Tim Duy Pham v. Xuan Nguyen

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMarch 4, 2025
Docket0892243
StatusUnpublished

This text of Tim Duy Pham v. Xuan Nguyen (Tim Duy Pham v. Xuan Nguyen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tim Duy Pham v. Xuan Nguyen, (Va. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Judges Malveaux, Fulton and White Argued at Salem, Virginia

TIM DUY PHAM, ET AL. MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0892-24-3 JUDGE KIMBERLEY SLAYTON WHITE MARCH 4, 2025 XUAN NGUYEN, ET AL.

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF BOTETOURT COUNTY Joel R. Branscom, Judge

Wilson C. Pasley (Wilson C. Pasley, PLC, on briefs), for appellants.

Justin A. Steele (John S. Koehler; The Law Office of James Steele, PLLC, on brief), for appellees.

Tim Duy Pham and Leanna L. Cao appeal the circuit court’s order enforcing the sale of a

nail salon, DL Nails, to Xuan Nguyen and Phi Ni Thach; rescinding the related rental contract;

and awarding Nguyen and Thach $12,335.87 for unjust enrichment and attorney fees. In seven

assignments of error, Pham and Cao argue that the evidence did not support a finding that they

sold the entire business to Nguyen and Thach, that they engaged in fraud in securing the rental

contract, or the damages award. We affirm the circuit court’s judgment regarding the contracts

but reverse its finding that Pham and Cao were jointly liable for unjust enrichment.

BACKGROUND

A. Facts

Appellants Tim Duy Pham and Leanna Cao are ex-spouses. Pham owned a nail salon

business called “DL Nails,” whose store front had the large, printed word “NAILS” on it. Cao

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). worked at DL Nails as a nail technician during the marriage and after the divorce. Although Cao

worked there and kept some personal property in the store related to her nail work, she never

owned DL Nails.

DL Nails is located in the Botetourt Commons shopping center in Daleville, Virginia.

Botetourt Commons is owned by Steven Strauss, who rents out parcels of land to businesses.

Strauss is the manager of Timberbrook Associates, LC, the entity that rented Pham the parcel of

the Commons on which DL Nails sits. Pham’s lease began in 2011 and is still in effect. The

lease forbids Pham from subleasing the property without the landlord’s permission.

On November 27, 2021, Cao posted an advertisement on Facebook offering to rent out

DL Nails for $5,000 per month and requiring a refundable deposit of $30,000 to $35,000. Xuan

Nguyen replied to Cao’s advertisement via Facebook messenger because Nguyen had a friend

who wanted to buy a salon.1

In a later conversation on November 27, Cao told Nguyen that she intended to either rent

out or sell the salon. Nguyen asked for both the sale price and the rental price. After asking

Pham, Cao replied that the sale price was $80,000 and the rental price was $5,000. Later, Cao

messaged that Pham no longer wanted to sell the salon and would only rent it out for a five-year

term at $5,000 per month. Nguyen had decided that she wanted the salon for herself rather than

for her friend and told Cao that she would only buy it, not rent it.

On December 13, Cao offered to sell the salon to Nguyen for $80,000 if Nguyen also

signed a five-year lease agreement with Pham. Nguyen asked whether the agreement would be

with Pham or with the landlord, to which Cao replied that Pham was the landlord and that Cao

pays him rent every month. Nguyen testified that this conversation caused her to believe that

Cao accepted her offer to buy the salon.

1 Cao had known Nguyen for ten years and had done her taxes. -2- Six days after accepting the offer, Cao created a “Bill of sale” dated December 19.2 The

Bill noted that Cao was “SELLER” and that Nguyen and Phi Ni Thach, Nguyen’s husband, were

the “BUYER.” The Bill also stated:

THE SELLER HEREBY GRANTS TRANSFER OR SALE OF THE FOLLOWING GOODS: NAI1S [sic] TO MRS. NGUYEN IN THE AMOUNT $80,000 ($5,000 deposit nonrefundable 12/19/2021 in cash money order or cashier check only).

12/26/2021 [Nguyen] will give [Cao] $35,000(cash or cashier check, money order only

the $40,000 will be pay [sic] to [Cao] when transfer [sic] merchant to buyer name. WITH FOLLOWING ITEMS: [ten pedicure chairs; nine nail tables; a washer and dryer; a dryer table; two TVs; and a cashier station]

....

The []seller’s signature of the goods [above] signifies that [s]he is the lawful owner of the goods listed above, and the seller has the right to sell the goods as she chooses. After exchange of payment, the buyers render full rights and ownership of the goods listed above[.]

Cao and Nguyen signed the Bill. Pham and Thach were present when the Bill was

signed.

There was also a separate “Contract for Rent DL Nail Salon” dated December 26, one

week after the Bill of sale. Nguyen and Pham signed the Contract. Pham agreed to rent all

“equipments, design, decorating, furnitures, exhaust system, to” Nguyen and to cover rent, lawn,

and utility fees. The Contract also set the monthly rent prices for each year from 2021 to 2028.

It further stated that Nguyen requires Pham’s permission to “change anything of business or use

the business for any loan.” Nguyen was never informed that Pham was not the property’s

landlord.

This document, introduced into evidence as Plaintiff’s Exhibit A, was titled “Bill of 2

sale.” We refer to it in this manner going forward. -3- Two days later, Nguyen’s husband Thach sent Cao a $75,000 cashier’s check with the

stated purpose of “purchas[ing] nail business.” Both Cao and Pham signed the back of the

check.

Nguyen testified that Cao orally agreed to reimburse Nguyen for the value of any gift

cards sold prior to the Bill of sale. The total amount was $5,677, but Cao never provided any

reimbursement.

Nguyen made her last rental payment to Pham for March 2023 under the Contract and

then stopped paying rent to Pham because Pham was not the “real landlord.”

B. Proceedings

In August 2023, Nguyen and Thach sued Pham and Cao in circuit court. Nguyen asked

the court for specific performance of the Bill of sale “purchas[ing] the entire DL Nails business”;

to set aside the Contract for Rent because Nguyen already owns DL Nails and because Pham’s

lease with Timberbrook prohibited him from subleasing the space without Timberbrook’s

permission; and to order Pham and Cao to pay the value of all gift cards honored by Nguyen

since the business transfer but sold prior to it. Nguyen also asked for costs and attorney fees.

At trial, Nguyen and Thach testified to their belief that they were purchasing the entire

business. They did not intend to purchase the Bill’s list of items only, which merely

“represent[ed] what’s in the business.” They asserted that they believed Pham was the landlord

and did not know that he was in fact a tenant who rented the space from Timberbrook.

Cao presented tax documentation showing that DL Nails was solely owned by Pham. In

filing her taxes, Cao identified her own manicurist business, operated in DL Nails, as being separate

from the “DL Nails” entity; her business had no name or employer ID. Cao claimed that she rented

space in DL Nails after she divorced Pham in 2018. She stated that she did not have any managerial

responsibilities in DL Nails but owned all the specific items of personal property listed in the Bill.

-4- Cao argued at trial that the Bill’s word “NAI1S” referred to specific nail goods, including

fake nails, nail supplies, and nail furniture, and not to the “Nails” business. She asserted that the

Bill, which she drafted, only sold her personal property, not Pham’s business. Cao acknowledged

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Tim Duy Pham v. Xuan Nguyen, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tim-duy-pham-v-xuan-nguyen-vactapp-2025.