White v. Llewellyn

CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMay 6, 2021
Docket191599
StatusPublished

This text of White v. Llewellyn (White v. Llewellyn) 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
White v. Llewellyn, (Va. 2021).

Opinion

PRESENT: All the Justices

ANN MICHELLE WHITE OPINION BY v. Record No. 191599 JUSTICE S. BERNARD GOODWYN May 6, 2021 ANN ELIZABETH LLEWELLYN, ET AL.

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF HENRICO COUNTY Richard S. Wallerstein, Jr., Judge

In this appeal, we consider whether the circuit court erred in shifting only the burden of

production—but not the burden of persuasion—to the defendants in a fraudulent conveyance

suit, after the plaintiff established a presumption of a fraudulent conveyance.

BACKGROUND

In 2011, Ann Elizabeth Llewellyn (Ann) and David Bradford Llewellyn (Brad)

(collectively, the Llewellyns), then husband and wife, purchased a house (the Residence) on

Ziontown Road in Henrico County, Virginia. On July 21, 2013, Ann drove out of the

Residence’s driveway and struck a vehicle driven by Ann Michelle White (White). As a result

of the collision, White suffered personal injuries and required several surgeries, including

bi-lateral hip replacement.

Seeking damages for the injuries she suffered, White filed a personal injury suit against

the Llewellyns in the Circuit Court of Henrico County on July 10, 2015. White’s suit included a

negligence claim against Ann and a premises liability claim against both Ann and Brad. In

response, Ann filed an answer and a demurrer, and Brad filed a demurrer.

Before the accident, the Llewellyns had been experiencing marital problems. Between

2012 and 2015, the Llewellyns separated, reconciled, separated again, and executed separation

agreements. On December 30, 2015, while White’s personal injury suit was still pending against both Ann and Brad, the Llewellyns finalized their divorce proceedings. The Llewellyns’ final

property settlement agreement indicated that Brad would receive ownership of the Residence.

On January 28, 2016, the circuit court sustained Brad’s demurrer, thus dismissing Brad

from the suit, but a claim against Ann remained pending.

On November 9, 2016, the Llewellyns executed a deed of gift (the 2016 Gift) granting

Brad fee simple title over the Residence, “for and in consideration of mutual love and affection.”

After the 2016 Gift was executed, Ann and their children continued to live rent-free in the

Residence.

On March 30, 2018, White filed the instant suit in the Circuit Court of Henrico County,

seeking to void a purported fraudulent conveyance of the Residence to Brad pursuant to Code

§ 55.1-400 (formerly Code § 55-80), and to assess damages and fees pursuant to Code

§ 55.1-403 (formerly Code § 55-82.1). She alleged that the transfer of the Residence to Brad is

prima facie fraudulent because of several badges of fraud, namely (1) the close familial

relationship between Ann and Brad; (2) Ann’s claim of insolvency; (3) the lack of marketable

consideration; and (4) Ann’s retention of possession and occupancy of the Residence.

In May 2018, after a trial of the negligence claim against Ann, the circuit court entered a

final order on the jury’s verdict which awarded White $1,500,000 in damages against Ann.

On April 4, 2019, at the subsequent trial of White’s fraudulent conveyance suit, White

called Ann and Brad as witnesses. Ann denied that she and Brad executed the 2016 Gift for the

purpose of avoiding any liability in White’s personal injury suit. She clarified that she executed

the 2016 Gift as part of “housekeeping” measures to effect the transfer of title that passed “as

part of the divorce agreement.” Brad testified that, after the 2016 Gift was executed, he allowed

Ann and their children to remain in the Residence so their children could remain close to the

2 schools that they were attending at the time of the divorce. He expounded that there was “no

official end date” to Ann’s and their children’s stay in the Residence, but the arrangement would

likely end after their middle son left for college.

At the conclusion of White’s presentation of evidence, the circuit court found that

White’s evidence, which proved several badges of fraud, was sufficient to establish a

presumption that the conveyance was fraudulent.

During the Llewellyns’ presentation of evidence, Ann and Brad were again called as

witnesses. Brad testified that White’s personal injury suit did not have any effect on the transfer

of the Residence’s ownership; he and Ann simply negotiated the property settlement agreement

for their divorce, without regard as to the pending suit. Ann testified that Brad allowed her and

their children to remain in the Residence in order to help them deal with any anxiety and

depression brought about by the divorce. She again denied that she and Brad executed the 2016

Gift for the purpose of avoiding any liability in White’s personal injury suit, and noted that, as

part of their separation agreement, she had retained sole ownership of a second residence.

At the end of the trial, the circuit court invited the parties to file letter briefs regarding

(1) a plaintiff’s burden of proof to establish fraudulent intent after badges of fraud have been

proven and (2) what burden of proof shifts from a plaintiff to a defendant after badges of fraud

have been proven.

After considering the parties’ post-trial briefs, the circuit court held that the presumption

of fraudulent conveyance is established “once the badges of fraud are [proven by a plaintiff and

that the presumption] shifts the burden of production to the defendant, [but] not the burden of

persuasion.” Thus, it held that White retained the burden of persuasion to prove the fraudulent

conveyance by clear and convincing evidence upon the Llewellyns meeting their burden to

3 produce “countervailing evidence tending to prove that the conveyance was not done with the

intent to evade the plaintiff.”

The circuit court ruled that it was convinced that the Llewellyns’ testimony was

sufficiently credible as to satisfy their burden to produce evidence that the transaction regarding

the residence was not carried out with the intent to evade the rights of the plaintiff. The circuit

court also noted that at the time that the Llewellyns entered the divorce agreement, both of them

were still defendants in the suit brought by White. It concluded that the Llewellyns had satisfied

their burden of production, and that White had failed to carry her burden of persuasion to prove a

fraudulent conveyance by clear and convincing evidence.

The circuit court entered a final order dismissing White’s complaint. The circuit court

anchored its reasoning on four points, which it outlined. First, the Virginia Code places “the

burden of proving fraudulent intent by clear and convincing evidence” on a plaintiff. Second,

when a plaintiff establishes a prima facie case of fraudulent intent, then the effect is that her suit

“survive[s] a motion to strike,” but the trial itself is unaffected by the prima facie case. Third,

when a plaintiff establishes a prima facie case of fraud, the burden of producing evidence shifts

to the defendant, but the burden of persuasion by clear and convincing evidence remains with the

plaintiff. Fourth, if a defendant presents “credible evidence” to rebut a presumption of fraud,

then “the presumption disappears.” Based on the foregoing, the circuit court held that the

Llewellyns’ testimonies regarding their reason for the transfer of the Residence was “credible

and sufficient” to rebut any presumption of fraud established by White, and that White failed to

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White v. Llewellyn, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-llewellyn-va-2021.