MEMORANDUM OPINION
This action arises out of attempts by the plaintiffs to collect on judgments they hold against defendant Barrie Peterson. Plaintiffs, C.F. Trust, Inc. (“CF Trust”) and Atlantic Funding Corporation (“AFC”), have brought suit alleging that defendant Barrie Peterson has used various corporations, partnerships, and individuals as alter egos to avoid payment of his obligations under the judgments and seeking to pierce the corporate veil in reverse to reach the assets of these entities. At bar are the parties’ cross motions for summary judgment, presenting, inter alia, the question whether Virginia law recognizes a cause of action for reverse piercing of the corporate veil, and if so, what standards govern such an action.
I
Plaintiffs, CF Trust, a Florida corporation with its principal place of business in Florida, and AFC, a Nevada corporation with its principal place of business in Florida, each own commercial notes on which defendant Barrie Peterson, individually, Barrie Peterson as a trustee, and Nancy
This case is by no means the first suit by the plaintiffs claiming that Barrie Peterson has taken steps to evade the payment of these judgments and to defraud his creditors. To the contrary, this case is merely the latest chapter in an ongoing saga. So voluminous is the litigation involving these parties that only a summary is presented in the margin. 4
In the instant suit, filed in November 1999, plaintiffs initially stated claims for; (i) a declaratory judgment that First Flight, BHG, BOI, PVD Limited Partner
At all relevant times, Barrie Peterson, a Virginia citizen, wholly owned and controlled defendants BHG, BOI, and Maryland Air Industries and is a 49% limited partner, along with his son Scott Peterson, in defendant First Flight. 7 First Flight is a limited partnership organized under the laws of Virginia with its principal place of business in Woodbridge, Virginia. The general partner of First Flight is a corporation wholly owned by defendant Scott Peterson, the Upland Group. BHG 8 and BOI 9 are both corporations organized under the laws of Virginia with their principal place of business in Wood-bridge, Virginia. Maryland Air Industries is a corporation organized under the laws of Virginia with its principal place of business in Woodbridge, Virginia.
Plaintiffs allege that, during and after the initial judgment was entered, defendants engaged in numerous transactions among themselves, and transferred funds among themselves, for the purpose of avoiding Barrie Peterson’s obligations to plaintiffs. Plaintiffs also allege that Barrie and Scott Peterson conduct business
II
On a motion for summary judgment, the moving party must demonstrate that “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). The facts themselves, and the inferences to be drawn from those facts, must be viewed in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.
See Ross v. Communications Satellite Corp.,
Ill
The threshold question raised by the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment is whether Virginia law permits creditors to pierce the corporate veil in reverse — that is, whether a person with a claim against a corporate insider or limited partner can “attempt to have the insider and the corporate entity treated as a single person.” Gregory S. Crespi,
The Reverse Pierce Doctrine: Applying Appropriate Standards,
16 J.Corp.L. 33, 36 (1990). Defendants assert that Virginia does not recognize reverse piercing of the corporate veil, and that even if it did, the plaintiffs have failed to establish that Bar
1. Virginia Law Permits Reverse Piercing of the Corporate Veil
The “independent legal existence of the corporation is a basic component of corporate law.”
O’Hazza v. Executive Credit Corp.,
This case raises a variant of the traditional veil-piercing case. In a traditional veil-piercing action, a court disregards the existence of the corporate entity so a claimant can reach the assets of a corporate insider. In a reverse piercing action, however, the plaintiff seeks to reach the assets of a corporation to satisfy claims against a corporate insider.
See, e.g., In re Blatstein,
Although relatively new, reverse piercing actions have gradually gained acceptance throughout the country.
13
While the Supreme Court of Virginia has not yet addressed this issue. Virginia may be said, nonetheless, to have joined this movement given that the Virginia Court of Appeals has recognized the outsider reverse piercing cause of action.
See Fox v. Fox,
The conclusion that Virginia law recognizes reverse piercing is not based solely on the Court of Appeals decision in Fox; 15 it finds farther firm support in principle. Simply put, the rationale for traditional piercing operates with equal force in support of reverse piercing. The fiction of the separate legal existence of a corporation is recognized for the purpose of encouraging and enabling economic growth. When this form is abused, courts, in appropriate circumstances, may disregard the fiction. And, in these circumstances, this should be so, on principle, whether the fiction is misused to shield the owner’s assets from claims against the corporation or to shield the corporation’s assets from claims against the owner. Were this not the case, an individual could abuse the corporate or limited partnership forms with impunity so as to evade personal obligations and to hinder the collection of valid judgments. Commentators agree that reverse piercing, like traditional piercing, does not impair the legitimate commercial use of the corporate fiction. See, e.g., Stephen B. Presser, Piercing the Corporate Veil § 1.06 (1998); Crespi, The Reverse Pierce Doctrine: Applying Appropriate Standards, 16 J.Corp.L. 33 (1990). 16 Accordingly, it is likely that the Supreme Court of Virginia would recognize a reverse piercing cause of action, provided that the plaintiff can establish the requisite grounds. 17
2. The Standard to Pierce the Corporate Veil
The standard for piercing the corporate veil, either to reach the individual through the corporation or the reverse, has occasioned much litigation, perhaps because, as the Supreme Court of Virginia has stated, “no single rule or criterion ... can be applied to determine whether piercing the corporate veil is justified.”
O’Hazza,
Defendants, however, argue for a different phrasing of the alter ego test, which they contend the plaintiffs cannot meet. Specifically, defendants contend that the phrase “evade personal obligations,” included for the first time in the
O’Hazza
decision, is not a part of the alter ego standard.
O’Hazza,
they argue, was an aberration because a subsequent 1994 Supreme Court of Virginia decision did not include this language.
See RF & P Corp. v. Little,
Defendants’ argument fails for two reasons. First, in
Greenberg v. Commonwealth,
the Supreme Court of Virginia in 1998 restated the
O’Hazza
formulation of the alter ego test, complete with the phrase “evade personal obligations.”
Second, defendants misread Perpetual. The “legal wrong” requirement is correctly understood as a broad category that includes using the corporate form to (i) evade personal obligations, (ii) perpetuate fraud or a crime, or (in) commit injustice. Thus, plaintiffs do not have to prove a legal wrong in the form of conspiracy or RICO violations in order to establish that the various entities are the alter egos of Barrie Peterson; instead, what is required is that the facts and circumstances establish one of the factors set forth in the Cheatle-O’Hazzou-Greenberg line of cases. By showing that the transactions in question, which include alleged violations of charging or garnishment orders, were undertaken with a wrongful purpose or to evade creditors, plaintiffs may satisfy the “legal wrong” requirement in Perpetual and the factors in Cheatle and O’Hazza.
Furthermore, relying on their mistaken view of the “legal wrong” requirement, defendants argue that dismissal of the majority of the counts from the complaint prohibits the plaintiffs from proving an alter ego claim because no underlying cause of action exists. This argument, too, fails. To be sure, the defendants are correct that the alter ego doctrine is not an independent cause of action, but rather is a “means for a complainant to reach a second corporation or
8. Genuine Issues of Material Fact Exist
Given the conclusion that plaintiffs may pursue their reverse piercing claim under Virginia law, the question that remains is whether either party is entitled to summary judgment based on the current record. More precisely, the question is whether the current record discloses any disputed material facts concerning whether the defendants abused the corporate and partnership forms so as to perpetrate a fraud or crime, evade a personal obligation, or commit an injustice. A component of this is whether the transactions in question were undertaken with the purpose of hindering and defrauding Barrie Peterson’s creditors in their attempt to collect on the judgments against him. A close review of the current record reflects that on this issue, material facts are indeed genuinely disputed, rendering summary judgment inappropriate.
See Perpetual,
While the occurrence of certain transactions is not in question, their purpose is. Thus, the parties agree that certain of Barrie Peterson’s captive corporations made payments to cover his personal living expenses, but they sharply dispute whether Barrie Peterson directed these payments with the intent to defraud creditors or to evade a personal obligation. The parties also agree that BHG transferred funds to other Barrie Peterson-controlled entities. Plaintiffs allege, however, that these entities (First Flight, PVD Limited Partnership, Occoquan Limited Partnership) had no obligation or right to these funds and that these transfers were used to pay Barrie Peterson’s personal living expenses. Yet another transaction in which the purpose is disputed is the distribution by First Flight of over $4.3 million to Scott Peterson between 1996 and 1999 and the subsequent transfer by Scott Peterson of $687,000 to BHG. While the parties agree that these distributions occurred, they disagree over whether these distributions were in violation of the First Flight Partnership Agreement and whether, therefore, approximately one-half of these funds should have been distributed to Barrie Peterson, in which event they may have been subject to plaintiffs’ charging order on Barrie Peterson’s interest in
h Nancy and Scott Peterson Cannot Be the Alter Egos of Bame Peterson.
The parties cite no case that authoritatively discusses whether the alter ego test is properly applicable to establish that an individual, not a corporation or partnership, is the alter ego of another individual. Nor is this surprising, for, on principle, it is clear that an individual cannot be the alter ego of another individual. The alter ego test was developed to provide creditors with a means of disregarding the corporate or limited partnership form when that legal fiction has been abused by corporate insiders.
See Cheatle,
This does not mean that plaintiffs were without a remedy for their concern over the roles that Nancy Peterson and Scott Peterson played in the alleged attempt to hinder the plaintiffs from collecting on the judgment. For example, plaintiffs might have asserted a conspiracy claim that Scott Peterson aided his father to avoid his legal obligations. However, these claims are not before the Court. Absent these claims, Scott and Nancy Peterson are not properly parties to this action.
IV
For all the reasons stated above, defendants’ joint motion for summary judgment is granted in part as to Nancy and Scott Peterson and denied in all other respects.
The Clerk is directed to forward this Memorandum Opinion to all counsel of record.
Notes
. Nancy Peterson, the wife of Barrie Peterson, is liable only on the CF Trust notes.
. Plaintiffs are purchasers, not original holders of the commercial notes. They brought this suit as co-plaintiffs because the sole shareholder of AFC is both the vice-president of CF Trust and the sole owner of a corporation that is a 25% shareholder of CF Trust.
. The commercial notes owned by CF Trust are in the original principal amount of $6,064,903.57. The promissory note owned by AFC is in the total original principal amount of $1 million.
.
See C.F. Trust v. Peterson,
Civil Action No. 96-1128-A (E.D Va. Dec. 9, 1996) (voiding as a fraudulent conveyance a deed of trust Barrie and Nancy Peterson placed on their residence);
C.F. Trust, Inc. v. DEP, Inc.,
Adversary Proceeding No. 97-1017 (Bankr.E.D.Va. Oct. 31, 1997),
aff'd sub nom. J.P. Development, Inc. v. C.F. Trust, Inc.,
Civil Action No. 98-0079 (E.D.Va. April 3, 1999),
aff'd sub nom. C.F. Trust, Inc. v. J.P. Development, Inc.,
Case No. 98-1670,
. By Order dated March 31, 2000, this Court dismissed the RICO count. See C.F. Trust, Inc. v. First Flight Ltd. Partnership., Order, C.A. No. 99-1742-A (March 31, 2000). Furthermore, on June 23, 2000, this Court accepted plaintiffs’ motion to dismiss voluntarily Counts IV, VI, VII, VIII, and X, and defendants Occoquan and Carnett pursuant to Rule 41(a)(2), Fed.R.Civ.P. See C.F. Trust, Inc. v. First Flight Ltd. Partnership., Order, C.A. No. 99-1742-A (June 23, 2000). According to the parties’ memoranda, plaintiffs accepted a $15,000 offer of judgment from Birchwood Holdings Group on Count V of the complaint (violation of a garnishment order).
. By Order dated March 31, 2000, this Court dismissed PVD Limited Partnership, a Florida corporation, in order to maintain diversity jurisdiction. See C.F. Trust, Inc. v. First Flight Ltd. Partnership., Order, C.A. No. 99-1742-A (March 31, 2000). Furthermore, by Order dated August 25, 2000, this Court dismissed BHG and BOI for lack of controversy. See C.F. Trust, Inc. v. First Flight Ltd. Partnership., Order, C.A. No. 99-1742-A (August 25, 2000).
. By Order dated June 19, 2000, plaintiff AFC became the sole owner of the stock of BHG and BOI. See Atlantic Funding Corp. v. Peterson, Order, C.A. No. 91-1084-A (June 19, 2000). AFC bought the stock at auction pursuant to a judicial sale order. As a result, defendant Barrie Peterson has lost ownership and control of these entities. Because of this loss of control, defendants moved for partial summary judgment on behalf of BHG and BOI due to a lack of controversy remaining between the plaintiffs and these parties.
. BHG provides administrative and management services, primarily, to other Barrie Peterson controlled entities. BHG derives revenue from fees charged for these services at the rate of cost plus ten percent.
. BOI provides lease and property management services almost exclusively to the First Flight. BOI charges a four percent fee for this service.
. For example, plaintiffs allege that BHG paid Barrie Peterson's personal mortgage obligation on a residence in Nantucket, his credit card expenses, his health insurance, and his expenses at a country club.
. Although discussion of the alter ego doctrine typically focuses on the corporate form, it is settled that the doctrine also applies to limited partnerships.
See, e.g., Sloan v. Thornton,
. Outsider reverse piercing actions must be distinguished from "insider reverse piercing” actions which are not the subject matter of the instant suit. In an insider reverse piercing claim, a dominant shareholder attempts to disregard the corporate form so as to permit the insider to raise corporate claims against the third party.
See Cargill v. Hedge,
. See, e.g., United States v. Scherping,
. In reaching this conclusion, the Fox court relied on established Virginia precedent elucidating the standard for the determination of the alter ego test. See Fox, 1998 WL at *7-8.
. Worth noting is that plaintiffs contend that
Fox
is not the sole decision indicating that Virginia law recognizes reverse piercing; they also cite two Eastern District of Virginia Bankruptcy decisions to support their reverse piercing claim.
See In re Wilson,
. The only exception to this rule is that if a corporation has multiple shareholders, the prejudice to these other shareholders is greater under reverse piercing, because they, as non-culpable parties, will suffer for the actions of another shareholder. Because Barrie Peterson owns virtually all of the stock or partnership interests in these entities, this concern is not present in this case.
. Plaintiffs actually assert that First Flight and Maryland Air Industries are the alter egos of BHG, its affiliate corporation, which, in turn, is the alter ego of Barrie Peterson. Virginia has long held that entities can be the alter egos of its subsidiaries
or
its affiliates.
See U.S. Fire Ins. Co. v. Allied Towing Corp.,
. Fletcher Cyc. Corp. § 41.10.
. This issue may be revisited by the parties following hearing on the merits.
. The only case purporting to find an individual to be an alter ego of another individual is the unreported decision of
In re Bohrer,
