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Adding additional judgment debtors to California Money Judgments.

Often a party to a lawsuit will have great success at trial, resulting in a money judgment. Then the judgment holder tries to collect the judgment, and finds that the debtor is judgment – proof, has no assets, or files bankruptcy to avoid liability for that judgment. Sacramento business attorneys are frequently presented with the problem of an uncollectible judgment. One solution – A judgment may be amended to add additional judgment debtors on the ground that a person or entity is the alter ego of the original judgment debtor; it is an equitable procedure based on the theory that the court is not amending the judgment to add a new defendant but is merely inserting the correct name of the real defendant. That happened to a plaintiff in a recent decision, and the court found that the creditor met the test to nail the parties responsible for the damages, who were not originally named defendants.

sacramento business lawyer -judgment debtor.jpgIn Relentless Air Racing, LLC v. Airborne Turbine Ltd. Partnership, Relentless sued Airborne concerning purchase of a French military jet that was not certified for flight. Relentless won a money judgment for damages of one dollar ($1.00), plus was awarded attorney fees of over $174,000 and costs of over $6,000. Airborne limited partnership was a deadbeat, with no assets, so Relentless could not collect its judgment. Relentless the sought to add the husband and wife team behind Airborne, plus their two corporations, as judgment debtors.

The court first reviewed the law concerning adding additional judgment debtors. The theory that the court is not amending the judgment to add a new defendant but is merely inserting the correct name of the real defendant. The three-part test requires the judgment holder show:

(1) the parties to be added as judgment debtors had control of the underlying litigation and were virtually represented in that proceeding;

(2) there is such a unity of interest and ownership that the separate personalities of the entity and the owners no longer exist; and

(3) an inequitable result will follow if the acts are treated as those of the entity alone.
(Greenspan, 191 Cal App 4th 486, 509)

Here, the evidence was pretty bad for Airborne, and the individuals, Linda and Wayne Fulton. They are the sole limited partners and the directors of the two corporations that were its general partner. Just before the end of the trial (must have looked grim!) The changed general partners, and the new one had no asserts. All the entities operate from an office in their home, using equipment that they own. They have written minutes of only one partnership meeting per year. They took draws when they had bills to pay, but did not have meetings concerning draws. Prior to the trial they withdrew $115,000 from Airborne, the last of its cash. At trial, their demeanor was that the business ventures were their personal efforts, benefits, responsibilities, and liabilities.

sacramento business lawyer collecting judgment.jpgThe trial court found that the Fultons and their business entities were not separate, but that there was a unity of interest. However, the trial judge did not find that there was evidence of an inequitable result, because there was insufficient evidence to show that the Fultons acted with wrongful intent. The appellate court said this was wrong- intent was not required, but rather proof of an inequitable result. Given that the trial court found the unity of interest, and that the Fultons controlled the partnership, it is highly unlikely that the partnership will ever have assets to satisfy the judgment. Relentless cannot collect its judgment because Airborne is insolvent. Under the circumstances here, this is an inequitable result as a matter of law.

The defendant also argued that it was too late – Robert Fulton was originally named in the suit as the alter ego of Airborne, but was dismissed by the plaintiff before trial. But the court noted that it would not be appropriate, in every case, to require a plaintiff suing a corporation to allege alter ego liability. The plaintiff would then have to engage in pretrial discovery to establish such liability, resulting in a fishing expedition into alter ego evidence before the plaintiff had a favorable judgment.

photos:
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