This opinion is nonprecedential except as provided by Minn.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NONPRECEDENTIAL OPINION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.
2024) (rejecting as forfeited an appellant’s attempt to raise a legal argument for the first
time on appeal).
5 II. The district court did not abuse its discretion in piercing the corporate veil and adding Rupp as judgment debtor.
Rupp contends that the district court improperly pierced the corporate veil. He
asserts that there was insufficient evidence to support the district court’s decision that
Commonwealth was not run as a corporation. Rupp also argues that, because SPB entered
a commercial transaction with Commonwealth knowing that Rupp was not going to
guarantee Commonwealth’s obligations, there is no element of injustice to SPB. In
response, SPB maintains that the district court’s decision to add Rupp as judgment debtor
is supported by the evidence, the factors set forth in Victoria Elevator Co. v. Meriden Grain
Co., 283 N.W.2d 509, 512 (Minn. 1979), and the need to avoid a fundamental injustice.
SPB has the better argument.
The district court “may pierce the corporate veil to hold a party liable for the acts of
a corporate entity if the entity is used for a fraudulent purpose or the party is the alter ego
of the entity.” Equity Tr. Co. Custodian ex rel. Eisenmenger IRA v. Cole, 766 N.W.2d 334,
339 (Minn. App. 2009) (citing Victoria Elevator, 283 N.W.2d at 512) (other citation
omitted). Courts use a two-prong test to determine whether a party is the alter ego of an
entity. Id. at 339-41. At the first prong of the test, “courts look to the reality and not form,
with how the corporation operated and the individual defendant’s relationship to that
operation.” Id. at 339 (quoting Hoyt Props., Inc. v. Prod. Res. Grp., L.L.C., 736 N.W.2d
313, 318 (Minn. 2007)). As elaborated on below, there are eight “alter ego” factors relevant
to this inquiry. Id. “The second prong of the test requires a showing that piercing of the
corporate veil is necessary to avoid injustice or fundamental unfairness.” Id. at 340.
6 “Piercing the corporate veil is an equitable remedy that is intended to avoid
injustice.” Aaron Carlson Corp. v. Cohen, 933 N.W.2d 63, 69 (Minn. 2019). “A district
court’s exercise of its equitable powers is reviewed for an abuse of discretion.” Cole, 766
N.W.2d at 339; see also Nadeau v. Ramsey Cnty., 277 N.W.2d 520, 524 (Minn. 1979)
(“Granting equitable relief is within the sound discretion of the [district] court. Only a clear
abuse of that discretion will result in reversal.”). “The factual findings made in support of
the decision to pierce are reviewed for clear error on appeal.” Cole, 766 N.W.2d at 339
(citing Minn. R. Civ. P. 52.01). “[T]he clear-error standard does not contemplate a
reweighing of the evidence, inherent or otherwise; it is a review of the record to confirm
that evidence exists to support the decision.” In re Civ. Commitment of Kenney, 963
N.W.2d 214, 222 (Minn. 2021)
We next address each prong of the Victoria Elevator test in turn.
A. “Alter Ego” Factors
As to the first Victoria Elevator prong, eight factors guide our analysis of whether
a corporation or LLC is an “alter ego” or “mere instrumentality”: (1) “insufficient
capitalization for purposes of corporate undertaking”; (2) “failure to observe corporate
formalities”; (3) “nonpayment of dividends”; (4) “insolvency of debtor corporation at time
of transaction in question”; (5) “siphoning of funds by dominant shareholder”;
(6) “nonfunctioning of other officers and directors”; (7) “absence of corporate records”;
and (8) “existence of corporation as merely facade for individual dealings.” Id. (quotation
omitted).
7 Here, the district court made factual findings on several of the “alter ego” factors
and determined that “Rupp’s relationship, as the sole shareholder, with Commonwealth,
the corporate entity, resembles something more akin to the operator of a shell game at an
old-time carnival than a president of a corporate entity.” As explained below, based on our
review of the record and application of the eight “alter ego” factors, we conclude that the
district court’s factual findings were not clearly erroneous and that the district court did not
abuse its discretion in determining that Commonwealth is an alter ego of Rupp.
1. Insufficient Capitalization for Purposes of Corporate Undertaking
The district court found that, “[b]y design, Commonwealth is and was
undercapitalized for corporate undertaking” because “[i]t is capitalized only to the extent
that . . . Rupp wants it to be capitalized.” This finding is not clearly erroneous because it is
supported by the record.
Rupp testified during his deposition that he contributed “close to $3 million over the
years into Commonwealth to cover its operating costs” and that there were “substantial
losses every year throughout the history of the company.” Rupp admitted that
Commonwealth “never earned any money from third parties” and “was never a business
that provided services to any other entity or any other individual.” Rupp stated that
Commonwealth “was never intended to have anything,” that “[i]t never had anything[,]”
and that “[i]t doesn’t have anything.” Rupp also testified that Commonwealth had no
ownership interests in either real estate or another business entity.
8 Considering the foregoing, the district court did not clearly err in finding that
Commonwealth was insufficiently capitalized for purposes of corporate undertaking and
did not abuse its discretion in determining that this factor favors piercing the corporate veil.
2. Failure to Observe Corporate Formalities
The district court found that Commonwealth’s business filings were current with
the Minnesota Secretary of State, but still determined that “other corporate formalities were
lacking, such as proper documentation and corporate records related to purported loans
between Rupp and Commonwealth.” This finding is grounded in the evidence before the
district court.
The record reflects that Commonwealth accounted for the money it received not as
revenue but as personal loans from Rupp, who was Commonwealth’s sole shareholder. No
formal loan agreements or other documentation existed. Commonwealth owed $2.7 million
to Rupp personally and never made a payment on any of its “loans” from Rupp. According
to Rupp’s deposition testimony, Commonwealth dealt solely with the administration and
bookkeeping of Rupp’s LLCs and never earned any money from third parties. “[R]ather
than each of [his] assets and businesses hiring their own bookkeeper, [Rupp] would just
have a couple of people, maybe as many as three,” and he “would take money from all of
[his] various enterprises and pay them, rather than employing them individually at each
one of [his] enterprises.”
Rupp also testified about personal vehicles that Commonwealth insured and for
which Commonwealth held title. These vehicles included an Aston Martin and three
Mercedes station wagons. Rupp explained that the Aston Martin was his personal vehicle
9 and that it was titled in Commonwealth’s name to reduce Rupp’s insurance costs. Rupp
also stated that his wife’s Tesla was titled in Commonwealth’s name and that his ex-wife’s
Mazda Miata had remained titled in Commonwealth’s name for 20 years. Rupp admitted
that he “always tried to have corporate ownership of assets that might expose [him] to some
liability. Cars being an example.”
This record evidence persuades us that the district court did not clearly err in finding
that Commonwealth failed to observe corporate formalities and did not abuse its discretion
in determining that this factor favors piercing the corporate veil.
3. Nonpayment of Dividends
The district court found that “no dividends were ever issued” by Commonwealth.
This finding aligns with the evidence before the district court: Rupp agreed that
Commonwealth never paid a dividend because Commonwealth’s main source of funds was
the money that Rupp loaned to the company. As a result, the district court did not clearly
err in finding that Commonwealth did not issue any dividends and that this factor favors
piercing the corporate veil.
4. Insolvency of Debtor Corporation at Time of Transaction in Question
Although the district court noted that Commonwealth “is allegedly insolvent,” it did
not make any specific finding about Commonwealth’s solvency when Commonwealth and
SPB entered into the commercial lease agreement.
In his deposition testimony, Rupp stated that, as of 2021, Commonwealth was
insolvent and no longer had employees. Rupp also admitted that he assumed personal
10 responsibility for Commonwealth’s debts and that Commonwealth was generally unable
to pay on its obligations as they became due unless he personally provided the funds. Rupp
further testified that Commonwealth “didn’t have any assets,” never had any ownership
interest in real estate, and did not have an ownership interest in another business entity.
Despite the lack of evidence supporting a finding that Commonwealth was insolvent
when Commonwealth and SPB executed the commercial lease agreement, the record as a
whole suggests that this factor is, at most, neutral. We conclude that any question about
Commonwealth’s insolvency at the time of its commercial lease agreement with SPB does
not suggest that the district court abused its discretion in piercing the corporate veil.
5. Siphoning of Funds by Dominant Shareholder
Although the district court made no explicit finding that Commonwealth had
suffered siphoning of funds by a dominant shareholder, the district court did find that Rupp
“was Commonwealth’s sole financial decisionmaker and he dictated how funds were
transferred and managed at his business entities.” The district court also found that
“Commonwealth routinely paid expenses for Rupp’s other entities.” These findings are
supported by Rupp’s deposition testimony.
Rupp testified that Commonwealth was “a paymaster for a lot of expenses” and
agreed that Commonwealth regularly made payments for Rupp’s other businesses and their
employees. Rupp stated that Commonwealth paid expenses for his properties, such as
insurance on automobiles. Commonwealth’s checking account was the source of these
funds.
11 That said, “[n]o siphoning of assets occurs if the transactions are for fair
consideration.” Snyder Elec. Co. v. Fleming, 305 N.W.2d 863, 868 (Minn. 1981). But
nothing in the record suggests that Commonwealth received fair consideration for the
services it provided to Rupp’s other businesses. In fact, Rupp said that his other LLCs did
not pay Commonwealth directly for its services. Instead, if Commonwealth was “short on
money” and Rupp had “received a distribution from one of [his] companies . . . then [he]
in turn would contribute money to cover the expenses at Commonwealth, as opposed to an
entity directly making a loan or covering an expense.”
This evidence amply supports the district court’s factual findings, which in turn
imply that Rupp—Commonwealth’s sole owner and shareholder—siphoned funds from
Commonwealth. But even assuming no such implied finding, the relevant facts in the
record pertaining to this factor do not reflect that the district court abused its discretion in
6. Nonfunctioning of Other Officers and Directors
The district court found that “[t]here were . . . no other officers or directors” and
that “Rupp was both the sole shareholder and sole financial decisionmaker for
Commonwealth.” The district court’s findings are well founded in the record.
Although Rupp testified at his deposition that Commonwealth “could have” had
other officers at some point, that his wife might have had an officer position, and that she
may have received a payroll check from the company, his memory was ultimately
imprecise. On appeal, Rupp makes no claim that Commonwealth had any other officers
and instead asserts that he “was a functioning officer[,]” that “Commonwealth was a close
12 corporation,” and that his “active performance as an officer of Commonwealth is not
inconsistent with how a close corporation operates.” But this argument ignores the very
premise of this factor: the nonfunctioning of other officers or directors.
We therefore discern no clear error in the district court’s finding that
Commonwealth did not have other officers and directors. The district court did not abuse
its discretion in determining that this factor favors piercing the corporate veil.
7. Absence of Corporate Records
It is unclear whether the district court weighed an absence of corporate records in
favor of piercing the corporate veil. But the district court did make several findings relevant
to this factor, which are consistent with the record evidence.
The district court found that Commonwealth “filed tax returns and maintained some
financial records.” This finding is supported by Rupp’s deposition testimony. But the
district court also found that “the accuracy of the tax returns and financial records [was] in
dispute.” This finding also reflects Rupp’s testimony. For example, Commonwealth’s 2017
tax returns state that Commonwealth owned stock in W.A. Frost, a corporation of which
Rupp is sole shareholder, and which owns a restaurant. But Rupp admitted that
Commonwealth “did not own W.A. Frost stock at the end of 2017.” The district court also
found that Commonwealth “has no records of any executive meetings, board meetings, or
officer meetings.” This finding accords with Rupp’s testimony that Commonwealth never
had any such meetings because he was the sole owner “with no board and no other
officers.” As a result, the record shows that Commonwealth did not have any meeting
minutes.
13 Although the evidence before the district court demonstrated that Commonwealth
did have corporate records, the evidence also reveals that the accuracy of those records is
highly dubious. This factor is therefore neutral and does not suggest that the district court
abused its discretion in piercing the corporate veil.
8. Existence of Corporation as Merely Facade for Individual Dealings
The district court did not expressly address whether Rupp used Commonwealth as
merely a facade for his individual dealings by, for example, commingling finances and
inappropriately spending the corporation’s money. See Urban ex rel. Urban v. Am. Legion
Post 184, 695 N.W.2d 153, 161 (Minn. App. 2005) (explaining that a party can meet this
factor by providing evidence of commingling finances and improperly raiding and using
corporate funds), aff’d on other grounds, 723 N.W.2d 1 (Minn. 2006); see also Damon v.
Groteboer, 937 F. Supp. 2d 1048, 1081 (D. Minn. 2013) (citing Urban and stating that
“[c]ircumstances indicative of this factor include commingling of personal and corporate
finances, corporate property securing individual loans, or selling corporate assets to satisfy
personal debts”). Even so, evidence in the record relevant to this factor shows that the
district court did not abuse its discretion by piercing the corporate veil.
In his deposition testimony, Rupp explained that Commonwealth dealt with the
administration and bookkeeping for Rupp’s LLCs and never earned any money from third
parties. Rather than require his individual businesses to have their own bookkeepers, Rupp
paid Commonwealth bookkeepers with funds he acquired from his other enterprises and
had Commonwealth provide such services. And Rupp testified that Commonwealth might
14 have also “had an employee [who] cut grass at various locations and a building engineer
[who] wandered around and made mechanical repairs . . . on all the properties.”
Rupp stated that Commonwealth went out of “active business” when it ran out of
Paycheck Protection Plan (PPP) funds. Rupp later moved Commonwealth’s bookkeeper
and controller to another company. At the end of 2019, Rupp’s other businesses were
shrinking, which affected his ability to fund Commonwealth and to pay the rent
Commonwealth owed to SPB. Rupp admitted that Commonwealth would have no way to
pay back its PPP loan unless he contributed the money.
Although Rupp testified that his business is “the acquisition[,] . . . renovation[,] and
repositioning of historic properties of various kinds,” Rupp mainly used Commonwealth
to manage his other entities and to pay his employees. Rupp acknowledged that
Commonwealth insured personal vehicles that belonged to him, his wife, and his ex-wife.
Rupp also testified that he assumed personal responsibility for a $90,000 loan paid to
Commonwealth by one of his friends. Rupp stated that, in return for transferring several
automobiles valued at less than the $90,000 to another company that he owned, Rupp
agreed to pay back the loan. This transaction evinces commingling of personal and
corporate finances. Based on such record evidence, the existence of Commonwealth as
merely a facade for individual dealings supports the district court’s decision to pierce the
corporate veil.
We therefore conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in
determining that the first Victoria Elevator prong is satisfied.
15 B. Element of Injustice or Fundamental Unfairness
As discussed above, the second Victoria Elevator prong “requires a showing that
piercing of the corporate veil is necessary to avoid injustice or fundamental unfairness.”
Cole, 766 N.W.2d at 340. “[D]oing business as a corporation to limit personal liability is
not wrong; it is a major reason for incorporating.” Davis v. Johnson, 415 N.W.2d 755, 758-
59 (Minn. App. 1987) (citing Victoria Elevator, 283 N.W.2d at 512). “To satisfy this
portion of the test, ‘proof of strict common law fraud is not required, but, rather, evidence
that the corporate entity has been operated as a constructive fraud or in an unjust manner
must be presented.’” Groves v. Dakota Printing Servs., Inc., 371 N.W.2d 59, 62-63 (Minn.
App. 1985) (quoting White v. Jorgenson, 322 N.W.2d 607, 608 (Minn. 1982)). Thus, “[t]he
second prong of the test examines the relationship of the plaintiff to the corporation.”
White, 322 N.W.2d at 608.
Here, despite “acknowledg[ing] that the parties are sophisticated and entered into a
commercial transaction in which . . . [SPB] rented office space to [Commonwealth],” the
district court determined that SPB “satisfied the second prong” because “it is unfair to
allow [Rupp] to avoid payment to [SPB] of the judgment.” In support of its determination,
the district court found that “Rupp has assets, including some that were transferred from
Commonwealth to himself and/or other associates and entities during this litigation[.]” This
finding is supported by Rupp’s deposition testimony: Rupp admitted that he transferred
ownership of a Mercedes station wagon from Commonwealth to one of his other businesses
in late winter or early spring of 2021.
16 The district court also found that, “when Commonwealth entered into the lease with
[SPB] in 2018, . . . Rupp knew that he would be personally paying money into
Commonwealth to pay its rent and that if he stopped personally paying money into
Commonwealth, Commonwealth would have no way to pay rent to [SPB].” This finding
tracks Rupp’s deposition testimony. When asked if Commonwealth paid rent to SPB for
the use of the ninth and tenth floors of the Saint Paul Building before Rupp sold the
company to a third party in 2018, Rupp responded: “Well . . . maybe as a fiction,
because . . . I owned the building, and the money that came from the rent came from me.
It was circular.” Rupp also testified that he personally negotiated the terms of the
September 2018 commercial lease agreement between Commonwealth and SPB. And, as
noted earlier, Rupp admitted that he assumed personal responsibility for Commonwealth’s
debts and that Commonwealth was generally unable to pay on its obligations as they
became due, unless he personally provided the funds.
The district court did not abuse its discretion in determining that piercing the
corporate veil is necessary to avoid fundamental unfairness to SPB. Under these specific
circumstances, allowing Rupp to escape payment of a $443,166.29 judgment to which he
stipulated as Commonwealth’s sole owner and shareholder is neither just nor fair. Indeed,
Rupp’s conduct is analogous to the shareholder defendant in Victoria Elevator, who “did
not treat the corporation as a separate entity” but rather “lent it the use of his money and
property—sometimes calling it a loan, sometimes calling it a transfer of assets, rarely
making a formal record of the transaction.” 283 N.W.2d at 513. As in Victoria Elevator,
17 “to allow an individual to escape liability because he does his business under a corporate
form is to allow him an advantage he does not deserve.” Id. at 512.
In sum, we discern no clear error in our review of the district court’s factual findings,
and we conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in exercising its equitable
powers by piercing the corporate veil and adding Rupp as judgment debtor.
Affirmed.