Andrews v. Wells (In Re Wells)

368 B.R. 506, 2006 Bankr. LEXIS 4221, 2006 WL 4526426
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Louisiana
DecidedNovember 21, 2006
Docket19-10242
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 368 B.R. 506 (Andrews v. Wells (In Re Wells)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrews v. Wells (In Re Wells), 368 B.R. 506, 2006 Bankr. LEXIS 4221, 2006 WL 4526426 (La. 2006).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

DOUGLAS D. DODD, Bankruptcy Judge.

Brian R. Andrews sued chapter 7 debtor George Kent Wells for a determination that Wells’s debt to Andrews was excepted from discharge under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(4). 1 Wells denied all liability to Andrews, who before the bankruptcy had obtained a $10,000 state court default judgment against the debtor.

This memorandum opinion explains why $4,665 of Wells’s debt to Andrews is non-dischargeable.

FACTS

Andrews and Wells formed Digital Connections, L.L.C. in July 2001 to open a cell phone retail store and credit repair business in Baton Rouge. Wells became the managing member of Digital Connections 2 though the two men never entered into a written operating agreement. Andrews lived in Fort Worth, Texas and Wells remained in Baton Rouge to run the business.

By agreement, Andrews’s initial capital of $10,000 was deposited into a Hibernia National Bank account. 3 Both Andrews and Wells were authorized signatories on the bank account. Wells’s depletion of the limited liability company’s initial capital is the basis for plaintiffs complaint.

*509 Digital Connections eventually did lease retail space, enter into an agreement to become a Sprint dealer, and also acquire some store trappings, including banners and a display of dummy cell phones. However, the evidence did not establish whether the store ever actually opened its doors to the public.

Wells was the sole manager of Digital Connections and conceded on cross-examination that he was responsible for accounting for its funds. Wells testified that he had arranged to acquire some of the business furnishings, called on clients and paid for unspecified printed marketing materials. He also insisted that he paid three months rent from the Hibernia account but on cross-examination backtracked, eventually conceding that in fact he paid only $1600 to landlord All State Financial in August 2001 for that month’s rent and the lease deposit.

After about four months, and the sale of possibly as few as four cellular telephones (two of which Andrews sold to friends), Digital Connections failed. Its initial capital was depleted and its bank account overdrawn. Wells could not explain at trial how the company’s account came to be overdrawn by late September 2001. He also could not explain the purpose of several transactions appearing on the company’s bank statements. 4

Andrews insisted that he and Wells did not agree that Wells could draw any compensation from the company’s initial capital. According to Andrews, Wells was to receive compensation only after the business became profitable. Wells insisted that he was entitled to be paid for his services as managing member, despite acknowledging that he and Andrews never agreed on a specific salary. In any case, Wells did not know the total amount Digital Connections paid him before it failed.

Wells wrote numerous checks to himself or to the order of cash. He also agreed that Andrews did not write any checks on the account. Wells identified a group of checks totaling $2,730 payable to him 5 from the limited liability company’s account. Four of the checks, adding up to $555, 6 were drawn after Digital Connections’ checking account had been overdrawn. 7 Although Wells could not identify the specific checks representing compensation, he testified that all the checks were either for his pay or to reimburse him for marketing materials. 8 However, he admitted that Digital Connections never issued a W-2 or 1099 form confirming amounts it paid him, and he acknowledged that he did not report the compensation to the Internal Revenue Service as income for 2001.

Wells never gave Andrews an accounting for his expenditures from the company’s funds but at trial contended that Andrews never asked him for one. Perhaps as justification for this, the defendant explained that he and the plaintiff spoke often by telephone and that Andrews could monitor transactions in the Hibernia account by internet.

*510 In September 2002, having lost his investment, Andrews sued Wells in Louisiana state court to recover his $10,000. 9 His petition alleged that Wells breached his fiduciary responsibilities to Digital Connections and Andrews and that Wells engaged in self-dealing in violation of his duties to Digital Connections and Andrews. Andrews confirmed a $10,000 default judgment against Wells, who had failed to answer Andrews’s petition. 10

ANALYSIS

I. PRECLUSIVE EFFECT OF THE STATE Court Default Judgment

Neither party raised the threshold issue of the preclusive effect of the state court default judgment. The United States Supreme Court has held that issue preclusion 11 principles apply in section 523(a) discharge exception proceedings, 12 though regardless of the preclusive effects of the state court default judgment, this court has exclusive jurisdiction to determine dischargeability of Wells’s debt to Andrews. 13

In considering the preclusive effect of a state court judgment, a federal court must determine what preclusive effect a court of that state would give to the judgment. 14 Thus, this court’s inquiry begins with a review of Louisiana principles of issue preclusion, found in La. R.S. 13:4231. 15 Issue preclusion specifically is governed by La. R.S. 13:4231(3), which provides that a judgment is conclusive in any subsequent action between the plaintiff and the defendant “with respect to any issue actually litigated and determined if its determination was essential to that judgment.” 16 Louisiana courts have held that an issue is “actually litigated” for preclusion purposes when a party raises an issue and a court undertakes a determination of the issue. 17 Under the common law *511 construction of the term “actually litigated,” from which the Louisiana definition is taken, 18

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
368 B.R. 506, 2006 Bankr. LEXIS 4221, 2006 WL 4526426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrews-v-wells-in-re-wells-lamb-2006.