and that Commonwealth’s opposition to

that motion included an argument that the motion was untimely under the Minnesota Rules

of Civil Procedure. But SPB later served Rupp with amended pleadings seeking to amend

the judgment to pierce the corporate veil and add Rupp as judgment debtor—as well as

supporting memoranda—none of which cited or relied on rule 52.02. And Rupp’s

memorandum in opposition to SPB’s amended motion did not raise any procedural-due-

process argument beyond the following footnote:

While Rupp has now been served with [SPB’s] motion in this matter, he maintains his position that proper procedure has not been followed in seeking to add a judgment debtor following entry of judgment. Without waiving this argument, Rupp relies on what is contained within Commonwealth’s previous memorandum in opposition to [SPB’s] motion on this issue.

4 This footnote, which contains no citations to legal authority, is the only mention

Rupp made to the district court about a purported procedural defect in SPB’s amended

motion. In fact, when the parties appeared before the district court for a hearing in August

2023, Rupp failed to assert that amending the judgment would be procedurally improper

or that doing so would violate due process. Instead, the parties argued the merits of SPB’s

request that the district court pierce the corporate veil and add Rupp as judgment debtor.

Not surprisingly, the district court’s memorandum accompanying its order on SPB’s

motion to amend the judgment did not consider any procedural-due-process claim by Rupp.

“A reviewing court must generally consider only those issues that the record shows

were presented [to] and considered by the [district] court in deciding the matter before it.”

Thiele v. Stich, 425 N.W.2d 580, 582 (Minn. 1988) (quotation omitted); see also Michaels

v. First USA Title, LLC, 844 N.W.2d 528, 532 (Minn. App. 2014) (citing Thiele and stating

that “[w]e . . . only review legal questions that the record demonstrates were actually raised

in, and decided by, the district court”). Because Rupp presented no procedural-due-process

argument to the district court in response to SPB’s amended pleadings, and because the

district court did not consider it, we conclude that the claim is forfeited and therefore

decline to address it. See Stone v. Invitation Homes, Inc., 4 N.W.3d 489, 493-95 (Minn.

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