CHARLES M. MARTIN, APPELLANT, v. SANTORINI CAPITAL, LLC, ET AL., APPELLEES.
Nos. 18-CV-1178 & 19-CV-490
District of Columbia Court of Appeals
August 27, 2020
Appeal from the Superior Court of the District of Columbia (CAB-5462-18) (Hon. Elizabeth C. Wingo, Trial Judge)
Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the Atlantic and Maryland Reporters. Users are requested to notify the Clerk of the Court of any formal errors so that corrections may be made before the bound volumes go to press.
Charles M. Martin, pro se.
Roger C. Simmons was on the brief for appellees Santorini Capital, LLC, Steven S. Snider, R. Michael Kuehn, Jeffrey Mertz, and William Leahy.
Lindsay A. Thompson and Thomas F. Murphy were on the brief for appellee Richard L. Sugarman.
Before BLACKBURNE-RIGSBY, Chief Judge, BECKWITH, Associate Judge, and RUIZ, Senior Judge.
I. Factual and Procedural History
Appellant‘s complaint makes the following allegations. Between November 2016 and March 2017, Santorini issued approximately nine loans to LLCs owned and controlled by appellant for the purposes of purchasing, renovating, and selling several pieces of real property that those LLCs owned.2 Appellant guaranteed each of the loans in his individual capacity. The LLCs subsequently defaulted on the loans, and, in May 2018, Santorini – through counsel Sugarman – filed foreclosure notices on the relevant LLC-owned real properties. To prevent foreclosure and ensure loan repayment, the LLC-property owners, appellant, and Santorini entered into a Loan Modification Agreement on June 20, 2018 (the “Agreement“). Pursuant to the Agreement, the LLCs and appellant (as guarantor of the loans) agreed to repay the loan balance of $2,900,000 to Santorini by October 30, 2018, and to pay $50,000 in interest to Santorini every month between August 1 and October 1, 2018. In addition, each LLC agreed to execute a deed in lieu of foreclosure in Santorini‘s name against the property under its control. Santorini, in turn, made additional promises to each LLC that were specific to its respective property, described in relevant part below. Appellant signed the Agreement in his personal capacity as the “Individual Guarantor” and on behalf of each LLC as its “Authorized Member.”
The complaint further alleges that appellees breached the Agreement with respect to three LLC-owned real properties. First, Snider and Kuehn forced a tenant to leave one real property (owned by “CMSEP – 601 Atlantic St. SE, LLC“), which made it impossible for that LLC to sell the real property to that tenant and make specified modifications to the contract of sale, as provided for in the Agreement. Second, Santorini failed to reduce and amend an Indemnity Deed of Trust (“IDOT“) on a second property (owned by “P3DC – 1668 Tamarack St. NW, LLC“), as required by the Agreement. Third, after appellant paid off the debt for a third property (owned by “CSFB – 5000 Marlboro Pike, LLC“), Santorini failed to issue a debt satisfaction letter, as required by the Agreement.
On August 1, 2018, appellant filed the complaint, naming himself in his individual capacity as plaintiff, against Santorini, Snider, Leahy, Kuehn, Mertz, and Sugarman. He alleged nine claims: breach of contract, i.e., the Agreement, against all appellees
On September 4, 2018, Leahy filed a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim for relief under
On November 1, 2018, the trial court issued an Omnibus Order granting the motions to dismiss filed by appellees Leahy and Sugarman, sua sponte dismissing the complaint as to the remaining defendants, and granting Santorini‘s motion to cancel and release the lis pendens notices. The court dismissed Counts 1 through 7 without prejudice as to all appellees, reasoning that appellant lacked standing to assert these claims in his individual capacity. The court noted that appellant‘s alleged injuries – monetary losses, deprivation of real properties, inability to use and invest real properties, and inability to direct funds and gains – “accrued in the first instances to the LLCs.” Grounding its analysis in constitutional standing and corporate law, the court found that appellant‘s membership in or controlling interest in the LLCs or role as guarantor to the loans did not vest him with standing to assert claims in his individual capacity for harms directly sustained by the LLCs. The court then dismissed Count 8 with prejudice because intentional infliction of financial distress is not a viable cause of action under District of Columbia law, and dismissed Count 9 without prejudice for failure to state a claim because appellant‘s defamation claim failed to attribute any defamatory statement to any of the named defendants.
As a result of its dismissal of the complaint, the court granted Santorini‘s motion to release the lis pendens notices. This appeal followed.
II. Legal Framework
Rule 17‘s real-party-in-interest requirement is “essentially a codification of th[e] nonconstitutional, prudential limitation on standing.” Varnum Props., 204 A.3d at 121 n.7 (quoting Rawoof v. Texor Petroleum Co., 521 F.3d 750, 757 (7th Cir. 2008)). In every case, this court applies the constitutional limitation on standing – requiring that a plaintiff plead a “case or controversy” – as well as any applicable prudential limitations on standing. Friends of Tilden Park, Inc. v. District of Columbia, 806 A.2d 1201, 1206 (D.C. 2002). Prudential concerns impose judicially created limits on standing aside from those imposed by the Constitution, including among others “the general prohibition on a litigant‘s raising another person‘s legal rights.” Grayson v. AT & T Corp., 15 A.3d 219, 233-35 (D.C. 2011) (en banc) (quoting Allen v. Wright, 468 U.S. 737, 751 (1984)). Pursuant to this prudential limit, this court will generally restrict cases to those in which the plaintiff is the real party in interest, i.e., “the plaintiff generally must assert his own legal rights and interests, and cannot rest his claim to relief on the legal rights or interests of third parties.” Consumer Fed‘n of Am. v. Upjohn Co., 346 A.2d 725, 727 (D.C. 1975) (quoting Warth v. Seldin, 422 U.S. 490, 499 (1975)).4
In Estate of Raleigh, this court held that a majority or sole shareholder is prohibited from suing individually to redress wrongs associated with real property owned by a corporate entity because, under corporate law, “title to the corporate property is vested in the corporation and not in the owner of its stock.” 947 A.2d at 470-73. Rather, Rule 17 requires the real party in interest, i.e., the corporate entity, to sue on its own behalf, and a complaint filed by the shareholder was properly dismissed. Id. There, an estate sued a corporate entity and others to quiet title of certain real property. Id. at 468. While the real property was recorded and titled in the name of the corporate entity (in which the decedent had been a majority shareholder), the estate of the decedent argued that the decedent, in fact, owned the property. Id. at 468, 471. The court concluded that, under applicable corporate law principles, the estate had “no legal right to the individual assets owned by the corporation merely because its decedent was a shareholder or even the sole shareholder.” Id. at 470. Because corporate property “is vested in the corporation and not its individual shareholders,” “[t]he authority to sue to redress the alleged wrongs related to [conduct concerning the corporate property] also belongs to the corporation, not to the individual shareholder.”5 Id. (citation omitted).
The rules governing corporations as articulated in Estate of Raleigh are similarly applicable to LLCs because an LLC, like a traditional corporation, “is an entity distinct from its member or members.”
A guarantor of a corporate loan stands in no different a position than a shareholder (or LLC member), creditor, or lessor and therefore is not a real party in interest that can prosecute a claim on behalf of a corporation or LLC. See Labovitz v. Wash. Times Corp., 172 F.3d 897, 902 (D.C. Cir. 1999). A guarantor is a contingent creditor, and creditors, like a corporate shareholder, cannot recover directly for an injury to a corporation. See id. at 901-02 (discussing Mid-State Fertilizer Co. v. Exch. Nat‘l Bank of Chi., 877 F.2d 133, 1336-37 (7th Cir. 1989)). In Labovitz, two owner-shareholders of DCI Publishing, Inc. (“DCI“), who together owned half the company, sued Washington Times Corp. when it attempted to acquire DCI at a distressed price. Id. at 898. The shareholders alleged that the Times’ “dealings with them and DCI substantially reduced the value of their interests in DCI” and “triggered their personal guarantees of loans to DCI.” Id. at 898. The federal appellate court noted that the issue presented was “who is the real party in interest to bring a lawsuit under the governing substantive law to enforce the asserted right.” Id. at 900 n.6 (citing
However, a member of an LLC, like a shareholder, “with a direct, personal interest in a cause of action [may] bring suit even if the corporation‘s rights are also implicated.” Franchise Tax Bd. of Cal. v. Alcan Aluminium Ltd., 493 U.S. 331, 336 (1990). To sue directly, an individual “must identify a legal interest that has been directly or independently harmed, i.e., a ‘special injury’ that does not derive from the injury to the corporation.” Harpole Architects, P.C. v. Barlow, 668 F. Supp. 2d 68, 77 (D.D.C. 2009) (applying D.C. law). A shareholder‘s economic damage resulting from losses to the corporation is not a direct or independent harm giving rise to shareholder standing. See id. at 77-78; Cheeks v. Fort Myer Constr. Co., 722 F. Supp. 2d 93, 109 (D.D.C. 2010).
III. Standard of Review
A plaintiff‘s violation of
IV. Analysis
In most part, we find no error in the trial court‘s dismissal of the complaint pursuant to
A. Affirming Dismissal of Count 1, in part, and of Counts 2 to 7
The trial court dismissed Counts 1 through 7 for lack of constitutional standing. We affirm that dismissal, in part, though on different grounds. See Kerrigan v. Britches of Georgetowne, Inc., 705 A.2d 624, 628 (D.C. 1997) (“[W]e are not limited to reviewing the legal adequacy of the grounds the trial court relied on for its ruling; if there is an alternative basis that dictates the same result, a correct judgment must be affirmed on appeal.“).10 Because Count 1, in part, and Counts 2 through 7 seek to redress alleged harms to the interests of the LLCs (as property owners), the LLCs are the real parties in interest and must prosecute these claims in their own name. Appellant‘s failure to substitute the LLCs as plaintiffs, despite adequate notice and reasonable time to do so, and the fact that this appears to be an intentional decision, given his post-dismissal arguments to the trial court and arguments on appeal that he is the proper plaintiff, violates Rule 17‘s requirement that actions “must be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest.” Thus, we affirm dismissal of Counts 1 through 7 to the extent that they seek to address the LLC‘s rights under the Agreement or to claim damages related to the LLCs’ ownership interests in the real properties.
Appellant‘s main argument on appeal – that he can prosecute these claims because he signed the Agreement in his individual capacity – ignores the allegations in the complaint that assert harms that flow to the LLC-property owners, and not to him directly.11 Whether in his role as guarantor of Santorini‘s loans, or as a member of each LLC-property owner, or as a signatory to the Agreement, appellant lacks a legal interest in the ownership rights in the real properties, which are owned by the LLCs. As he is not the real party in interest, he therefore cannot prosecute claims to redress harms that belong to the LLCs. See Estate of Raleigh, 947 A.2d at 470; Labovitz, 172 F.3d at 902.
In his complaint for breach of contract (Count 1), appellant alleges the following harms:
41. As a direct and proximate result of the Defendant‘s Breach of Contract, the Plaintiff has been injured in damages, monetary losses, deprived of its real properties. In addition, the Plaintiff is entitled to compensation, including but not limited to a recovery of its documented monetary expenditures, a vacating of the Deeds-In-Lieu of Foreclosure, the Deeds to each of his properties, compensation for capital losses, and for the personal injuries resulting from the Defendant‘s actions.
42. As a further direct, proximate, reasonably foreseeable consequence of the Defendant‘s actions, the Plaintiff has sustained an inability to use, enjoy, invest, develop his real properties, and direct his funds, gains, and potential gains causing the Plaintiff extreme inconvenience, monetary losses, the inability to devote his time to his professional
duties, has been deprived of his real properties, and has at the hands of the Defendants, experienced a diminished enjoyment of his money and real properties.
Appellant‘s complaint mirrors these paragraphs at the end of each of Counts 2 through 7. All of the harms articulated in the complaint that are associated with the ownership interests in the real properties – monetary losses; deprivation of real properties; inability to use, enjoy, invest, and develop real properties; and inability to direct funds, gains, and potential gains – would be incurred by the LLC-owners of those real properties. Although appellant attempts to characterize these harms as personal – for instance, by alleging that “Plaintiff has sustained an inability to use, enjoy, invest, [and] develop his real properties” – they are, in fact, harms that flow first to the LLCs as property owners. His harms are derivative, because these harms flow to him as owner of the LLCs and guarantor of their debt obligations.
Specifically, Count 1 for breach of contract alleges that appellees breached the Agreement by failing to fulfill contractual obligations to the LLCs concerning property owned by them by (1) failing to reduce and amend the IDOT for the property owned by “P3DC – 1668 Tamarack St. NW, LLC,” and (2) forcing a tenant to leave one real property, thereby prohibiting its LLC-owner (“CMSEP – 601 Atlantic St. SE, LLC“) from selling it.12 Count 2 for tortious interference with contract is premised on actions by Snider and Kuehn affecting the rights of the LLC “CMSEP – 601 Atlantic St. SE, LLC” to sell its property.13 Counts 3, 5, and 6 concern appellees’ alleged actions that affected the property rights of the LLCs, i.e., filing wrongful foreclosure notices on the LLC-owned real properties, fraudulently inducing the execution of deeds in lieu of foreclosure of those properties, and unjustly retaining them. Counts 4 and 7, appellant‘s allegations of fraud and conspiracy to commit fraud, are premised on appellees’ acquisition of the LLC-owned real properties. As to all of these allegations, any harms to ownership interests in the real properties must be prosecuted by the real parties in interest, i.e., the LLCs.
Appellant failed to substitute the LLCs as plaintiffs for these claims, despite having a reasonable amount of time to do so. We have recognized thirty days as a reasonable period. See, e.g., Varnum Props., 204 A.3d at 122; Duckett v. District of Columbia, 654 A.2d 1288, 1290-91 (D.C. 1995) (per curiam). Here, appellant had almost two months – between appellee Leahy‘s September 4, 2018, motion first identifying the issue of standing and the trial court‘s November 1 Omnibus Order – to substitute the LLC-property owners, but he failed to do so. Rather, on appeal, appellant doubles down on his decision to prosecute these claims in his individual capacity, arguing that he is entitled to assert these claims as a signatory to the
In sum, because appellant is not the real party in interest with respect to any injury to the ownership interests in the real properties and because he failed to timely substitute the LLC property owners as plaintiffs, we affirm the trial court‘s dismissal of Counts 1 through 7 without prejudice to the extent that those claims allege damages to the ownership interests in the real properties.14
B. Reversing, in part, Dismissal of Count 1
Because appellant signed the Agreement in his role as guarantor of the LLC‘s loans, he may allege a claim for breach of contract against other Agreement signatories so long as he can claim a breach arising from (1) an obligation between himself as Individual Guarantor and any signatories, as expressed in the Agreement, or (2) direct or independent harms that are independent of the injuries to the LLCs whose debt he guaranteed. Because the complaint alleged such harms, we must reverse in part and remand as to Count 1 as alleged against Santorini.15 We affirm dismissal of Count 1 as to appellees Snider, Kuehn, Mertz, and Leahy because they were not parties to the contract. See Charlton v. Mond, 987 A.2d 436, 441 (D.C. 2010) (“Non-parties [to a contract] owe no contractual duty to the contracting parties.“).
First, appellant‘s claim for breach of contract (Count 1) includes an allegation that Santorini breached the Agreement by failing to issue him a debt satisfaction letter, an obligation arising from his role as Individual Guarantor. Article 4(e) of the Agreement states that, “[u]pon payment in full of all obligations owed,” Santorini “agrees to issue letters stating that such person or entity paid the loan satisfactorily.” The complaint alleges that appellant “caused the loan [owed by CSFB – 5000 Marlboro Pike, LLC] to be paid off via bank wire,” but that, as of filing the complaint, “Santorini has failed to issue the required letter.” Because the Agreement obligated Santorini to issue a debt satisfaction letter to appellant, and because it allegedly failed to do so, appellant has pled a claim for relief for breach of contract against Santorini.
Second, we reverse the dismissal of the breach of contract claim to the extent that appellant‘s complaint alleges direct harms or harms independent from those that accrued to the LLCs whose debt he guaranteed. See Jackson v. George, 146 A.3d 405, 415 n.6 (D.C. 2016) (noting plaintiffs “alleg[ing] a ‘special injury’ to themselves apart from that suffered by the corporation” as an “exception to the requirement that suits alleging wrongs against a corporation be brought derivatively” (quoting Labovitz, 172 F.3d at 901)); Harpole, 668 F. Supp. 2d at 77 (acknowledging that, for injuries to be recoverable, a complaint must allege “a ‘special injury’ that does not derive from the injury to the corporation“).
In Harpole, a corporation and its sole shareholder sued a former employee on several claims related to the employee‘s conduct that defrauded the corporation. 668 F. Supp. 2d at 77. The plaintiff-shareholder claimed damages in the form of
Here, appellant‘s complaint alleges three ways in which Santorini breached the contract – concerning the IDOT for Tamarack St. NW, the sale of 601 Atlantic St. SE, and the debt satisfaction letter for 5000 Marlboro Pike. As a result of that conduct, he alleges direct harms, independent of those to the LLCs: “documented monetary expenditures” and “personal injuries” in Paragraph 41, and “diminished enjoyment of his money” in Paragraph 42. Because these alleged injuries are direct to appellant and not necessarily dependent on harms to the LLCs, appellant has standing to assert a claim for breach of contract against Santorini, and that claim survives a motion to dismiss pursuant to
Appellant, however, lacks standing in his personal capacity to allege injuries that derive from harms suffered by the LLCs or economic damages incurred as a result of his role as a member of each LLC. See Cheeks, 722 F. Supp. 2d at 109; Harpole, 668 F. Supp. 2d at 77. The damages alleged in Paragraphs 41 and 42 that were not identified above fall into this category. For example, appellant cannot claim damages for the “extreme inconvenience, monetary losses, [] inability to devote his time to his professional duties, [and depriv]ation of his real properties” as alleged in Paragraph 42 because he alleges that those injuries were “caus[ed]” by the loss of the ability to “use, enjoy, invest, [and] develop . . . real properties, and direct [] funds, gains, and potential gains,” all of which are injuries incurred by the LLCs. See Harpole, 668 F. Supp. 2d at 77 (ruling that “emotional distress derive[d] from the harm to [the corporation] . . . cannot provide standing“). Thus, these allegations in Paragraph 42 do not reflect harms that are direct to appellant or harms independent of those incurred to the LLCs.
Thus, we reverse the dismissal of appellant‘s breach of contract claim against Santorini to the extent that he has alleged a breach of Article 4(e) of the Agreement, as well as damages from Santorini‘s breaches that are direct and independent from any damages to the LLC-property owners.
C. Affirming Dismissal of Counts 8 and 9
As the trial court recognized, intentional infliction of financial distress is not a cognizable claim in the District of Columbia. To survive a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, a complaint must contain factual allegations sufficient to state a claim, but it need not precisely set out the legal theory on pain of dismissal “for imperfect statement of the legal theory supporting the claim asserted.” Johnson v. City of Shelby, 574 U.S. 10, 11 (2014) (per curiam). In the District of Columbia, intentional infliction of emotional distress is a
Appellant also failed to state a claim for defamation (Count 9) because he did not identify any statement attributed (or that can be construed as being attributed) to appellees that was “false and defamatory.” Beeton v. District of Columbia, 779 A.2d 918, 923 (D.C. 2001). Instead, appellant alleges that the “evidence and the Exhibits will show that . . . Defendants have defamed the Plaintiff.” A vague and conclusory assertion of what future evidence may prove does not meet the pleading standards required to survive a
V. Lis Pendens
The trial court properly granted Santorini‘s emergency motion to release the lis pendens notices. A lis pendens notice is designed to enable interested third parties to discover the existence and scope of pending litigation affecting the title to real property or asserting a mortgage, lien, security interest, or other interest in real property. See Heck v. Adamson, 941 A.2d 1028, 1029-30 (D.C. 2008); see also
We affirm dismissal of the complaint to the extent that it involves the ownership interests of the LLCs; appellant may only advance a claim that alleges direct and independent harms. Therefore, this case is no longer “an action or proceeding . . . affecting the title to or tenancy interest in . . . real property.”
VI. Conclusion
Accordingly, the trial court‘s dismissal of Counts 2 through 9 is affirmed. We reverse the dismissal of Count 1 only against Santorini to the extent that the complaint alleges a breach of the Agreement as to Article 4(e) and alleges direct or independent
So ordered.
