Water, Waste & Land, Inc. v. Lanham

955 P.2d 997, 1998 Colo. J. C.A.R. 1074, 1998 Colo. LEXIS 238, 1998 WL 112869
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMarch 9, 1998
DocketNo. 97SC199
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 955 P.2d 997 (Water, Waste & Land, Inc. v. Lanham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Water, Waste & Land, Inc. v. Lanham, 955 P.2d 997, 1998 Colo. J. C.A.R. 1074, 1998 Colo. LEXIS 238, 1998 WL 112869 (Colo. 1998).

Opinion

Justice SCOTT

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This case requires us to decide whether the members or managers of a limited liability company (LLC) are excused from personal liability on a contract where the other party to the contract did not have notice that the members or managers were negotiating on [999]*999behalf of a limited liability company at the time the contract was made.1 Because the county court found that the party dealing with the members or managers was unaware that they were acting as agents of a limited liability company when they negotiated the contract, and the evidence in the record supports the county court’s findings, we see no legal basis to excuse the agents of the LLC from liability and therefore we reverse the judgment of the district court.

I.

Water, Waste, & Land, Inc., the petitioner, is a land development and engineering company doing business under the name “Wes-tec.” At the time of the events in this case, Donald Lanham and Larry Clark were managers and also members of Preferred Income Investors, L.L.C. (Company or P.I.I.). The Company is a limited liability company organized under the Colorado Limited Liability Company Act, §§ 7-80-101 to -1101, 2 C.R.S. (1997) (the LLC Act).

In March 1995, Clark contacted Westec about the possibility of hiring Westec to perform engineering work in connection with a development project which involved the construction of a fast-food restaurant known as Taco Cabaña. In the course of preliminary discussions, Clark gave his business card to representatives of Westec. The business card included Lanham’s address, which was also the address listed as the Company’s principal office and place of business in its articles of organization filed with the secretary of state. While the Company’s name was not on the business card, the letters “P.I.I.” appeared above the address on the card. However, there was no indication as to what the acronym meant or that P.I.I. was a limited liability company.

After further negotiations, an oral agreement was reached concerning Westec’s involvement with the Company’s restaurant project. Clark instructed Westec to send a written proposal of its work to Lanham and the proposal was sent in April 1995. On August 2, 1995, Westec sent Lanham a form of contract, which Lanham was to execute and return to Westec.2 Although Westec never received a signed contract, in mid-August it did receive verbal authorization from Clark to begin work. Westec completed the engineering work and sent a bill for $9,183.40 to Lanham. No payments were made on the bill.

Westec filed a claim in county court against Clark and Lanham individually as well as against the Company. At trial, the Company admitted liability for the amount claimed by Westec. The county court entered judgment in favor of Westec. The county court found that: (1) Clark had contacted Westec to do engineering work for Lanham; (2) it was “unknown” to Westec that Lanham had organized the Company as a limited liability company; and (3) the letters “P.I.I.” on Clark’s business card were insufficient to place Westec on notice that the Company was a limited liability company. Based on its findings, the county court ruled that: (1) Clark was an agent of both Lanham and the Company with “authority to obligate [1000]*1000... Lanham and the Company”; (2) a valid and binding contract existed for the work; (3) Westec “did not have knowledge of any business entity” and only dealt with Clark and Lanham “on a personal basis”; and (4) Westec understood Clark to be Lanham’s agent and therefore “Clark is not personally liable.” Accordingly, the county court dismissed Clark from the suit, concluding he could not be held personally liable, and entered judgment in the amount of $9,183 against Lanham and the Company. Lanham appealed, seeking review in the Larimer County District Court (district court).

The district court reversed, concluding that “[t]he issue which the court must address is whether the County Court erred in holding Lanham, a member and primary manager of the company, personally liable for a debt of the company.” In addressing that issue, the district court found that Wes-tec was placed on notice that it was dealing with a limited liability company based on two factors: (1) the business card containing the letters “P.I.I.”; and (2) the notice provision of section 7-80-208, of the LLC Act. Principally in reliance upon the LLC Act’s notice provision, section 7-80-208, which provides that the filing of the articles of organization serve as constructive notice of a company’s status as a limited liability company, the district court held that “the County Court erred in finding that Westec had no notice that it was dealing with an L.L.C.” Contrary to the trial court’s findings, the district court held that “evidence presented at trial was uncontradicted that Westec knew it was dealing with a business entity (P.I.I.) and § 7-80-208 imputes notice that the entity was an ‘L.L.C.’ in addition to any common law presumption of a duty to inquire.” In the district court’s view, the notice provision, as well as Westee’s failure to investigate or request a personal guarantee, relieved Lanham of personal liability for claims against the Company.

II.

Resolution of the controversy between Westec and Lanham requires us to analyze the relationship between the common law of agency and the reach of our statutes governing managers and members of a limited liability company. However, before doing so, it may prove helpful to first discuss the history and development of limited liability companies and their use in business enterprise.

The limited liability company is a relatively recent innovation in the law governing business entities. Wyoming adopted the first LLC statute in 1977, but the majority of states did not adopt LLC legislation until the 1990s, largely because the tax treatment of such companies was in doubt. See 1 Larry E. Ribstein and Robert R. Keatinge, Ribstein and Keatinge on Limited Liability Companies §§ 1.06 & 16.02 (1997). These doubts have been largely resolved, and the LLC has become a popular form of business organization because it offers members the limited liability protection of a corporation, together with the single-tier tax treatment of a partnership along with considerable flexibility in management and financing. The ability to avoid two levels of income taxation is an especially attractive feature of organization as a limited liability company. See id. §§ 1.03 — 1.06; 1 Cathy Stricklin Krendl and James R. Krendl, Colorado Methods of Practice § 4.1 (1997).

In 1990, our General Assembly adopted the LLC Act, a statute currently codified as amended at sections 7-80-101 through 7-80-1101, 2 C.R.S. (1997), making Colorado the third state, behind Wyoming and Florida, to do so.3 Unlike a number of other states, where LLC statutes were based on a model act drafted by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws, Colorado’s LLC Act combined features of the state’s existing limited partnership and corporation statutes. See John R. Maxfield et al., Colorado Enacts Limited Liability Company Legislation, 19 Colo. Law. 1029 (June 1990). In any case, the LLC Act includes the same basic features of limited liability, single-tier tax treatment, and planning flexibility shared by the Uniform Limited Liability Company Act and LLC legislation adopted by other states.

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Bluebook (online)
955 P.2d 997, 1998 Colo. J. C.A.R. 1074, 1998 Colo. LEXIS 238, 1998 WL 112869, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/water-waste-land-inc-v-lanham-colo-1998.