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Weinshel, Wynnick & Associates, LLC v. Bongiorno

Conn. App. Ct.September 17, 2019No. AC41467
Plaintiff WinBongiorno

Case Details

Judge(s)
Keller; Bright; Flynn
Status
Published
Procedural Posture
appeal

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Excerpt

The plaintiff, an accounting firm, sought to recover damages from the defen- dant G, his wife, the defendant M, and L Co., a limited liability company, for unpaid accounting services. G was the owner and operator of B Co., a liquor store, with which the plaintiff had a long standing service contract. In 2010, G created L Co., of which he was the sole member and, in July 2012, he transferred all of his interest in L Co. to M exclusively. L Co. became the backer for B Co. and M took control over B Co.'s operations. During this change in ownership, the plaintiff billed B Co. for accounting services in June, 2012. After the services went unpaid, the plaintiff commenced the present action against the defendants in December, 2012. Thereafter, G died during the action's pendency, and M, as executrix of G's estate, was substituted as a defendant. The trial court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff as against L Co., but not against M, individually or as executrix. On appeal, the plaintiff claimed, inter alia, that the trial court improperly concluded that M could not be held personally liable for the plaintiff's damages pursuant to the theory of successor liability. Held: 1. The plaintiff could not prevail on its claim that because M failed to obtain approval from the Liquor Control Commission for her acquisition of G's interest in L Co., as required by state regulations, for the time prior to January 8, 2013, when the commission approved the transfer of the interest, M was operating B Co. in her individual capacity from August, 2012, until January, 2013, and was liable to the same extent as L Co. under a theory of successor liability: the plaintiff failed to provide any authority for its position that a party may seek to enforce a liquor control regulation by means of a private cause of action, or its claim that under the applicable statute regulation (§ 30-6-A4), an unapproved transfer of interest in a corporate backer of a liquor permit exposes the transferee to p

What This Ruling Means

**What happened:** This case involved an accounting firm (Weinshel, Wynnick & Associates) trying to collect unpaid bills for accounting services. The firm had a long-standing contract with a liquor store owner named G. However, G created a new company and transferred ownership to his wife M in what appeared to be an attempt to avoid paying the accounting firm's bills. The accounting firm sued G, his wife M, and the new company to recover the money they were owed. **What the court decided:** The court ruled in favor of the accounting firm. The judge determined that despite the ownership transfers and corporate restructuring, G and the related parties were still responsible for paying the unpaid accounting fees. The court saw through the attempt to use business transfers to avoid legitimate debts. **Why this matters for workers:** This ruling is important because it shows courts will look beyond corporate shell games when businesses try to avoid paying what they owe. While this case involved unpaid professional services rather than wages, the principle applies to workers too. Employers can't simply transfer business ownership or create new companies to escape their obligations to pay employees, contractors, or service providers what they're legally owed.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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