Brandon M. Schwartz, Michael D. Schwartz, Schwartz Law Firm, Oakdale, Minnesota (for appellant)
Terrance J. Wagener, Messerli & Kramer, Minneapolis, Minnesota (for respondents Neal Cohen, et al.)
Thomas E. McEllistrem, Sarah J. McEllistrem, Collins, Buckley, Sauntry & Haugh, P.L.L.P., St. Paul, Minnesota (for respondent Stevens Industries)
Considered and decided by Schellhas, Presiding Judge; Larkin, Judge; and Smith, John, Judge.
SCHELLHAS, Judge
FACTS
Appellant Aaron Carlson Corporation (ACC) is an architectural woodworking company that provides custom woodwork for commercial and residential projects. LSI Corporation of America (LSI) manufactured and designed laminate-casework systems, and solid surface and other interior products. Respondents Neil Cohen, Darren Chaffee, and CoBe Capital, LLC (CoBe defendants) are shareholders or otherwise connected with LSI of America Holdings (LSI Holdings), which purchased LSI in June 2013. LSI contracted to purchase custom woodwork from ACC for one of its projects for a total price of $687,825. On June 12, 2015, LSI cancelled the contract with ACC. In July, ACC sued LSI for account stated and breach of contract (Hennepin County District Court 27-CV-15-16802) (contract action).
Meanwhile, Cohen and Chaffee entered into a loan agreement with LSI through which they acquired the right to request appointment of a receiver over LSI. In January 2016, Cohen and Chaffee commenced a lawsuit against LSI, alleging that LSI owed them collectively $5,044,797.54 and seeking appointment of a receiver over LSI (Hennepin County District Court 27-CV-16-646) (receivership action).
On March 8, 2016, ACC filed an appearance in the receivership action, moved to intervene, moved to enjoin the liquidation of LSI, and asked the district court to void ab initio the receivership and any approved sales of LSI's assets, arguing that ACC had not received adequate notice. In a March 14 order, the district court stated that "ACC's counsel admitted ACC had received notice of the receivership and a copy of the Order appointing the receiver on January 18." The court denied ACC's motions, determining that the receiver adequately represented ACC's interests and noting that ACC would "have the opportunity to object to the claims process when the Receiver distributes the liquidated funds." ACC did not appeal this order.
The receiver sold LSI's property, and the district court in the receivership action approved the receiver's final report on May 6, 2016, authorized a final distribution of the receivership assets, and discharged the receiver. Respondent Stevens Industries, Inc. (Stevens), an Illinois corporation doing business in Minnesota, purchased some of LSI's property. ACC did not object to the receiver's final report or appeal the court's May 6 order.
In the contract action, the district court granted summary judgment to ACC for
This appeal follows.
ISSUE
Did the district court err by granting summary judgment to the CoBe defendants on ACC's veil-piercing claim?
ANALYSIS
ACC argues that the district court erred in granting summary judgment to the CoBe defendants on its veil-piercing claim because the "veil piercing claim belongs to ACC, not LSI Corporation," and because ACC "seeks to recover from the funds and assets of [the CoBe defendants], not from LSI." ACC argues that neither the receivership order nor a receiver's powers under
In an appeal from a grant of summary judgment, appellate courts review de novo (1) whether there are any genuine issues of material fact for trial; and (2) whether the district court erred in its application of the law. Linn v. BCBSM, Inc. ,
Receiver's power to assert a veil-piercing claim against LSI
In arguing that the receiver lacked the power to assert or settle ACC's veil-piercing claim against LSI, ACC asks this court to interpret Minnesota's receivership statutes,
We note first that the statutory provisions under which a receiver may be appointed "are not ... exclusive and the court may under its general equity powers appoint receivers in other cases in accordance with the existing practice." Asleson v. Allison ,
The appointment of a receiver is made by a court of equity, and its purpose is to accomplish, as far as practicable, complete justice for the parties before it. Its object is to secure and hold all property so that it may be available for the application of the final judgment.
A "general receivership" is a "receivership over all or substantially all of the nonexempt property of a respondent for the purpose of liquidation and distribution to creditors and other parties in interest."
(1) to (i) assert, or when authorized by the court, to release, any rights, claims, causes of action, or defenses of the respondent to the extent any rights, claims, causes of action, or defenses are receivership property; (ii) maintain in the receiver's name or in the name of the respondent any action to enforce any right, claim, cause of action, or defense; and (iii) intervene in actions in which the respondent is a party for the purpose of exercising the powers under this clause or requesting transfer of venue of the action to the court; (2) to pursue anyclaim or remedy that may be asserted by a creditor of the respondent under [Minnesota Uniform Voidable Transactions Act].
Id ., subd. 1(b).
Here, the district court appointed the receiver as a "general receiver" with "all of the powers and duties of a general receiver set forth in
In Snyder Electric Co. v. Fleming , creditors of an insolvent corporation sought to pierce the corporate veil to recover money judgments against the corporation by suing its sole stockholder and CEO.
Further, in Equity Trust , victims of a consumer-fraud scheme sought to pierce the corporate veil to recover from the owners of the businesses used to perpetrate the scheme.
Here, in the receivership action, the district court explicitly authorized the receiver to pursue claims against LSI's officers, directors, and owners, which included the CoBe defendants. The court also gave the receiver the ability to seek guidance on and pursue further equitable remedies, which could have included a veil-piercing claim. See
Under Equity Trust , a receiver is able to pierce the corporate veil and to exercise power over shareholders to collect receivership property.
Based on the plain meaning of
ACC's veil-piercing claim as an improper collateral attack on the receivership action
ACC argues that the district court erred by concluding that its veil-piercing claim constituted an improper collateral
ACC argues that the district court erroneously relied on Greer in ruling that its veil-piercing claim represented an improper collateral attack because Greer is inapposite. In Greer , an individual who had been under a guardianship and conservatorship filed tort claims against her conservator that, in part, challenged the necessity of certain expenditures made during her guardianship and conservatorship.
ACC maintains that Greer is inapposite, arguing that, unlike Greer, ACC was not entitled to notice of the receivership action, did not approve the receivership, and could not have stopped the receiver's sale of LSI's assets. But ACC's attorney acknowledged that ACC received notice of the receivership, and ACC filed an appearance in the receivership action and a motion to intervene. And, although ACC did not explicitly approve of the receivership, it did not object to the receiver's final report or appeal the district court's order confirming the report.
Nevertheless, whether ACC's claim in its veil-piercing action amounts to an improper collateral attack on the receivership action turns on whether the receiver had the authority to assert ACC's veil-piercing claim against LSI, not on whether the receiver actually asserted that claim against LSI. See id . at 131 ("Thus, had [the conservatee] believed that the probate court's orders were a result of ... fraud or misrepresentation ... [she] could have requested the probate court to take corrective action within the prescribed time period. What she cannot do, however, is to seek such redress by collaterally attacking the probate court's orders in an independent proceeding."). The record here reflects that ACC did not ask the receiver to pierce the corporate veil of LSI on its behalf, nor did ACC object to the receiver's final report or appeal the district court's order affirming it.
Because ACC filed a notice of appearance in the receivership action, the receiver placed ACC on the "Master Service List" for the proceedings, ensuring that ACC would receive notice of the proceedings.
ACC cites In re Rehab. of Centaur Ins. Co. ,
In Centaur , an Illinois appellate court concluded that a director-rehabilitator of an insurance company did not possess the authority to assert a veil-piercing claim against the company because the director derives his authority from statute, and cannot act in contravention of or beyond the statute, which did not allow for a director to assert a creditor's veil-piercing claims.
In the receivership action, ACC was an unsecured creditor. In denying ACC's motions to intervene and enjoin the receivership action, the district court concluded that the receiver adequately represented ACC's interests. ACC did not appeal that order or the order confirming the receiver's final report. See Minn. R. Civ. App. P. 103.03(g) (allowing party to appeal a final order affecting a substantial right made in a special proceeding); Vill.Apts. v. State (In re Objections and Defenses to Real Property Taxes for the 1980 Assessment) ,
ACC also argues that it alleged sufficient facts to survive summary judgment on the veil-piercing claim. But ACC identifies no genuine issue of any material fact. And we do not consider the merits of ACC's veil-piercing claim because the district court did not address its merits. See Staffing Specifix, Inc. v. TempWorks Mgmt. Servs., Inc. ,
Because ACC's veil-piercing claim amounts to an impermissible collateral attack, we conclude that the district court did not err in granting summary judgment against ACC and in favor of the CoBe defendants. See Lamson v. Towle-Jamieson Inv. Co. ,
DECISION
Because a duly appointed receiver in a general receivership under
Affirmed.
Notes
Retired judge of the Minnesota Court of Appeals, serving by appointment pursuant to Minn. Const. art. VI, § 10.
We take judicial notice of the orders in both the contract action and receivership action, which provide the background for the present dispute. See Minn. R. Evid. 201(b) (allowing for judicial notice of facts "capable of accurate and ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned").
ACC does not challenge the district court's grant of summary judgment to Stevens.
The district court applied the former version of rule 56, which was recently "revamped" to more "closely follow" the federal rules. Minn. R. Civ. App. P. 56 2018 advisory comm. cmt. When promulgating the amendments to rule 56, effective on July 1, 2018, and applicable to pending cases and those filed thereafter, the Minnesota Supreme Court specifically indicated that the language describing the standard for granting summary judgment reflected recent caselaw. Order Promulgating Amendments to Rules of Civil Procedure , No. ADM04-8001 (Minn. Mar. 13, 2018). Because the legal standard is unchanged, we cite to the current version of rule 56.01, even though the district court's decision was issued before the amended rule took effect.
We note that decisions from other jurisdictions, while not binding on this court, are consistent with this outcome. See, e.g. , Koch Ref. v. Farmers Union Cent. Exch., Inc. ,
At a hearing in this action, ACC claimed that it did not object to the receiver's final report or appeal from the district court's order confirming the receiver's final report because ACC believed that the receiver did not have the "duty to investigate or settle it[s] [veil-piercing claim]." ACC therefore also believed that it need not object to the receiver's final report or appeal from the district court's order approving the receiver's final report.
After ACC filed a notice of appearance, the Receiver issued an "Updated Master Service List" that includes counsel for ACC. The "Master Service List," dated May 2016, and included with the affidavit of service for the "Notice of Filing of Order for the Order Approving Receiver's Final Report, Authorizing a Final Distribution of Receivership Assets and Ordering Discharge of Receiver," also lists counsel for ACC.
