Tauber v. Commonwealth

499 S.E.2d 839, 255 Va. 445, 1998 Va. LEXIS 58
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 17, 1998
DocketRecord 971155
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 499 S.E.2d 839 (Tauber v. Commonwealth) 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
Tauber v. Commonwealth, 499 S.E.2d 839, 255 Va. 445, 1998 Va. LEXIS 58 (Va. 1998).

Opinion

JUSTICE COMPTON delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this chancery suit, the Attorney General of Virginia and a commonwealth’s attorney jointly assert jurisdiction in the name of the Commonwealth over assets located in Virginia held by trustees in dissolution of a foreign charitable corporation. The trustees had been directors of the corporation, which operated a hospital in this State.

A brief summary of the relevant business activities of the hospital directors will set the stage for this discussion. Jefferson Memorial Hospital, Inc. (JMHI), was chartered originally as a for-profit, stock corporation in Maryland in 1963. In 1964, the corporation amended its charter to become a nonprofit, nonstock charitable entity; it began operations as an acute-care hospital in Alexandria on March 15, 1965.

In April 1969, the federal Internal Revenue Service began an investigation leading to revocation of JMHI’s tax-exempt status, retroactive to November 1,1965. In 1971, the corporation’s directors attempted to “merge” JMHI into a for-profit Delaware corporation, Jefferson Memorial Hospital Corporation (JMHC). There was an effort to dissolve JMHI and to transfer its assets and liabilities to JMHC, of which JMHI’s directors would serve as directors.

*449 In April 1973, Maryland ordered JMHI’s corporate charter forfeited “for failure to file the necessary corporate personal property report or failure to pay any late filing penalties due.”

In 1974, the directors retained counsel “to represent the Hospital in looking after and insuring that the Hospital Corporate structure for the past, present, and for the immediate future, be handled so as to insure that everything is legally correct and in keeping with the best interest of the investors of the Hospital,” according to JMHC’s minutes. Counsel testified that he was “asked to rectify the problem that had arisen because a supposed merger in ’71 had not been done.”

Unaware that Maryland had revoked JMHI’s charter, counsel had the directors declare JMHI insolvent and approve transfer of JMHI’s assets to JMHC. In January 1975, JMHC’s directors authorized purchase of the assets and assumption of the liabilities. The directors of JMHC, believing they had assembled all the assets of the former charity into the for-profit corporation, agreed to transfer all JMHC’s “assets” to appellant Laszlo N. Tauber as trustee for appellant Jefferson Memorial Hospital Joint Venture (JMHJV), a partnership in which those assets apparently still reside. The directors also agreed to lease back from the partnership the transferred assets.

In July 1996, the present suit was instituted by the Commonwealth of Virginia, ex rel. the Attorney General of Virginia and the Commonwealth’s Attorney for the City of Alexandria. The defendants are Tauber and nine other named physicians, “each individually and as a former director, of [JMHI] . . . and/or as partners in Jefferson Memorial Hospital Associates, or [JMHJV], and/or directors or shareholders of [JMHC] (a Delaware Corporation now known as ‘Jefferson Corporation of Alexandria’)”; Jefferson Memorial Hospital Associates; JMHJV; and Jefferson Corporation of Alexandria. A prior suit had been commenced by the Attorney General against the same defendants in April 1995, but was nonsuited during trial.

In the present suit, the plaintiffs filed a 112-paragraph, 40-page, three-count bill of complaint. They alleged that funds and assets received by the defendants as directors and trustees of a charitable corporation “were misappropriated and diverted” contrary to law that requires such funds to be used only for charitable purposes, “and not for private inurement.” The plaintiffs then recited in detail the defendants’ alleged business activities in connection with the hospital.

In count one, the plaintiffs alleged the “purported merger between JMHI and JMHC in 1971 never took place,” and the “subsequent purported transfers of the property of JMHI were likewise *450 null and void.” Asserting “JMHI was and is a non-stock foreign corporation whose assets are located in the Commonwealth” and are subject to the trial court’s jurisdiction, the plaintiffs asked the court: to declare “that the purposes for which JMHI was created have been frustrated and are no longer capable of being accomplished by virtue of” the defendants’ conduct; to declare that legal title to JMHTs assets remain in JMHI; to order that an appropriate custodian gather the assets of the former JMHI and administer them under the court’s supervision; to require that defendants account for the money or other value received in the transactions and that defendants be surcharged for the charitable assets they usurped in the amount of at least $40 million; and to enter judgment against defendants as a result of “their conversion, misappropriation, or appropriation of the charitable assets” described.

In count two, the plaintiffs sought similar relief and also asked the court “to impose a constructive trust upon the Hospital, its land, equipment and any other assets,” as well as upon settlement proceeds being paid by an entity which, in 1985, negotiated with JMHJV to buy the right to operate the hospital and its assets as a going concern.

In count three, the plaintiffs asked the court to declare that “the corporate opportunities of JMHI have been usurped” by the defendants; that the defendants be required “to account for and disgorge all sums usurped;” that the court impress upon any future sums defendants may receive “an appropriate judgement or trust to secure the interests of the beneficiaries of JMHI, and, if necessary, to refer the matter to a Commissioner in Chancery for an appropriate accounting and charging order against JMHJV.”

After the chancellor overruled their demurrer and plea in bar, defendants answered the bill of complaint. They generally denied the allegations, asserting the plaintiffs are not entitled to the relief prayed for, or to any other relief.

The cause was heard ore tenus in January 1997. The parties had stipulated that the trial in the present suit was to commence where the prior trial terminated, and that the record of all proceedings in the prior suit is to be a part of the present record.

Following the trial, the chancellor filed a memorandum opinion ruling that the plaintiffs are entitled to relief sought in the bill of complaint. In a March 1997 decree, from which we awarded defendants this appeal, the court declared that the assets and liabilities of JMHI “be, reside and remain with [defendants] as trustees and fur *451 ther that a constructive trust be . . . imposed on such assets and liabilities.”

The court also ordered that a custodian “be appointed with exclusive jurisdiction to hold and administer the said assets and liabilities.” Additionally, the court ordered defendants to submit “a full and complete accounting of all assets and liabilities that are the subject of this Decree.” Finally, the court denied the plaintiffs’ “claim for monetary damages.”

On appeal, defendants contend the trial court erred “when it concluded that the Attorney General has authority to bring this suit.” The chancellor ruled “that the Attorney General has standing and authority to bring this action both at common law and pursuant to” Code § 13.1-909(B).

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Related

Tauber v. Commonwealth Ex Rel. Kilgore
562 S.E.2d 118 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 2002)
Martin v. Moore
561 S.E.2d 672 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 2002)
Falwell v. City of Lynchburg, Virginia
198 F. Supp. 2d 765 (W.D. Virginia, 2002)
Commonwealth Ex Rel. Beales v. Joco Foundation
558 S.E.2d 280 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 2002)
Patterson v. Patterson
515 S.E.2d 113 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1999)
Richelieu v. Kirby
48 Va. Cir. 260 (Fairfax County Circuit Court, 1999)
Jones v. Eley
501 S.E.2d 405 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1998)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
499 S.E.2d 839, 255 Va. 445, 1998 Va. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tauber-v-commonwealth-va-1998.