UNPUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
RAPIDS CONSTRUCTION COMPANY,
INCORPORATED,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
No. 97-1239
v.
CARL O. MALONE; HARRY R. HALL,
Defendants-Appellants.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Virginia, at Alexandria.
Albert V. Bryan, Jr., Senior District Judge.
(CA-96-539-A)
Argued: October 30, 1997
Decided: March 13, 1998
Before WILKINSON, Chief Judge, MOTZ, Circuit Judge, and
CAMPBELL, Senior Circuit Judge of the United States Court of
Appeals for the First Circuit, sitting by designation.
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Affirmed by unpublished opinion. Senior Judge Campbell wrote the
opinion, in which Chief Judge Wilkinson and Judge Motz joined.
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COUNSEL
ARGUED: Max Christian Dorian, ABRAMOWITZ & DORIAN,
Annandale, Virginia, for Appellants. Mathew David Ravencraft,
FLINN & BEAGAN, Vienna, Virginia, for Appellee. ON BRIEF:
James McConville, Annandale, Virginia, for Appellants. Robert F.
Flinn, FLINN & BEAGAN, Vienna, Virginia, for Appellee.
Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit. See
Local Rule 36(c).
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OPINION
CAMPBELL, Senior Circuit Judge:
This is a diversity case governed, as all parties concede, by Vir-
ginia law. Rapids Construction Company ("Rapids") secured a judg-
ment against ADCO Systems, Inc. ("ADCO"), a general contractor,
for breach of a contract. After failing to collect its judgment, Rapids
sued ADCO's shareholders, Harry R. Hall and Carl O. Malone, alleg-
ing, inter alia, that they had impermissibly caused the corporation to
repurchase certain of its own stock in exchange for an offset to Hall's
and Malone's indebtedness to the corporation. Rapids also alleged
that Hall and Malone had made other improper payments to them-
selves and to affiliated companies. Relying in large measure on a
sixty-four year-old Virginia case, Marshall v. Fredericksburg Lumber
Co., 173 S.E. 553 (Va. 1934), the district court granted Rapids'
motion for summary judgment on the above claims against Hall and
Malone, and they now appeal.
I. Background
Defendants-Appellants Malone and Hall are directors, officers, and
sole shareholders of ADCO. ADCO hired Plaintiff-Appellee Rapids
as a subcontractor responsible for installing drywall in a retail store
in Fairfax County, Virginia, that ADCO was building for the Guess
Company.
Problems started when ADCO did not pay Rapids for its work on
the Guess project. Rapids then filed an action for breach of contract
in federal district court. That action resulted in a judgment against
ADCO for $70,588.88, which ADCO did not pay.1 Malone conceded
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1 By the time Rapids recovered summary judgment in the instant action
against Malone and Hall, mounting interest had caused the total owed by
ADCO to reach $83,589.97.
2
in his deposition that two weeks before entry of that judgment, ADCO
lacked sufficient funds to meet its financial obligations. At no time
since then has it been suggested that ADCO was willing or able to
pay the judgment.
A month or so after ADCO failed to pay Rapids' account (but prior
to Rapids' action against ADCO), Hall and Malone caused ADCO to
forgive $82,150 in "shareholder receivables" due from themselves in
exchange for the surrender of certain stock Malone held in the company.2
This left approximately $100,000 still owed to ADCO in the share-
holders' receivables account. After Rapids obtained its judgment
against ADCO, Hall and Malone shifted most of ADCO's assets to
other companies and ADCO, while not formally dissolved, com-
pletely ceased doing business.
The instant case arose when Rapids was unable to collect its judg-
ment from ADCO. Rapids brought this diversity action in the district
court against Hall and Malone to recover from them the sum owed by
ADCO. The complaint comprised causes of action for fraud, piercing
the corporate veil, and breach of fiduciary duty. Only the final count
is at issue here. That count alleged that Defendants"Malone and Hall,
as directors and officers of ADCO, owed a fiduciary duty to protect
and preserve the assets of ADCO for the benefit of Rapids Corpora-
tion."
At the close of discovery, Hall and Malone moved for summary
judgment on all three counts, and Rapids moved for summary judg-
ment on the count for breach of fiduciary duty. The district court
granted Defendants Hall's and Malone's motion for summary judg-
ment on the fraud count, and denied their motion on the veil-piercing
count. At a subsequent trial of the veil-piercing count the court found
for Hall and Malone. No appeal has been taken regarding either the
fraud or veil-piercing counts.
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2 While it appears that the surrendered stock was Class B stock belong-
ing to Malone, the "shareholder receivables" account against which the
value of the stock was offset related on ADCO's books to both Hall and
Malone. The district court attributed the stock and the offset to both men
without distinction. As it is not argued that only Malone should be held
liable, we do not consider this possible issue.
3
On the fiduciary duty count, the district court granted summary
judgment for $82,150 in favor of Plaintiff Rapids. That sum was the
amount by which Hall and Malone's indebtedness to ADCO was
reduced in return for the company's repurchase of the stock -- a
transaction consummated just before Rapids secured its judgment
against ADCO. The district court reasoned that "[a]t least two propo-
sitions support this judgment. The first is that the controlling share-
holders of a corporation have a duty to pay the corporate liabilities to
outside creditors before they may receive any of the residuum of the
corporation's assets." For this proposition, the district court relied
solely on the Virginia Supreme Court's decision in Marshall v. Fred-
ericksburg Lumber Co., 173 S.E. 553, 557 (Va. 1934).
Second, the court, quoting FDIC v. Sea Pines Co. , 692 F.2d 973,
976-77 (4th Cir. 1982) (applying South Carolina law), stated "that
when a corporation becomes insolvent or is in a failing condition, `the
fiduciary duty of the directors shifts from the stockholders to the cred-
itors.'"
Applying these principles, the district court concluded that Hall and
Malone had breached their fiduciary duty to their creditor, Rapids.
The court conceded that "[t]he solvency or insolvency of ADCO from
September 1994 to the present is not clear from the record." However,
the district court continued,
at a time when defendants concede ADCO did not have suf-
ficient funds to meet its financial obligations, and immedi-
ately prior to Rapids becoming a judgment creditor of
ADCO, Malone and Hall transferred monies from ADCO to
themselves and their other businesses. They also effectively
dissolved the company by arranging, in January of 1995, for
ADCO to buy back all of their stock for $82,150.
The stock repurchase was not merely "a purely paper transaction," as
it resulted in ADCO's having exchanged Defendants' obligations to
it for "stock of doubtful value" rather than"an $82,150 infusion of
cash." (Id.) "These actions," the court concluded, "constituted a
breach of the fiduciary duty that defendants, as ADCO's sole share-
holders, owed the corporation's creditors." (Id.)
4
Hall and Malone now appeal.
II. Standard of Review
We review a grant of summary judgment de novo . United States v.
Kanasco, Ltd., 123 F.3d 209, 210 (4th Cir. 1997). The moving party
must demonstrate that there exists no genuine issue of material fact.
See Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 322-23 (1986). We consider
the facts in the light most favorable to the non-moving party. See
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 255 (1986).
III. Discussion
On appeal, Hall and Malone contend that the district court erred
both in reading Fredericksburg Lumber as prescribing a duty to credi-
tors, and in applying that putative duty to the facts of the instant case.
We disagree. Fredericksburg Lumber allows a creditor to recover in
equity assets of an execution-proof corporation that have been
improperly distributed to shareholders, and we think that the princi-
ples of that case allow recovery here.
A. Fredericksburg Lumber3
The plaintiff in Fredericksburg Lumber was one Neff, who secured
a judgment against a corporation for a debt that first arose in 1919.
Three years later, after failing to collect his judgment from the
execution-proof corporation, Neff filed a bill in equity seeking to
establish that the corporation's officers and directors possessed funds
of the corporations and to subject these funds to the payment of the
corporation's debt to Neff. In between the creation of the debt and the
commencement of litigation, Neff alleged that the directors had, "with
intent to defraud," caused the corporation to use its funds to repur-
chase the stock held by two of the directors at a time when "the cor-
poration was insolvent." See Fredericksburg Lumber, 173 S.E. at 555.
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3 The district court also relied on FDIC v. Sea Pines, supra. However,
in that case, this court applied the law of South Carolina, not Virginia.
While a Virginia court might find Sea Pines and its South Carolina ante-
cedents persuasive, it is unclear to what extent it would do so, and for
that reason we base our analysis on Fredericksburg Lumber.
5
The Chancery Court ruled in Neff's favor, holding personally liable
the two directors whose stock the corporation repurchased as well as
the director who endorsed the note for which the stock was exchanged
(the other two directors were this director's wife and daughter). See
id.
The Virginia Supreme Court, over one dissenting vote, amended
the equity decree and affirmed. The Court framed the questions pres-
ented as follows:
Was Neff a creditor of the corporation in August 1919 when
the sale of stock was made? Did the corporation buy its own
stock through Edgar Marshall, the president, from Ida P.
Marshall, vice-president and director, and Virginia Gregory,
a director with corporate funds?
Id. at 556. The Court reasoned that "[a]n affirmative answer to these
questions, which we think are determinative, will lead to an affirma-
tion of the decree." Id. The Court then pointed out one other condition
for liability that was clearly satisfied: the corporation's inability to
pay its debts:
Whether the corporation was solvent or insolvent at the time
[of the stock repurchase] has no material bearing. When the
creditor, Neff, sought to collect his debt, which had been
reduced to judgment in 1922, the corporation was then exe-
cution proof and had no assets from which the judgment and
execution could be satisfied.
Id. Together, these two passages suggest that shareholders of an
execution-proof corporation will be liable to creditors for distributions
of the corporation's capital assets. The question before the
Fredericksburg Lumber Court was whether this rule applied to the
corporation's at-par repurchase of its directors' shares.
The Court answered this question in the affirmative, concluding
that the shareholders were liable for payments from the corporation
in exchange for stock. "[T]he effect of the transaction" on Neff, the
creditor, was that the corporate funds, "upon which he had a right to
6
rely for the payment of his debt[,] were diverted from corporate pur-
poses and placed beyond his reach." Id. at 557. "The capital assets
were diminished to that extent and no consideration for those assets
was received by the corporation." Id.
The court then amended the decree to negate the liability of Edgar
Marshall, the director who caused the corporation to execute the
repurchase but who "did not personally receive any benefit from the
transaction." 173 S.E. at 558.
B. The Trust Fund Doctrine
Hall and Malone claim that Fredericksburg Lumber was really a
fraudulent conveyance case, "stand[ing] only for the proposition that
a transfer of corporate assets to a shareholder without consideration
is a fraud on corporate creditors." But we are unable to construe
Fredericksburg Lumber as resting upon fraudulent conveyance law.4
The Virginia Supreme Court nowhere used the term"fraudulent con-
veyance," even though in 1934, when Fredericksburg Lumber was
decided, the Virginia fraudulent conveyance statute had been in effect
for many years,5 and there were numerous contemporary cases inter-
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4 If true, this argument would help Hall and Malone because Rapids'
complaint did not include a cause of action for fraudulent conveyance.
Hall and Malone go on to contend that even if Rapids had claimed a
fraudulent conveyance, it would be unable to obtain a personal judgment
under Cheatle v. Rudd's Swimming Pool Supply Co., 360 S.E.2d 828
(1987). This contention is problematic, as the Virginia Supreme Court
has recently held in Price v. Hawkins, 439 S.E.2d 382, 385 (Va. 1994),
that a personal judgment is proper under Va. Code§ 55-80 if the creditor
would otherwise be "without any effective remedy."
5 The current fraudulent conveyance statute provides:
Every gift, conveyance, assignment or transfer or, or charge
upon, any estate, real or personal, every suit commenced or
decree, judgment or execution suffered or obtained and every
bond or other writing given with intent to delay, hinder or
defraud creditors, purchasers or other persons of or from what
they are or may be lawfully entitled to shall, as to such creditors,
purchasers or other persons, their representatives or assigned, be
void. This section shall not affect the title of a purchaser for
7
preting the statute. The Court's failure to mention the statute, or the
familiar language of "intent to delay, hinder or defraud creditors,"
strongly suggests that it was not relying on the fraudulent conveyance
statute.
Instead, Fredericksburg Lumber appears to rest on the "trust fund
doctrine." The doctrine was described as follows in Ashworth v.
Hagan Estates, Inc., 181 S.E. 381 (Va. 1935):
"The authorities seem to be uniform to the effect that the
assets of the corporation are subject to an equitable lien in
favor of the creditors, and that such creditors may follow
such assets, or the proceeds thereof, into whatsoever hands
they can trace them and subject them to such debts, except
as against a bona fide purchaser for value. And where a cor-
poration transfers all its assets to another corporation with
a view of going out of business, and nothing is left with
which to pay its debts, such transferee is charged with notice
by the very circumstance of the transaction, and takes the
same cum onere. Such a case cannot be considered a sale in
the due course of business even though based on a valuable
consideration, as it operates as a fraud against the creditors."
Id. at 385 (quoting Williams v. Commercial National Bank, 90 P.
1012, 1015 (Or. 1907)); see also Zolman Cavitch, 14 Business
Organizations § 190.02[2][c], at 190-91 (1993) (describing doctrine);
4B Michie's Jurisprudence of Virginia and West Virginia § 269, at
592-93 (1986) (same). In short, the trust fund doctrine gives creditors
an equitable right of recovery against shareholders who take assets
from a dissolving corporation.
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valuable consideration, unless it appear that he had notice of the
fraudulent intent of his immediate grantor or of the fraud render-
ing void the title of such grantor.
Va. Code § 55-80. The statute's language dates back, in its entirety, to
the time of Fredericksburg Lumber. See, e.g., Artrip v. Kelly, 134 S.E.
690, 690 (1926) (quoting § 55-80's predecessor, § 5184 of the 1919 Vir-
ginia Code).
8
Fredericksburg Lumber applied this doctrine to a corporation's
repurchase of controlling shareholders' stock. Indeed, the stock repur-
chase in Fredericksburg Lumber amounted to a liquidation, as the
cash exchanged for the repurchased stock represented the "only assets
of the corporation." 173 S.E. at 555. As a result, there were "no assets
out of which [the creditor's] claim can be collected." Id. at 558.
Subsequent Virginia authority is consistent with this view. The two
Virginia state court decisions citing to Fredericksburg Lumber do so
for the proposition that "`a corporation has no right to purchase its
own shares if the substantial rights of either stockholders or creditors
will be adversely affected thereby.'" Marcuse v. Broad-Grace Arcade
Corp., 180 S.E. 327, 337 (Va. 1935) (quoting Kemp v. Levinger, 174
S.E. 820, 827 (Va. 1934), and citing Fredericksburg Lumber); Kemp,
174 S.E. at 827 (also citing Fredericksburg Lumber). Other courts cit-
ing Fredericksburg Lumber have done so in other contexts, such as
bankruptcy, that are less relevant here. See, e.g., In re Kane, 1997 WL
781645, *3 (Bankr. E.D. Va. Dec. 4, 1997) (citing Fredericksburg
Lumber for the proposition that "[w]hen[debtor-in-possession under
Chapter 13] dissolved the Corporation, the vehicles should have been
released to the Creditors in satisfaction of the debt incurred by the
Corporation").
Although Fredericksburg Lumber has not been cited by a Virginia
court since 1935, it has never been overruled and Hall and Malone do
not question its continued validity. See, e.g. , Gilstrap v. Amtrak, 998
F.2d 559, 562 (8th Cir. 1993) (following 80-year-old state court deci-
sion despite lack of recent citation); In re Ryan, 851 F.2d 502, 508-09
(1st Cir. 1988) (following 1869 state-court decision absent "persua-
sive" evidence that state supreme court would rule differently);
Simmons v. Hartford Ins. Co., 786 F. Supp. 574, 580 (E.D. La. 1992)
("[T]he Louisiana Supreme Court has spoken, albeit over one hundred
years ago. Since the Louisiana Court has spoken, this Court need not
speculate as to whether it might rule differently today."); see
generally 19 Charles A. Wright et al., Federal Practice and
Procedure § 4507, at 141, 145, & 147 (1996) (explaining that "[e]ven
if . . . [diversity court views state precedent as] anomalous, anti-
quated, or simply unwise, it must be followed . . . unless there are
very persuasive grounds for believing that the state's highest court no
9
longer would adhere to the previously announced principle") (foot-
notes omitted).
We conclude that Fredericksburg Lumber remains valid and con-
trolling Virginia authority.6
C. Application of the Trust Fund Doctrine
The district court reasoned that even though the corporation paid
Malone and Hall no cash, Rapids could, under Fredericksburg
Lumber, recover the write-off against shareholder receivables. Here,
as in Fredericksburg Lumber, controlling shareholders caused the
corporation to purchase their stock; this reduced the corporation's
receivables, leaving it unable to pay the outstanding claim of a judg-
ment lien creditor.7
Malone and Hall try to distinguish their case from Fredericksburg
Lumber on several grounds. First, they point out that, unlike the
shareholders in Fredericksburg Lumber, they received a forgiveness
of debt rather than cash in exchange for the stock. We conclude that
distinction is not of controlling significance. The trust fund doctrine,
both generally and in Virginia, allows creditors to satisfy their claims
out of shareholder debts such as unpaid stock subscriptions. See
Martin v. South Salem Land Co., 26 S.E. 591, 598 (Va. 1896); 4B
Michie's Jurisprudence of Virginia and West Virginia § 269, at 593
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6 The parties have not argued, and so we have not considered, whether
Fredericksburg Lumber has been eroded by Virginia's statutory enact-
ments in the corporate area. See Va. Code§§ 13.1-746 & -747 (giving
creditor a right to petition court for involuntary dissolution of insolvent
corporation and prescribing priority of distribution of assets). Arguably
the statute takes the place of an equitable lien based upon "trust fund"
principles. However, it can also be argued that the trust fund doctrine
remains a viable alternative to any statutory remedy. Given the parties'
failure to pursue this issue, we do not enter the thicket.
7 Also, the district court averted briefly to other payments Hall and
Malone caused ADCO to transfer to themselves and other businesses;
these constituted a separate basis for the district court's grant of sum-
mary judgment under Fredericksburg Lumber. In light of our discussion
herein, we need not reach this aspect of the decision below.
10
("Within the meaning of [the trust fund doctrine], unpaid subscrip-
tions to the corporate stock constitute a part of the corporate assets,
and in this sense of the `trust fund' doctrine constitutes a trust fund
for the payment of creditors."). Thus, like a cash payment, the reduc-
tion in Malone's and Hall's liability to the corporation dissipated the
corporation's assets.
Second, Appellants point out that even after the stock repurchase,
they still owed the corporation (in the form of"shareholder receiv-
ables") over $100,000 -- more than enough to satisfy Rapids' entire
claim. By contrast, in Fredericksburg Lumber, the payment to share-
holders comprised the company's "only assets." 173 S.E. at 558.
Here, Hall and Malone reason, the rule of Fredericksburg Lumber
would not apply until the corporate assets can be shown to have been
reduced so as to be insufficient to pay its liabilities. However, the
court in Fredericksburg Lumber stated that"[w]hether the corporation
was solvent or insolvent at the time [the debt was first incurred] has
no material bearing. When the creditor, Neff, sought to collect his
debt . . ., the corporation was then execution proof and had no assets
from which the judgment and execution could be satisfied." 173 S.E.
at 555.
Malone and Hall contend that the stock repurchase here did not
render ADCO "execution proof," since there is no evidence of an exe-
cution returned unsatisfied. However, Malone testified under oath that
the corporation was unable to pay its financial obligations, and there
has been no suggestion by anyone that, since Rapids first obtained its
judgment against ADCO, the corporation has been willing and able
to pay Rapids' judgment. All the evidence indicates that ADCO is
now a non-functional corporate shell. We do not think it lies in the
mouth of ADCO's sole shareholders, Hall and Malone, who have
steadfastly resisted responsibility for ADCO's indebtedness, to con-
tend that their own shareholders' liabilities to the corporation render
this suit superfluous. ADCO's demonstrated incapacity in these cir-
cumstances to satisfy the judgment constitutes ample grounds for
applying Fredericksburg Lumber's equitable doctrine and granting
relief against Malone and Hall.
IV. Conclusion
The judgment against Malone and Hall is affirmed.
AFFIRMED
11