Postal Instant Press, Inc. v. Kaswa Corp. (2008) 162 Cal.App.4th 1510, -- Cal.Rptr.3d --
[No.
G038270. Fourth Dist., Div. Three. May. 20, 2008.]
POSTAL
INSTANT PRESS, INC., Plaintiff and Respondent, v. KASWA CORPORATION, Defendant and Appellant.
(Superior
Court of Orange County, No. 05CC00814, Frederick Paul Horn, Judge.)
(Opinion
by Fybel, J., with Rylaarsdam, Acting P. J., and O'Leary, J., concurring.)
COUNSEL
Palumbo
Bergstrom and David B. Wasson for Defendant and Appellant.
Berry
& Perkins and Kenneth L. Perkins, Jr., for Plaintiff and Respondent. [162 Cal.App.4th 1512]
OPINION
FYBEL,
J.-
INTRODUCTION
Kaswa
Corporation (Kaswa) appeals from an amended judgment entered after the trial court granted the motion of Postal
Instant Press, Inc. (PIP), to add Kaswa as a defendant/judgment debtor. PIP had obtained the judgment against
Shahid Rangoonwala, a former shareholder of Kaswa, for claims arising out of a franchise agreement to which
Kaswa was not a party. In this case of first impression in California, we analyze authorities nationwide and
hold a third party creditor may not pierce the corporate veil to reach [162 Cal.App.4th 1513] corporate
assets to satisfy a shareholder's personal liability. Accordingly, we reverse.
[1]
Under the standard alter ego doctrine, in appropriate circumstances the corporate form may be disregarded and
the corporate veil pierced so that an individual shareholder may be held personally liable for claims against
the corporation. Some courts have recognized a variant of the alter ego doctrine, called third party or
"outside" reverse piercing of the corporate veil, by which the corporate veil is pierced to permit a third party
creditor to reach corporate assets to satisfy claims against an individual shareholder.
The
reasoning of the cases adopting outside reverse piercing of the corporate veil is flawed, and we join other
courts declining to accept it. As we will explain, outside reverse piercing is not a logical extension of the
standard alter ego doctrine but instead addresses significantly different concerns. Outside reverse piercing can
harm innocent shareholders and corporate creditors, and allow judgment creditors to bypass normal judgment
collection procedures. Legal theories (such as agency or respondeat superior) and legal remedies (such as claims
for conversion or fraudulent conveyance) adequately protect judgment creditors without the need to distort
theories of corporate liability.
To
address the many concerns created by outside reverse piercing, the courts recognizing the doctrine have created
significant qualifications to its application. These qualifications swallow the rule in practice. PIP failed to
satisfy at least two of those qualifications--inadequacy of legal remedies and no harm to innocent
creditors--and, as a result, we would reverse even if we accepted the doctrine of outside reverse piercing.
FACTS
In
1998, Rangoonwala and Syed Saeed Ahmed purchased a PIP franchise from the franchisee. On July 24, 1998,
Rangoonwala and Ahmed executed an agreement and consent to assignment of the franchise. PIP was a party to this
assignment agreement and consented to the assignment of the franchise to Rangoonwala and Ahmed. Rangoonwala and
Ahmed assumed the written contract (the Franchise Agreement) dated July 13, 1983 governing the relationship with
PIP and held the PIP franchise as general partners. In May 1998, Rangoonwala and Ahmed formed Kaswa as a
corporation and initially capitalized it with $40,000. Kaswa was not a party to the Franchise Agreement or the
assignment agreement. [162 Cal.App.4th 1514]
Sometime
in 2000, Ahmed left the partnership that held the PIP franchise and sold his equity interest in it to
Rangoonwala for $10,000. However, in October 2001, Rangoonwala signed an "Ownership Structure Addendum"
verifying both he and Ahmed owned the franchise as a general partnership, with each having a 50 percent equity
interest in the franchise.
In
late September or early October 2001, after Ahmed had left the partnership, Rangoonwala asked PIP's director of
credit and collections, Edward Longo, if Kaswa could replace Rangoonwala as the franchisee on the Franchise
Agreement. Longo refused. In a letter to Rangoonwala, dated October 9, 2001, Longo stated, "[a]s soon as your
new Articles of Incorporation are completed, please forward a copy to our Legal department and they will make
the necessary revisions to the [franchise] agreement." On October 24, 2001, Rangoonwala, individually as the
franchisee, signed an amendment to the Franchise Agreement.
In
2003, PIP filed a UCC-1 financing statement to perfect a security interest in certain property owned by
Rangoonwala, including machinery, equipment, and trade fixtures.
In
September 2004, a dispute arose between PIP and Rangoonwala concerning payment of royalties by Rangoonwala to
PIP under the Franchise Agreement. PIP and Rangoonwala submitted the dispute to arbitration, as required by the
Franchise Agreement. In February 2005, the arbitrator issued an award of $77,434.69 in PIP's favor and against
Rangoonwala. In June 2005, the trial court granted PIP's petition to confirm the arbitration award, and judgment
was entered against Rangoonwala in the amount of $79,810.21, with postjudgment interest at the rate of 10
percent per year. On the date judgment was entered, the PIP franchise was owned solely by Rangoonwala.
As
part of its judgment collection efforts, PIP hired a private investigator to investigate Rangoonwala's
background and finances. During the course of the investigation, PIP learned Rangoonwala had a new partner named
Michael Haxton and the two had sold all of the franchise assets to a company called Definite Impressions, a sole
proprietorship owned by Ward Johnson. PIP served Johnson with a notice of levy on money, credit or debts
belonging or owing to Rangoonwala. PIP also conducted an Internet-based public records search on Rangoonwala.
PIP
conducted a judgment debtor's examination of Rangoonwala in February 2006. Rangoonwala testified at the judgment
debtor's examination that Kaswa had been formed for the purpose of operating the PIP franchise and [162
Cal.App.4th 1515] that Kaswa owned the franchise assets. In 2002, after Ahmed had left the business, Kaswa
merged with a company called The Print Works, which was owned by Haxton. The resulting company, which retained
the name Kaswa, continued to operate the PIP franchise. According to Rangoonwala, he no longer owned shares of
Kaswa, having "walk[ed] away" to "put everything behind me." He did continue, however, to receive monthly draws
of $2,600 from the PIP franchise through August 31, 2005.
Soon
after entry of the judgment against Rangoonwala, Kaswa sold the franchise assets to Ward Johnson and Susan
Johnson (the Johnsons), doing business as Definite Impressions. According to Rangoonwala, Ward Johnson
"basically came in and emptied out . . . whatever was there basically in the business . . . he took. . . . I
just didn't want anything to do with it."
Rangoonwala
testified PIP knew about Kaswa because in 2001 he had asked PIP to allow him to substitute Kaswa as the
franchisee. According to Rangoonwala, PIP declined, but told him he could add Kaswa as an additional franchisee.
Rangoonwala was not interested in merely adding Kaswa to the Franchise Agreement because in that case he would
remain personally liable under the Franchise Agreement. In a declaration submitted in opposition to the motion
to add Kaswa as a judgment debtor, Rangoonwala stated he was not opposed to adding Kaswa to the Franchise
Agreement, but PIP did not pursue the matter.
In
July 2006, PIP conducted a judgment debtor's examination of Haxton, who testified he was the sole shareholder
and president of Kaswa. Haxton testified that Rangoonwala had been the secretary and possibly a vice-president
of Kaswa, as well as a shareholder, but had walked away from Kaswa several years earlier while owing the company
$9,500 for draws on his equity. Haxton testified that Kaswa sold its assets in August 2005 to the Johnsons,
doing business as Definite Impressions, for a price of $300,000 and produced a copy of the written sale
agreement. The agreement, dated August 29, 2005, called for a down payment of $50,000 and installment payments
for the balance over the next 31 months.
In
a declaration submitted in opposition to PIP's motion to amend the judgment to add Kaswa as a judgment debtor,
Haxton stated he purchased Ahmed's interest in Kaswa for $20,000; since 2002, Rangoonwala's personal assets were
not commingled with Kaswa's; Kaswa and The Print Works merged in 2002; after the merger, Haxton exercised
control over Kaswa; and Rangoonwala continued to operate the PIP franchise, but did not participate in Kaswa's
operation. According to Haxton's declaration, "[o]ther than some minor equipment purchased by Mr. Rangoonwala
and a list of customers [162 Cal.App.4th 1516] Mr. Rangoonwala had acquired, K[aswa] contributed nothing
significant to the merger and the new business except its name."
The
Johnsons made the down payment and five installment payments to Kaswa. They stopped making payments sometime
after January 2006, when they learned of the judgment against Rangoonwala. The Johnsons believed the judgment
constituted a breach of the agreement to purchase Kaswa's assets.
As
of July 2006, Haxton was the only shareholder of Kaswa. Its only asset was the right to receive about $225,000
from the Johnsons under the agreement to purchase Kaswa's assets. Kaswa conducted no business, did not maintain
corporate records, and did not conduct shareholder meetings.
MOTION
TO ADD JUDGMENT DEBTOR
In
October 2006, after taking the judgment debtor examinations, PIP moved pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure
section 187 to amend the judgment to add Kaswa as a judgment debtor. On December 19, 2006, the trial court heard
oral argument, and, after addressing Kaswa's evidentiary objections, took the matter under submission.
fn. 1
On
January 17, 2007, the trial court issued an order granting PIP's motion, concluding Rangoonwala and Kaswa were
alter egos of each other. The court explained: "Rangoonwala claims that he was no longer participating in Kaswa
at the time the underlying litigati[o]n commenced. However, as Kaswa owned all of the printing equipment and
Rangoonwala was still a shareholder, this claim rings hollow. Also, Rangoonwala stated that the initial $40,000
was used to purchase the Franchise, for working capital, and to 'survive off of['] . . . . This shows that the
capitalization of the company was inadequate and that Kaswa's money was used to purchase the Franchise--a
franchise that was supposed to have been owned and operated by Rangoonwala and Ahmed. This also shows that the
corporate assets were freely commingled with shareholder assets. [¶] The sole purpose in creating Kaswa was to
operate the [162 Cal.App.4th 1517] Postal Instant Press, Inc[.] franchise . . . . Therefore, by appearing
in the underlying litigation, in which Postal Instant Press, Inc[.] was seeking royalty fees and advertising
fund fees under the Franchise Agreement, Rangoonwala was essentially defending both himself and Kaswa against
Postal Instant Press, Inc[.]'s allegations. Kaswa's claim that it would have asserted defenses in the
arbitration is pure 20-20 hindsight and speculation with no factual basis."
An
amended judgment adding Kaswa as a judgment debtor was entered on February 2, 2007. Kaswa timely appealed from
the amended judgment.
DISCUSSION
[2]
Code of Civil Procedure section 187 authorizes a trial court to amend a judgment to add judgment debtors.
(Hall, Goodhue, Haisley & Barker, Inc. v. Marconi Conf. Center Bd. (1996) 41
Cal.App.4th 1551,
1554.) Kaswa argues the trial court erred by adding it as a judgment debtor because the alter ego doctrine may
be used only to pierce the corporate veil to hold corporate officers and shareholders liable for the
corporation's debts and may not be used, as it was here, to hold the corporation liable for the debts of a
shareholder. PIP counters by arguing the alter ego doctrine may be used in either direction--to reach
shareholder assets to satisfy corporate debts, or to reach corporate assets to satisfy shareholder debts.
Neither
here nor in the trial court did Kaswa or PIP cite the breadth of authorities we discuss in this opinion; indeed,
neither one has cited a single case accepting or rejecting the doctrine of outside reverse piercing of the
corporate veil. Our independent research and analysis lead us to reject outside reverse piercing.
[3]
Government Code section 68081 has been satisfied because PIP knew of the outside reverse piercing issue and had
full opportunity to brief it. "Section 68081 does not require that a party actually have briefed an issue; it
requires only that the party had the opportunity to do so." (People v. Alice (2007)
41
Cal.4th 668,
677.) Both Kaswa and PIP argue outside reverse piercing of the corporate veil in their appellate briefs
(albeit without mentioning the doctrine by name). At pages 21-22 of the respondent's brief, PIP specifically
stated: "[Kaswa] argues that the alter ego doctrine allows a court to disregard the corporate shield when an
individual tries to shield personal assets by loading liability into the corporation, but not when the
individual accepts the liability but loads the assets into the corporation. [¶] This 'one-way'/'two-way'
distinction is 'a distinction without [162 Cal.App.4th 1518] a difference.'" PIP thus recognized the
issue but stopped short of fully briefing it. By failing to cite pertinent authority to the trial court,
Kaswa and PIP placed the trial court in the unacceptable position of having to make a difficult decision on
an issue of first impression without the benefit of the parties' presentation of adequate research and
analysis.
I.
Outside Reverse Corporate Piercing of the Corporate Veil--Definition and Status in
California
The
alter ego doctrine traditionally is applied to pierce the corporate veil so that a shareholder may be held
liable for the debts or conduct of the corporation. Some courts recognize the corporate veil may be pierced in
reverse so that a corporation may be held liable for the debts or conduct of a shareholder. (See Annot.,
Acceptance and Application of Reverse Veil-Piercing--Third-Party Claimant (2005) 2 A.L.R.6th 195, § 2.) "The
typical 'reverse pierce' case involves a corporate insider, or someone claiming through such individual,
attempting to pierce the corporate veil from within so that the corporate entity and the individual will be
considered one and the same." (1 Fletcher Cyclopedia of the Law of Corporations (Sept. 2007) § 41.70.) This is
sometimes called "[i]nside reverse piercing." (In re Phillips (Colo. 2006) 139 P.3d 639, 644-645.)
A
variant of the reverse piercing theory, sometimes called "outside" or "third party" reverse piercing, occurs
when a third party outsider seeks to reach corporate assets to satisfy claims against an individual shareholder.
(In re Phillips, supra, 139 P.3d at p. 645; 1 Fletcher Cyclopedia of the Law of Corporations,
supra, § 41.70; Annot., Acceptance and Application of Reverse Veil-Piercing--Third-Party Claimant,
supra, 2 A.L.R.6th 195, § 2.) Perhaps the oldest reverse piercing case is Kingston Dry Dock Co. v.
Lake Champlain Transp. Co. (2d Cir. 1929) 31 F.2d 265 (Kingston) (opn. by L. Hand, J.). There, the
court recognized as a matter of federal law the possibility a parent corporation may be liable for the acts of
its subsidiary corporation when the parent corporation directly intervened in the transaction, "ignoring the
subsidiary's paraphernalia of incorporation, directors and officers." (Id. at p. 267.) The court
cautioned, however, that "such instances, if possible at all, must be extremely rare." (Ibid.)
The
California Supreme Court has not spoken on the issue of outside reverse piercing of the corporate veil;
therefore, whether to accept or reject the doctrine is an issue of first impression in this state. In support of
holding Kaswa liable for the judgment against Rangoonwala, PIP relies on a passage from a law review article
published in 1925 and quoted in Mesler v. Bragg Management [162 Cal.App.4th 1519] Co.
(1985) 39
Cal.3d 290,
300 (Mesler): "'As the separate personality of the corporation is a statutory privilege, it must be used
for legitimate business purposes and must not be perverted. When it is abused it will be disregarded and the
corporation looked at as a collection or association of individuals, so that the corporation will be liable for
acts of the stockholders or the stockholders liable for acts done in the name of the corporation.'" In this
passage, the Mesler court was quoting from a law review article entitled Comment, Corporations:
Disregarding Corporate Entity: One Man Company (1925) 13 Cal. L.Rev. 235, 237, which was published even
before the Kingston case. Mesler was a traditional alter ego case, not a reverse piercing case,
and therefore does not compel us to accept reverse piercing. fn.
2
In
Taylor v. Newton (1953) 117
Cal.App.2d 752,
760-761, the Court of Appeal concluded a corporation was liable on a judgment against the corporation's sole
stockholder because the evidence supported a finding of alter ego. The court did not discuss the doctrine of
reverse piercing or any of the problems it raises. Rather, the court relied on traditional alter ego law to
conclude that adherence to the fiction of a separate corporate existence "would promote an injustice" to the
stockholder's creditors. (Id. at p. 761.)
PIP
argues NEC Electronics Inc. v. Hurt (1989) 208
Cal.App.3d 772 supports
imposition of liability on the corporation for a debt of a shareholder. That case was a traditional alter ego
case: The plaintiff secured a judgment against the corporate defendant, then moved to amend the judgment to add
the corporation's sole shareholder as a judgment debtor. (Id. at pp. 775-776.) The trial court granted
the motion, but the appellate court reversed on the ground there was insufficient evidence to show the
shareholder had an opportunity to litigate the underlying action between the plaintiff and the corporation.
(Id. at pp. 776, 781.)
II.
Cases Rejecting Outside Reverse Piercing of the Corporate Veil
We
agree with the sound reasoning and analysis of the cases rejecting outside reverse piercing of the corporate
veil. The court in Olympic Capital [162 Cal.App.4th 1520] Corp. v. Newman (C.D.Cal. 1967) 276
F.Supp. 646, 658 described outside reverse piercing as "a complete distortion of the alter ego doctrine." The
court continued: "That doctrine has been invoked when fairness and justice require that the property of
individual stockholders be made subject to the debts of the corporation. To apply such a doctrine here would be
asking the court to apply the doctrine in one manner, i.e., make the property of the corporation the property of
a stockholder, for the purposes of obtaining jurisdiction of the person of the stockholder and then to reverse
the procedure, i.e., make the action of the individual stockholder the action of the corporation for purposes of
creating liability in the name of the corporation. Neither reason nor law compel[s] such a gymnastic."
(Ibid.)
In
Cascade Energy and Metals Corp. v. Banks (10th Cir. 1990) 896 F.2d 1557, 1576-1577 (Cascade
Energy), the court, concluding Utah had not recognized outside reverse piercing, reversed the district
court's order holding various corporations liable for a judgment against an individual shareholder who
controlled the corporations. The court criticized outside reverse piercing, identifying three significant
problems with the doctrine. First, reverse piercing "bypasses normal judgment-collection procedures, whereby
judgment creditors attach the judgment debtor's shares in the corporation and not the corporation's assets."
(Id. at p. 1577.) Second, the court explained: "[T]o the extent that the corporation has other
non-culpable shareholders, they obviously will be prejudiced if the corporation's assets can be attached
directly. In contrast, in ordinary piercing cases, only the assets of the particular shareholder who is
determined to be the corporation's alter ego are subject to attachment." (Ibid.)
The
Cascade Energy court also recognized legal remedies adequately protected creditors from fraud. Thus, the
court stated: "Absent a clear statement by the Supreme Court of Utah that it has adopted the variant reverse
piercing theory urged upon us here, we are inclined to conclude that more traditional theories of conversion,
fraudulent conveyance of assets, respondeat superior and agency law are adequate to deal with situations where
one seeks to recover from a corporation for the wrongful conduct committed by a controlling stockholder without
the necessity to invent a new theory of liability." (Cascade Energy, supra, 896 F.2d 1557, 1577.)
In
Floyd v. I.R.S. (10th Cir. 1998) 151 F.3d 1295 (Floyd), the court rejected outside reverse
piercing as a matter of Kansas law. The Floyd court expanded on Cascade Energy's criticism of the
doctrine: "There are reasons beyond those identified in Cascade to deny an alter ego claim of this kind.
For one thing, the prospect of losing out to an individual shareholder's [162 Cal.App.4th 1521] creditors
will unsettle the expectations of corporate creditors who understand their loans to be secured--expressly or
otherwise--by corporate assets. Corporate creditors are likely to insist on being compensated for the increased
risk of default posed by outside reverse-piercing claims, which will reduce the effectiveness of the corporate
form as a means of raising credit. Furthermore, as Judge Learned Hand suggested in what may be the earliest case
to consider such a claim, outside reverse piercing is only appropriate in the rare case of a subsidiary
dominating its parent." (Floyd, supra, 151 F.3d at pp. 1299-1300, citing Kingston, supra, 31 F.2d
at p. 267.)
The
Floyd court explained that disregard of the corporate form, as an equitable remedy, should be granted
only when legal remedies are inadequate. When the corporation has been dominated by a controlling shareholder,
the Floyd court concluded, "an agency or aiding and abetting theory may suffice to hold the corporation
liable for the actions of that stockholder." (Floyd, supra, 151 F.3d at p. 1300.) In addition,
"[s]tandard judgment collection procedures may also suffice to cover shareholder liability without expanding
equitable theories of corporate liability." (Ibid.) The Floyd court concluded, "in the absence of
a clear statement of Kansas law by the Kansas courts, we will not assume that such a potentially problematic
doctrine already has application in that state." (Ibid.)
The
Georgia Supreme Court rejected outside reverse piercing in Acree v. McMahan (2003) 276 Ga. 880. The
court, after reciting the criticisms of the outside reverse piercing doctrine expressed in Cascade Energy
and Floyd, concluded: "Allowing outsider reverse piercing claims would constitute a radical change to the
concept of piercing the corporate veil in this state and, thus, should be created by the General Assembly and
not by this Court." (Acree v. McMahan, supra, 276 Ga. at p. 882.)
III.
Cases Accepting Outside Reverse Piercing of the Corporate Veil and Why We Disagree with
Them
As
those cases explain, outside reverse piercing is a radical and problematic change in standard alter ego law.
Nonetheless, cases accepting outside reverse piercing (outside of federal tax cases)
fn. 3 have accepted it
as a logical [162 Cal.App.4th 1522] extension of the standard alter ego law either because both have the
same equitable goals (see S.E.C. v. Hickey, supra, 322 F.3d at p. 1130 [reverse piercing "flows from the
traditional piercing theory"]; Minich v. Gem State Developers, Inc. (1979) 99 Idaho 911, 917 ["no reason in
law or logic" to limit the alter ego doctrine to the traditional variety]; C.F. Trust, Inc. v. First Flight
L.P. (2003) 266 Va. 3, 11 ["We conclude that there is no logical basis upon which to distinguish between a
traditional veil piercing action and an outsider reverse piercing action"]), or because outside reverse piercing is
seen as the trend in authority (Litchfield Asset Management Corp. v. Howell (2002) 70 Conn.App. 133, 149-151
["We discern from these cases a growing recognition of the doctrine of reverse piercing of the corporate veil"];
Goya Foods, Inc. v. Unanue (1st Cir. 2000) 233 F.3d 38, 43 [reverse piercing allowed under New York law]).
In In re Phillips, supra, 139 P.3d at page 645, the Colorado Supreme Court reasoned that Colorado permits
outside reverse piercing "[d]ue to the similarities and parallel goals achieved in outside reverse piercing and
traditional piercing."
[4]
The reasoning of those cases is unpersuasive and flawed. Traditional alter ego doctrine and reverse piercing,
while having similar goals, advance those goals by addressing very different concerns. When a judgment debtor is
a corporation, the judgment creditor cannot reach the assets of the individual shareholders due to limitations
on liability imposed by corporate law. Traditional piercing of the corporate veil is justified as an equitable
remedy when the shareholders have abused the corporate form to evade individual liability, circumvent a statute,
or accomplish a wrongful purpose. (See Mesler, supra, 39 Cal.3d at pp. 300-301; see also 9 Witkin,
Summary of Cal. Law (10th ed. 2005) Corporations, §§ 9, 11, 12.)
The
same abuse of the corporate form does not exist when the judgment debtor is the shareholder. In that situation,
the corporate form is not being used to evade a shareholder's personal liability because the shareholder did not
incur the debt through the corporate guise and misuse that guise to escape personal liability for the debt. The
judgment creditor can enforce the judgment against the shareholder's assets, including shares in the
corporation. Upon acquiring the shares, the judgment creditor will have whatever rights the shareholder had in
the corporation. [162 Cal.App.4th 1523]
[5]
The true issue that outside reverse piercing seeks to address is not the misuse of the corporate form to shield
the shareholder from personal liability. Rather, the issue addressed by outside reverse piercing is the
shareholder's transfer of personal assets to the corporation to shield the assets from collection by a creditor
of the shareholder. In other words, outside reverse piercing seeks to protect the judgment creditor from the
shareholder's fraudulent transfer of assets to the corporation. But, as explained in Cascade Energy and
Floyd, conversion and fraudulent conveyance already afford judgment creditors protection in that
situation. Outside reverse piercing, accomplished by the expedient means of a postjudgment motion, is an
unacceptable shortcut to pursue those remedies.
To
all of these problems recognized by other courts, we add one more: Here, PIP consented to the assignment of the
franchise to Rangoonwala and Ahmed and knew the franchise was not being assigned to a corporation. PIP could
have taken whatever precautions it believed necessary to protect its interests, for example, conditioning the
assignment on Rangoonwala owning the franchise assets, taking a security interest in Rangoonwala's Kaswa stock,
or requiring a guaranty from Kaswa. Rangoonwala submitted a declaration stating that in October 2001 he informed
PIP of his corporation, and PIP conceded its former director of credit and collections "might have known" of
Kaswa's existence. There is no question Rangoonwala is personally liable to PIP for unpaid royalties owed under
the Franchise Agreement, and PIP can enforce its judgment against Rangoonwala personally.
PIP's
real concern is that Rangoonwala allegedly used his alter ego Kaswa to shield franchise assets from his
creditors. However, to the extent Rangoonwala fraudulently conveyed assets to Kaswa (or fraudulently sold his
Kaswa stock), PIP has legal means to try to reach those assets and the proceeds from them. Counsel for PIP
acknowledged at oral argument that PIP did not pursue those legal remedies because amending the judgment to add
Kaswa as a judgment debtor was simply more expedient.
The
cases accepting outside reverse piercing have imposed limitations on its use to try to overcome its many flaws.
Thus, in In re Phillips, supra, 139 P.3d 639, 646, the court imposed a requirement that "innocent
shareholders and creditors be adequately protected before outside reverse piercing is appropriate under Colorado
law." Because piercing the corporate veil is an extraordinary remedy, the court also required the trial court to
consider alternative, adequate remedies (such as claims for conversion, fraudulent conveyance of assets,
respondeat superior, and agency) before permitting outside reverse piercing: "When a less invasive, adequate
remedy is available, [162 Cal.App.4th 1524] outside reverse piercing is discouraged." (Id. at p.
647.) In C.F. Trust, Inc. v. First Flight L.P., supra, 266 Va. 3, 12-13, the Virginia Supreme Court
similarly cautioned that a court considering reverse piercing must weigh the effect of veil piercing on innocent
investors and on secured and unsecured creditors, and must consider the availability of other remedies the
creditor may pursue. (See also Litchfield Asset Management Corp. v. Howell, supra, 70 Conn.App. at p.
151, fn. 14 [acknowledging the concern that reverse piercing may harm innocent shareholders, but stating that
concern "is not implicated by the facts of this case"].)
While
these cases treat such flaws and concerns as limitations on the application of the doctrine of outside reverse
piercing, we conclude they reflect inherent and insurmountable flaws in the doctrine itself. These concerns
arise precisely because standard alter ego and outside reverse piercing are actually different theories,
justified by different reasons, and address different issues. To ameliorate the flaws in outside reverse
piercing, courts recognizing the doctrine have imposed qualifications and requirements which, in their totality,
essentially eliminate the outside reverse piercing doctrine as a practical matter. Indeed, if all the
requirements of outside reverse piercing are met, its application would be unnecessary to protect the judgment
creditor. Judgment collection procedures offer judgment creditors adequate protection in situations where
outside reverse piercing would not harm innocent shareholders and creditors, legal remedies are inadequate, and
the traditional requirements of proving alter ego are met. By levying on the debtor's shares, the judgment
creditor could place itself in the same position as the shareholder.
IV.
PIP Failed to Meet the Requirements for Application of Outside Reverse Piercing
[6]
Even if we were to accept outside reverse piercing, we would reverse because PIP failed to meet the requirements
for its application. At the time of the litigation, Rangoonwala was not the sole shareholder of Kaswa. PIP
failed to show that innocent creditors would be adequately protected. Amendment of a judgment to add an alter
ego is an equitable procedure (Carr v. Barnabey's Hotel Corp. (1994) 23
Cal.App.4th 14,
21), and before applying outside reverse piercing, "the availability of alternative, adequate remedies must be
considered by the trial court" (In re Phillips, supra, 139 P.3d at p. 647). PIP failed to establish its
legal remedies were inadequate, and the record does not show whether the trial court considered the adequacy of
PIP's legal remedies. [162 Cal.App.4th 1525]
DISPOSITION
The
amended judgment against Kaswa is reversed. Appellant to recover costs incurred on appeal.
Rylaarsdam,
Acting P. J., and O'Leary, J., concurred.
FN 1. Kaswa
objected to portions of a declaration and some attached exhibits submitted in support of PIP's motion. PIP did not
respond to the objections because, as its counsel stated at the hearing on the motion, the evidence to which Kaswa
objected was not dispositive of the motion. The trial court did not formally rule on the objections, but stated: "I
was going to let [counsel] argue [the objections], but then [PIP's] counsel said he doesn't have any argument with
these, he's going to concede these." On appeal, PIP does not argue the merit of Kaswa's evidentiary objections, and
this opinion excludes reference to any fact based on evidence that was the subject of those objections.
FN 2. In
S.E.C. v. Hickey (9th Cir. 2003) 322 F.3d 1123, 1130-1131, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a
district court order freezing nonparty corporate assets to enforce a securities fraud disgorgement order against an
individual shareholder. The Ninth Circuit addressed California alter ego law and discussed outside reverse
piercing, but concluded reverse piercing did not apply because the asset freeze ordered by the district court did
not depend on an alter ego relationship. (Ibid.)
FN 3. Many
courts have permitted the United States to use a reverse piercing theory to recover a taxpayer's delinquent tax
liability from the taxpayer's alter ego business entity. (E.g., Brownfield Investment Corp. v. United States
(9th Cir., July 13, 1994, No. 92-16621) 1994 U.S.App. Lexis 18331; Towe Antique Ford Foundation v. I.R.S.
(9th Cir. 1993) 999 F.2d 1387, 1390-1391; Century Hotels v. United States (5th Cir. 1992) 952 F.2d 107, 110;
Shades Ridge Holding Co., Inc. v. United States (11th Cir. 1989) 888 F.2d 725, 728; Loving Saviour Church
v. United States (8th Cir. 1984) 728 F.2d 1085, 1086; see also Annot., Acceptance and Application of Reverse
Veil-Piercing-Third-Party Claimant, supra, 2 A.L.R.6th 195, §§ 16, 17.) These cases recognize that "reverse
piercing is a well-established theory in the federal tax realm" that advances the policies of "avoiding fraud and
collecting delinquent federal taxes." (United States v. Scherping (8th Cir. 1999) 187 F.3d 796, 803,
804.)
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