ROGERS, C.J.
This case raises the question of whether the equitable doctrine of reverse piercing of the corporate veil is a viable remedy in Connecticut. The defendants, State Five Industrial Park, Inc. (State Five), and Jean L. Farricielli (Jean), appeal
The following facts, which the trial court found, and procedural history are relevant to the appeal. On July 9, 1999, the commissioner initiated an action against Joseph and the five corporations that he controlled and/ or owned—Hamden Salvage, Inc., Tire Salvage, Inc., North Haven Tire Disposal, Inc., Quinnipiak Real Estate & Development Corporation and Hamden Sand & Stone, Inc.—alleging egregious violations of state statutes regulating solid waste disposal. Id., at 191, 848 A.2d 1206. "Specifically, the commissioner sought: an order from the trial court enforcing the terms of the commissioner's 1998 consent order with [Joseph] and his corporations, which was designed to end ongoing statutory violations; a temporary and permanent injunction requiring [Joseph] and his corporations to cease their illegal activities; and an order requiring [Joseph] and his corporations to pay civil penalties for each day of each alleged violation.... [T]he plaintiffs filed a joint amended complaint seeking, in addition to all of the aforementioned remedies, enforcement of an existing cease and desist order and the stipulated judgment in effect between the town and [Joseph] and his corporations, which was designed to end ongoing violations of various zoning ordinances. A bench trial took place in September and October, 2000, and the trial court issued its memorandum of decision on September 21, 2001, ordering all of the forms of relief sought by the plaintiffs." Id., at 191-92, 848 A.2d 1206. Joseph appealed and, on June 1, 2004, this court affirmed the trial court's judgment.
The 2001 judgment required Joseph and his corporations to, inter alia, post bonds, fund the closure of two illegal solid waste landfills and pay approximately $3.8 million in civil penalties to the commissioner and the town. The judgment also required Joseph and his corporations to reimburse the commissioner for amounts expended in addressing environmental conditions at the landfills. Although the bonds have been posted, in part, and substantial remediation work has been done at the subject properties since the 2001 judgment, the civil penalties largely have gone unpaid.
In 2005, the plaintiffs initiated the present action, alleging that Jean and
A trial to the court was held in February and March, 2008. The trial court examined the activities of Joseph, Jean and State Five prior and subsequent to the 2001 judgment and found the following facts. State Five, under its present name and various others, has been in existence since 1967.
Over the years, Joseph has quitclaimed real property to State Five, including parcel C in February, 1996. In January, 2000, he caused Tire Salvage, Inc., to transfer a strip of land to State Five so that parcel C would meet the requisite regulatory requirements for construction of the cellular telephone tower. Between 2001 and 2004, Joseph wrote personal checks transferring funds to State Five, and he provided a down payment for a pickup truck for the company.
Joseph presently has no ownership interest in State Five. All of the stock of State Five is owned by another entity, Recycling Enterprises (Recycling). Eighty percent of the stock of Recycling is owned by Jean, and the remaining 20 percent is owned by the two sons of Jean and Joseph, thereby giving the sons an indirect ownership interest in State Five. The sons are not parties to this action. This ownership structure originated in the late 1980s, when Joseph transferred all of the stock of State Five to Recycling, and has been in place since then, except for a period between December, 2001, and August, 2004. During that period, Recycling transferred ownership of all of State Five's stock to a friend of Jean and Joseph, William J. LaVelle.
Prior to February, 2001, Joseph ran all aspects of State Five. Thereafter, although he held no formal office or position at State Five, he remained very involved in its operations. During the period that LaVelle owned State Five and was its president, LaVelle's control over State Five was restricted, and Joseph and Jean both continued to participate in State Five's affairs. Although it was agreed that LaVelle would split profits that accrued from the development of parcel C with Joseph and Jean, LaVelle ran into roadblocks when pursuing that development, and no significant progress was made. Jean frequently was present at State Five's offices and dealt with its tenants. Joseph maintained an office at State Five, sometimes received wages from the corporation and continued to deal with its tenants. He directed its bookkeeper and accountant as to how to characterize transactions, and he wrote correspondence on State Five's behalf. Both Joseph and Jean continued to write checks from State Five's checking account.
Subsequent to the 2001 judgment, State Five continued to earn rental income from its existing tenants, and it gained several new tenants during LaVelle's tenure. While State Five previously had operated profitably as a landlord and, between 1998 and 2000, was not liable on any notes to lending institutions, it began, starting in 2001, to take on substantial debt by assuming obligations of Hamden Sand & Stone, Inc., without also acquiring that corporation's assets. The corporate debt that State Five assumed had been personally guaranteed by Jean and Joseph. Between 2001 and 2006, State Five's financial condition worsened, it became thinly capitalized and most of its debt did not relate to its business as a landlord.
To keep State Five viable, Jean contributed her own funds, as well as those borrowed from her mother, to finance State Five. Additionally, she borrowed against her own property, and property she owned jointly with Joseph, and put the proceeds into State Five. State Five also opened a line of credit with Citizens Bank, which was secured with Jean's personal assets.
Despite its poor financial condition, State Five paid "thousands of dollars" worth of personal expenses for Jean and Joseph, consisting mostly of joint obligations, but also including individual expenses such as Joseph's legal expenses. State Five's accounting treatment of these personal expenses was improper and inconsistent, and it lacked appropriate documentation. Although Joseph and Jean have caused State Five to make payments to themselves or loans to family members, they have not caused State Five to make any payments due under the 2001 judgment.
After comprehensively surveying Connecticut's jurisprudence addressing traditional veil piercing claims, as well as Litchfield Asset Management Corp. v. Howell, 70 Conn.App. 133, 799 A.2d 298, cert. denied, 261 Conn. 911, 806 A.2d 49 (2002), which is the only Connecticut appellate decision explicitly approving a reverse veil piercing claim, the trial court applied the legal standards set forth in those cases, namely, the identity and instrumentality
The trial court considered, but rejected, the defendants' argument that reverse veil piercing should not apply because the plaintiffs had adequate remedies at law that they had not pursued, including, inter alia, filing a fraudulent transfer action. The court concluded, however, that reverse veil piercing nevertheless was warranted because the parties, following the 2001 judgment, "were occupied with the appeal and remediation efforts," and because Jean and Joseph made unspecified misrepresentations in postjudgment interrogatories,
The defendants claim that the trial court improperly held State Five liable for the 2001 judgment against Joseph because this court has never recognized reverse veil piercing and argue that, for various policy reasons, it should not be adopted as a viable legal theory in Connecticut under any circumstances. Consequently, they request that Litchfield Asset Management Corp. v. Howell, supra, 70 Conn.App. at 133, 799 A.2d 298, a case in which the Appellate Court applied reverse veil piercing to hold a corporate defendant liable for a stockholder's debt, be overruled. Alternatively, the defendants argue that reverse veil piercing is not proper on the facts of the present case. Because we agree that the facts proven here do not support the application of reverse veil piercing as that doctrine has been applied in other jurisdictions, we need not answer the question of whether the doctrine should be disallowed in Connecticut under any and all circumstances.
"Generally, a corporation is a distinct legal entity and the stockholders are not personally liable for the acts and obligations of the corporation"; Saphir v. Neustadt, 177 Conn. 191, 209, 413 A.2d 843 (1979); or vice versa. "Courts will, however, disregard the fiction of a separate legal entity to pierce the shield of immunity afforded by the corporate structure in a situation in which the corporate entity has been so controlled and dominated that justice requires liability to be imposed on the real actor." Id.
In a traditional veil piercing case, a litigant "requests that a court disregard the existence of a corporate entity so that the litigant can reach the assets of a corporate insider, usually a majority shareholder. In a reverse piercing action, however, the claimant seeks to reach the assets of a corporation or some other business entity... to satisfy claims or a judgment obtained against a corporate insider." C.F. Trust, Inc. v. First Flight, L.P., 266 Va. 3, 10, 580 S.E.2d 806 (2003); see also In re Blatstein, 192 F.3d 88, 100 (3d Cir.1999); Postal Instant Press, Inc. v. Kaswa Corp., 162 Cal.App.4th 1510, 1513, 77 Cal.Rptr.3d 96 (2008), cert. denied, 2008 Cal. LEXIS 10671 (August 27,2008); annot., 2 A.L.R.6th 195, § 2 (2005). In either circumstance, veil piercing is not lightly imposed. "[C]orporate veils exist for a reason and should be pierced only reluctantly and cautiously. The law permits the incorporation of businesses for the very purpose of isolating liabilities among separate entities." Cascade Energy & Metals Corp. v. Banks, 896 F.2d 1557, 1576 (10th Cir.), cert. denied sub nom. Weston v. Banks, 498 U.S. 849, 111 S.Ct. 138, 112 L.Ed.2d 105 (1990). Accordingly, "the corporate veil is pierced only under exceptional circumstances, for example, where the corporation is a mere shell, serving no legitimate purpose, and used primarily as an intermediary to perpetuate fraud or promote injustice." (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Angelo Tomasso, Inc. v. Armor Construction & Paving, Inc., 187 Conn. 544, 557, 447 A.2d 406 (1982).
Although some courts have adopted reverse veil piercing with little distinction as a logical corollary of traditional veil piercing, because the two share the same equitable goals, others wisely have recognized
Second, if a "corporation has other non-culpable shareholders, they [too] 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 [or other insider] who is determined to be the corporation's alter ego are subject to the attachment." (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Postal Instant Press, Inc. v. Kaswa Corp., supra, 162 Cal.App.4th at 1520, 77 Cal.Rptr.3d 96. Thus, "[a] key factor in any outsider reverse piercing controversy is the presence of corporate shareholders other than the insider against whom the outsider is asserting the primary claim. If other shareholders do exist, allowance of a reverse pierce would prejudice those shareholders by allowing the outsider to attach assets in which they have an interest." G.S. Crespi, supra, 16 J. Corp. L. at 65.
Finally, because corporate veil piercing is an equitable remedy, it should be granted only in the absence of adequate remedies at law. See Naples v. Keystone Building & Development Corp., supra, 295 Conn. at 233, 990 A.2d 326; see also Floyd v. Internal Revenue Service, supra, 151 F.3d at 1300; 1 W. Fletcher, Cyclopedia of the Law of Private Corporations (1999) § 41.25, p. 604; annot., 2 A.L.R.6th, supra, § 3, at p. 195. In the case of a traditional veil pierce, "[w]hen 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"; Postal Instant Press, Inc. v. Kaswa Corp., supra, 162 Cal.App.4th at 1522, 77 Cal.Rptr.3d 96; thereby justifying the invocation of equity. Conversely, when the judgment debtor is a shareholder or other insider, many legal remedies potentially are available to reach corporate assets that rightfully should be available for collection, including the attachment of the debtor's shares in the corporation, if he or she is a shareholder, garnishment of his or her pay from the corporation, if he or she
When the preceding concerns are implicated, courts have declined to impose reverse veil piercing. To summarize, "a court considering reverse veil piercing must weigh the impact of such action upon innocent investors.... A court considering reverse veil piercing must also consider the impact of such an act upon innocent secured and unsecured creditors. The court must also consider the availability of other remedies the creditor may pursue." C.F. Trust, Inc. v. First Flight, L.P., supra, 266 Va. at 12-13, 580 S.E.2d 806.
We conclude that in the present matter, the trial court should not have applied reverse veil piercing, regardless of whether it is a viable theory in Connecticut. Certain of the trial court's subsidiary factual findings lacked evidentiary support and, therefore, were clearly erroneous. Those findings related to crucial factors that necessarily render reverse veil piercing inequitable. Additionally, after reviewing the trial court's application of the identity and instrumentality rules, although we conclude that the court's findings have some basis in the evidence, we nevertheless are left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made.
First, the plaintiffs failed to demonstrate
Evidence of the sons' lack of involvement in running State Five, making necessary business decisions or suggesting any changes simply does not support the trial court's finding, implicit in the previous statement, that they were complicit in Joseph's
Second, the plaintiffs did not demonstrate that nonparty creditors of State Five would not be harmed by making all of the corporation's assets available to satisfy the 2001 judgment by way of a reverse veil pierce. Testimony and printed statements in evidence at trial indicated that State Five had a line of credit of approximately $200,000 with Citizens Bank that it had actively accessed, at times carrying balances that were close to the limit. The trial court in its memorandum of decision did not address this circumstance but subsequently, in response to the defendants' motion for articulation, pointed to its factual finding that the line of credit was secured with Jean's personal assets, not State Five property. The court further noted that a 2007 accounting ledger of State Five indicated that, earlier in the year, the line of credit had been paid off.
To the extent that the court's observations constitute a finding that no third party corporate creditors would be harmed by reverse veil piercing, that finding is clearly erroneous. It is of no consequence that State Five's line of credit is not secured by corporate assets; a lender in this context extends credit in reasonable reliance on the existence of both a viable borrower in possession of assets and the additional security provided by a secondary obliger. See Floyd v. Internal Revenue Service, supra, 151 F.3d at 1299 (corporate creditors rely on entity's separate existence when extending it credit and "understand their loans to be secured— expressly or otherwise—by corporate assets" [emphasis added]); In re Phillips, 139 P.3d 639, 646 (Colo.2006) ("secured and unsecured creditors of the corporation have a cognizable legal interest in corporate assets, upon which they relied in lending money and selling goods and services to the corporation" [emphasis added]). Permitting direct attachment of corporate assets to satisfy an individual insider's debt undermines corporate viability, reasonably relied upon by creditors, with no forewarning. Additionally, even if a brief entry in State Five's records, which the trial court considered to be deficient in many respects, suffices to establish that the line of credit was repaid in early 2007, it is silent as to the outstanding balance, if any, on that line of credit in January, 2009, when the trial court issued its memorandum of decision applying reverse veil piercing. In sum, the court did not, before applying reverse veil piercing, adequately
Aside from the foregoing problems, our review of the trial court's application of the rules governing veil piercing convinces us that the court improperly concluded that the equitable remedy was warranted in this case.
Applying that standard to the present case, the trial court reasoned that Joseph exercised his control over State Five
As to proximate causation, the trial court found that "Joseph ... and [his corporations] have not complied with the 2001 judgment; specifically, they have not funded the closure of the [properties involved in the 1999 action], nor have they paid the assessed penalties. Joseph['s] ... direct or indirect control or influence over State Five was used to avoid funding the obligations under the 2001 judgment, including the obligation to pay the civil penalties assessed. Joseph ... was responsible for transferring assets and funds out of the 2001 judgment [corporations], thereby depriving the plaintiffs of means to collect the 2001 judgment. Joseph ... commingled his personal funds with [State Five] to evade the 2001 judgment.
"The plaintiffs attempted property executions, but they have not been able to satisfy the 2001 judgment. They have been deprived of the means of collecting the 2001 judgment. The actions of Joseph... were a substantial factor in the failure to satisfy the 2001 judgment and were the proximate cause of the plaintiffs' loss. As a result, Joseph ... and [his corporations] have not funded the obligations under the [2001] judgment and have not paid the civil penalties."
Understandably, the trial court was troubled by the fact that State Five, owned by Joseph's family members, had assets that benefited Joseph while the obligations imposed by the 2001 judgment remained outstanding. It is not enough, however, simply to show that a judgment remains unsatisfied; indeed, most veil piercing claims are initiated due to unpaid debts. Sea-Land Services, Inc. v. Pepper Source, 941 F.2d 519, 522-23 (7th Cir. 1991); see also 18 Am.Jur.2d 696, Corporations § 47 (2d Ed. 2004) ("[a] corporate entity may not be disregarded simply because it stands as a bar to a litigant's recovery of property"). There must be some wrong beyond the creditor's inability to collect, which is contrary to the creditor's
To summarize, the trial court's application of the equitable remedy of reverse veil piercing was based in part on unsupported factual findings, and additionally, the court employed improper reasoning when analyzing other facts such that we are left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made. Accordingly, the trial court's determination that reverse veil piercing was warranted must be set aside as clearly erroneous, and judgment on the plaintiffs' veil piercing claims should be rendered in favor of the defendants.
The judgment is reversed and the case is remanded with direction to render judgment for the defendants.
In this opinion NORCOTT, PALMER, McLACHLAN and EVELEIGH, Js., concurred.
ZARELLA, J., concurring.
I agree with the result that the majority reaches but write separately to express my view that Litchfield Asset Management Corp. v. Howell, 70 Conn.App. 133, 799 A.2d 298, cert. denied, 261 Conn. 911, 806 A.2d 49 (2002), which applied the doctrine of reverse veil piercing in this state for the first time, should be disavowed. Because the facts of the present case implicate the applicability of the doctrine, and because the defendants
The majority has summarized and explained the general principles governing both traditional veil piercing and reverse veil piercing, and, therefore, I do not repeat that discussion in any length. Suffice it to say that virtually all jurisdictions accept the doctrine of traditional veil piercing, whereas jurisdictions are split on the propriety of adopting the reverse veil piercing doctrine.
"Both types of piercing strive to achieve an equitable result.... In traditional piercing, equity requires [that] the veil be pierced to impose liability on a shareholder who has abused the corporate form for his or her own advantage.... Similarly, in outside reverse piercing, an equitable result is achieved by ignoring the corporate fiction to attach liability to the corporation." (Citations omitted.) In re Phillips, supra, 139 P.3d at 645.
Jurisdictions adopting the reverse veil piercing doctrine largely have relied on a perceived fundamental similarity between traditional and reverse piercing. With respect to both types of piercing, courts focus on identifying whether an individual has abused the corporate form by failing to treat the corporation as a distinct legal entity. Accordingly, a court will not allow that individual to rely on the statutory protections limiting the individual's liability. Put differently, if an individual and a corporation are indistinguishable by virtue of the individual's own acts, the corporate veil should be subject to piercing in either direction. Thus, both traditional piercing and reverse piercing attempt to rectify the same inequity, and, therefore, some jurisdictions that permit traditional veil piercing also permit reverse veil piercing.
The flaw with this rationale is that it glosses over critical distinctions between traditional and reverse veil piercing. See Postal Instant Press, Inc. v. Kaswa Corp., 162 Cal.App.4th 1510, 1522, 77 Cal.Rptr.3d 96 (2008) ("[t]raditional alter ego doctrine and reverse piercing, while having similar goals, advance those goals by addressing very different concerns"), review denied, 2008 Cal. LEXIS 10671 (Cal. August 27, 2008). The focus cannot be only on whether an individual has abused the corporate form. Under traditional veil piercing, when an individual is held liable for the actions of the corporation, the corporation itself is not affected by the piercing. In the case of reverse veil piercing, however, the opposite is true. The corporation itself is liable—and thus corporate assets are vulnerable—for the wrongdoing of an individual. In more concrete terms, reverse veil piercing allows courts to alter the legislatively created corporate form by allowing a creditor to reach otherwise protected corporate assets. Three separate but related issues specifically illustrate the problem with this result.
The Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals recently explained why creating an additional means of securing a judgment against a corporation would be inappropriate by distinguishing a claim grounded in fraudulent transfer from one grounded in reverse veil piercing: "The difference between finding an entity to be a nominee holding fraudulently conveyed assets and finding an entity to be the debtor's alter ego under [the] reverse veil piercing doctrine may be a subtle one. But it is no less significant for its subtlety. Under [the] reverse veil piercing doctrine, the [creditor] would have needed to show that the [corporations] at issue were not just [the debtor's] nominees with respect to the particular assets in question but his alter ego for all purposes. See Bollore S.A. v. Import Warehouse, Inc., 448 F.3d 317, 325 (5th Cir.2006) (recognizing that courts can reverse pierce a corporation's veil based on a finding of alter ego). As reward for making this more onerous showing, the [creditor] might have seized all the assets in the trusts without regard to their original source. See Oxford Capital Corp. v. United States, 211 F.3d 280, 284 (5th Cir.2000) (Under the alter ego doctrine ... all the assets of an alter ego corporation may be levied [on] to satisfy the tax liabilities of a delinquent taxpayer-shareholder if the separate corporate identity is merely a sham.).... By contrast, a nominee holding a fraudulently conveyed asset may maintain an independent legal identity and lawfully hold other assets of its own. Finding that an entity is a nominee of the debtor only requires a showing that the nominee holds bare or apparent title to a particular asset that actually belongs to the debtor. And it is only the particular assets held in this fashion (not others the nominee may possess in its own right) that the debtor's creditor may reach." (Internal quotation marks omitted.) In re Krause, 637 F.3d 1160, 1165 (10th Cir. 2011); see also Postal Instant Press, Inc. v. Kaswa Corp., supra, 162 Cal.App.4th at 1523, 77 Cal.Rptr.3d 96 ("[c]ounsel for [the creditor] acknowledged ... that [it] did not pursue those [traditional] legal remedies
A second issue arises with respect to what assets can, and should be, reached by a creditor. Reverse veil piercing allows a judgment creditor to reach the assets of a corporation to the detriment of other shareholders and existing creditors. That is, "to 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." Cascade Energy & Metals Corp. v. Banks, supra, 896 F.2d at 1577. Some jurisdictions that have allowed reverse veil piercing have attempted to eliminate, or at least minimize, this concern by prohibiting reverse veil piercing in situations in which doing so would harm other shareholders, or otherwise would be inequitable. See C.F. Trust, Inc. v. First Flight Ltd. Partnership, 266 Va. 3, 12-13, 580 S.E.2d 806 (2003) ("[A] court considering reverse veil piercing must weigh the impact of such action [on] innocent investors, in this instance, innocent limited partners or innocent general partners. A court considering reverse veil piercing must also consider the impact of such an act [on] innocent secured and unsecured creditors. The court must also consider the availability of other remedies the creditor may pursue."); see also In re Phillips, supra, 139 P.3d at 646 ("A court may reverse pierce the corporate veil and obtain the assets of a corporation for the obligations of a controlling shareholder or other corporate insider only upon a clear showing that [1] the controlling insider and the corporation are alter egos of each other ... [2] justice requires recognizing the substance of the relationship over the form because the corporate fiction is utilized to perpetuate a fraud or defeat a rightful claim ... and [3] an equitable result is achieved by piercing.... Only when a claimant makes a clear showing of each factor may the corporate form be disregarded." [Citations omitted.]).
Another way to minimize this concern may be to restrict veil piercing to single shareholder corporations, for it is difficult to conceive of other circumstances in which reverse piercing would not affect other shareholders. See Postal Instant Press, Inc. v. Kaswa Corp., supra, 162 Cal. App.4th at 1524, 77 Cal.Rptr.3d 96 ("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."). Moreover, if reverse veil piercing is truly an equitable remedy, and thus only available to a plaintiff if no legal remedy exists, it would appear that the limitations espoused by the Virginia and Colorado Supreme Courts in C.F. Trust, Inc., and In re Phillips, respectively, are superfluous.
A third concern is that reverse piercing injects uncertainty into the corporate structure in a way that could systemically alter the ability of corporations to obtain loans and investment capital. "[T]he prospect of losing out to an individual shareholder's 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." Floyd v. Internal Revenue Service, 151 F.3d 1295, 1299 (10th Cir.1998); see also M. Richardson, supra, 79 U. Cin. L.Rev. at 1628 ("If reverse piercing is allowed, there would be no rational way to investigate a business to determine the risk it presents.... There are multiple implications to [reverse piercing as a] collateral attack on the rights of consensual creditors.... If creditors take steps to shield themselves from this increased risk, the result could be a general chilling of the ability of small businesses with few owners to receive financing. At the very least, lenders may begin through altered risk calculations to spread the cost of individual misdeeds across all small businesses.").
In light of the foregoing, I believe that we should overrule Howell and reject the doctrine of reverse veil piercing until the legislature signals otherwise. Reverse veil piercing should be a remedy created by the legislature, and not the courts, because corporate entities are creatures of statute, and, unlike traditional veil piercing, reverse veil piercing alters the corporate attributes established by those statutes. As one court has succinctly stated in rejecting the doctrine, "[a]llowing ... reverse piercing claims would constitute a radical change to the concept of piercing the corporate veil ... and, thus, should be created by the [legislature] and not by [the] [c]ourt." Acree v. McMahan, 276 Ga. 880, 883, 585 S.E.2d 873 (2003).
"The identity rule has been stated as follows: If [the] plaintiff can show that there was such a unity of interest and ownership that the independence of the corporations had in effect ceased or had never begun, an adherence to the fiction of separate identity would serve only to defeat justice and equity by permitting the economic entity to escape liability arising out of an operation conducted by one corporation for the benefit of the whole enterprise." (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Naples v. Keystone Building & Development Corp., 295 Conn. 214, 232, 990 A.2d 326 (2010).
As evidenced by our discussion in this opinion and our particular criticisms of the trial court's analysis, we share the concerns expressed by the concurring justice with regard to the potential unfair effects of applying the reverse veil piercing doctrine. We are not convinced, however, that those concerns cannot be addressed adequately, in the appropriate case, by recognition of the doctrine only when it is proven that it achieves its equitable purpose without harming third parties. Because this so clearly is not such a case, and we are reluctant to presume that there is no possible factual scenario in which reverse veil piercing would be appropriate, we decline to hold that this doctrine is not viable under any circumstance at this juncture.
The trial court found that Joseph "wrote personal checks to State Five," but did not indicate the amounts of those checks. Checks in evidence, written from Joseph to State Five following the 2001 judgment, total $59,500. An additional check from Quinnipiak Real Estate & Development Corporation to State Five, endorsed by Joseph and dated May 28, 2002, is for $7500. The trial court also found that Joseph "wrote a check on the Discover Card [of Jean and Joseph] for a down payment on a ... pickup truck for State Five," but does not specify the amount. A memorandum in evidence indicates that the down payment was $4784.49.
In a July, 2009 articulation responding to the defendants' claim that the plaintiffs had failed to pursue other opportunities for collecting the 2001 judgment, the trial court suggested that $250,000 generated from remediation activities at one of the properties at issue in the 1999 action improperly had been recorded in State Five's books. Assuming that to be the case, the total of all transfers of assets during the relevant period is approximately $342, 000, which is less than 10 percent of the judgment for which the trial court ultimately found State Five liable. Because transfers to State Five totaling only $342,000 could not be the proximate cause of the plaintiffs' failure to collect a judgment that had grown to exceed $4 million, application of a reverse veil pierce to make all of State Five's assets available for collection was not equitable.
The impact of the Appellate Court's decision in Howell extends beyond the boundaries of this state. For example, the Virginia Supreme Court relied on the decision when it adopted reverse veil piercing as a viable doctrine in that state. See C.F. Trust, Inc. v. First Flight Ltd. Partnership, 266 Va. 3, 11, 580 S.E.2d 806 (2003); see also C.F. Trust, Inc. v. First Flight Ltd. Partnership, 306 F.3d 126, 141 (4th Cir.2002) (reasoning that "[i]f a Virginia court followed the rationale of [Howell], outsider reverse veil-piercing against the limited partnership would be a viable option ... even if not generally permitted in cases involving limited partnerships"). Scholars and academics also have relied on Howell in their discussions regarding the appropriateness and applicability of the doctrine of reverse veil piercing. See, e.g., C. Bishop, "Reverse Piercing: A Single Member LLC Paradox," 54 S.D. L.Rev. 199, 230-31 (2009); L. Heilman, comment, "C.F. Trust, Inc. v. First Flight Limited Partnership: Will the Virginia Supreme Court Permit Outside Reverse Veil-Piercing Against a Limited Partnership?," 28 Del. J. Corp. L. 619, 628-29, 636-37 (2003); M. Richardson, comment, "The Helter Skelter Application of the Reverse Piercing Doctrine," 79 U. Cin. L.Rev. 1605, 1623 n. 141 (2011). Additionally, commentary to the Revised Limited Liability Company Act cites to Howell with approval in its discussion of charging orders against limited liability companies. Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act (2006) § 503(g), comment, 6B U.L.A. 500 (2008).
Although the plaintiffs argue that our holding in Zaist v. Olson, 154 Conn. 563, 576-78, 227 A.2d 552 (1967), suggests that this court also previously has employed reverse veil piercing, it is unclear from the facts and reasoning in that decision whether that is true. To the extent that Zaist can be read to support the application of the reverse veil piercing doctrine, I would overrule its application of that doctrine for the same reasons that I would overrule the Appellate Court's adoption of it in Howell.