State v. ABC TOWING

954 P.2d 575, 1998 Alas. App. LEXIS 9, 1998 WL 66138
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedFebruary 20, 1998
DocketA-6394
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 954 P.2d 575 (State v. ABC TOWING) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. ABC TOWING, 954 P.2d 575, 1998 Alas. App. LEXIS 9, 1998 WL 66138 (Ala. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

This case involves the law of “vicarious responsibility” — the law defining when one person can be held criminally responsible for the conduct of another. More specifically, this case presents the question of whether a business run by a sole proprietor is an “organization” under AS 11.16.130(a), a statute which declares that organizations are criminally responsible for certain acts of their agents. We hold that a sole proprietorship is not an “organization” for purposes of AS 11.16.130(a).

Rodney E. Lewis does business as “ABC Towing”. When one of Lewis’s employees discharged gasoline on the ground, the State brought criminal charges against both the employee and ABC Towing; both defendants were charged with violating an anti-pollution statute, AS 46.03.710.

Under Alaska law, organizations face broader vicarious criminal responsibility than do individuals. Generally speaking, an individual can be held criminally responsible for the conduct of another only if the individual asks or encourages the other person to commit the offense or if the individual helps to plan or commit the offense. See AS ll.ie.llO^). 1 The State presented no evidence that Lewis asked his employee to discharge the gasoline, or that Lewis aided or *577 abetted the employee’s act. However, an organization can be held accountable for criminal conduct that its owners, members, officers, or directors did not know about until afterwards. Under AS 11.16.130(a)(1), an organization is criminally responsible for an offense committed by one of its agents if the agent was acting in behalf of the organization and within the scope of the agent’s employment, or if the organization subsequently ratified or adopted the agent’s conduct. 2 The State charged ABC Towing with the pollution violation, alleging that Lewis’s employee had been acting within the scope of his employment, and in behalf of ABC Towing, when he discharged the gasoline on the ground.

The case against ABC Towing was tried to District Court Judge Natalie K. Finn on stipulated facts. The parties agreed that ABC Towing’s employee had violated the anti-pollution statute and that the employee had been acting within the scope of his employment and in behalf of ABC Towing when he committed this violation. There was only one disputed issue, and that was an issue of law: was ABC Towing an “organization” for purposes of AS 11.16.130(a), so that it could be held liable for its employee’s discharge of gasoline?

AS 11.81.900(b)(39) defines the term “organization” for purposes of Title 11. Under that definition, “organization” means:

a legal entity, including a corporation, company, association, firm, partnership, joint stock company, foundation, institution, government, society, union, club, church, or any other group of persons organized for any purpose.

Lewis’s attorney contended that ABC Towing was not an “organization” because it was a sole proprietorship — an unincorporated business owned solely by Lewis. In a well-reasoned opinion, Judge Finn concluded that this contention was correct — that sole propri-etorships are not “organizations” under the statutory definition. Judge Finn wrote:

[A] sole proprietorship is not a legal entity. [It] has no legal significance apart from its sole proprietor. It cannot incur debts, conduct business, sue or be sued, or incur or pay taxes apart from its sole proprietor. Legally, it makes no difference whether the business is named ABC Towing or Rodney E. Lewis. The accountability of ABC Towing is therefore no different from that of an individual.... This court finds that ABC Towing, a sole proprietorship, is not an organization within the meaning of AS 11.81.900(b)(39) and is therefore not legally accountable [for acts of its agents under] AS 11.16.130.

Judge Finn therefore dismissed the complaint against ABC Towing, and the State now appeals Judge Finn’s decision.

Under AS 11.81.900(b)(39), “organization” (for purposes of Title 11) “means a legal entity”. The statute does not define “legal entity” except by example, and the term “legal entity” is not further defined in Title 11 or, indeed, anywhere else in the Alaska statutes. However, the term “legal entity” does have a common-law meaning, and that meaning presumptively governs our interpretation of AS 11.81.900(b)(39). See AS 01.10.010 (the common law remains the rule of decision in this state unless it is inconsistent with the laws passed by the Alaska legislature or inconsistent with the federal or Alaska constitutions).

The concept of “legal entity” is a useful fiction employed by the law to distinguish an ongoing human endeavor from the people who presently own or control that endeavor. As Judge Finn correctly pointed out in her decision, the defining characteristic of a “legal entity” is its separate legal existence apart from its owners, officers, and directors.

At common law, sole proprietorships are not “legal entities”. Neither are partnerships (for most purposes: compare Pratt v. Kirkpatrick, 718 P.2d 962, 967-68 (Alaska 1986)). Rather, sole proprietorships and partnerships are deemed to be merely the alter egos of the proprietor or the partners *578 (as individuals). In a sole proprietorship, all of the proprietor’s assets are completely at risk, and the sole proprietorship ceases to exist upon the proprietor’s death. Harry J. Haynsworth, Selecting the Form of a Small Business Entity (1985), § 1.02, pp. 2-3; see also Harry G. Hehn and John R. Alexander, Laws of Corporations and Other Business Entities (3rd ed.1985), § 18, p. 58. Similarly, a partnership is not a separate legal entity (for most purposes). Haynsworth, § 1.03 pp. 4, 7; Hehn & Alexander, § 19, pp. 63-64.

The common law adopted a strict view [of partnership] and accorded no recognition to the partnership as an entity for the purposes of ownership of real property, contract, suit, etc[,] although many of these disabilities have been abolished or altered by statute.

Hehn & Alexander, § 19, p. 64. 3

Alaska law recognizes the common-law rule. See Williams v. Mammoth of Alaska, Inc., 890 P.2d 581, 584 (Alaska 1995) (“The nearly universal rule is that if the employer is a partnership, then each partner is an employer of the partnership’s employees. This is because a partnership is not a legal entity separate from its partners.”); Berger v. Ohlson, 120 F.2d 56, 60, 10 Alaska 84, 93 (9th Cir.1941) (“[T]he Alaska Railroad is not a corporate or any other legal entity. It is a name only. The sole owner of the railroad and its terminals ... is the United States.”)

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Bluebook (online)
954 P.2d 575, 1998 Alas. App. LEXIS 9, 1998 WL 66138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-abc-towing-alaskactapp-1998.