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Warning: The following opinion is provided for purposes of discussion only. We have not Shepardized™ this opinion, and do not know the subsequent disposition of this case nor whether the effect of the opinion has been overruled or superceded by other law. Szturm v. Huntington Blizzard
Hockey Associates, West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals No. 25196 516 S.E.2d 267, 1999.WV.42019 , 5 Wage & Hour Cas.2d (BNA) 711 May 17, 1999 RICHARD SZTURM, INDIVIDUALLY, ON BEHALF OF HUNTINGTON BLIZZARD HOCKEY, PLAINTIFF BELOW v. HUNTINGTON BLIZZARD HOCKEY ASSOCIATES LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, ET AL., DEFENDANT BELOW, APPELLEE ROBERT D. HENRY, DEFENDANT BELOW, APPELLANT SYLLABUS BY THE COURT SYLLABUS BY THE COURT 1. "This Court reviews the circuit court's final order and ultimate Disposition under an abuse of discretion standard. We review challenges to findings of fact under a clearly erroneous standard; Conclusions of law are reviewed de novo." Syl. pt. 4, Burgess v. Porterfield, 196 W. Va. 178, 469 S.E.2d 114 (1996). 2. "Where the language of a statute is clear and without ambiguity the plain meaning is to be accepted without resorting to the rules of interpretation." Syl. pt. 2, State v. Elder, 152 W. Va. 571, 165 S.E.2d 108 (1968). 3. Pursuant to the relevant provisions of the Revised Uniform Limited Partnership Act, W. Va. Code §§ 47-9-7 & -47(1) (1981), a partner may, subject to other applicable law, obtain a lien superior to that of other general creditors of the limited partnership. 4. To the extent that Lowther v. Riggleman, 189 W. Va. 68, 428 S.E.2d 49 (1993), holds that a partner of a partnership in dissolution is presumptively barred from asserting a lien superior to the non-partner general creditors of the partnership, it has been legislatively overruled by the adoption of the Revised Uniform Partnership Act, 1995 W. Va. Acts ch. 250 (codified as amended at W. Va. Code ch. 47B). Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cabell County Honorable Daniel P. O'Hanlon, Judge Case No. 95-C-00398 F. T. Graff, Jr., Esq. Elizabeth D. Harter, Esq. Bowles Rice McDavid Graff and Love, Pllc Charleston, West Virginia Attorneys for Appellant James A. Dodrill, Esq. Huntington, West Virginia Attorney for Appellee Special Receiver The opinion of the court was delivered by: McGraw, Justice REVERSED AND REMANDED Submitted: February 16, 1999 Filed: May 17, 1999 JUSTICE McGRAW delivered the Opinion of the Court. This case concerns whether an individual who is both a limited partner and management employee of a limited partnership is, by virtue of such status, presumptively prohibited from asserting a priority claim for wages upon dissolution of the partnership. Because the Revised Uniform Limited Partnership Act ("RULPA"), W. Va. Code §§ 47-9-1 to -63, expressly permits a partner of a limited partnership to transact business with the partnership and enjoy the same rights as a person who is not a partner, W. Va. Code § 47-9-7 (1981), we conclude that, as a general rule, a limited partner is not per se prohibited from obtaining a lien superior to the claims of the partnership's general creditors. I. Huntington Blizzard Hockey Associates Limited Partnership ("Huntington Blizzard"), a West Virginia limited partnership governed by the provisions of the RULPA, was engaged in the business of owning and operating a professional hockey team. The partnership was dissolved in September 1995 by the Circuit Court of Cabell County pursuant to W. Va. Code § 47-9-45 (1981). The circuit court simultaneously appointed a special receiver under W. Va. Code § 53-6-1 (1923), for the purpose of winding up the affairs of the partnership. An accounting report subsequently tendered by the special receiver to the circuit court indicated that, after the sale of the partnership's assets, Huntington Blizzard had approximately $291,893 to satisfy creditor and partner-contribution claims totaling $1,912,780. Appellant Robert D. Henry was a limited partner and employee of Huntington Blizzard, as well as a shareholder in the limited partnership's general partner, Huntington Hockey, Inc. The sparse record in this case does not shed light on Henry's specific function within the partnership, although Henry himself concedes in his brief that he was "a management employee." Following dissolution, Henry submitted a wage claim of $44,426, which included a demand for liquidated damages in the amount of $4,153. Henry's salary went unpaid between some unspecified point-in-time in 1994, and the dissolution of the limited partnership in September 1995. The special receiver, in its report to the circuit court submitted on May 1, 1996, recommended that Henry's wage claim (together with similar claims submitted by two other former employees) be relegated to the status of an unsecured obligation, with the exception of $250 that was given priority status under the purported authority of W. Va. Code § 21A-5-18(1) (1945). *fn1 (Unsecured creditors were paid on a pro rata basis from the assets of the limited partnership remaining after the payment of secured and judgment creditors, which amounted to approximately 21% of their claims). Henry filed timely objections to the special receiver's recommendation on May 28, 1996. Following a June 13, 1996 hearing on the matter, the circuit court denied these objections and adopted the special receiver's recommendation pertaining to Henry's claim by an order entered December 18, 1997. *fn2 It is from this order that Henry now appeals. II. Henry challenges the circuit court's denial of his priority wage claim, asserting that the various Conclusions of law set forth in the report of the special receiver (which were adopted by the lower court) are erroneous. Appellee, the substitute special receiver *fn3 of the partnership, acknowledges error with respect to the circuit court's ruling, although he limits the concession to perceived defects in the order entered by the lower court. We reverse, concluding that there was no valid legal basis upon which to differentiate Henry from other employees based simply upon his status as a limited partner and management employee of the partnership. *fn4 We note at the outset that the parties to this litigation have proceeded upon the unchallenged assumption that an employee has a priority lien for the payment of wages upon the dissolution of a partnership. The Court assumes, without necessarily deciding, that this premise is correct. Consequently, after initially discussing and rejecting certain legal Conclusions reached by the circuit court relative to Henry's underlying right to collect wages and liquidated damages, we focus on the more central question of whether his status as a limited partner and manager of the Huntington Blizzard necessarily bars him from asserting a lien superior to the claims of other general creditors. The following is a summary of the legal justifications advanced by the special receiver (and embraced by the circuit court) for subordinating Henry's wage claim: (1) the rights normally afforded employees under W. Va. Code § 21-5-4 (1975) *fn5 do not extend to Henry's claim because he was a management employee; (2) given Henry's management position, and the fact that he was not paid for over a year prior to the partnership's dissolution in 1995, it must be presumed that he agreed not to be paid; (3) W. Va. Code § 21A-5-18 limits all priority wage claims to $250; and (4) Lowther v. Riggleman, 189 W. Va. 68, 428 S.E.2d 49 (1993), precludes Henry from obtaining a lien superior to unsecured creditors because he was a limited partner of the partnership. *fn6 The first three of these four Conclusions of law are clearly without merit, while the fourth requires a slightly more detailed analysis involving a comparison of this Court's rationale for its holding in Lowther with the relevant statutory language of the RULPA. "This Court reviews the circuit court's final order and ultimate Disposition under an abuse of discretion standard. We review challenges to findings of fact under a clearly erroneous standard; Conclusions of law are reviewed de novo." Syl. pt. 4, Burgess v. Porterfield, 196 W. Va. 178, 469 S.E.2d 114 (1996). The special receiver's initial Conclusion that W. Va. Code § 21-5-4, *fn7 which delineates an employee's right to payment of wages following separation from employment, does not apply to management employees finds absolutely no support in the Wage Payment and Collection Act (the "Act"), W. Va. Code §§ 21-5-1 to -18. The Act defines "employee" to "include[] any person suffered or permitted to work by a person, firm or corporation." W. Va. Code § 21-5-1(b) (1987). The statute's broad definition of employee thus defeats any contention that the protections afforded by § 21-5-4 do not extend to management employees. Therefore, whatever its relevance to the special receiver's ultimate recommendation regarding Henry's claim, we find that this interpretation of § 21-5-4 was erroneous. *fn8 The second legal Conclusion, that Henry's position within the limited partnership and the fact that he had not been paid his wages for a long period of time mandates a presumption that he assented not to be paid, likewise finds no basis in law. We have not been directed to any authority that would presumptively bar a limited partner or management employee of a limited partnership from receiving wages. While the Revised Uniform Partnership Act provides that "[a] partner is not entitled to remuneration for services performed for the partnership, except for reasonable compensation for services rendered in winding up the business of the partnership," W. Va. Code § 47B-4-1(h) (1996), *fn9 this default rule, although it applies to a general partner of a limited partnership, see W. Va. Code § 47-9-24(a) (1984), does not extend to limited partners or management employees. There is thus no legal presumption that a limited partner who provides services to a partnership does so without expectation of remuneration. Nor is there any basis for the special receiver's oblique suggestion that Henry waived his right to the payment of wages by continuing to work notwithstanding the non- payment of wages, and the partnership's violation of W. Va. Code § 21-5-3 (1979), which, in relevant part, requires that an employer "shall settle with its employees at least once every two weeks, unless otherwise provided by special agreement." This Court has previously rejected such an argument. In Britner v. Medical Sec. Card, Inc., 200 W. Va. 352, 354-55, 489 S.E.2d 734, 736-37 (1997) (per curiam), three employees brought suit alleging that their employer had failed, over a four-year period, to pay them wages due under a provision in their written employment contracts requiring 15% annual pay increases. The employer argued that the employees were estopped from bringing such a claim based upon their acquiescence in the non-payment of the annual raises. We rejected this argument, citing W. Va. Code § 21-5-10 (1975) *fn10 and stating that [t]he legislature has attempted to prevent employers from abusing their positions by compromising the wages of employees. The language of W. Va. Code § 21-5-10 is mandatory. An employer must pay earned wages to its employees. Any other reading would seriously compromise and undermine the legislative intent of W. Va. Code § 21-5-10. 200 W. Va. at 355, 489 S.E.2d at 737. The recognition of a waiver in such situations would, moreover, effectively require an employee to immediately seek relief under W. Va. Code § 21-5-12 (1975), or else risk losing the right to payment of wages as afforded by the Act. The effect of such an implicit requirement could obviously have a serious disruptive impact on employee-employer relations. Thus, the mere fact that Henry worked without pay for a lengthy period of time prior to the partnership's dissolution, in clear violation of § 21-5-3, does not establish a waiver of the right to agreed-upon wages. The third pillar supporting the circuit court's ruling, the Conclusion that W. Va. Code § 21A-5-18(1) (1945) *fn11 limits all priority wage claims to $250, is erroneous in the face of the clear language of the statute. The cardinal rule of statutory construction is that "[w]here the language of a statute is clear and without ambiguity the plain meaning is to be accepted without resorting to the rules of interpretation." Syl. pt. 2, State v. Elder, 152 W. Va. 571, 165 S.E.2d 108 (1968). Rather than limiting all priority wage claims to $250, § 21A-5-18(1) merely governs the priority of contributions owed to the unemployment compensation fund. The term "payments," as used in § 21A-5-18(1), refers exclusively to "the money required to be paid or that may be voluntarily paid into the state unemployment compensation fund as provided in article five of [Chapter 21A]." W. Va. Code § 21A-1A-22 (1996). The statute in question straightforwardly gives the unemployment compensation fund a first-priority lien upon the proceeds of any judicially-ordered distribution of an employer's assets, with the exception of claims for taxes and employee wages not exceeding $250. Section 21A-5-18(1) does not otherwise control the priority of wage claims vis-à-vis the claims of other creditors. Moreover, in the present case the statute was inapplicable because, according to the special receiver's uncontested representation in her report, no funds were due the unemployment compensation fund. We therefore find that the effect ascribed to § 21A-5-18(1) in the proceedings below was erroneous. We turn now to the pivotal issue in this case: Whether Henry, as a limited partner of Huntington Blizzard, is legally precluded from asserting a lien superior to that of other general creditors in light of this Court's previous holding in Lowther v. Riggleman, 189 W. Va. 68, 428 S.E.2d 49 (1993). This question requires us to scrutinize Lowther in the context of countervailing provisions contained within the RULPA, and ultimately to reconsider its continued validity in the face of West Virginia's adoption in 1995 of the Revised Uniform Partnership Act ("RUPA"), 1995 W. Va. Acts ch. 250 (codified as amended at W. Va. Code ch. 47B). In Lowther, two partners secured loans to their partnership by recording deeds of trust encumbering the partnership's real property, creating liens superior to an instrument recorded by a non-partner creditor. Following foreclosure by a bank whose loan was secured by a first-priority deed of trust on the subject property, the two partners attempted to obtain the excess proceeds realized from the trustee sale. (The partnership in question was in the process of dissolution at the time of foreclosure.) The circuit court permitted the two partners to take these proceeds, predicating its ruling upon their superior lien positions relative to the other creditor. This Court reversed, stating in Syllabus point 2: "The common law was that a partner in a partnership dissolution could not assert a lien on partnership assets that would create a preferential claim over its general creditors. The same result has been achieved interpreting the Uniform Partnership Act, W. Va. Code, 47-8A-1, et seq." The relevant provision of the Uniform Partnership Act that informed our decision in Lowther_W. Va. Code § 47-8A-40 (1953), *fn12 repealed by 1995 W. Va. Acts ch. 250_was understood by this Court to mandate that "the liability of a partnership to creditors other than partners must be given greater priority in the order of payment than the liability owed by a partnership to its partners when the partnership is dissolved." Syl. pt. 1, in part, Lowther. This Court's holding in Lowther does not find similar support in the text of the RULPA. The RULPA eliminates the fraudulent conveyance provision contained in its predecessor, and makes no distinction between partner and non-partner creditors with respect to payments made upon the dissolution of a limited partnership. See W. Va. Code § 47-9-47(1) (1981). *fn13 Moreover, § 107 of the RULPA, codified at W. Va. Code § 47-9-7 (1981), provides: "Except as provided in the partnership agreement, a partner may lend money to and transact other business with the limited partnership and, subject to other applicable law, has the same rights and obligations with respect thereto as a person who is not a partner." (Emphasis added.) These provisions, which differ markedly from the statutory framework found determinative in Lowther, make clear that there is no per se restriction upon the right of a partner to obtain and assert a lien superior to that of a general creditor of the limited partnership. We therefore hold that pursuant to the relevant provisions of the RULPA, W. Va. Code §§ 47-9-7 & -47(1), a partner may, subject to other applicable law, obtain a lien superior to that of other general creditors of the limited partnership. *fn14 Consequently, the circuit court committed error by denying Henry's purported wage lien upon the authority of Lowther. Finally, we note that the same statutory language that requires our rejection of Lowther in the context of limited partnerships has recently been incorporated into the partnership law of our jurisdiction as a result of West Virginia's adoption of the RUPA in 1995. Compare W. Va. Code § 47-9-47(1) with W. Va. Code § 47B-8-7(a) (1996); and W. Va. Code § 47-9-7 with W. Va. Code § 47B-4-4(f) (1995). Thus, to the extent that Lowther holds that a partner of a partnership in dissolution is presumptively barred from asserting a lien superior to the non-partner general creditors of the partnership, it has been legislatively overruled by the adoption of the RUPA. III. In light of the fact that this Court has not been directed to any valid authority supporting the proposition that appellant Henry, as a limited partner and management employee of Huntington Blizzard, should be treated differently from other employees of the limited partnership with respect to the payment of wages following dissolution, the judgment of the Circuit Court of Cabell County is hereby reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Reversed and remanded.
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