Backlund v. Stanley-Snow (In Re Stanley-Snow)

405 B.R. 11, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 984, 2009 WL 1219943
CourtBankruptcy Appellate Panel of the First Circuit
DecidedMay 6, 2009
DocketBAP No. MB 08-065. Bankruptcy No. 06-11319-WCH. Adversary No. 06-01329-WCH
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 405 B.R. 11 (Backlund v. Stanley-Snow (In Re Stanley-Snow)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Bankruptcy Appellate Panel of the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Backlund v. Stanley-Snow (In Re Stanley-Snow), 405 B.R. 11, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 984, 2009 WL 1219943 (bap1 2009).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Daisy L. Stanley-Snow (the “Debtor”) appeals from the bankruptcy court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of David Baeklund and Sharon Backhand (the “Plaintiffs”) on their claim that a state court judgment in favor of the Plaintiffs was nondischargeable pursuant to § 523(a)(2)(A). 1 The Debtor argues that *15 the bankruptcy court erred in giving a prior state court judgment collateral estop-pel effect, because: (1) a default judgment does not have collateral estoppel effect in a subsequent action; and (2) the standard for establishing a Chapter 93A violation under Massachusetts’ law, which was the basis of the state court judgment, differs from the standard for a claim of nondis-chargeability under § 523(a)(2)(A). For the reasons discussed below, we AFFIRM.

Background

Prior to this bankruptcy case, the Plaintiffs and the Debtor were neighbors. The Debtor lived with her husband, Kevin Snow, her son, Kevin Snow, Jr., and her sister, Martha Stanley. The Debtor owned the driveway paving business known as Main Street Paving, which was operated by her husband. During 2001 and 2002, the Plaintiffs made substantial payments to the Debtor, either directly or through Main Street Paving, or to other family members. The Plaintiffs, who are mentally challenged, assert that they were scammed into making payments for a variety of reasons, including unnecessary driveway paving and landscaping services, the building of a post-9/11 bomb shelter, and several bogus demands for ransom, to obtain the release of the Debtor and her husband from falsely contrived kidnapping situations. The Debtor claimed that the payments were either gifts or payments for services actually rendered.

In 2003, the Plaintiffs brought suit in Essex County Superior Court (the “state court”) against the Debtor, her husband, and her sister (the “Defendants”), alleging unjust enrichment, fraud/misrepresentation, conversion, conspiracy, and violation of the Consumer Protection Act, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 93A (“Chapter 93A”). The Debtor filed an answer to the complaint, the parties conducted extensive discovery, and the matter was set for a trial. When the defendants failed to appear on the first day of trial (although they were subpoenaed by the Plaintiffs, and despite their counsel’s repeated attempts to contact them), the state court defaulted each of the Defendants on all five counts of the complaint. The case then proceeded before a jury for the assessment of damages on the first four counts, with the state court reserving decision on the fifth count, which alleged Chapter 93A violations. Only the Debtor appeared and testified at the damages trial. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the Plaintiffs in the amount of $58,275.00. As to the fifth count, the state court trial judge concluded that the Defendants had violated Chapter 93A, and that treble damages, attorneys’ fees and costs were warranted. Accordingly, judgment was entered against each of the Defendants in the amount of $474,703.46, which included damages, interest, costs, attorneys’ fees and punitive damages (the “State Court Judgment”). The state court also issued an order of execution against each of the Defendants.

In its Findings and Rulings regarding the Chapter 93A count, the state court made the following specific findings:

1. “Main Street Paving” was merely a “d/b/a” for the Debtor. ’
2. The three individual defendants (including the Debtor), “were engaged in willful and knowing common scheme of unfair and deceptive practices designed to steal as much money as they could from the mentally challenged plaintiffs and put it in their own pockets.”
*16 3. “Defendant Kevin Snow and Martha Stanley were overt actors and perpetrators of fraudulent schemes to separate the plaintiffs from their money.” Kevin Snow “unduly influenced and eventually frightened” the plaintiffs into giving him money for the building of a “bomb shelter” for their safety after the events of September 11, 2001, and ultimately built a “worthless structure.” In addition, “Kevin Snow pressured the plaintiffs into having their asphalt driveway resurfaced at an outrageous cost when such work was not required.” Kevin Snow and Martha Stanley also participated in a scheme to extract monies from the plaintiffs for ransom to free the Debtor and her husband from “phony kidnapping situations.”
4. “Defendants Kevin Snow and [the Debtor] either enlisted or encouraged their son to participate in scamming the plaintiffs by having him convince the plaintiffs that they needed a further resurfacing of their driveway at additional cost.”
5. The Debtor “obtained the d/b/a/ Main Street Paving to allow [her husband] to perform paving projects under that name” and her d/b/a “assisted [her husband] in his efforts to defraud the plaintiffs concerning the bomb shelter and paving work.”
6. “[The Debtor] bears responsibility to the [plaintiffs] for allowing Kevin Snow to operate under the d/b/a name when she knew that Kevin Snow was extracting unexplained large sums of money from the [plaintiffs] at' a time when Kevin Snow was feeding a drug habit.”
7. The Debtor’s testimony on the second day of trial, that she knew nothing of her husband’s and sister’s schemes “was not credible,” that “she cashed substantial checks written by the plaintiffs to her ...” and that “she knew what was going on and was perfectly accepting of it and was a willing participant and beneficiary of the plan to separate [the plaintiffs] from their money.”
8.The defendants’ conduct “was unscrupulous, unconscionable and violates all sense of decency and acceptable community standards.”

Shortly thereafter, the Debtor filed a chapter 7 petition. The bankruptcy judge granted the Debtor’s motion to avoid the Plaintiffs’ judicial lien, thereby converting the Plaintiffs’ secured claim into a general unsecured claim.

The Plaintiffs filed an adversary proceeding against the Debtor seeking: (1) a determination that the debt owed to the Plaintiffs as a result of the State Court Judgment is non-dischargeable under § 523(a)(2)(A); (2) an order denying the Debtor a discharge pursuant to § 727(a)(4)(A); (3) a judgment against the Debtor in the amount of $474,703.46, plus legal fees and costs; and (4) an order allowing the Plaintiffs to attach the Debt- or’s real estate for any judgment issued by the bankruptcy court. The Debtor filed an answer to the complaint, discovery ensued, and the Plaintiffs filed a motion for summary judgment on the first four counts of their complaint, which the Debtor opposed.

After a hearing, the bankruptcy judge in a bench ruling, made his findings and conclusions on the record, holding that: (1) the Debtor was collaterally estopped from challenging the State Court Judgment and findings of the state court; and (2) the damages awarded by the state court were nondischargeable under § 523(a)(2). The bankruptcy judge then issued an order granting summary judgment in favor of the Plaintiffs on the first four counts of the *17 complaint. The bankruptcy court order stated: “Hearing held.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
405 B.R. 11, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 984, 2009 WL 1219943, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/backlund-v-stanley-snow-in-re-stanley-snow-bap1-2009.