delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this appeal, we consider whether the trial court erred in piercing the corporate veil of a close corporation to assess liability for a judgment against the corporation upon its stockholders.
BACKGROUND
This case originated with a motion for judgment filed in the Circuit Court of the City of Norfolk (the trial court) on June 14, 2000, by 313 Freemason, a Condominium Association, Inc. (the Association) and the owners of four individual units of the condominium against Freemason Associates, Inc. (Freemason), and Thomas W. Dana and Conley J. Hall, the corporation’s sole stockholders. The motion for judgment alleged that the roof, chimneys, fireplaces, and flues of the condominium building were defective when the building was sold by Freemason to the individual unit owners or their grantors. Asserting theories of actual fraud, fraudulent misrepresentation, constructive fraud, false advertising under Code § 59.1-68.3, breach of contract, and breach of the statutory warranty provided by Code § 55-79.79 of the Condominium Act, the Association and the individual unit owners sought compensatory damages of “no less than $200,000” in addition to punitive damages, costs, and attorney’s fees.
By an order dated April 18, 2001, the trial court severed the claims of the Association and the individual unit owners and directed that each action thereafter proceed independently, except for purposes of conducting discovery. 1 On June 2, 2001, the Association filed an amended motion for judgment asserting as its separate claims only the claim for breach of the statutory warranty provided by Code § 55-79.79 and a new claim for a violation of Code § 55-79.90, relating to the failure of a public offering statement to “disclose fully and accurately the characteristics of the condominium.” The amount of compensatory damages sought was $380,000 along with punitive damages, costs, and attorney’s fees.
Subsequently, the trial court limited the issues to be resolved by the impending jury trial on the Association’s claims. The trial court ruled that the Association would not be permitted to assert a claim for the alleged defects in the chimneys, fireplaces, and flues. These claims were reserved to the individual unit owners upon the court’s conclusion that these structures were not common elements of the condominium. The court further ruled that Dana and Hall could not be held directly liable for a breach of the Condominium Act by Freemason in its corporate capacity because only that corporation was the declarant for the registration of the condominium. However, the court also ruled that the Association would be permitted to present evidence in support of its assertion that, in the event it obtained a judgment against Freemason, the corporate veil of Freemason should be pierced in order to impose personal liability upon Dana and Hall.
After the jury returned its verdict, the Association filed a motion to pierce the corporate veil of Freemason and for an award of attorney’s fees under Code § 55-79.53. 2 After receiving briefs from the parties, the trial court, sitting without the jury, held an evidentiary hearing on November 6, 2002 on this motion. In an opinion letter dated November 22, 2002, the court first concluded that an award of attorney’s fees against Freemason in the amount of $61,213.17 was appropriate under the statute. The court then concluded that the evi dence from the trial and the evidentiary hearing was sufficient to permit piercing the corporate veil of Freemason and to hold Dana and Hall liable for the judgment and award of attorney’s fees against Freemason.
For reasons that will become apparent, we need not recount in detail the evidence or other incidents of the trial relevant to all the assignments of error in this case. For purposes of the resolution of this appeal, our focus is on the post-verdict determination by the trial court to pierce the corporate veil of Freemason. Accordingly, we will recite only the evidence from the trial and the post-verdict hearing relevant to that determination.
During trial, it was shown that in April 1997 Dana acquired the property located at 313 Freemason Street, a lot and an abandoned residential structure that had last been used as an apartment building, with the intent to renovate the building as a four-unit condominium. Dana encumbered the property with a deed of trust securing a $316,880 personal line of credit. Although he had no direct ownership in the property, Hall testified that “Dana handled the financing and [Hall] handled the renovation” of the building by hiring contractors and overseeing their work. Dana and Hall had previously worked together on similar renovation projects and had several other ongoing projects during the time the 313 Freemason building was being renovated.
Hall, indicating that he was the “manager,” filed an application for registration of the condominium. The declarant on the application was listed as Freemason Associates, L.L.C. The application stated that Hall owned approximately fifty percent of the declarant. The application further stated that Freemason Associates, L.L.C. had no assets other than the 313 Freemason property.
In February 1998, Hall contacted the roofing contractor who had installed and subsequently made repairs to the roof of the condominium. Hall advised the contractor that the roof continued to leak and requested that it be replaced. The following month, although they did not advise him of the ongoing problem with the roof, Dana and Hall sought the advice of an attorney who advised them that “they would have decreased liability if they formed a corporation.” Shortly thereafter, Dana and Hall incorporated Freemason. On May 12, 1998, Hall filed a revised application for registration of the condominium substituting Freemason as the declarant in place of Freemason Associates, L.L.C. In April 2000, an attorney representing Dana and Hall, wrote to the same roofing contractor requesting that the roof be repaired because it “continues to leak since its installation” and “the roof contains major structural defects which have caused extensive damage.”
In the November 22, 2002 opinion letter, the trial court summarized its findings of the
Dana maintained a personal checking account designated by him as the “Rehab” account, which served as the deposit and payment account for the 313 Freemason property as well as several other properties Dana and Hall were renovating. 3 None of these other renovation projects were owned by corporations, but were directly controlled by Dana. Dana maintained separate check registers for each project for which funds were deposited and disbursed from his personal account, but made no other effort to segregate the funds within the account. Freemason had no bank account of its own, and all funds received from the sale of its individual condominium units were deposited into Dana’s “Rehab” account. As a result, Freemason never had any liquid assets, and a warranty reserve fund, which was to have been established following incorporation under the terms of the condominium declaration, was never funded.
Based upon these facts and relying primarily upon
O’Hazza v. Executive Credit Corp.,
In a final order dated November 27, 2002, the trial court confirmed the jury verdict in favor of the Association and granted judgment against Freemason in the principal amount of $37,054.75, and under Code § 55-79.53 awarded attorney’s fees and costs to the Association in the amount of $61,213.17 against Freemason. Additionally, the trial court pierced the corporate veil of Freemason and granted judgment in favor of the Association against Dana and Hall, jointly and severally, in the principal amount of $37,054.75 in addition to attorney’s fees and costs of $61,213.17. This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
Initially, we note that the procedural posture of this appeal bars our consideration of a number of assignments of error asserted by Dana and Hall. Dana and Hall filed their notice of appeal jointly. Freemason did not join in that notice and did not file a separate notice of appeal. In their petition for appeal, Dana and Hall assigned error challenging the trial court’s failure to strike the evidence as insufficient to support either claim in the Association’s motion for judgment, the trial court’s failure to grant an instruction regarding
During oral argument of this appeal, Dana and Hall contended that because the trial court pierced the corporate veil of Freemason and imposed liability upon them, they have standing to appeal the judgment and award against the corporation. We disagree.
“The proposition is elementary that a corporation is a legal entity separate and distinct from the stockholders or members who compose it.”
Cheatle v. Rudd’s Swimming Pool Supply Co., Inc.,
We now turn to the question whether the trial court properly pierced the corporate veil of Freemason and assessed liability on Dana and Hall personally. Although the underlying judgment against Freemason arises from a jury verdict, the trial court’s judgment to pierce the veil of the corporation was made post-trial by the trial court.
4
Whether to allow piercing the veil of a corporation is a mixed question of law and fact and, accordingly, we review the trial court’s application of the law
de novo
while giving deference to the trial court’s factual findings.
Caplan
v.
Bogard,
Stockholder immunity “is a basic provision of statutory and common law and supports a vital economic policy underlying the whole corporate concept.”
Cheatle,
We have recognized that “no single rule or criterion . . . can be applied to determine whether piercing the corporate veil is justified.”
O’Hazza,
the shareholder[s] sought to be held personally liable [have] controlled or used the corporation to evade a personal obligation, to perpetrate fraud or a crime, to commit an injustice, or to gain an unfair advantage. Piercing the corporate veil is justified when the unity of interest and ownership is such that the separate personalities of the corporation and the individuals] no longer exist and to adhere to that separateness would work an injustice.
Id.
at 115,
The trial court determined as a matter of fact that the formation of Freemason as a corporate entity in 1998 was “to evade any personal liability that Dana and Hall would have for the problems with the roof.” The evidence in the record supports that finding. Both parties were aware that the roof continually leaked from the time it was installed and that the roof contained “major structural defects” which had caused damage to the condominium. Dana and Hall did not obtain their requested replacement or repair of the roof. Rather, the evidence supports the conclusion that they simply determined to form Freemason and, ultimately, to use that corporation to evade personal liability while the condominium continued to be marketed with a known defective roof.
Similarly, the evidence amply supports the trial court’s findings of fact that the unity of interest and ownership was such that the separate personalities of Freemason, Dana, and Hall did not exist. The absolute control of Freemason by Dana and Hall is beyond question. But for the corporate existence of Freemason, Dana and Hall treated and conducted the 313 Freemason renovation just as they did all of their other renovation projects. There is no evidence in the record that Freemason ever conducted the business of a corporation independently from that of its shareholders. The trial court correctly determined that under those circumstances “[Freemason] was the . . . stooge, or dummy” of Dana and Hall.
See Lewis Trucking Corp. v. Commonwealth,
It then only remains to be resolved whether the trial court properly concluded that as a matter of law piercing the veil of the corporation was necessary to avoid an injustice. One of the principal factors we look to in resolving the issue of piercing the veil of a corporation, and pertinent here, is whether the inability of the corporation to satisfy the judgment against it is the result of the deliberate undercapitalization by the incorporating stockholders. “If, from its inception, a corporation is unable to pay its costs of doing business because of grossly inadequate capitalization, its legitimacy is suspect. Under such circumstances, stockholders may not be entitled to the corporate shield.”
O’Hazza,
In O’Hazza, we held that an initial capitalization of $10,000 was not, as a matter of law, inadequate to capitalize the close corporation involved in that case. Here, however, the record shows that Freemason was never capitalized even in a de minimis amount. The apparent inability of Freemason to satisfy the judgment against it in this case was not the result of poor business decisions, mismanagement, or unexpected liabilities such that an expected profit never materialized. Rather, because of the deliberate acts of the incorporating stockholders, Freemason suffered from nonexistent capitalization from its inception. Despite an obligation to do so, Dana and Hall never took any steps to establish the corporation’s warranty reserve. Moreover, the corporation never had any liquid assets because it had no bank accounts and Dana deposited all funds that were properly the corporation’s into his personal checking account. As a result, the corporation had no funds from which it could replace or repair the defective roof. Indeed, upon the conveyances to the various purchasers of individual units of the corporation’s only capital asset, the cor poration ceased to have any function other than to serve as a shield for Dana and Hall against the civil suits which followed.
This Court has been very reluctant to permit corporate veil piercing. We have made it clear that only an extraordinary exception
CONCLUSION
For these reasons, the judgment of the circuit court will be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Notes
Appeals of two of the individual unit owners are also today decided. Our resolution of those appeals, however, has no direct bearing upon our resolution of this appeal.
See Klaiber
v.
Freemason Associates, Inc.,
During trial, it was argued that because the award of attorney’s fees was a matter of statute, the Association should have been required to present evidence on that issue during its case-in-chief. The trial court ruled that as an award of attorney’s fees would not be appropriate in the absence of a finding of liability, the issue would be resolved by the trial court in the event of a verdict in favor of the Association.
During oral argument of this appeal, counsel for Dana and Hall attempted to characterize this account as being a personal account in name only, contending that because it was used only for Dana’s business interests, it was somehow distinct from a personal checking account. There is not the slightest suggestion that Dana used the funds deposited into this account for improper purposes. However, the fact remains that this account was established solely in Dana’s name in his capacity as a private person, and the corporation had no access to or control over the deposits to that account.
The parties agreed that the issue of piercing the corporate veil would be decided by the trial court without a jury.
