Allnutt v. Associates Leasing, Inc. (In Re Allnutt)

220 B.R. 871, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 391, 1998 WL 234153
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Maryland
DecidedMarch 20, 1998
Docket19-00057
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 220 B.R. 871 (Allnutt v. Associates Leasing, Inc. (In Re Allnutt)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allnutt v. Associates Leasing, Inc. (In Re Allnutt), 220 B.R. 871, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 391, 1998 WL 234153 (Md. 1998).

Opinion

*876 MEMORANDUM OPINION IMPOSING SANCTIONS JOINTLY AGAINST PLAINTIFF AND PLAINTIFF’S COUNSEL IN THE AMOUNT OF $66,929.01

JAMES F. SCHNEIDER, Bankruptcy Judge.

During the pendency of the debtor’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy case, his non-filing spouse filed the instant complaint in a state court against nondebtor defendants for wrongful detainer and conversion of property which she alleged was sold by her husband’s Chapter 11 trustee and in which the plaintiff alleged she held an undivided interest as tenant by the entireties. The defendants removed the suit to this Court, where the Chapter 11 bankruptcy ease of the plaintiffs husband, Fred W. Allnutt, Sr. (“Allnutt,” or “debtor”), is pending. The plaintiff moved to remand. The Chapter 11 trustee, who was not sued with the original defendants, filed a motion to intervene. The defendants moved to dismiss the complaints and to impose sanctions against the plaintiff and her counsel. The plaintiff filed oppositions to the motions to dismiss and the motion for sanctions. For the reasons stated, the Chapter 11 trustee’s motion to intervene will be granted, the plaintiffs motions to remand will be denied, the motions to dismiss will be granted, and the motion for the imposition of sanctions against both the plaintiff and her attorney will be granted. In addition, a permanent injunction will issue against the debtor, his insiders and agents, including his, her, or their attorneys, from contesting the validity of sales of property of the bankruptcy estate by the Chapter 11 trustee, subject to additional sanctions.

FINDINGS OF FACT

On September 27, 1996, the plaintiff, Joanne Armstrong Allnutt, a resident of Maryland and the wife of the Chapter 11 debtor in this case, filed the instant suit in the Circuit Court for Howard County, Maryland. The suit stated that the plaintiff and Fred W. Allnutt, Sr., have been husband and wife since 1958.

The defendants sued in the state court were Miller & Miller Auctioneers, Inc. (“Miller & Miller”), a Texas corporation; Associates Leasing, Inc. (“Associates”), a Virginia corporation; Charles J. Miller, Inc. (“Charles J. Miller”), a Maryland corporation; and Urban N. Zink Contractors, Inc. (“Zink”), also a Maryland corporation (collectively, “the original defendants”). They removed the suit to this Court.

The cause of action which forms the gravamen of the complaint arose out of actions taken by the debtor’s Chapter 11 trustee in the bankruptcy court in connection with a court-approved sale of assets of the bankruptcy estate. The eight-count complaint sought the return of the property or damages in the amount of $40,555,167.23, from Miller & Miller; the return of property or damages in the amount of $19,720,464.74, from both Miller & Miller and Associates; the return of property or damages in the amount of $523,182.00, from Charles J. Miller; and the return of property or damages from Zink in the amount of $281,167.00. Exhibit A to the complaint was the bill of sale dated September 29, 1993, signed by the trustee and Miller & Miller; Exhibit B to the complaint identified the property sought to be recovered by the plaintiff as the same inventory of assets sold by the trustee to Miller & Miller. The complaint was signed by “Tracy E. Mulligan, attorney for Plaintiff.”

The notorious career of Fred W. Allnutt, Sr., (“Allnutt” or “debtor”) as a tax protester has inspired a well-documented odyssey of seemingly endless litigation in the state and federal courts over the past 14 years. 1

*877 On October 2, 1992, the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland and obtained an order permitting it to seize the assets of the debtor’s company, then known as JFC Excavating (“JFC”). 2 Thereafter, the IRS seized and impounded the heavy equipment of JFC for non-payment of taxes.

On October 7, 1992, JFC, Christopher All-nutt, the son of Fred W. Allnutt, Sr., together with Sovereign Equipment Association, Constitution Leasing Association, and Elli-cott Building Association, filed suit against the IRS in the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland to recover the assets of JFC, a company owned and controlled by Allnutt. JFC was identified in the complaint as “an unincorporated Maryland partnership,” while each of the other three associations was identified as “a Maryland trust.” The three associations were created by Fred W. Allnutt, Sr., to hold title to the assets of JFC for the purpose of evading the payment of various federal, state and local taxes. The suits were later consolidated, and on January 20,1993, Allnutt joined the suit.

On October 9, 1992, one day after the U.S. District Court [Northrop, J.] denied the plaintiffs’ request for an interlocutory injunction against the IRS, Allnutt filed a voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition 3 in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Maryland. On the same day, Allnutt filed Adversary Proceeding No. 92-6475 in this Court, seeking an injunction to require the IRS to return the JFC property to him. In light of Allnutt’s public record as a tax protestor and the U.S. District Court’s refusal to order the IRS to return the JFC property, this Court declined to order the IRS to unconditionally return the assets of JFC to Allnutt to operate as a debtor in possession. However, on October 27, 1992, upon the suggestion of this Court, and by agreement of Allnutt and the IRS, the United States Trustee appointed Mark J. Friedman, Esquire, as operating Chapter 11 trustee. This facilitated the turnover of excavating equipment by the IRS to Mr. Friedman and the resumption of the business of JFC under the aegis of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court.

Except for the aforementioned suit against the IRS, Allnutt steadfastly disavowed owning the assets of JFC in an effort to avoid the tax consequences of that ownership. At no time during the administration of the bankruptcy case did Allnutt claim that the assets of JFC were exempt from administration by the trustee as property held by the entireties or otherwise. 4 Instead, he disput *878 ed the inclusion of JFC in the bankruptcy estate by renouncing his ownership of its assets. At no time during the administration of the bankruptcy case did Mrs. Allnutt assert a claim to the assets of JFC. If there ever was property of JFC held by the entire-ties by Allnutt and the plaintiff, • they concealed this fact from the trustee and this Court.

On February 9,1993, the Chapter 11 trustee filed an objection [P. 94] to the exemptions which the debtor claimed merely “to state a position as to the Proposed Exemptions,” namely that they were not properly claimed in accordance with the state exemption statute. In his objection, the trustee set forth an enumeration of the assets that were subject to his administration:

In addition to the Debtor as an individual, the Chapter 11 Trustee is also administering a business known as JFC Excavating which, is engaged in business as an excavation contractor.

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Bluebook (online)
220 B.R. 871, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 391, 1998 WL 234153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allnutt-v-associates-leasing-inc-in-re-allnutt-mdb-1998.