Susan Fringer v. Kersey Homes, Inc.

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJune 25, 2018
DocketCA 9780-VCG
StatusPublished

This text of Susan Fringer v. Kersey Homes, Inc. (Susan Fringer v. Kersey Homes, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Susan Fringer v. Kersey Homes, Inc., (Del. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

SUSAN FRINGER, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 9780-VCG ) KERSEY HOMES, INC., a Delaware ) Corporation, LIVING ENTERPRISES, ) LLC, a Delaware Limited Liability ) Company, and NOELLE MCCOLGAN, ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: March 5, 2018 Date Decided: June 25, 2018

Dean A. Campbell, of LAW OFFICE OF DEAN A. CAMPBELL, P.A., Georgetown, Delaware, Attorney for Plaintiff Susan Fringer.

Richard E. Berl, Jr., of HUDSON, JONES, JAYWORK & FISHER, LLC, Lewes, Delaware, Attorney for Defendants Living Enterprises, LLC and Noelle McColgan.

GLASSCOCK, Vice Chancellor The great advantage of the corporate form is that it permits investment and

ownership without risk of personal liability for entity debt. This advantage has its

limits, obviously. One such limitation is involved here. The corporation involved,

Kersey Homes, found itself a defendant in a lawsuit based on fraud, in connection

with an agreement to sell a modular home. At the time of the agreement, the

company was moribund, and as the trial date approached, it had a single asset with

value, the modular home at issue. In fact, by that time, Kersey Homes had caused

the building to be placed on a permanent foundation, on a lot owned by another

entity controlled by Kersey Homes’ principals, Living Enterprises. Kersey Homes

made what I find to have been a tactical decision. It treated the modular home as an

asset no longer owned by Kersey Homes; created a bill of sale purporting to show

transfer of the asset—two years previously—to a relative of the principals, in

satisfaction of an old debt; and then defaulted on the fraud action. Kersey Homes’

principals, I find, acted on the (misplaced) understanding that a judgment against the

now-insolvent Kersey Homes would be beyond the reach of the resulting judgment

creditors.

The survivor of the judgment creditors here, Susan Fringer, sued in this Court,

on the belief that neither law nor equity would condone the behavior of Kersey

Homes, or leave her without remedy. That belief was well-founded. This is my

post-trial decision. I find that the “sale” of the modular home to the relative, the

1 grandmother of Noelle McColgan, the President of Kersey Homes, was a sham; that

the home was transferred to the lot owner, Living Enterprises, when it was affixed

to its lot; and that the latter transfer was fraudulent under Delaware’s Uniform

Fraudulent Transfer Act. Mrs. Fringer, accordingly, is entitled to levy on the

property, and to receive the sales proceeds in an amount sufficient to satisfy her

judgment against Kersey Homes. My reasoning follows.

I. BACKGROUND

Trial took place over one day, during which seven witnesses gave live

testimony. The parties submitted twenty-two exhibits. I give the evidence the

weight and credibility I find that it deserves.1

A. Factual Background

1. The Fringers Buy Their Retirement Home

Plaintiff Susan Fringer lives in York, Pennsylvania.2 In 2001, Susan3 and her

late husband Herbert bought a vacant lot in Beaver Dam Acres, a development in

rural eastern Sussex County.4 The Fringers planned to build their retirement home

on the lot.5

1 Citations to “PTO A,” “PTO B,” and “PTO C” refer to sections A, B, and C of the stipulated facts in the parties’ joint pre-trial stipulation. 2 Trial Tr. 79:24–80:1; Fringer Dep. 7:13–14. 3 To the extent I use first names here, it is to avoid confusion; no disrespect is meant. 4 Fringer Dep. 14:9–17. Herbert Fringer passed away in the course of this litigation. 5 Trial Tr. 80:15–21.

2 Herbert retired in 2011, and in July of that year, he met with representatives

of Defendant Kersey Homes, Inc., a designated builder for Beracah Homes, Inc.,

which manufactures modular homes.6 The Kersey Homes representatives showed

Herbert a model home located on the company’s sales lot in Millsboro, Delaware.7

On July 9, 2011, the Fringers agreed to buy the modular home Herbert had seen at

the Kersey Homes lot for $210,795.8 Per the agreement, Kersey Homes would clear

the Fringers’ lot, build the foundation, install the well and septic systems, and deliver

and set the house.9 Later, on March 17, 2012, the parties revised the terms of the

agreement.10 Under the new agreement, the Fringers would bear the costs of clearing

the lot and installing the well, water, and septic systems, among other things.11

Kersey Homes would still be responsible for building the foundation and setting the

house.12 The Fringers agreed to pay $184,230 under the revised agreement, which

valued the modular home at $182,000.13

6 Fringer Dep. 15:17–18; PTO A ¶¶ 2, 4. The Defendants respond to the first section of Susan Fringer’s proposed factual findings as follows: “Defendants admit all of the facts proposed by the Plaintiff in this section (1-25). By way of further response, however, Defendants Living Enterprises and McColgan were not parties to th[e Superior Court] action, and as a result those facts are not binding on the Defendants here.” Defs.’ Resp. to Pl.’s Statement of Facts 7–8. I take this to mean that the Defendants stipulate to the facts in question. 7 PTO A ¶ 4. 8 Id. ¶ 5, B ¶ 1; JX 000011–12. 9 PTO B ¶ 1; JX 000011–12. 10 PTO B ¶ 2. 11 Id. 12 Id. 13 Id. ¶¶ 2–3.

3 Unbeknownst to the Fringers, the modular home they purchased was the only

one Kersey Homes owned.14 Indeed, Kersey Homes’ sole remaining assets at the

time of sale were the modular home, an inoperable box truck,15 and a modular office

building.16 The Fringers also did not know that, despite Kersey Homes’

representations to the contrary, they were not buying a Beracah Homes-constructed

home.17 Instead, their house was built by Crest Homes.18

Kersey Homes was in dire financial straits when it contracted with the

Fringers. The company was insolvent, and its tax returns reveal losses of $9,450 and

$81,104 in 2011 and 2012, respectively.19 Defendant Noelle McColgan was the

President and Treasurer of Kersey Homes, and her father Graham Living was its

Vice President and Secretary.20 Graham was the sole owner of Kersey Homes,

which Graham and his wife ran until Noelle took over as President in 2009.21

In the spring of 2012, after executing the revised agreement with Kersey

Homes, the Fringers cleared the lot and installed the well and septic systems.22 That

summer, the parties began to argue over several issues, including Kersey Homes’

14 Trial Tr. 50:4–11, 82:1–4. “Kersey Home” would have been a more accurate corporate moniker. 15 Kersey Homes was later able to fix the box truck and sell it, though just “[b]arely.” Id. at 49:10– 12. 16 Id. at 45:22–46:7. 17 PTO A ¶¶ 3, 6, 12. 18 Id. ¶ 12. 19 Trial Tr. 45:17–27; PTO B ¶ 10. 20 PTO B ¶¶ 18, 20. 21 Trial Tr. 100:16–18; McColgan Dep. 13:5–21. 22 PTO A ¶ 8.

4 delay in starting work, difficulties encountered by the company in constructing the

foundation, and “credits for appliances.”23 In July 2012, Kersey Homes informed

the Fringers that they needed to pay an additional $4,323.75 to complete the

foundation.24 The Fringers refused to pay, and Kersey Homes ceased working on

the project.25 Around this time, Herbert visited the lot and discovered that the

foundation could not be used for the modular home.26 Specifically, the crawlspace

was dug too deep, and parts of the foundation had not been closed properly. 27

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In the Matter of Robert P. Krehl, Debtor-Appellant
86 F.3d 737 (Seventh Circuit, 1996)
Hartford National Bank & Trust Co. v. Godin
398 A.2d 286 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1979)
Wilmington Housing Authority v. Following Parcel of Land
219 A.2d 148 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1966)
United States v. West
299 F. Supp. 661 (D. Delaware, 1969)
Quadrant Structured Products Company, Ltd. v. Vertin
102 A.3d 155 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 2014)
Warrington v. Hignutt
31 A.2d 480 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1943)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Susan Fringer v. Kersey Homes, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/susan-fringer-v-kersey-homes-inc-delch-2018.