Standage v. Planned Investment Corp.

772 P.2d 1140, 160 Ariz. 287, 24 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 27, 1988 Ariz. App. LEXIS 374
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedDecember 27, 1988
Docket2 CA-CV 88-0309
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 772 P.2d 1140 (Standage v. Planned Investment Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standage v. Planned Investment Corp., 772 P.2d 1140, 160 Ariz. 287, 24 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 27, 1988 Ariz. App. LEXIS 374 (Ark. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

FERNANDEZ, Judge.

This case is but one of a series of lawsuits that have ensued from the management of a shopping center. We affirm on all issues except the award of attorney’s fees which we remand for a new determination. In order to understand the issues presented, it is necessary to recite some historical background.

In 1963, Hugh Lawson formed Planned Investment Corporation (PIC), an Arizona corporation. He retained ownership of 52% of the stock until his death in July 1979 when his interest passed to his wife Gladys Lawson. Hugh Lawson gave 24% of the PIC stock to his son Roger Lawson and 24% to his daughter Cheryl Standage. PIC’s principal asset is a 13-unit shopping center located in Mesa. Cheryl Standage’s husband Keith F. Standage managed the center pursuant to a written agreement *289 from 1964 through 1969. After that he continued as manager without a written agreement until 1984.

Keith Standage was also the secretary of PIC from its inception until August 5,1982. After Hugh Lawson’s death, Standage negotiated with Gladys Lawson to purchase her interest in the shopping center. Before completion of the sale, Cheryl Standage filed for divorce, and the sale negotiations terminated. In the divorce action, Cheryl was awarded her 24% of the PIC stock as her sole and separate property. Standage v. Standage, 147 Ariz. 473, 711 P.2d 612 (App.1985). In November 1983, PIC obtained a court order removing Standage as manager of the shopping center effective February 14, 1984.

After Standage was removed, PIC hired Tom Stapley and Associates, an independent property management company, to manage the shopping center. When Stapley failed to receive rent from Ivory Crow who operates Crow Cleaners, a dry cleaning establishment in the shopping center, it gave notice to terminate Crow’s month-to-month tenancy. On June 21, 1984, PIC filed a forcible detainer action against Crow which was later dismissed.

The present action was initially filed by Crow alone. Later Standage joined Crow as a party plaintiff in an amended complaint which alleged that both Cheryl Standage and Stapley intentionally interfered with the business relationship between Crow, Standage and PIC, that PIC breached an agreement with Crow and Standage and that PIC had racially discriminated against Crow. In the amended complaint, Standage alleged that he had a lease with PIC for Crow Cleaners. PIC, Cheryl Standage and Stapley answered, and PIC counterclaimed seeking a declaratory judgment that two agreements under which Standage was claiming rights to lease Crow Cleaners were invalid and unenforceable, and alleging breach of fiduciary duty and breach of contract against Standage and forcible detainer and conversion against Crow. The two agreements involved in the counterclaim were a lease dated July 1, 1976, which purportedly leased the dry cleaner pad to Standage until 2006. This lease was signed by Standage both as lessor and as lessee. The second agreement, dated June 10, 1980, purported to be an arrangement between Standage and Crow as first parties and PIC as second party whereby Crow would clean the shopping center parking lot and provide Standage and his family free dry cleaning in lieu of paying rent. Standage also signed this agreement as both first party and second party.

This case was consolidated from December 20, 1984, to April 3, 1987, with two earlier cases which involved the validity of a 1968 lifetime management agreement allegedly between Standage and PIC and PIC’s attempts to remove Standage as its manager. The parties stipulated that the issues in this case would be bifurcated from the trial in the other two cases and would be tried by the court without a jury on the evidence presented in the other two cases to the extent it was relevant, as well as on such additional evidence as the parties chose to present. In the earlier cases, PIC obtained a judgment against Standage on claims arising out of the alleged 1968 management agreement and two promissory notes and mortgages. The jury in those proceedings also determined that the documents were false. PIC was awarded both compensatory and punitive damages pursuant to findings that Standage had filed false documents, had willfully refused to release certain documents, had slandered title and had breached his fiduciary duty to PIC.

After the trial in this action, the court found that the 1976 lease and the 1980 agreement were neither drafted nor signed in 1976 or 1980 but rather in 1984 when the forcible detainer litigation became intense. The court further found that PIC did not ratify the documents, that Standage had no authority to sign either agreement on behalf of PIC and that he did not disclose the agreements either in his divorce or to a prospective purchaser of the shopping center in 1982. Previously, both Standage and Crow had claimed only an oral month-to-month tenáncy of the dry cleaning pad. Standage also did not disclose the doc *290 uments in his 1983 bankruptcy. The court noted that the originals of the documents had not been produced and found that failure to disclose them constituted a breach of fiduciary duty and interfered with PIC’s ability to re-lease the premises.

The court denied relief on all claims of the amended complaint. With regard to the counterclaim, the court awarded PIC damages of $51,785 against Standage for breach of fiduciary duty, awarded damages of $13,592.50 against both Standage and Crow for forcible detainer, awarded punitive damages against Standage in the amount of $50,000, and awarded attorney’s fees against both Standage and Crow in the amount of $81,882 “because of the vexatious and protracted nature of th[e] litigation.” Only Standage has appealed.

On appeal, Standage contends that 1) a corporate officer cannot be held accountable for breach of fiduciary duty arising after his termination, 2) forcible detainer cannot be maintained against a tenant who is not in actual possession at the commencement of the action, 3) actual damages must be awarded as a predicate to an award of punitive damages, 4) the attorney’s fees award was improper, and 5) the court improperly awarded a judgment for wrongful prosecution of a civil action.

BREACH OF FIDUCIARY DUTY

Standage contends that because the court found that he fabricated the lease agreements in 1984 after he had been removed as an officer and director, as a matter of law he cannot be held liable for breach of a fiduciary duty.

We initially observe, as PIC has noted, that Standage does not complain factually about the finding of breach of fiduciary duty; he only contends that as a matter of law the finding cannot support a judgment against him. We also note that from the filing of the amended complaint until the close of trial, Standage insisted the agreements were valid and that they gave him at least a thirty-year lease in the dry cleaning premises at no rent other than cleaning of the parking lot by Crow and free dry cleaning for Standage and his family. The only reason the agreements ever had any credibility was because of Standage’s prior fiduciary relationship to PIC.

The fact that Standage was found to have manufactured the agreements in 1984 is of no consequence in the action for breach of fiduciary duty.

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772 P.2d 1140, 160 Ariz. 287, 24 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 27, 1988 Ariz. App. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standage-v-planned-investment-corp-arizctapp-1988.