Court Opinion

ID: 9371458
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-02-16 15:12:15.211391+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:16:27.663343
License: Public Domain

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

            Present: Judges Athey, Chaney and Raphael
PUBLISHED

            Argued at Winchester, Virginia

            THEODORE THEOLOGIS
                                                                                   OPINION BY
            v.     Record No. 0133-22-4                                     JUDGE STUART A. RAPHAEL
                                                                               FEBRUARY 14, 2023
            MARK WEILER, PATRICIA JAMES,
             DARIA COLLINS, KHAI WISLER AND
             JANIS BALDWIN

                               FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FREDERICK COUNTY
                                            Brian M. Madden, Judge

                           Nicholas Hantzes (Hantzes & Associates, on briefs), for appellant.

                           William L. Mitchell, II (Richard E. Armstrong IV; Jay Ian Igiel;
                           Timothy R. Johnson; James A. Klenkar; Eccleston & Wolf, P.C.;
                           Nealon & Associates, P.C.; The Law Offices of Timothy R. Johnson,
                           PLC; Hall, Monahan, Engle, Mahan & Mitchell, on briefs), for
                           appellees.

                   This case arose in 2020 when Theodore Theologis sued several of his fellow townhome-

            association members after they publicly criticized his performance as the association’s president.

            His three-count complaint asserted claims of defamation and business conspiracy. Because the

            trial court correctly found that the statements in question were not defamatory, we affirm its

            decision sustaining the defendants’ demurrers.

                                                        BACKGROUND

                   In reviewing a trial court’s decision sustaining a demurrer, “we accept as true all factual

            allegations in the complaint ‘made with “sufficient definiteness to enable the court to find the

            existence of a legal basis for its judgment.”’” Patterson v. City of Danville, ___ Va. ___, ___ (July
7, 2022) (quoting Squire v. Va. Hous. Dev. Auth., 287 Va. 507, 514 (2014)). But we are not bound

by the pleader’s conclusions of law that are couched as facts. Id.

        Fieldstone Townhome Association, Inc. is the homeowners’ association for the Fieldstone

townhome development, a residential community in Winchester consisting of 225 townhomes. One

membership vote is allocated to the owners of each townhome. The association is managed by a

board comprised of five directors elected by the members. The board of directors elects the

association’s officers: the president, vice-president, secretary, and treasurer.

        In 2017, the association’s members elected Theologis to serve a three-year term on the

board of directors. In 2019, the board of directors elected him to serve as the association’s

president. The board reelected him in 2020 to serve as president through the end of his three-year

term on the board.

        The five defendants here are all Fieldstone townhome residents; some previously served on

the board of directors. In July 2020, about two-dozen townhome residents, including three of the

defendants, signed a petition to remove Theologis from the board. A special meeting of the

association to consider that petition was scheduled for August 11, 2020.

        In July 2020, four defendants—Daria Collins, Tricia James, Khai Wisler, and Mark

Weiler—wrote a letter to their “Fellow Fieldstone” homeowners, urging them to vote Theologis out

of office. That July 2020 letter listed various grievances about his performance as an officer and

director. It said, for instance, that Theologis had “made repeated efforts to impose far more

restrictive policies than provided for in the Covenants & By-Laws” and that he had “usurp[ed] the

authority granted to the Board as a whole via the Covenant & By-Laws.” At the special meeting,

however, there were not enough votes against Theologis, so the removal effort fizzled.

        Before a homeowners’ association meeting on December 15, 2020, defendant Wisler wrote

a social-media post on the website NextDoor, urging a fellow townhome resident to attend the

                                                  -2-
meeting and to voice her concerns about the association’s operations. Wisler wrote that “Theologis

is capricious in his enforcement of [HOA] policy (even as he has broken our HOA bylaws).”

Wisler added that Theologis “should be leaving the board at that date and you should have more

reasonable people on the review board.”

       Theologis filed a three-count complaint in the Circuit Court of Frederick County. Count I

alleged that defendants Weiler, James, Collins, and Wisler defamed him when they circulated their

July 2020 letter. Paragraph 62 of the complaint listed 24 separate statements in the letter that

Theologis identified as defamatory. He attached the letter itself as Exhibit 1 to the complaint.

Theologis requested $1 million in compensatory damages and $350,000 in punitive damages.

       Count II alleged that Wisler’s NextDoor post was also defamatory, for which Theologis

sought $350,000 in compensatory damages and $350,000 in punitive damages against Wisler. The

complaint attached Wisler’s post as Exhibit 2.

       Count III alleged that all five defendants conspired to injure Theologis in his trade, business,

and occupation, in violation of the Virginia business-conspiracy statute, Code §§ 18.2-499 to

18.2-500. Theologis pleaded that he owns a real-estate-brokerage and property-management

company in Frederick County and that he is a licensed attorney with a law practice in Virginia. He

claimed that the defendants’ actions injured his professional reputation by “preventing and

hindering [him] from conducting his business in Fieldstone and in Frederick County.” This is the

only count against Janis Baldwin, who did not sign the allegedly defamatory statements about

Theologis. Theologis alleged that Baldwin is a former member of the board of directors and a

friend of defendant James and that Theologis had several disagreements with Baldwin about HOA

rules and policies. Count III requested $1 million in compensatory damages and treble damages and

attorney fees against all five defendants under Code § 18.2-500.

                                                 -3-
       Each defendant filed a separate demurrer. All five argued that Count III failed to state a

business-conspiracy claim against them. Defendant Baldwin argued that the statements at issue

were not defamatory and that the complaint did not plead facts showing her participation in any

scheme to defame Theologis. The other four defendants argued that the complaint failed to identify

the exact words alleged to be defamatory and that the statements, in any case, were not defamatory.

       Two defendants—Weiler and James—also claimed that Theologis had failed to plead New

York Times malice.1 They argued that Theologis was a limited-purpose public figure and that the

complaint failed to show that the defendants knew that their statements were false or probably false.

Some but not all defendants also asserted the defense of common-interest privilege.

       The circuit court heard argument on the demurrers, but no court reporter was present. The

court entered a final order reciting, “Defendants’ demurrers are sustained with prejudice for the

reason(s) stated by the Court at the hearing . . . , which are incorporated herein by reference.” The

parties subsequently disagreed over the accuracy of Theologis’s proposed written statement in lieu

of a transcript. See Rule 5A:8(c). The circuit court entered a “written statement of facts” rejecting

Theologis’s proposed statement as “inaccurate” and clarifying that the court had sustained the

demurrers on the grounds raised by each defendant. Theologis timely appealed.

                                              ANALYSIS

       We exercise de novo review of the circuit court’s decision sustaining the defendants’

demurrers. Givago Growth, LLC v. iTech AG, LLC, 300 Va. 260, 264 (2021). The circuit court

said that it sustained those demurrers on every ground raised by each of the five defendants. The

       1
          See New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254, 279-80 (1964) (holding that the First
Amendment “prohibits a public official from recovering damages for a defamatory falsehood
relating to his official conduct unless he proves that the statement was made with ‘actual
malice’—that is, with knowledge that it was false or with reckless disregard of whether it was
false or not”); Great Coastal Express, Inc. v. Ellington, 230 Va. 142, 149 n.3 (1985)
(distinguishing “New York Times malice” from “common-law malice, a different and broader
concept”), overruled in part on other grounds by Cashion v. Smith, 286 Va. 327, 338 (2013).
                                                -4-
defendants’ arguments, however, were not all the same. For instance, only four defendants argued

that the defamation claims were deficient for failing to plead the exact words used; Baldwin did not

join in that argument. Only two defendants (James and Weiler) argued that the complaint was

deficient for failing to plead New York Times malice. Only one defendant (Weiler) joined in the

arguments of other demurrants (James and Wisler).2

       We have an “obligation to decide cases on the best and narrowest grounds available.”

Esposito v. Va. State Police, 74 Va. App. 130, 134 (2022). Given the large number of issues

presented here, we look for the best and fewest grounds on which to resolve this appeal.

       Our selection of which issues to address is constrained by a long-standing feature of

Virginia demurrer practice: we may affirm an order sustaining a demurrer only on a ground that the

defendant raised in the trial court. See Code § 8.01-273(A). The appeal of an order sustaining a

demurrer thus differs from other appeals in which “the right-result-different-reason doctrine” would

allow an appellee to “assert for the first time on appeal a purely legal ground for upholding the

challenged judgment.” Collins v. Commonwealth, 297 Va. 207, 212 n.1 (2019).3 Code § 8.01-273

prevents us from applying that doctrine to permit an appellee to benefit from an argument that he

did not include in his own demurrer. The statute requires that each demurrant “state specifically the

grounds on which the demurrant concludes that the pleading is insufficient at law,” and “[n]o

grounds other than those stated specifically in the demurrer shall be considered by the court.”

Code § 8.01-273(A) (emphasis added).

       2
         Although “[a] demurrer may be amended as other pleadings are amended,” Code
§ 8.01-273(A), no defendant sought leave to file an amended demurrer to include or incorporate
another defendant’s argument.
       3
         See generally Robert & Bertha Robinson Family, LLC v. Allen, 295 Va. 130, 141 (2018)
(“We recognize that an ‘appellee is free to defend its judgment on any ground’ supported by the
record, ‘whether or not that ground was relied upon, rejected, or even considered by the [circuit]
court’ so long as additional factual findings are unnecessary.” (alteration in original) (quoting
Perry v. Commonwealth, 280 Va. 572, 581 (2010))).
                                                 -5-
         Our Supreme Court has repeatedly applied this statute to bar consideration on appeal of an

argument that was not included in the defendant’s demurrer. See, e.g., TC MidAtlantic Dev., Inc. v.

Commonwealth, Dept. of Gen. Servs., 280 Va. 204, 214 (2010); Delk v. Columbia/HCA Healthcare

Corp., 259 Va. 125, 136 (2000). This rule dates to the turn of the last century. See 1899-1900 Va.

Acts ch. 100. The Supreme Court has called this pleading requirement “a wise one that should be

upheld and enforced as it is written,” adding that the statute’s “salutary purpose would be defeated

and the statute practically abrogated if it were permissible to modify it by ingrafting exceptions

upon it.” Saunders v. S. Ry. Co., 117 Va. 396, 399 (1915).4 In light of the statute’s clear language

and history, we cannot affirm the dismissal of the complaint as to one demurrant based on an

argument advanced only by a different demurrant.

         With these considerations in mind, we have determined that the best-and-narrowest ground

here is that the statements about which Theologis complains were not defamatory. All five

defendants raised that argument on demurrer. Because we agree that the statements lacked

sufficient “sting” to be actionable, we find that the trial court properly dismissed the defamation

claims, together with the business-conspiracy claim that depended on defamation as the predicate

tort.5

         4
         When Title 8 was recodified, the revisors carried forward this requirement in Code
§ 8.01-273 “to prevent the demurrant from presenting, on appeal, grounds for the demurrer not
relied on before the trial court.” See Va. Code Comm’n, Revision of Title 8 of the Code of
Virginia, H. Doc. No. 14, at 186 (1977).
         5
         We therefore express no opinion on the other issues raised by Theologis: whether the
defamation claims were deficient for failing to plead the exact words used (Assignments of Error
1-2); whether the statements were non-actionable expressions of opinion (Assignments of Error
4, 6); whether the complaint pleaded facts sufficient to establish New York Times malice or to
overcome the common-interest privilege; and whether those issues could be reached on demurrer
(Assignments of Error 9, 10).
                                               -6-
       A. The defamation claims fail against all defendants because the statements lacked
          sufficient “sting” to harm Theologis’s reputation (Assignments of Error 3, 5).

       Not all false and disparaging statements about a person are defamatory. “A statement

must contain the requisite defamatory sting to be actionable.” Bryant-Shannon v. Hampton

Roads Cmty. Action Program, Inc., 299 Va. 579, 585 (2021). The trial court has the

“gatekeeping function” to determine as a matter of law “whether a statement is reasonably

capable of defamatory meaning before allowing the matter to be presented to a finder of fact.”

Schaecher v. Bouffault, 290 Va. 83, 94 (2015). In evaluating whether a statement carries enough

sting, courts “take all inferences in favor of the plaintiff, but such inferences cannot rise above

the language of the documents or statements themselves.” Id. at 93.

       To have the requisite sting requires language that “tends to injure one’s reputation in the

common estimation of mankind, to throw contumely, shame, or disgrace upon him, or which

tends to hold him up to scorn, ridicule, or contempt, or which is calculated to render him

infamous, odious, or ridiculous.” Id. at 92 (quoting Moss v. Harwood, 102 Va. 386, 392 (1904)).

By contrast, “‘language that is insulting, offensive, or otherwise inappropriate, but constitutes no

more than “rhetorical hyperbole”’ is not defamatory.” Id. (quoting Yeagle v. Collegiate Times,

255 Va. 293, 296 (1998)).

       The Supreme Court held in Schaecher that accusing someone of violating an ordinance or

breaching an easement, covenant, or contract generally does not carry sufficient sting to be

actionable as defamation. Id. at 94-98. The plaintiff in that case, Schaecher, was seeking a

special-use permit to open a kennel. The project was opposed by her “nearby neighbor,”

Bouffault, who also happened to be a member of the local planning commission. Id. at 89.

Schaecher sued Bouffalt for defamation after Bouffalt sent various emails to her fellow planning-

commission members, claiming that the kennel plans would “not comply with easements,

covenants, or ordinances.” Id. at 94. Schaecher claimed that the emails defamed her by
                                                -7-
depicting her as a “law breaker or a person of disregard for . . . legal obligations.” Id. (alteration

in original).

        But the Court found that none of Bouffault’s statements carried the requisite sting. The

violation of an easement would “not as a general principle carry the ‘sting’ of a reprehensible

crime.” Id. at 95. “The mere implication that one might be in violation of an easement, absent

more—such as inflammatory language or context to suggest that the statement causes particular

harm to one’s reputation—does not rise to the level of defamation.” Id. The same was true for

the alleged “violation of covenant restrictions.” Id. “Covenant restrictions are contractual in

nature, and the breach of a contract does not necessarily bring with it defamatory connotation.”

Id. (citation omitted). The Court did “not hold that accusations of violations of covenants or

easements are never defamatory as a matter of law, merely that they are not inherently

defamatory.” Id. So too for the alleged violation of local ordinances. While in “some contexts”

an accusation that the plaintiff violated an ordinance might carry defamatory sting, the ordinance

there involved a land-use restriction. Id. Violating that ordinance was insufficient to “render the

plaintiffs odious, infamous, or ridiculous, or otherwise subject them to contempt, shame, scorn,

or disgrace.” Id.

        The same is true of the alleged defamatory statements here, almost all of which allege

that Theologis failed to properly apply or follow various provisions of the Fieldstone Townhome

Association’s “Governing Documents.” At oral argument, we asked Theologis to list the five

most defamatory statements of the 26 itemized in the complaint. He identified the following—

all from the July 2020 letter—alleging that he violated or failed to apply the association’s

“Covenants” and “By-Laws”:

                                                 -8-
 Complaint ¶      Verbatim text from the July 2020 letter (Exhibit 1)

      62(f)       “[Theologis] has made repeated efforts to impose far more restrictive policies
                  than provided for in the Covenants & By-Laws. Examples are . . .”
      62(g)       “. . . absurdly stringent yet disparately applied enforcement of ‘violations’ as
                  seen through his adversarial view.”
      62(j)       [Theologis] “at times exclud[ed] [fellow board members] from board decision-
                  making altogether,”
      62(k)       “thereby usurping the authority granted to the Board as a whole via the
                  Covenants & By-Laws.”
      62(o)       Stating that Theologis “[s]cheduled a special board meeting using dubious
                  circumvention of proper guidelines for doing so as outlined in the Covenants
                  & By-Laws.”

       We will assume for argument’s sake that these were false statements of fact, rather than

non-actionable expressions of opinion. See generally Cashion v. Smith, 286 Va. 327, 336-37

(2013). Even so, it is “not apparent on the face of the document how this violation would render

the plaintiff[] odious, infamous, or ridiculous, or otherwise subject [him] to contempt, shame,

scorn, or disgrace.” Schaecher, 290 Va. at 95.

       Fieldstone’s governing documents, like the covenant restrictions in Schaecher, are

“contractual in nature.” Id.; see Manchester Oaks Homeowners Ass’n, Inc. v. Batt, 284 Va. 409,

419 (2012) (“A declaration pursuant to the [Property Owners’ Association] Act is ‘a contract

entered into by all owners’ of the lots in the subdivision it governs.” (quoting Sully Station II

Cmty. Ass’n, Inc. v. Dye, 259 Va. 282, 284 (2000))). So like Schaecher’s alleged violation of

covenants and easements, Theologis’s alleged misapplication of the association’s governing

documents is not inherently defamatory and does not stigmatize him as a “law breaker.”

Schaecher, 290 Va. at 95-96.

       “As with all evaluations of defamatory statements, . . . context is of the utmost

importance,” id. at 101, but the context here only weakens Theologis’s claim. Theologis had

assumed a leadership position as president of the homeowners’ association. The defendants’

statements were criticisms of his performance in that role before a meeting at which association

                                                 -9-
members would vote whether to remove him from the board. Statements tailored to whether

Theologis properly followed the association’s governing documents were germane to that

purpose. The “context” thus fails to transmute those statements into something sufficiently

sinister or odious to be actionable as defamation. While Theologis may have found his fellow

members’ criticisms of his management style “insulting, offensive, or otherwise inappropriate,”

the statements were not so inflammatory as to disgrace him “in the common estimation of

mankind.” Id. at 92 (first quoting Yeagle, 255 Va. at 296; then quoting Moss, 102 Va. at 392).6

       Nor does the complaint plead facts showing that, by innuendo, those criticisms crossed

the line into calumny. “In the law of defamation, an innuendo is the plaintiff’s explanation of a

statement’s defamatory meaning when that meaning is not apparent from the statement’s face.”

Innuendo, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019). “For example, the innuendo of the statement

‘David burned down his house’ can be shown by pleading that the statement was understood to

mean that David was defrauding his insurance company . . . .” Id. The complaint here alleges

that Theologis is a Virginia lawyer and that he owns a real estate company that manages three

rental properties owned by clients who live in Fieldstone. Although none of the defendants’

       6
            The other 21 allegedly defamatory statements identified in the complaint—but which
Theologis did not include in his “top five” list—likewise carry insufficient sting to be actionable.
Three of them similarly allege that Theologis violated the association’s governing documents or
rules. Compl. ¶¶ 62(c), (p), 73(a). Seventeen are statements asserting that Theologis’s
leadership or communication style as president was poor, adversarial, or detrimental to the best
interests of the homeowner’s association. Compl. ¶¶ 62(a), (b), (d), (e), (h), (i), (l), (n), (q), (r),
(s), (t), (u), (v), (w), (x), 73(b). Those statements do “not meet the threshold for defamatory
‘sting’ to engender disgrace, shame, scorn, or contempt, or to render one odious, infamous, or
ridiculous.” Schaecher, 290 Va. at 102. And the remaining statement said that Theologis’s
“behavior extends to an ongoing failure to communicate properly with homeowners as well,
often to the point of appearing to be purposefully deceptive.” Compl. ¶ 62(m) & Ex. 1
(emphasis added). Like one of the statements found non-actionable in Schaecher, 290 Va. at 101
(“not totally truthful”), this statement fails to carry sufficient sting because it “hedges,” id. Also,
the context communicates that the statement was tied to Theologis’s alleged “failure to
communicate properly” with homeowners. The hedged statement was thus “married to a single
and relatively benign” complaint about Theologis’s overall communication style. Id. at 102.
                                                   - 10 -
statements mentioned those jobs, Theologis claims that their statements injured his reputation in

those occupations by implying that he was professionally unfit.

       Those allegations do not supply “sufficient innuendo to imply defamatory meaning.”

Schaecher, 290 Va. at 93.

               [T]he meaning of the alleged defamatory language can not, by
               innuendo, be extended beyond its ordinary and common
               acceptation. The province of the innuendo is to show how the
               words used are defamatory, and how they relate to the plaintiff, but
               it can not introduce new matter, nor extend the meaning of the
               words used . . . .

Id. (quoting Webb v. Virginian–Pilot Media Cos., 287 Va. 84, 89-90 (2014)). While the

defendants’ statements criticize Theologis’s performance as an association officer and director,

they do not impugn his integrity as a lawyer or private-property manager, let alone mention those

occupations. Theologis failed to plead facts showing that the defendants’ statements would be

recognized by readers as an attack on his law practice or his property-management business.

Because “innuendo may not extend beyond the meaning of the words in the statement,” id. at 96,

the complaint’s allegations about Theologis’s other jobs fail to make actionable the defendants’

statements about his leadership in the association.7

       B. The business-conspiracy count fails because the defamation claims fail
          (Assignments of Error 7-8).

       Count III of Theologis’s complaint seeks treble damages and attorney fees against all five

defendants under Code §§ 18.2-499 and 18.2-500. He claims that their conduct violated the

business-conspiracy statute because the defendants “willfully and maliciously [injured him] in

       7
          Theologis did not argue on brief in the trial court that any fiduciary duties he had as
president of the Fieldstone Townhome Association affect the lens through which a court should
evaluate whether the statements were defamatory. Nor did the parties brief (1) the existence and
scope of the fiduciary duties of a homeowners’ association president, or (2) whether those duties
affect the “sting” of an allegation that the association’s president breached the association’s
governing documents. Thus, we express no views on those questions. See Rule 5A:18.
                                                 - 11 -
his reputation, trade, business or profession.” Code § 18.2-499(A). All five defendants

demurred to Count III arguing (among other things) that Theologis’s conspiracy claims were

conclusory and insufficient to show a violation of the statute.

       “[A]ctions for common law civil conspiracy and statutory business conspiracy lie only if

a plaintiff sustains damages as a result of an act that is itself wrongful or tortious.” Dunlap v.

Cottman Transmission Sys., LLC, 287 Va. 207, 215 (2014). “[C]onspiracy allegations . . . do not

set forth an independent cause of action; instead, such allegations are sustainable only after an

underlying tort claim has been established.” Id. (quoting McCarthy v. Kleindienst, 741 F.2d

1406, 1413 n.7 (D.C. Cir. 1984)). In this case, the sole tortious conduct alleged by Theologis is

the sending of the July 2020 letter, which Theologis asserted “had the purpose and intent and

effect of injuring [his] reputation.” Compl. ¶ 83; see also Theologis Reply Br. 17 (claiming

“[t]he dissemination of the defamatory Letter affected Appellant’s ongoing business

relationships in Fieldstone”).

       Assuming without deciding that a statutory business-conspiracy claim could piggyback

on the defamation claims made here,8 the circuit court did not err in dismissing the conspiracy

claim. Because Theologis failed to state a claim for defamation, he necessarily failed to state a

claim for business conspiracy, as his conspiracy claim hinged on defamation as the predicate tort.

See, e.g., Davis v. Roessler, No. 1:20-cv-992 (RDA/TCB), 2022 WL 195496, at *7 (E.D. Va.

Jan. 21, 2022) (Alston, J.) (“Plaintiff’s conspiracy claim is inextricably linked to his underlying

       8
          Cf. Andrews v. Ring, 266 Va. 311, 319 (2003) (holding that “the word ‘reputation’” in
Code § 18.2-499, given “its association with ‘trade, business or profession[,]’ requires the
exclusion of personal reputation and interest in employment from the scope of the statute’s
coverage”); Shirvinski v. U.S. Coast Guard, 673 F.3d 308, 321 (4th Cir. 2012) (“But because
‘injury to personal reputation ordinarily causes damage to one’s business or profession, nearly
every defamation action would fall within’ the statute’s ambit if we permitted such claims to
proceed. Virginia’s business conspiracy statute was not designed to provide treble damages for
defamation suits cloaked as conspiracy claims.” (citation omitted) (quoting Moore v. Allied
Chem. Corp., 480 F. Supp. 364, 375 n.3 (E.D. Va. 1979))).
                                               - 12 -
defamation claims, which do not state a valid claim for relief. And without a valid underlying

tort claim, a conspiracy claim cannot survive.”).9

        C. The record contains no request by Theologis for leave to amend (Assignment of
           Error 11).

        Theologis argues that the circuit court erred when it dismissed his complaint “with

prejudice,” thereby denying him a chance to cure the pleading defects by filing an amended

complaint.10 We review a circuit court’s grant or denial of leave to amend a pleading under an

abuse-of-discretion standard. Bennett v. Sage Payment Solutions, Inc., 282 Va. 49, 54 (2011).

Theologis correctly notes that Rule 1:8 provides that “[l]eave to amend should be liberally

granted in furtherance of the ends of justice.” And “a trial court’s decision refusing leave to

amend after a showing of good cause is, in ordinary circumstances, an abuse of discretion.”

Ford Motor Co. v. Benitez, 273 Va. 242, 252 (2007).

        But the Supreme Court has also made clear that an appellant may not assert error to the

denial of leave to amend when, as here, “[t]he record contains no request . . . for leave to amend

. . . or a proposed . . . amended complaint.” TC MidAtlantic, 280 Va. at 214; see also Legg v.

Sch. Bd. of Wise Cnty., 157 Va. 295, 301 (1931) (“The trial court did not err in sustaining the

demurrers of both defendants; and as no request for leave to amend has been asked, the judgment

of the court giving final judgment for the defendants is affirmed.”). Theologis conceded at oral

        9
         Count III, the only count that named Baldwin as a defendant, likewise failed to state a
business-conspiracy claim against her. (Assignment of Error 8.) The complaint failed to allege
any facts to show that Baldwin authored any of the allegedly defamatory statements or that she
participated in the alleged conspiracy to injure Theologis’s reputation. Theologis did not meet
his pleading obligations by alleging that Baldwin served as a fellow member of the board and
was James’s “friend.” And as already noted, Baldwin included in her demurrer the other
defendants’ successful argument that the statements in question here “are not defamatory.”
        10
            Theologis misstates in this assignment of error that the circuit court failed “to set forth
. . . the grounds for granting the demurrers.” The circuit court’s “written statement of facts”
recited that the court “granted the demurrers filed by each defendant on the specific grounds
presented.”
                                                - 13 -
argument that the record contains no indication that he ever asked for leave to amend, either

before or after the trial court sustained the demurrers. He likewise did not object to the circuit

court’s failure to grant leave to amend. See Rule 5A:18. So we cannot say that the circuit court

abused its discretion when it sustained the demurrers without leave to amend.

                                            CONCLUSION

       The circuit court correctly found that the statements in question carried insufficient sting to

be defamatory. The court therefore did not err in dismissing the defamation claims, together with

the business-conspiracy claim that depended on defamation as the predicate tort. And because

Theologis failed to request leave to amend, the court did not abuse its discretion when it dismissed

his complaint “with prejudice.”

                                                                                             Affirmed.

                                                - 14 -