Zimmerman v. Kyte

765 P.2d 905, 53 Wash. App. 11
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 19, 1988
Docket21421-7-I
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 765 P.2d 905 (Zimmerman v. Kyte) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zimmerman v. Kyte, 765 P.2d 905, 53 Wash. App. 11 (Wash. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

Webster, J.

—Sara Kyte appeals a judgment in favor of Don and Kathryn Zimmerman on a cause of action previously owned by Plaza Drug Corporation. Kyte does not dispute her liability on the merits but argues that the Zim-mermans lacked standing as shareholders of Plaza to prosecute the claim and that the corporation could not do so because it failed to pay its annual license fee. The Secretary of State dissolved Plaza during the course of this action because of the fee delinquency, and the Zimmermans now claim title to the cause as Plaza's successors.

Facts

In 1974, Don Zimmerman and Michael Bloom formed Plaza Drug Corporation for the purpose of purchasing and operating a drugstore. Zimmerman and his wife owned one-half of Plaza; Bloom owned the other half. Zimmerman was *13 secretary-treasurer and Bloom was president. Together, they managed the corporation.

A tort claim for contractual interference accrued to Plaza in November 1984 when Kyte and other employees prevented Plaza from negotiating a lease. Zimmerman and Bloom met in March 1985 to discuss Plaza's response to the loss of its lease and to a fire that occurred at the drugstore premises in February. They decided to "dissolve" Plaza at this meeting and to "liquidate" Plaza's assets. According to Bloom, they distributed Plaza's claim against Kyte to the Zimmermans.

The Zimmermans filed suit on the claim in October 1985 naming themselves and Plaza as plaintiffs. Kyte challenged the Zimmermans' standing, arguing that they were mere shareholders and that only the corporation could sue. The Zimmermans responded by averring that Plaza had been voluntarily dissolved and that the corporation had transferred its rights to them. They moved for an order substituting themselves as plaintiffs in place of Plaza. The court summarily granted their request and ordered substitution in February 1986. Kyte received notice but did not object.

Bloom moved to intervene after substitution on alternative grounds. First, Bloom argued that he was a stockholder in Plaza and thus co-owned the cause. Second, he asserted that as an employee of Plaza he had a right to recover for lost wages resulting from Plaza's employees' tort. The court granted Bloom's motion, noting this time as before that Kyte did not object.

Kyte moved to dismiss all claims at the end of trial, on June 10, 1987. The court granted the motion as to Bloom because, as Kyte argued, both Zimmerman and Bloom testified that Plaza's claim passed to the Zimmermans. Kyte argued that the Zimmermans failed to prove essential elements of the tort of contractual interference and that therefore their claim should be dismissed as well. However, the court denied Kyte's motion as to the Zimmermans.

The parties discovered and stipulated a week later, on June 17, 1987, that the Secretary of State dissolved Plaza 1 *14 month after substitution because Plaza failed to pay its annual license fee. Kyte argued at a hearing on proposed findings in September 1987 that the administrative dissolution was the only evidence of dissolution. Therefore, Kyte contended, part of a proposed finding suggesting that Plaza had been dissolved "by agreement of the principals” should be stricken. The court agreed and simply found in accordance with the remainder of the proposed finding that Plaza had been dissolved and that the lawsuit had been transferred to the Zimmermans. Kyte did not dispute this finding, although she now contends that the evidence does not support a transfer.

Self-Invited Error

Kyte's reliance on a transfer of cause from Plaza to the Zimmermans in obtaining a dismissal against Bloom and her acquiescence in this theory as against Plaza prevents her from contradicting it now. A party may not use theories or arguments to his or her advantage at trial and then argue on appeal that they were erroneously accepted by the trial court. See State v. Lewis, 15 Wn. App. 172, 176, 548 P.2d 587 (1976); State v. Newman, 4 Wn. App. 588, 592, 484 P.2d 473, review denied, 79 Wn.2d 1004 (1971). In Lewis, the defendant requested instructions on third degree assault as a lesser included offense to second degree assault and then asserted on appeal that, since third degree assault is not included within the definition of second degree assault, there was a complete lack of evidence to support the conviction. In Newman, defense counsel argued that his client was prejudiced by a mug shot revealing a prior arrest, but counsel maintained on voir dire in the presence of the jury that a photo montage including the defendant was not necessarily the same one shown to a key identifying witness for the prosecution, because many of the persons photographed in the montage had been previously arrested and photographed. Counsel also did not specifically object to the problem presented by the mug shot. In both cases, the Court of Appeals held that the defendants invited the error *15 from which they appealed and could not complain of the resulting prejudice.

In the case at hand, counsel for Kyte did not object to substitution, but obtained a dismissal of Bloom's claim on the theory that the Zimmermans owned the entire tort claim previously held by Plaza. Counsel did not renew Kyte's objection to the Zimmermans' standing upon learning of Plaza's postassignment administrative dissolution but instead acquiesced in the benefit of having two fewer plaintiffs, Plaza and Bloom, against whom to defend. If Kyte were now permitted to challenge the trial court's finding, she would obtain a double benefit. The court's judgment is res judicata as to Plaza and Bloom, and, in any event, Plaza no longer exists. "Having gambled and won in the face of unfriendly odds, [Kyte] should not now be heard to complain of [her] victory, however hollow it might now appear to be." Lewis, at 176.

Sufficiency of the Evidence

The thrust of Kyte's argument is that the evidence does not establish a transfer of Plaza's tort claim to the Zim-mermans. Kyte argues that the Zimmermans predicated the transfer on a voluntary dissolution of the corporation. Since the trial court expressly found that there was no dissolution "by agreement of the principals," Kyte infers that no transfer ever occurred. Plaza thus held the cause at all critical times, and RCW 23A.44.120 prevented the corporation from suing to enforce it.

Kyte's argument is flawed in two respects. First, RCW 23A.44.120 is not a bar to the instant action by the Zim-mermans. Second, the trial court did not predicate its finding that the Zimmermans owned this action on a supposed voluntary dissolution of Plaza.

RCW 23A.44.120 provides that

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Bluebook (online)
765 P.2d 905, 53 Wash. App. 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zimmerman-v-kyte-washctapp-1988.