06-3340-cv
NetJets Aviation, Inc. v. LHC Communications, LLC
1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
2 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
3 - - - - - -
4 August Term, 2007
5 (Argued: January 15, 2008 Decided: August 8, 2008)
6
7 Docket No. 06-3340-cv
8 _________________________________________________________
9 NETJETS AVIATION, INC., and NETJETS SALES, INC.,
10 Plaintiffs-Appellants,
11 - v. -
12 LHC COMMUNICATIONS, LLC, and LAURENCE S. ZIMMERMAN,
13 Defendants-Appellees.
14 _________________________________________________________
15 Before: KEARSE, LEVAL, and CABRANES, Circuit Judges.
16 Appeal from so much of a judgment of the United States
17 District Court for the Southern District of New York, Deborah A.
18 Batts, Judge, as (a) dismissed claims against defendant company for
19 breach of contract, and (b) dismissed claims against the individual
20 defendant, on a veil-piercing theory of liability, for breach of
21 contract and account stated.
22 Vacated and remanded.
23 ROBERT T. BARNARD, New York, New York
24 (Joseph B. Koczko, Courtney L. Scheinmel,
25 Thompson Hine, New York, New York, O.
26 Judson Scheaf, Scott A. Campbell, Michele
27 L. Noble, Thompson Hine, Columbus, Ohio,
28 on the brief), for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
1 MICHAEL F. SCHWARTZ, New York, New York
2 (Penn Proefriedt Schwarzfeld & Schwartz,
3 New York, New York, on the brief), for
4 Defendants-Appellees.
5 KEARSE, Circuit Judge:
6 Plaintiffs NetJets Aviation, Inc., and NetJets Sales, Inc.
7 (collectively "NetJets"), appeal from so much of a judgment of the
8 United States District Court for the Southern District of New York,
9 Deborah A. Batts, Judge, as summarily dismissed their claims against
10 defendant LHC Communications, LLC ("LHC"), for breach of contract
11 and their claims against defendant Laurence S. Zimmerman, as LHC's
12 alter ego, for breach of contract and account stated. The district
13 court, having granted partial summary judgment in favor of NetJets
14 on account-stated claims against LHC, sua sponte dismissed NetJets's
15 breach-of-contract claims against LHC on the ground that they were
16 duplicative of the account-stated claims. The court sua sponte
17 granted summary judgment dismissing NetJets's claims against
18 Zimmerman on the ground that NetJets had not adduced sufficient
19 evidence to pierce the corporate veil. On appeal, NetJets contends
20 principally that the district court erred (1) in treating its
21 breach-of-contract claims as duplicative of its-account-stated
22 claims, because the pertinent contracts allow NetJets to recover not
23 only the balances due on LHC's accounts but also attorneys' fees,
24 and (2) in concluding that there was not sufficient evidence to
25 support its breach-of-contract and account-stated claims against
26 Zimmerman as LHC's alter ego. Finding merit in NetJets's
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1 contentions, we vacate so much of the judgment as dismissed the
2 above claims and remand for further proceedings.
3 I. BACKGROUND
4 NetJets is engaged in the business of leasing fractional
5 interests in airplanes and providing related air-travel services.
6 LHC is a Delaware limited liability company whose sole member-owner
7 is Zimmerman. Most of the facts with respect to the relationship
8 between NetJets and LHC are not in dispute.
9 A. The Contracts Between NetJets and LHC
10 On August 1, 1999, LHC entered into two contracts with
11 NetJets. In the first (the "Lease Agreement"), NetJets leased to
12 LHC a 12.5 percent interest in an airplane, for which LHC was to pay
13 NetJets a fixed monthly rental fee. The lease term was five years,
14 with LHC having a qualified right of early termination. The second
15 contract (the "Management Agreement") required NetJets to manage
16 LHC's interest in the leased airplane and to provide services such
17 as maintenance and piloting with respect to that airplane, or
18 substitute aircraft, at specified hourly rates. It required LHC to
19 pay a monthly management fee, as well as fuel charges, taxes, and
20 other fees associated with LHC's air travel. The Management
21 Agreement allotted to LHC use of the airplane for an average of 100
22 hours per year for the five-year term of the lease ("LHC air
23 hours"), and it provided that if the leased airplane were
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1 unavailable at a time when LHC wished to use it, NetJets would
2 provide substitute aircraft. NetJets regularly sent LHC invoices
3 for the services provided under the Lease and Management Agreements.
4 The Lease Agreement provided that "[i]f any action at law
5 or in equity is necessary to enforce the terms of this Agreement,
6 the prevailing party shall be entitled to reasonable attorneys' fees
7 in addition to any other relief to which such party may be
8 entitled." (Lease Agreement § 19.) It was agreed that the Lease
9 Agreement would be "governed by and construed in all respects in
10 accordance with the laws of the State of New York." (Id. § 17.)
11 The Management Agreement, which the parties agreed would be governed
12 by Ohio law (see Management Agreement § 21), provided that if LHC
13 failed to pay amounts due under that Agreement, LHC would be liable
14 for the costs of collection, including reasonable attorneys' fees
15 (see id. § 7).
16 In July 2000, LHC terminated its agreements with NetJets.
17 LHC's chief financial officer ("CFO") James P. Whittier sent a
18 letter, addressed to a NetJets vice president, stating, in pertinent
19 part, that "[t]he present outstanding is $440,840.39 and we are
20 requesting that you apply the deposit of $100,000 against the
21 outstanding and contact this office to resolve the balance."
22 (Letter from James P. Whittier to Ron Miller dated July 24, 2000
23 ("LHC Termination Letter").)
24 As requested, NetJets contacted LHC and applied the
25 $100,000 deposit against LHC's debt; however, it did not receive
26 payment of the remaining balance of $340,840.39. In 2001, LHC
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1 ceased operations.
2 B. The Present Action and the Decision of the District Court
3 NetJets commenced the present diversity action in 2002,
4 asserting claims against LHC and Zimmerman for breach of contract,
5 account stated, and unjust enrichment. In connection with the
6 breach-of-contract claims, NetJets requested an award of attorneys'
7 fees.
8 Following a period of discovery, NetJets moved for summary
9 judgment against both defendants on the breach-of-contract and
10 account-stated claims. NetJets contended that Zimmerman should be
11 held liable for the debts of LHC as its alter ego based on evidence,
12 described in greater detail in Part II.B. below, of, inter alia, (a)
13 the frequent use of LHC air hours for personal travel by Zimmerman
14 and his friends and family, (b) the frequent transfers of funds
15 between LHC and Zimmerman's other companies, (c) Zimmerman's
16 frequent withdrawal of funds from LHC for his own personal use, and
17 (d) the fact that LHC is no longer in business and has no assets
18 with which to pay its debt to NetJets, a condition that NetJets
19 contends was caused by Zimmerman's withdrawals.
20 In a Memorandum and Order dated June 12, 2006, the
21 district court granted NetJets's summary judgment motion in part,
22 awarding it $340,840.39 against LHC on the account-stated claims.
23 See NetJets Aviation, Inc. v. LHC Communications LLC, No. 02 Civ.
24 7441, 2006 WL 1627899 (S.D.N.Y. June 12, 2006). The court concluded
25 that, in light of the LHC Termination Letter, whose authenticity was
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1 unchallenged, there was no genuine issue to be tried with respect to
2 LHC's liability to NetJets in the amount of $340,840.39. See 2006
3 WL 1627899, at *7. The district court denied the remainder of
4 NetJets's motion and dismissed its contract claims against LHC--as
5 well as its unjust enrichment claims. The court concluded that
6 because it had ruled in favor of NetJets against LHC on the theory
7 of account stated, NetJets's claims against LHC "for alternative
8 relief under a breach of contract theory do not survive." Id. The
9 court concluded that NetJets could not recover against LHC for
10 unjust enrichment, a theory alternative to breach of contract,
11 because NetJets's rights were grounded in contracts that were
12 essentially undisputed. See id. at *8.
13 The district court also denied NetJets's motion for
14 summary judgment on its contract and account-stated claims against
15 Zimmerman. It stated that under Delaware law, in order to recover
16 against Zimmerman for the debts of LHC, NetJets would be required to
17 meet a two-pronged test showing "(1) that the business entity and
18 its owner 'operated as a single economic entity' and (2) that [there
19 was] an 'overall element of injustice or unfairness.'" Id. at *4
20 (quoting Fletcher v. Atex, Inc., 68 F.3d 1451, 1458 (2d Cir. 1995),
21 which applied Delaware law). The court concluded that although
22 NetJets had "shown that Zimmerman and LHC functioned as a single
23 economic unit," 2006 WL 1627899, at *5, NetJets had not "set forth
24 any facts from which a jury could reasonably conclude that Zimmerman
25 formed LHC with the specific fraudulent intent of evading liability
26 to Plaintiffs," id. at *6. The court noted that while "something
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1 other than specific fraudulent intent could satisfy the second
2 prong, wherever courts have given shape to the second prong, they
3 primarily have focused on the need to show fraud or bad faith," id.;
4 it stated that NetJets had "not proven as a matter of law that
5 Zimmerman conducted a sophisticated shell game to the purposeful
6 detriment of creditors, namely NetJets," id. The district court
7 rejected the proposition that the requisite unfairness was shown by
8 the evidence that "Zimmerman allowed LHC to default on its payments
9 to NetJets even as he was siphoning money from the company coffers,
10 transferring funds to other companies he controlled, and making
11 payments through LHC on a mortgage and luxury cars that were in his
12 own name." Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). The court
13 stated that "each of these actions are factors in considering the
14 first prong of the alter ego analysis and cannot simultaneously be
15 used by Plaintiffs to satisfy the second prong. 'To hold otherwise
16 would render the fraud or injustice element meaningless . . . .'"
17 Id. (quoting Mobil Oil Corp. v. Linear Films, Inc., 718 F. Supp.
18 260, 268 (D. Del. 1989)).
19 Although Zimmerman had not moved for summary judgment in
20 his favor, the court sua sponte granted summary judgment dismissing
21 all of NetJets's claims against him.
22 II. DISCUSSION
23 On appeal, NetJets contends principally (1) that the
24 district court erred in dismissing its contract claims as
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1 duplicative of its account-stated claims, arguing that the pertinent
2 contracts allow NetJets to recover not only the balances due on
3 LHC's accounts but also reasonable attorneys' fees incurred in
4 collecting those debts; and (2) that the evidence as to Zimmerman's
5 operation of LHC for his personal use warranted the entry of summary
6 judgment in NetJets's favor on its veil-piercing breach-of-contract
7 and account-stated claims against Zimmerman, or at least was
8 sufficient to preclude the entry of summary judgment dismissing
9 those claims. Zimmerman, in addition to endorsing the district
10 court's decision that he was entitled to judgment for lack of proof
11 of an overall element of injustice or unfairness, contends that the
12 entry of summary judgment in his favor may also be upheld on a
13 different ground, see, e.g., Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co.
14 v. Ludwig, 426 U.S. 479, 480-81 (1976) (a party need not cross-
15 appeal in order to assert an alternative ground, based on the
16 record, to support the district court's judgment). He argues that
17 the court was presented with sufficient evidence to preclude a
18 finding that he and LHC operated as a single entity.
19 For the reasons that follow, we conclude that NetJets's
20 breach-of-contract claims against LHC were erroneously dismissed and
21 that NetJets is entitled to trial on its contract and account-stated
22 claims against Zimmerman as LHC's alter ego.
23 A. NetJets's Breach-of-Contract Claims Against LHC
24 Two claims are duplicative of one another if they "arise
25 from the same facts . . . and do not allege distinct damages."
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1 Sitar v. Sitar, 50 A.D.3d 667, 670, 854 N.Y.S.2d 536, 538 (2d Dep't
2 2008); see, e.g., Conway v. Icahn & Co., 16 F.3d 504, 511 (2d Cir.
3 1994). Where a claimant is entitled to a particular category of
4 damages on one claim but not the other, the claims are not
5 duplicative. See generally Freitag v. Bill Swad Datsun, 3 Ohio App.
6 3d 83, 86, 443 N.E.2d 988, 992 (1981) (when a plaintiff establishes
7 the elements of two claims arising out of the same set of facts, he
8 is entitled to judgment on the claim that provides the greater
9 measure of damages).
10 Under New York law, a contract that provides for an award
11 of reasonable attorneys' fees to the prevailing party in an action
12 to enforce the contract is enforceable if the contractual language
13 is sufficiently clear. See, e.g., Mid-Hudson Catskill Rural Migrant
14 Ministry, Inc. v. Fine Host Corp., 418 F.3d 168, 177-79 (2d Cir.
15 2005); Hooper Associates, Ltd. v. AGS Computers, Inc., 74 N.Y.2d
16 487, 491-92, 549 N.Y.S.2d 365, 366-67 (1989) (same). Under Ohio
17 law, such contractual provisions for attorneys' fees are enforceable
18 to the extent that the trial court, after consideration of all the
19 circumstances of the case, may award such fees as are fair, just,
20 and reasonable. See, e.g., Nottingdale Homeowners' Association,
21 Inc. v. Darby, 33 Ohio St. 3d 32, 37, 514 N.E.2d 702, 706-07 (1987);
22 Northwoods Condominium Owners' Association v. Arnold, 147 Ohio App.
23 3d 343, 348, 770 N.E.2d 627, 630-31 (2002).
24 On a valid cause of action for account stated, a plaintiff
25 is entitled to recover the amount due on the defendant's account.
26 Recovery on such a claim does not ordinarily include an award for
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1 attorneys' fees. See, e.g., Citibank (South Dakota), N.A. v.
2 Martin, 11 Misc. 3d 219, 225 n.6, 807 N.Y.S.2d 284, 290 n.6 (Civ.
3 Ct. 2005) (a "fee award cannot be based upon a cause of action
4 pleading an account stated"); see generally Keal v. Day, 164 Ohio
5 App. 3d 21, 24, 840 N.E.2d 1139, 1141 (2005) ("Ohio has adopted the
6 'American Rule,' by which each party to a lawsuit must pay his or
7 her own attorney fees," unless an exception applies, such as "the
8 parties' contract provid[ing] for fee-shifting"). Thus, when a
9 party has both a claim for account stated and a claim under a
10 contract that provides for an award of attorneys' fees, the claims
11 for breach of contract and account stated are not duplicative.
12 In dismissing NetJets's breach-of-contract claims as
13 duplicative of its account-stated claims, the district court relied
14 on Lankler Siffert & Wohl, LLP v. Rossi, No. 02 Civ. 10055, 2004 WL
15 541842 (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 19, 2004) ("Lankler"). That reliance was
16 misplaced, however, because in that case the plaintiffs' claims (for
17 account stated, breach of contract, conversion, unjust enrichment,
18 and tortious interference with contractual relations) all "s[ought]
19 the same relief"; thus, the Lankler court noted that "[i]f each of
20 the judgments for the Moving Plaintiffs on their account stated
21 claims are satisfied, then the Moving Plaintiffs will have received
22 full relief." Id. at *4.
23 LHC's brief on appeal presents no serious argument in
24 support of the district court's conclusion that the NetJets claims
25 for account stated and breach of contract were duplicative. It
26 merely states conclusorily that those claims "are duplicative" (LHC
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1 brief on appeal at 22), and cites the fact that "NetJets' Memorandum
2 of Law" in support of its motion for summary judgment discussed the
3 account-stated claims "first" before discussing the breach-of-
4 contract claims (id. at 21-22).
5 As set forth in Part I.A. above, both the Lease Agreement,
6 which the parties agreed is to be governed by New York law, and the
7 Management Agreement, which the parties agreed is to be governed by
8 Ohio law, contain clauses that allow NetJets to recover reasonable
9 attorneys' fees incurred in collecting the sums due under the
10 respective Agreements. As those fees could not be recovered on
11 claims for account stated, NetJets's contract claims were not
12 duplicative of its claims for account stated.
13 B. NetJets's Claims Against Zimmerman
14 1. Limitations on Limited Liability
15 A limited liability company (or "LLC"), formed by one or
16 more entities and/or individuals as its "members," is an entity
17 that, as a general matter, provides "tax benefits akin to a
18 partnership and limited liability akin to the corporate form." Elf
19 Altochem North America, Inc. v. Jaffari, 727 A.2d 286, 287 (Del.
20 1999); see generally id. at 290. The shareholders of a corporation
21 and the members of an LLC generally are not liable for the debts of
22 the entity, and a plaintiff seeking to persuade a Delaware court to
23 disregard the corporate structure faces "a difficult task," Harco
24 National Insurance Co. v. Green Farms, Inc., No. CIV. A. 1331, 1989
25 WL 110537, at *4 (Del. Ch. Sept. 19, 1989) ("Harco").
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1 Nonetheless, in appropriate circumstances, the distinction
2 between the entity and its owner "may be disregarded" to require an
3 owner to answer for the entity's debts. Pauley Petroleum Inc. v.
4 Continental Oil Co., 239 A.2d 629, 633 (Del. 1968). In general,
5 with respect to the limited liability of owners of a corporation,
6 Delaware law permits a court to pierce the corporate veil
7 "where there is fraud or where [the corporation] is in fact a mere
8 instrumentality or alter ego of its owner." Geyer v. Ingersoll
9 Publications Co., 621 A.2d 784, 793 (Del. Ch. 1992); see, e.g.,
10 Martin v. D.B. Martin Co., 10 Del. Ch. 211, 217, 88 A. 612, 615
11 (1913) ("Martin") ("Where one corporation owns all the shares of
12 another corporation, co-operating in the same business, the former
13 financing the latter, and the same persons are officers of both
14 corporations, the latter is for certain purposes to be considered as
15 an agency, adjunct or instrumentality of the former."); id. at 216-
16 17, 88 A. at 615 ("It must be in the power of the court to look
17 through these legal fictions to the equitable realities and see by
18 whom and through what agencies the wrong is done and on whom the
19 loss ultimately falls."). Given the similar liability shields that
20 are provided by corporations and LLCs to their respective owners,
21 "[e]merging caselaw illustrates" that "situations that result in a
22 piercing of the limited liability veil are similar to those [that
23 warrant] piercing the corporate veil." J. Leet, J. Clarke, P.
24 Nollkamper & P. Whynott, The Limited Liability Company § 11:130, at
25 11-7 (rev. ed. 2007); see also id. at 11-9 ("Every state that has
26 enacted LLC piercing legislation has chosen to follow corporate law
- 12 -
1 standards and not develop a separate LLC standard.").
2 To prevail under the alter-ego theory of piercing the
3 veil, a plaintiff need not prove that there was actual fraud but
4 must show a mingling of the operations of the entity and its owner
5 plus an "overall element of injustice or unfairness." Harco, 1989
6 WL 110537, at *4.
7 "[A]n alter ego analysis must start with an
8 examination of factors which reveal how the
9 corporation operates and the particular defendant's
10 relationship to that operation. These factors
11 include whether the corporation was adequately
12 capitalized for the corporate undertaking; whether
13 the corporation was solvent; whether dividends were
14 paid, corporate records kept, officers and directors
15 functioned properly, and other corporate formalities
16 were observed; whether the dominant shareholder
17 siphoned corporate funds; and whether, in general,
18 the corporation simply functioned as a facade for
19 the dominant shareholder."
20 Id. at *4 (quoting United States v. Golden Acres, Inc., 702 F. Supp.
21 1097, 1104 (D. Del. 1988) ("Golden Acres"), aff'd, 879 F.2d 857 &
22 860 (3d Cir. 1989)).
23 "[N]o single factor c[an] justify a decision to
24 disregard the corporate entity, but . . . some
25 combination of them [i]s required, and . . . an
26 overall element of injustice or unfairness must
27 always be present, as well." Harco, [1989 WL
28 110537, at *5] (quoting Golden Acres, 702 F.Supp. at
29 1104).
30 Harper v. Delaware Valley Broadcasters, Inc., 743 F. Supp. 1076,
31 1085 (D. Del. 1990) ("Harper") (emphasis added), aff'd, 932 F.2d 959
32 (3d Cir. 1991).
33 As the above discussion indicates, "[n]umerous factors
34 come into play when discussing whether separate legal entities
35 should be regarded as alter egos," id., and "[t]he legal test for
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1 determining when a corporate form should be ignored in equity cannot
2 be reduced to a single formula that is neither over- nor under-
3 inclusive," Irwin & Leighton, Inc. v. W.M. Anderson Co., 532 A.2d
4 983, 989 (Del. Ch. 1987). Stated generally, the inquiry initially
5 focuses on whether "those in control of a corporation" did not
6 "treat[] the corporation as a distinct entity"; and, if they did
7 not, the court then seeks "to evaluate the specific facts with a
8 standard of 'fraud' or 'misuse' or some other general term of
9 reproach in mind," id., such as whether the corporation was used to
10 engage in conduct that was "inequitable," Mobil Oil Corp. v. Linear
11 Films, Inc., 718 F. Supp. 260, 269 (D. Del. 1989) ("Mobil Oil")
12 (internal quotation marks omitted), or "prohibited," David v. Mast,
13 No. 1369-K, 1999 WL 135244, at *2 (Del. Ch. Mar. 2, 1999), or an
14 "unfair trade practice," id., or "illegal," Martin, 10 Del. Ch. at
15 219, 88 A. at 615.
16 Simply phrased, the standard may be restated as:
17 "whether [the two entities] operated as a single
18 economic entity such that it would be inequitable
19 for th[e] Court to uphold a legal distinction
20 between them." Mabon, Nugent & Co. [v. Texas
21 American Energy Corp., No. CIV. A. 8578, 1990 WL
22 44267, at *5 (Del. Ch. Apr. 12, 1990)].
23 Harper, 743 F. Supp. at 1085. Our Court has stated this as a two-
24 pronged test focusing on (1) whether the entities in question
25 operated as a single economic entity, and (2) whether there was an
26 overall element of injustice or unfairness. See Fletcher v. Atex,
27 Inc., 68 F.3d 1451, 1457 (2d Cir. 1995).
28 Finally, we note that the plaintiff need not prove that
29 the corporation was created with fraud or unfairness in mind. It is
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1 sufficient to prove that it was so used. See, e.g., Martin, 10 Del.
2 Ch. at 219, 88 A. at 615 (corporate form may be disregarded "when
3 used as a shield for fraudulent or other illegal acts, though it
4 does not appear that the arrangement was originally intended to
5 perpetrate a fraud"); Sonne v. Sacks, No. CIV.A. 4416, 1979 WL
6 178497, at *2 (Del. Ch. June 12, 1979) (courts "look behind the
7 corporate curtain" generally "where the facts indicate that the
8 corporate entity has been or is being used by those in control of it
9 to perpetrate a fraud" or to "promote injustice" (internal quotation
10 marks omitted)).
11 These principles are generally applicable as well where
12 one of the entities in question is an LLC rather than a corporation.
13 See, e.g., Oliver v. Boston University, No. 16570, 2000 WL 1091480,
14 at *9, *12 (Del. Ch. Jul. 18, 2000) (holding that a Massachusetts
15 LLC, created solely to serve the interests of its owner and
16 completely dominated by the owner, could be fairly characterized as
17 the alter ego of its owner). In the alter-ego analysis of an LLC,
18 somewhat less emphasis is placed on whether the LLC observed
19 internal formalities because fewer such formalities are legally
20 required. See, e.g., Delaware Limited Liability Company Act, Del.
21 Code Ann. tit. 6, § 18-101 et seq. ("DLLCA") (requiring little more
22 than that an LLC execute and file a proper certificate of formation,
23 see id. § 18-201(a), maintain a registered office in Delaware, see
24 id. § 18-104(a)(1), have a registered agent for service of process
25 in Delaware, see id. § 18-104(a)(2), and maintain certain records
26 such as membership lists and tax returns, see id. § 18-305(a)). On
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1 the other hand, if two entities with common ownership "failed to
2 follow legal formalities when contracting with each other it would
3 be tantamount to declaring that they are indeed one in the same."
4 Trustees of Village of Arden v. Unity Construction Co., No. C.A.
5 15025, 2000 WL 130627, at *3 (Del. Ch. Jan. 26, 2000) (emphasis
6 added).
7 2. Summary Judgment Principles
8 With the above substantive framework in mind, we turn to
9 (a) Zimmerman's contention that he was entitled to summary judgment
10 on the ground--contrary to the district court's opinion--that there
11 was insufficient evidence to permit a finding that he and LHC
12 operated as a single economic entity, and (b) NetJets's contention
13 that the district court erred in finding that despite the
14 intertwined operation of Zimmerman and LHC, there was insufficient
15 evidence to permit a finding of an overall element of injustice or
16 unfairness. In addressing these contentions, we apply the familiar
17 principles that, in reviewing the grant--or denial--of summary
18 judgment, see, e.g., Local Union No. 38, Sheet Metal Workers'
19 International Association, AFL-CIO v. Pelella, 350 F.3d 73, 80 (2d
20 Cir. 2003) (denial of summary judgment is reviewable after a final
21 decision has rendered the case appealable), we review the record de
22 novo, and we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the
23 party against which summary judgment was granted or sought, see,
24 e.g., Amidon v. Student Association of the State University of New
25 York at Albany, 508 F.3d 94, 98 (2d Cir. 2007); Cronin v. Aetna Life
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1 Insurance Co., 46 F.3d 196, 202-03 (2d Cir. 1995); New York State
2 Association of Realtors, Inc. v. Shaffer, 27 F.3d 834, 838 (2d
3 Cir.), cert. denied, 513 U.S. 1000 (1994).
4 Further, we note that although a district court may, on an
5 appropriate record, grant summary judgment sua sponte--after giving
6 the party against which the court is contemplating such a decision
7 notice and an opportunity to present evidence and arguments in
8 opposition, see, e.g., B.F. Goodrich v. Betkoski, 99 F.3d 505, 531
9 (2d Cir. 1996)--the court, in considering such a decision, is
10 required to view the record in the light most favorable to the party
11 against which summary judgment is contemplated and to resolve all
12 ambiguities and draw all factual inferences in favor of that party,
13 see generally Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 255
14 (1986); Coach Leatherware Co. v. AnnTaylor, Inc., 933 F.2d 162, 167
15 (2d Cir. 1991). Summary judgment is not appropriate if the evidence
16 is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict in favor of
17 the party against which summary judgment is contemplated. See,
18 e.g., Anderson, 477 U.S. at 248.
19 Finally, we emphasize that the fact that a party who has
20 moved for summary judgment in his own favor has not shown that he is
21 entitled to judgment as a matter of law does not mean that it is
22 appropriate to grant summary judgment against him. See, e.g.,
23 id. at 248-49 ("[T]he issue of material fact required . . . to
24 entitle a party to proceed to trial is not required to be resolved
25 conclusively in favor of the party asserting its existence; rather,
26 all that is required is that sufficient evidence supporting the
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1 claimed factual dispute be shown." (internal quotation marks
2 omitted) (emphasis added)); Brown v. Cara, 420 F.3d 148, 160-61 (2d
3 Cir. 2005). Thus, in deciding a party's summary judgment motion,
4 the district court is required to view the record in the light most
5 favorable to the party against which summary judgment is sought.
6 But in considering whether to grant summary judgment against the
7 moving party sua sponte, the court is required to view the evidence
8 in the moving party's favor.
9 3. The Evidence that LHC and Zimmerman Operated as One
10 With respect to the question of whether LHC and Zimmerman
11 operated as a single entity, the record contains, inter alia,
12 financial records of LHC and deposition testimony from Zimmerman and
13 LHC's CFO, Whittier. The evidence discussed below, taken in the
14 light most favorable to NetJets, shows, inter alia, that LHC, of
15 which Zimmerman is the sole member-owner, was started with a
16 capitalization of no more than $20,100; that LHC proceeded to invest
17 millions of dollars supplied by Zimmerman, including some $22
18 million in an internet technology company eventually called
19 Bazillion, Inc. ("Bazillion"); and that Zimmerman put money into LHC
20 as LHC needed it, and took money out of LHC as Zimmerman needed it.
21 Whittier, who had known Zimmerman since 1980 and worked
22 with him full time from 1996 until April 2002 (see, e.g., Deposition
23 of James P. Whittier ("Whittier Dep.") at 10-12), was LHC's only
24 officer other than Zimmerman (see Affidavit of Laurence Zimmerman
25 dated October 14, 2004 ("Zimmerman Aff."), ¶ 16). In addition to
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1 LHC, Zimmerman directly or indirectly owned or controlled a number
2 of companies, including Landover Telecom Corporation ("Landover
3 Telecom"), LandTel N.V. ("LandTel"), IP II Partners, LP ("IP II"),
4 Fox Lair Holdings Corporation ("Fox Lair"), and Kimlar Consulting
5 Corporation ("Kimlar"). (See Whittier Dep. 66-67, 70, 72-73, 78.)
6 Whittier acted as CFO for each of those companies. (See id. at 23,
7 68, 71, 72, 74, 79.) During most of the period 1996 to April 2002,
8 Whittier "got paid from either Mr. Zimmerman or one of his
9 corporations." (Id. at 14.)
10 Zimmerman formed LHC in 1998; for most of its operating
11 life, it shared office space with some of Zimmerman's other
12 companies; LHC employed no more than five-to-seven people at any
13 given time; and some of its employees worked for both LHC and
14 Zimmerman's other companies or for LHC and Zimmerman personally.
15 (See Whittier Dep. 24; Deposition of Laurence Zimmerman, October 1,
16 2003 ("Zimmerman Dep. I"), at 58.) Whittier ran much of LHC's day-
17 to-day operations based on instructions, general or specific,
18 received from Zimmerman. (See Whittier Dep. 23, 39.)
19 Zimmerman formed LHC "to be used as an investment vehicle
20 for Mr. Zimmerman for him to make investments." (Id. at 19.) "With
21 regards to investments, Mr. Zimmerman reviewed investments. If he
22 decided to go forward after his review, he would make an investment
23 through [LHC] to an investment corporation he wanted to invest in."
24 (Id. at 22.) Although Zimmerman sought Whittier's advice as to the
25 best way of accomplishing something he had decided he wanted to do
26 (see id. at 23), the ultimate decisions were always made by
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1 Zimmerman. "There were no decisions, financial decisions, made with
2 regard to LHC without Mr. Zimmerman's approval." (Id. at 22.)
3 Whittier testified that LHC also "was an operating company
4 which maintained a consulting agreement with another entity called
5 Landtel NV." (Id. at 19.) But LandTel, which was wholly owned by
6 Zimmerman's Landover Telecom--and was apparently LHC's only paying
7 client--did not come into existence until January 2000 (id. at
8 69-70), and LHC records do not show receipt of any consulting fees
9 from LandTel until July 2000. Until LandTel was formed, therefore,
10 the day-to-day LHC operations run by Whittier apparently consisted
11 only of making Zimmerman's investments and carrying on Zimmerman's
12 personal business:
13 Q. What was your role with regard to LHC?
14 A. I was acting chief financial officer.
15 Q. What were your responsibilities as chief
16 financial officer?
17 A. They were defined by Mr. Zimmerman. I
18 basically tried to carry out what Mr. Zimmerman's
19 wishes were.
20 . . . .
21 Q. What did your day-to-day responsibilities
22 with regard to Mr. Zimmerman include?
23 A. They varied. It was working on a potential
24 investment that LHC might make; it was overseeing
25 the consulting agreement that it had, might have
26 had, that it did have with Landtel, and it was
27 personal business.
28 Q. By "personal business," do you mean the
29 personal business of Mr. Zimmerman?
30 A. Sure.
31 Q. Do you mean anything else by "personal
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1 business"?
2 A. No.
3 (Whittier Dep. 23, 24 (emphases added).) Whittier's compensation
4 was paid sometimes by LHC and sometimes by Zimmerman personally.
5 (See id. at 14.)
6 In connection with Zimmerman's personal business, LHC's
7 records show numerous transfers of money by Zimmerman to LHC, as
8 well as numerous transfers of money from LHC to Zimmerman. Some of
9 the transfers by Zimmerman to LHC were for the purpose of having LHC
10 make investments, principally in Bazillion. Other transfers by
11 Zimmerman to LHC were made for the purpose of meeting LHC's
12 operating expenses:
13 To the extent that the corporation had to pay
14 operating expenses like rent, telephone, copy,
15 employees, if there was not sufficient capital in
16 the corporation, he would then advance the money
17 personally to the corporation to meet these
18 obligations.
19 (Whittier Dep. 27.) Whittier testified that Zimmerman would
20 transfer funds to LHC "as needed." (Id. at 26; see also id. at 61
21 ("Monies would go in . . . LHC based on the need.").) Often those
22 funds would come from Zimmerman's personal bank accounts. However,
23 because Zimmerman generally waited until the eleventh hour to
24 provide money to meet LHC's operating needs, sometimes "shortcuts"
25 were taken by having the money come to LHC directly from one of
26 Zimmerman's other companies (id. at 46-47) such as Landover Telecom,
27 Kimlar, Fox Lair, or IP II, none of which had any business
28 relationship with LHC (see, e.g., Deposition of Laurence S.
29 Zimmerman, February 20, 2004 ("Zimmerman Dep. II"), at 16, 24, 26;
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1 Whittier Dep. 68, 75).
2 Whittier testified also that "[m]onies would go . . . out
3 of LHC based on the need." (Whittier Dep. 61 (emphasis added).)
4 For example, Zimmerman would take money out of LHC to "mak[e] an
5 investment in another entity." (Id. at 41.) In addition, at
6 several brokerage firms, Zimmerman had personal accounts that were
7 unrelated to LHC's operations; he had many margin calls in those
8 accounts (see id. at 60) because he "utilized margin debt very
9 aggressively," especially with respect to two stocks whose market
10 prices dropped sharply in 2000 (id. at 59 (one "from a high of above
11 90 down to the 60s" and the other "from a high of 93 down to 3")).
12 Zimmerman had LHC make payments to meet some of these margin calls
13 in his personal accounts. On May 15 and 16, 2000, for example, LHC
14 wired a total of $2 million to Salomon Smith Barney to meet margin
15 calls or reduce the margin debt on Zimmerman's personal brokerage
16 accounts. (See id. at 50-51, 60-62.) On August 22 and October 6,
17 2000, LHC sent Paine Webber, another firm at which Zimmerman
18 personally had "big brokerage accounts" (id. at 44), checks totaling
19 $2 million. Some of the money that LHC used to pay Zimmerman's
20 margin calls was "loan money" that Zimmerman had put into LHC.
21 (Whittier Dep. 61 (describing the money as being "repatriated back
22 to Mr. Zimmerman").) Other money used to meet Zimmerman's margin
23 calls was money that LHC received from a third party ("Riverside")
24 purchasing a share of an LHC asset. Thus, the $2 million that LHC
25 paid to Salomon Smith Barney in May 2000 was money that Riverside
26 paid LHC to buy participation in a Bazillion convertible
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1 subordinated note owned by LHC. Riverside "bought [participation in
2 the note] directly from LHC" (id. at 64); but Riverside's payment to
3 LHC was used to meet margin calls in Zimmerman's personal brokerage
4 accounts (id. at 62-64).
5 LHC also transferred money to Zimmerman, or to third
6 persons on his behalf, in connection with his living expenses. For
7 example, LHC made payments to Fox Lair (consistently called "Fox
8 Liar" in LHC's general ledger), a Zimmerman corporation that owned
9 a $15 million New York apartment on Park Avenue, which was
10 characterized by Zimmerman as "a corporate residence" but was used
11 by no one other than Zimmerman and his family (Zimmerman Dep. II, at
12 28). Fox Lair needed money "to pay phone bills and cleaning people
13 and things of that nature" (Whittier Dep. 80); according to LHC's
14 ledgers, from December 5, 2000, through July 2, 2001, Fox Lair
15 received some $70,000 from LHC. In addition, LHC made periodic
16 payments to the Screen Actors Guild (of which Zimmerman's wife was
17 a member) for health insurance for Zimmerman and his family (see id.
18 at 49-50); LHC purchased a Bentley automobile at a cost of
19 approximately $350,000 for Zimmerman's personal use, placing title
20 in his name (see Zimmerman Dep. I, at 68-69); and LHC made a payment
21 of $110,000, characterized in its general ledger as "Loan
22 receivable" and in its check register as "Interest Expense," to a
23 person who had no connection with LHC but who held a mortgage on a
24 property owned by Zimmerman personally (see Zimmerman Dep. II, at
25 28-29).
26 In addition, many of the air hours to which LHC was
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1 entitled under its agreements with NetJets were used by Zimmerman
2 personally. Of the 40-odd LHC flights invoiced by NetJets,
3 Zimmerman acknowledges that "approximately 6" were for vacations for
4 himself and/or his wife. (Zimmerman Aff. ¶ 12.) But in addition to
5 those six, there were at least an equal number of flights that
6 apparently had no relation to LHC's business. These flights
7 included several that transported Zimmerman's family to and from
8 Europe or to and from one of Zimmerman's five homes. Zimmerman
9 contends that use of LHC air hours for these purposes was "part of
10 [his compensation] package" (Zimmerman Dep. I, at 41) and "[o]ne of
11 the perks of being the chairman" (id. at 39-40). That may be; but
12 for purposes of determining whether Zimmerman and LHC were alter
13 egos, it is pertinent that Zimmerman made all of LHC's financial
14 decisions (see, e.g., Whittier Dep. 22, 39-40); Zimmerman alone
15 decided what his perks and package would be.
16 In LHC's general ledger, each of the transfers of money
17 between LHC and Zimmerman--in either direction--is labeled "Loan
18 receivable." They were also so labeled regardless of whether
19 Zimmerman's payment to LHC was to be used to make an investment or
20 was to be used for operating expenses. Whittier, who had
21 responsibility for LHC's financial records, testified that the
22 ledger treated Zimmerman's payments to and withdrawals from LHC as
23 loans and loan repayments in order to allow Zimmerman to make
24 withdrawals as he needed money, without having to pay taxes on the
25 moneys withdrawn. (See, e.g., id. at 34.) Thus, aside from
26 Zimmerman's initial capital contribution to LHC (which Whittier
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1 thought was $100), "any monies that Mr. Zimmerman . . . deposited
2 into LHC should have been designated as loans" (id. at 38-39, 25).
3 The decision that those transactions would be labeled loans or loan
4 repayments was made by Zimmerman. (See id. at 39.)
5 "There were no written agreements" with regard to any of
6 Zimmerman's loans (id.); nor were there any "set repayment program"
7 or agreements as to repayment terms (id. at 40): "Money was put in
8 as needed and when money was not needed and Mr. Zimmerman needed
9 money elsewhere, he might transfer it out. That was his decision to
10 make." (Id. at 40 (emphasis added).) "There was no procedure.
11 Money was put in and taken out as needed." (Id. at 62 (emphasis
12 added).)
13 In all, LHC's financial records for the period January 1,
14 2000, through June 18, 2002, show--in addition to some two dozen
15 transactions between LHC and Zimmerman's other companies--
16 approximately 60 transfers of money directly from Zimmerman to LHC
17 and approximately 60 transfers of money out of LHC directly to
18 Zimmerman. In sum, there is evidence that, inter alia, Zimmerman
19 created LHC to be one of his personal investment vehicles; that he
20 was the sole decisionmaker with respect to LHC's financial actions;
21 that Zimmerman frequently put money into LHC as LHC needed it to
22 meet operating expenses; that LHC used some of that money, as well
23 as some moneys it received from selling shares of one of its assets,
24 to pay more than $4.5 million to third persons for Zimmerman's
25 personal expenses including margin calls, mortgage payments,
26 apartment expenses, and automobiles; and that with no written
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1 agreements or documentation or procedures in place, Zimmerman
2 directly, on the average of twice a month for 2½ years, took money
3 out of LHC at will in order to make other investments or to meet his
4 other personal expenses. This evidence is ample to permit a
5 reasonable factfinder to find that Zimmerman completely dominated
6 LHC and that he essentially treated LHC's bank account as one of his
7 pockets, into which he reached when he needed or desired funds for
8 his personal use. Accordingly, we reject Zimmerman's contention
9 that the district court should have granted summary judgment in his
10 favor on the ground that he and LHC did not operate as a single
11 economic entity.
12 4. The Evidence of Fraud, Illegality, or Injustice
13 The district court ruled that NetJets had not adduced
14 sufficient evidence to show that there was any fraud or unfairness
15 in Zimmerman's operation of LHC because the court believed it could
16 not consider, with regard to that issue, any of the factors that
17 showed that Zimmerman and LHC operated as a single entity. In so
18 ruling, the court stated that "'[t]o hold otherwise would render the
19 fraud or injustice element meaningless . . . .'" 2006 WL 1627899,
20 at *6 (quoting Mobil Oil, 718 F. Supp. at 268). Mobil Oil, however,
21 did not suggest that there can be no overlap in the proof as to
22 unity of ownership and the proof of unfairness. Rather, it stands
23 for the proposition that the claimed injustice must consist of more
24 than merely the tort or breach of contract that is the basis of the
25 plaintiff's lawsuit: "The underlying cause of action does not
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1 supply the necessary fraud or injustice. To hold otherwise would
2 render the fraud or injustice element meaningless . . . ." 718 F.
3 Supp. at 268. This proposition has been endorsed by the Delaware
4 courts. See, e.g., Outokumpu Engineering Enterprises, Inc. v.
5 Kvaerner Enviropower, Inc., 685 A.2d 724, 729 (Del. Super. 1996)
6 (citing Mobil Oil for the proposition that "[t]he 'injustice'" that
7 must be shown in order to pierce the veil on an alter-ego theory
8 "must be more than the breach of contract alleged in the
9 complaint"). But nothing prevents a court, in determining whether
10 there is sufficient evidence of fraud or unfairness, from taking
11 into account relevant evidence that is also pertinent to the
12 question of whether the two entities in question functioned as one.
13 Much of the evidence described in Part II.B.3. above,
14 along with other evidence discussed below, reveals that NetJets
15 adduced sufficient evidence of fraud, illegality, or unfairness to
16 warrant a trial on its contract and account-stated claims against
17 Zimmerman as LHC's alter ego. For example, in an effort to parry
18 NetJets's contention that LHC was undercapitalized, Zimmerman
19 submitted an affidavit from LHC's accountant stating that "it was
20 not intended by Zimmerman to treat the monies paid into LHC as
21 loans" (Affidavit of Mark Balaban dated October 14, 2004, ¶ 6) and
22 that all of Zimmerman's payments into LHC were in fact capital
23 contributions (see id. ¶¶ 4-8). Yet, as discussed above, Whittier
24 testified that Zimmerman instructed him that those payments were to
25 be characterized as loans, in order to allow Zimmerman to take money
26 out of LHC at will and to do so without tax consequences.
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1 Further, although the Balaban affidavit stops short of
2 giving an opinion as to how to characterize Zimmerman's withdrawals
3 of money from LHC, it would appear that, if his payments to LHC were
4 capital contributions as the Balaban affidavit opines, LHC's
5 payments to Zimmerman would be properly characterized as
6 distributions. Yet the DLLCA provides generally, with some
7 qualifications, that an LLC "shall not make a distribution to a
8 member to the extent that at the time of the distribution, after
9 giving effect to the distribution, all liabilities of the limited
10 liability company . . . exceed the fair value of the assets of the
11 limited liability company." Del. Code tit. 6, § 18-607(a). Given
12 that LHC ceased operating and was unable to pay its debt to NetJets,
13 if Zimmerman's withdrawals left LHC in that condition those
14 withdrawals may well have been prohibited by § 18-607(a). A
15 factfinder could infer that Zimmerman's payments to LHC were
16 deliberately mischaracterized as loans in order to mask the fact
17 that Zimmerman was making withdrawals from LHC that were forbidden
18 by law, and could thereby properly find fraud or an unfair siphoning
19 of LHC's assets.
20 The record also includes other evidence from which a
21 reasonable factfinder could find that Zimmerman operated LHC in his
22 own self-interest in a manner that unfairly disregarded the rights
23 of LHC's creditors. For example, it could find
24 - that although LHC was apparently unable in 2000 to
25 pay its $340,840.39 (net of LHC's deposit) debt to
26 NetJets, in that year LHC bought, and gave Zimmerman title
27 to, a Bentley automobile for $350,210.95;
28 - that LHC's only paying client for its consulting
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1 services began paying LHC for those services in July 2000
2 (the month in which LHC terminated its agreements with
3 NetJets), sending LHC a first payment of approximately
4 $675,000 on July 9, and that on that day Zimmerman
5 withdrew that amount and more from LHC;
6 - that from the point at which LHC terminated its
7 relationship with NetJets in July 2000 until the end of
8 2001--the year in which NetJets ceased operations--LHC's
9 records of its transactions directly with Zimmerman
10 indicate that Zimmerman withdrew from LHC approximately
11 $750,000 more than he put in;
12 - and that, excluding moneys put into LHC solely for
13 its investments in Bazillion, the total amount of money
14 taken out of LHC by Zimmerman and his other companies
15 appears to exceed the amount that he and those companies
16 put into LHC by some $3 million.
17 From this record, a reasonable factfinder could properly
18 find that there was an overall element of injustice in Zimmerman's
19 operation of LHC. Summary judgment should not have been entered
20 dismissing NetJets's breach-of-contract and account-stated claims
21 against Zimmerman.
22 We reject, however, NetJets's contention that the evidence
23 supporting its claims against Zimmerman on the alter-ego theory was
24 such as to entitle NetJets to summary judgment in its favor. In this
25 opinion, we have dealt with the granting of summary judgment against
26 NetJets and accordingly we have, as required, viewed the evidence in
27 the light most favorable to NetJets; a factfinder after trial,
28 however, is not required to view the evidence in this light. Both
29 the question of whether LHC was operated as Zimmerman's alter ego
30 and the question of whether it was so operated in a way that shows
31 fraud, illegality, bad faith, or an overall element of injustice or
32 unfairness, remain to be answered by the factfinder after trial.
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1 CONCLUSION
2 We have considered all of defendants' contentions in
3 support of the dismissals challenged by NetJets on this appeal and
4 have found them to be without merit. For the reasons stated above,
5 the judgment of the district court is vacated insofar as it
6 dismissed the breach-of-contract claims against LHC and the breach-
7 of-contract and account-stated claims against Zimmerman; with
8 respect to those claims, the case is remanded for further
9 proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
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