Syed v. ZH TECHNOLOGIES, INC.

694 S.E.2d 625, 280 Va. 58, 2010 Va. LEXIS 73
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 10, 2010
Docket091172
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 694 S.E.2d 625 (Syed v. ZH TECHNOLOGIES, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Syed v. ZH TECHNOLOGIES, INC., 694 S.E.2d 625, 280 Va. 58, 2010 Va. LEXIS 73 (Va. 2010).

Opinion

694 S.E.2d 625 (2010)

Adnan SYED, et al.
v.
ZH TECHNOLOGIES, INC., et al.

Record No. 091172.

Supreme Court of Virginia.

June 10, 2010.

*627 Andrei J. Kublan (Kublan & Austin, on brief), for appellants.

William R. Fitzpatrick, Arlington (Robert E. Sevila; Sevila, Saunders, Huddleston & White, on brief), for appellees.

Present: All the Justices.

OPINION BY Justice DONALD W. LEMONS.

I. Facts and Proceedings Below

ZH Technologies, Inc. ("ZH Tech") and Abulala K. Naser ("Naser") filed a complaint against Adnan Syed ("Syed"), Sheriza Ousman ("Ousman"), and Zerowire Technologies, Inc. ("Zerowire"),[1] in which ZH Tech and Naser alleged six causes of action: (1) breach of fiduciary duty, (2) conversion, (3) unjust enrichment, (4) fraud, (5) violation of the Virginia business conspiracy statute, and (6) tortious interference with contractual relationships.[2]

ZH Tech was incorporated in Virginia on March 26, 1999. Naser, the sole owner, officer, shareholder, and employee of ZH Tech, testified that ZH Tech "is a technology company which provides information technology solutions to client[s]." Naser testified that from 1999 until May 2005, ZH Tech predominately provided contract services to the IRS such as "a deficient support system for taxpayers to catch fraud" and a "data mining system." However, Naser also testified that in the fall of 2002, ZH Tech began to expand its work. Specifically, Naser testified that he wanted ZH Tech to obtain more government contract work.

In 2002, Naser, Syed, Rajiv Bhatia, Faisal Rana and Asad Khan signed a letter of intent to become partners in ZH Tech. They intended to obtain historically underutilized business zone ("HUBZone") status to obtain more government contract work in the area of information technology system services. See 13 C.F.R. § 126.103 (defining "HUBZone"). ZH Tech was denied HUBZone status. Naser, Syed, Rajiv Bhatia, Faisal Rana, and Asad Khan signed a document of dissolution by late summer of 2003 after "nothing materialized" for ZH Tech in obtaining government contracts.

After the partnership dissolved, Naser continued to seek business opportunities for ZH Tech. In the summer of 2003 he and Syed together sought to expand ZH Tech's business. Naser testified that he and Syed planned to expand ZH Tech to develop high-speed internet access for the hospitality industry and to obtain other government contracts. Naser also testified that he and Syed "agreed, and it was a gentleman's agreement that [ZH Tech] is going to be 50/50" and that he

would initially put in all the start up money, and Mr. Syed's duty [was] computer work, installation and the marketing and everything, and also I would support like the—equipment order, other management issues, discussing contracts and discussing installation support contract, discussing the prices for the hardware, discussing how much should we [bill] for the labor and all that.

While Naser maintains that he never told Syed he would be a half-owner, director, shareholder, or officer of ZH Tech, Naser considered Syed a partner of ZH Tech in both the government contract and high-speed internet access installation businesses of ZH Tech. Furthermore, Naser attempted to "formalize" his partnership by adoption of a written agreement with Syed in February 2005; *628 however, Syed never signed the partnership agreement.

Syed corroborated Naser's testimony about starting a partnership with Rajiv Bhatia and Faisal Rana in 2002 and that the partnership dissolved in the summer of 2003.[3] Syed also corroborated Naser's testimony that Syed began to provide high-speed internet access installation and support in the hospitality industry using ZH Tech's name. However, Syed testified that while he and Naser agreed they would be partners in ZH Tech for the government contract business, the work providing high-speed internet access for the hospitality industry was not included in the ZH Tech partnership. Syed testified that he deposited the revenue from the first "two, three jobs" he completed for the high-speed internet access business into the ZH Tech account that "Mr. Naser runs." Syed also testified that he and Naser opened a separate account in September 2003 dedicated to the high-speed internet access business. Syed also testified that he believed he was an owner, officer and director of ZH Tech because Naser told him he was.

However, when Syed tried to obtain documentation that he was an officer, director and owner of ZH Tech in the course of applying for a mortgage in December 2004, he discovered that Naser was the only officer, director and owner of ZH Tech and that ZH Tech's corporate existence was terminated on August 2, 2004. After that discovery, Syed was concerned about potential personal liability for the work he did for ZH Tech after ZH Tech's corporate existence was terminated. Syed decided not to sign the partnership agreement Naser had sent him. Instead he and his wife, Ousman, founded a new corporation, Zerowire, on February 15, 2005.

ZH Tech and Naser sought damages against Syed for breach of fiduciary duty and alleged that Syed, in his capacity as an employee, breached a fiduciary duty owed to ZH Tech and Naser. In response, Syed denied ever being an employee of, or entering into an employment, nondisclosure or noncompetition agreement with, ZH Tech. Syed also pled that he and Naser "agreed that they would be Partners, [and] that [they] would share equally in ZH [Tech] to obtain and to perform a[ ] substantial subcontract for" a government agency, but that "Defendant Syed would operate his own separate wireless internet business using the ZH [Tech] name until the partners began performing the" government contract work.

At trial, Naser acknowledged that ZH Tech issued IRS 1099 tax forms to Syed in 2003 and 2004 that listed Syed's compensation as "nonemployee" and identified Syed as an "independent contractor," that ZH Tech never gave Syed a W-2 form, and that ZH Tech never withheld money for tax purposes from Syed. While Naser now disputes Syed's 1099 tax form for 2004, he stated that he did not tell the IRS in writing that this tax form was incorrect. Furthermore, Naser and ZH Tech's accountant testified that Naser never asked him to amend or revoke Syed's 2004 1099 tax form and that Naser had inquired about issuing a W-2 form to Syed but that he told Naser that a person's status cannot "retroactively" be converted after a form has been filed.

ZH Tech and Naser also sought damages against the Defendants for statutory business conspiracy. ZH Tech and Naser alleged that Syed and Ousman willfully conspired to injure ZH Tech by creating Zerowire and misappropriating ZH Tech's customers. At trial, ZH Tech and Naser introduced evidence suggesting a conspiracy between Syed and a man named Trevor Warner ("Warner"). However, Warner was not referenced in ZH Tech and Naser's complaint.

At the conclusion of the evidence, but before closing arguments were made, ZH Tech and Naser's attorneys moved to amend or conform the pleadings to the evidence pursuant to Code § 8.01-377. ZH Tech and Naser *629 argued that the evidence at trial revealed that Syed was a partner, not an employee as alleged in the complaint. Therefore, ZH Tech and Naser sought to amend their complaint or conform their averments to the evidence that Syed breached his fiduciary duty as a partner.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
694 S.E.2d 625, 280 Va. 58, 2010 Va. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/syed-v-zh-technologies-inc-va-2010.