Nancy Friedman v. Estate of Gerald Friedman ( 2023 )


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  •                                              COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    UNPUBLISHED
    Present: Judges Athey, Ortiz and Lorish
    Argued at Norfolk, Virginia
    CHARLES S. FRIEDMAN,
    NANCY M. FRIEDMAN AND
    OCEAN HILL PROPERTIES, INC.
    v.     Record No. 0117-22-1
    MONA FRIEDMAN SMITH,
    LAURA GOLDSTEIN,                          MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
    ESTATE OF GERALD FRIEDMAN,                JUDGE CLIFFORD L. ATHEY, JR.
    FOUR SEASONS RESORT, INC. AND                  JANUARY 24, 2023
    JOHN W. RICHARDSON, AS LIQUIDATING TRUSTEE FOR
    OCEAN HILL COMMERCIAL, LLC AND
    SWAN BEACH COROLLA, LLC
    NANCY FRIEDMAN
    v.     Record No. 0495-22-1
    ESTATE OF GERALD FRIEDMAN
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF NORFOLK
    David W. Lannetti, Judge
    George R.A. Doumar (Raj H. Patel; Brandon M. Goodwin; Doumar
    Martin PLLC; Hunter Hanger & Associates, P.C., on briefs), for
    appellants.
    John F. Sawyer (James S. Panagis, Jr.; Wolcott Rivers Gates, on
    brief), for Estate of Gerald Friedman, Swan Beach Corolla, LLC
    and Ocean Hill Commercial, LLC.
    No brief or argument for Mona Friedman Smith, Laura Goldstein,
    Four Seasons Resort, Inc. or John W. Richardson, as Liquidating
    Trustee for Ocean Hill Commercial, LLC and Swan Beach
    Corolla, LLC.
    *
    Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
    Nancy Friedman (“Nancy”) and Charles Friedman (“Chip”) appeal from orders entered in
    the Circuit Court of the City of Norfolk (“trial court”) finding them in contempt for violating
    several previous orders entered by the trial court. Nancy and Chip contend that the trial court
    lacked the personal jurisdiction necessary to even consider the matters raised in the original
    orders. As a result, they argue that the trial court’s ruling finding them in contempt was void.
    Nancy and Chip also contend that the trial court erred by finding them in contempt for violating
    orders that were not clear or definite in what activities were prohibited. We affirm in part and
    reverse in part.
    I. BACKGROUND
    Gerald Friedman (“Gerald”) and Nancy were divorced on July 31, 2017. During their
    marriage, Gerald was involved extensively in developing real property located primarily in
    Hampton Roads, Virginia and the Outer Banks of North Carolina while Nancy supported the
    family in her role as wife and mother. Gerald died following the entry of the divorce decree but
    prior to equitable distribution of their marital assets which included extensive real estate holdings
    in Virginia and North Carolina. During their marriage, as a part of their estate plan, Gerald and
    Nancy conveyed to their three, adult children, Mona Friedman Smith (“Mona”), Laura Friedman
    Goldstein (“Laura”), and Chip, various interests in the real estate at issue in the equitable
    distribution proceedings. As a result, their adult children became involved directly and indirectly
    in the equitable distribution proceedings. This well-meaning estate planning eventually led to
    eight lawsuits between the five family members with claims and counterclaims covering a range
    of issues including defamation, will contests, and the equitable distribution arising from the
    divorce.
    While numerous properties and entities have been addressed during the resulting
    litigation, Four Seasons Resort, Inc. (“Four Seasons”), Ocean Hill Properties, Inc. (“OHP”), and
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    the actions related to the equitable distribution thereof are the pertinent issues raised in this
    appeal. Prior to the divorce, Gerald owned all the shares of stock in Four Seasons. Four Seasons
    owned a small commercial building which generated monthly rental income. Following the
    divorce, the parties mediated how to equitably distribute Four Seasons and OHP which resulted
    in: (1) Nancy and Gerald’s Estate (the “Estate”) agreeing to sell the real property owned by Four
    Seasons and dividing the proceeds equally, and (2) Nancy and the Estate agreeing that the Estate
    would sell its 50% interest in OHP to Chip in exchange for $220,000. As a result, Chip and
    Nancy would own 100% of OHP. The partial settlement agreements (“Agreements”) were
    subsequently executed on January 30, 2019, and signed by Laura and Mona as co-executors of
    the Estate, Nancy, Chip, and Chip as “President” of OHP.
    Near the conclusion of the hearing related to the Agreements, the trial court, with the
    express consent of Nancy and Chip, appointed Karen Crowley (“Crowley”) as the conservator
    for the Estate. The trial court also stated that “Crowley, as Conservator, shall have decision
    making authority on the method of sale and the terms thereof and all terms of management [and
    that] Crowley shall also dissolve [Four Seasons] . . . .” Nancy expressly consented to the
    appointment and terms by initialing the page of the trial court’s order concerning the
    appointment of the conservatorship. The trial court subsequently entered a final order regarding
    equitable distribution (“ED order”) on January 10, 2020.
    Following entry of the ED order, Chip, for the first time, asserted that OHP was the
    beneficiary of a $542,000 note made by Ocean Hill Commercial, LLC (“Ocean Hill
    Commercial”), a separate entity owned by the Estate and managed by Crowley as conservator of
    the Estate. Next, Chip contended that OHP, as a result of the note, was entitled to enforce a
    corresponding deed of trust against real property owned by Ocean Hill Commercial even though
    Chip conceded that the whereabouts of the original note were unknown. Doubting Chip’s
    -3-
    veracity as to the existence of this lost phantom note,1 and following a hearing, the trial court
    entered an order on September 18, 2020, providing that: “[Chip] shall not take any actions that
    affect the current status of the properties, including but not limited to those identified as the
    North Carolina Properties2 identified in the mediated Settlement Agreements dated 1/30/2019 or
    take any actions that otherwise are inconsistent with the Agreements.”
    Finally, on October 22, 2020, the trial court entered a settlement agreement order (“SA
    order”) which attached and incorporated the parties’ settlement agreements. The provisions of
    the September 18, 2020 order regarding the prohibitions on Chip’s activities were also expressly
    incorporated into the SA order, and a copy of that September 18, 2020 order was attached to and
    made a part of the SA order.
    Rather than comply with the SA order, Chip assisted in the formation of 1215
    Acceptance, LLC (“1215 Acceptance”) and assigned the disputed phantom note and the disputed
    deed of trust to 1215 Acceptance on or about March 17, 2021. Through counsel, 1215
    Acceptance demanded in writing that Ocean Hill Commercial pay off the disputed note in full.
    Next, 1215 Acceptance initiated a foreclosure proceeding under the disputed deed of trust against
    the real property owned by Ocean Hill Commercial and managed by Crowley.
    Crowley, who had begun the process of selling the Four Seasons property pursuant to the
    court’s previous order, received an offer from Nancy to buy the Four Seasons property for well
    below the property’s appraised value. Chip, who advised Crowley that he was Nancy’s “POA,”
    1
    In Chip’s supplemental response to Crowley’s discovery requests, he responded to the
    interrogatory asking for “a detailed list of any unpaid obligations owed to any person or entity
    . . . by Ocean Hill Commercial, LLC.” He said that “all notes and obligations have been
    previously provided to [Crowley] and are of record in the Equitable Distribution Case as heard
    by this court.” The disputed note was not provided or mentioned to Crowley as of the date of the
    supplemental response.
    2
    According to the Settlement Agreements, the “North Carolina Properties” included real
    estate owned by OHP and Ocean Hill Commercial.
    -4-
    attempted to negotiate the purchase of the property with Crowley, which culminated in Chip
    threatening Crowley in various email exchanges. Crowley rejected Nancy’s initial offer, but
    made a counter offer which Nancy subsequently rejected. When Crowley received a higher offer
    for the Four Seasons property from a third party, Nancy filed a “Notice of Lis Pendens” and a
    “Complaint for Judicial Dissolution,” as well as a “Declaratory Judgment” and a “Motion for a
    Preliminary Injunction” in the General Court of Justice, Superior Court Division, in the State of
    North Carolina, County of Currituck. As a result, the third party retracted their offer to purchase
    the Four Seasons property. Eventually, Crowley obtained and accepted another offer to purchase
    the property but by this point, $20,826.32 in legal fees and costs had been expended by Crowley
    to overcome Nancy’s efforts to undermine the sale.
    As a result, the trial court ordered a show cause hearing to determine whether Nancy
    and/or Chip should be held in contempt for violating the trial court’s orders and the Agreements
    which were incorporated into those orders. At the conclusion of the show cause hearing, the trial
    court held in an order entered July 12, 2021, that Nancy and Chip had actual knowledge of the
    orders and knowingly and willfully disobeyed them. The trial court further found that Nancy and
    Chip were therefore in contempt for violating the trial court’s orders, and it awarded the Estate
    damages in the amount of $20,826.32 against Nancy for her actions and $35,076.00 against Chip
    for his actions. Nancy and Chip appealed. Although they do not seek to rescind any past
    transactions, they do seek reversal of the trial court’s finding of contempt as to their actions
    related to Four Seasons and OHP.
    II. ANALYSIS
    A. Standards of Review
    “Whether a court has acquired personal jurisdiction over a defendant presents a mixed
    question of law and fact.” Koons v. Crane, 
    72 Va. App. 720
    , 732 (2021). “We defer to the
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    circuit court’s factual findings and view the facts in the light most favorable to . . . the prevailing
    party below, but we review de novo the court’s application of the law to those facts.” 
    Id.
     In
    reviewing a holding of contempt, “we may reverse the ruling of the [trial] court only if we find
    that it abused its discretion.” 
    Id. at 737
    .
    B. Nancy and Chip are estopped from challenging personal jurisdiction.3
    Nancy and Chip argue that because the Estate never served OHP with a third-party
    complaint, the trial court could not exercise authority over OHP or prohibit enforcement of a
    North Carolina Deed of Trust because it did not have personal jurisdiction. They therefore
    maintain that the trial court erred by ordering that Chip take no action inconsistent with the
    settlement agreement. We need not consider whether the trial court had personal jurisdiction
    over OHP, because even if it did not, Nancy and Chip are equitably estopped from challenging
    personal jurisdiction in this matter.4
    “While a mere general appearance, by itself, is not enough to retroactively validate a
    judgment that is void for lack of personal jurisdiction as a result of defective service, it is
    possible for a litigant to forfeit the right to make that challenge to the judgment.” McCulley v.
    Brooks & Co. Gen. Contractors, 
    295 Va. 583
    , 591 (2018). We deny challenges like Nancy’s and
    3
    Nancy and Chip also argue that the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to order
    a conservator to dissolve Four Seasons and sell its property. There is no question that the trial
    court had subject matter jurisdiction over the equitable distribution proceeding and that this
    Court has jurisdiction to review an order of contempt arising from an equitable distribution
    order. Because we find the equitable distribution order is not specific enough to support a
    contempt finding and Nancy and Chip do not seek to void the equitable distribution order, and
    because the assignment of error only questions whether the court had jurisdiction, we decline to
    reach the complicated question of whether the trial court had authority to appoint a conservator
    to dissolve a foreign corporation closely held by the parties in an equitable distribution
    proceeding.
    4
    Nancy and Chip also argue that there was no personal jurisdiction over OHP since it
    was not properly served. However, the orders in question held Chip and Nancy in contempt
    individually and they were parties to the proceeding.
    -6-
    Chip’s if the challengers have “actual notice of the judgment and ratified it by manifesting an
    intention to treat the judgment as valid,” and if by granting relief from the judgment we “would
    impair another person’s substantial interest of reliance on the judgment.” 
    Id.
    [E]quitable estoppel applies when a party “claim[s] that the court
    had no jurisdiction” or attempts “to discountenance the validity of
    its process” yet nonetheless “c[a]me into court and sought and
    obtained relief through proceedings regularly had therein” and thus
    “submit[ted] himself to the jurisdiction, and receive[d] benefits
    from its judgments.”
    
    Id. at 592-93
     (quoting 3 Joseph Story, Commentaries on Equity Jurisprudence as Administered
    in England and America § 2020, at 581 (W.H. Lyon, Jr. ed., 14th ed. 1918)).
    Both Nancy and Chip had notice of the trial court’s judgment and ratified it by signature
    of their counsel. Chip also received the benefit by being able to buy the Estate’s 50% share of
    OHP pursuant to the trial court’s judgment. Because granting Nancy and Chip’s requested relief
    would impair the Estate’s reliance on the judgment as it concerns “property” and the “sale of
    assets,” Nancy and Chip are equitably estopped from contesting the trial court’s personal
    jurisdiction.
    C. The trial court abused its discretion by holding Nancy in contempt but did not err by
    holding Chip in contempt.
    Nancy and Chip contend that because the trial court’s original orders were void, the
    subsequent findings of contempt were also void. Alternatively, they argue that the trial court
    erred because the order upon which the contempt is predicated is not definite as to its terms and
    contains no specific prohibitions. We reverse the trial court’s decision finding Nancy in
    contempt but affirm its decision finding Chip in contempt.5
    5
    They also argue that Chip’s contempt order cannot stand because the trial court erred in
    finding that Chip and OHP “are estopped from enforcing, or making any claims based on, the
    Disputed Note and/or the Disputed Deed of Trust” and in finding the settlement agreement
    precluded Chip and OHP from enforcing the note and deed of trust. We need not reach the
    questions of whether the trial court properly applied estoppel against OHP or properly
    -7-
    “[A] party cannot be guilty of contempt of court for disobeying an order which the court
    had no authority of law to make, but if a court has jurisdiction over the parties and legal authority
    to render the order, then it must be obeyed . . . .” Epps v. Commonwealth, 
    47 Va. App. 687
    , 702
    (2006) (en banc) (quoting Robertson v. Commonwealth, 
    181 Va. 520
    , 537 (1943)), aff’d, 
    273 Va. 410
     (2007). “[T]o hold a litigant in contempt, the litigant must be ‘acting in bad faith or [in]
    willful disobedience of [the court’s] order.’” Koons, 72 Va. App. at 737 (quoting Zedan v.
    Westheim, 
    60 Va. App. 556
    , 574-75 (2012)). “[T]he process for contempt lies for disobedience
    of what is decreed, not for what may be decreed.” Winn v. Winn, 
    218 Va. 8
    , 10 (1977) (quoting
    Taliaferro v. Horde’s Adm’r, 
    22 Va. (1 Rand.) 242
    , 247 (1822)). “[B]efore a person may be held
    in contempt for violating a court order, the order must be in definite terms as to the duties
    thereby imposed upon him and the command must be expressed rather than implied.” 
    Id.
    (citation omitted). “If the actions of the alleged contemnor do not violate a clearly defined duty
    imposed upon him or her by a court’s decree, the alleged contemnor’s actions do not constitute
    contempt.” Wilson v. Collins, 
    27 Va. App. 411
    , 424 (1998).
    As previously discussed, since the original orders are not void, the subsequent findings of
    contempt are not void. Here, although the trial court ordered Crowley to sell Four Seasons, it did
    not place any prohibitions on Nancy. The trial court order’s express command was directed at
    Crowley, not Nancy, and stated that, “Crowley, as Conservator, shall have decision making
    authority on the method of sale and the terms thereof and all terms of management [and that]
    Crowley shall also dissolve [Four Seasons] . . . .” Although Nancy signed the “Notice of Lis
    Pendens” and filed a “Complaint for Judicial Dissolution” and “Declaratory Judgment” and
    interpreted OHP’s rights under the settlement agreement. The court explicitly ordered Chip not
    to take any actions affecting the status of the properties covered in the settlement agreements.
    Chip took such action in his individual capacity. The court did not abuse its discretion in finding
    him in contempt as an individual.
    -8-
    “Motion for a Preliminary Injunction” in North Carolina, she violated no express command
    given by the trial court. Therefore, the trial court abused its discretion by finding Nancy in
    contempt and ordering her to pay $20,826.32 in legal fees and costs. We reverse this decision of
    the trial court.
    Contrarily, the trial court explicitly stated that Chip should not take any action regarding
    the properties owned by the Estate. Yet, Chip then initiated foreclosure proceedings, by way of
    1215 Acceptance, against Ocean Hill Commercial. Chip violated the explicit terms of the trial
    court’s order which stated, “Chip Friedman shall not take any actions that affect the current
    status of the properties . . . or take any actions that otherwise are inconsistent with the
    Agreements.” Therefore, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by holding Chip in contempt
    and ordering him to pay the Estate $35,076 in legal fees and costs. We affirm this decision of
    the trial court. Additionally, we award the Estate appellate attorney fees and costs against Chip
    pursuant to Rule 5A:30. We base our decision on 1) Chip’s failure to prevail on appeal, 2) the
    Estate’s request for fees, and 3) “all the equities of the case.” Friedman v. Smith, 
    68 Va. App. 529
    , 546 (2018).
    III. CONCLUSION
    For the aforementioned reasons, the trial court’s judgment is affirmed in part and
    reversed in part, and the case will be remanded for a determination of reasonable attorney fees.
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
    -9-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 0495221

Filed Date: 1/24/2023

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 1/24/2023