Barnhill v. Vaudreuil (In Re Busconi)

177 B.R. 153, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 124, 26 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 815, 1995 WL 49288
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedFebruary 3, 1995
Docket19-40387
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 177 B.R. 153 (Barnhill v. Vaudreuil (In Re Busconi)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnhill v. Vaudreuil (In Re Busconi), 177 B.R. 153, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 124, 26 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 815, 1995 WL 49288 (Mass. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

JAMES F. QUEENAN, Jr., Chief Judge.

James H. Barnhill (the “Trustee”) brings this complaint against Elaine J. Vaudreuil (the “Defendant”), the former wife of Lewis J. Busconi (the “Debtor”), to avoid as preferential certain transfers made pursuant to the parties’ divorce judgment. All but one of the transfers occurred between ninety days and one year prior to the Debtor’s chapter 11 filing, so they are voidable only if the Defendant was then an “insider.” The Trustee moves for partial summary judgment on the insider issue and for full summary judgment on a transfer made two days before the bankruptcy filing. I rule in favor of the Defendant except as to that last transfer. The Defendant was not an insider at the time of the earlier transactions because (i) she was not a “relative” of the Debtor even during the period before their divorce judgment became absolute, and (ii) she did not have the type of relationship with the Debtor required of one who is not a relative. I also hold the conveyance of the parties’ marital home is not voidable for the additional reason the transfer was not for an antecedent debt.

I. FACTS

The facts are not at issue. After having lived with the Debtor for several years, the Defendant in 1981 pressed the Debtor to marry her. The Debtor agreed, but insisted she sign an antenuptial agreement so that his obligations would be fixed in the event of a divorce. They had each been previously married and divorced. On May 9, 1981, the day before their marriage, the parties signed an antenuptial agreement. The Debtor promised in the agreement to make the following payments and transfers to the Defendant if there were a later divorce: (i) a lump sum payment of $250,000, (ii) transfer of the marital home then worth $750,000 and furnishings at 44 Oak Hill Road, Southboro, Massachusetts, (iii) payment of any federal or state income taxes incurred by the Defendant due to receipt of the foregoing, and (iv) monthly payments at an annual rate of $40,-000, adjusted for changes in the cost of living, which were to survive any remarriage by the Defendant. As consideration for these obligations, the Defendant waived her right to any other claims for alimony or property.

The antenuptial agreement was prophetic. The Defendant filed a complaint for divorce on September 27, 1988. The divorce proceeding was bitter and protracted. The Defendant sought to set aside the antenuptial agreement on various grounds including coercion and fraud. She placed a lis pendens on record giving notice of her claim to the marital home. Judge Arline S. Rotman, of the Massachusetts Probate and Family Court, upheld the agreement. The judge found the agreement was fair and reasonable both at the time of its execution and at the time the divorce petition was filed. The judge took into account that the parties had *156 no children of their marriage and the Defendant was making a good living in her own real estate business, which she operated separately from the Debtor’s more extensive real estate and business operations.

On June 11,1990, Judge Rotman entered a divorce judgment “nisi” which was declared to become “absolute” ninety days later. 1 Judge Rotman ordered the Debtor to honor his obligations under the antenuptial agreement by paying $250,000, making the agreed monthly payments and transferring the marital home and furnishings in Southboro, free of liens and encumbrances. The judgment incorporated the antenuptial agreement by reference but stated the agreement was not merged into the judgment.

The Debtor was painfully (presumably for both of them) slow in making the $250,000 lump sum payment and in honoring his obligation to transfer the home. He paid $104,-000 on August 30, 1990, which was within the ninety day nisi period. On September 20th, after the divorce judgment became absolute, he transferred the Southboro home to the Defendant, but he failed to pay off the mortgage on the property. The Defendant hauled him into court. On October 29, 1990, Judge Rotman found the Debtor guilty of contempt and ordered him to pay, by November 5th, the remaining $146,000 due on his $250,000 obligation, plus interest. 2 On November 5th, the Debtor appeared in court with a $75,000 check which he delivered to the Defendant’s lawyer. Judge Rotman found the Debtor had not purged himself of contempt and sentenced him to jail. Before the day was out, the Debtor paid the $75,524 principal and interest balance due on the $250,000 debt. On February 5, 1991, the Debtor finally paid the balance due on the Southboro mortgage by paying $24,012.79 to Fleet Bank, the mortgagee. Two days later, on February 7, 1991, the Debtor filed a chapter 11 petition with this court.

In summary, the Trustee seeks to avoid the following transfers falling into the categories indicated:

Date Within Divorce Nisi Period After Nisi Period Within 90 Days Prior to Filing

8/30/90 $104,000

9/20/90 Home & Contents

11/5/90 $75,000

11/5/90 $75,524

2/5/91 $24,012.79

II. DEFENDANT AS “RELATIVE” DURING NISI PERIOD

The elements of a voidable preference, subject to various defenses not relevant here, are set forth below. 3 If the transferee is an “insider,” section 547 of the Code permits the avoidance of transfers made between ninety days and one year before the filing of the *157 bankruptcy petition. 4 The Trustee takes the position there can be no question the Defendant was an insider prior to September 10, 1990, when the divorce judgment became absolute, so that the August 30th payment of $104,000 is clearly voidable if the Debtor was then insolvent. I disagree.

The term “insider” includes a “relative of the debtor_” 5 A “relative,” in turn, “means individual related by affinity or consanguinity within the third degree as determined by the common law....” 6 There being no blood relationship between the parties, the question is whether the Debtor and Defendant were related by “affinity.” A relationship by affinity, under either the common law or civil law, is the relationship enjoyed between one spouse and the blood relatives of the other spouse. 7 Each spouse is related by affinity to the blood relatives of the other in the same degree the other is related to them by blood. 8 Although the relationship by affinity is based upon a treatment of the two spouses as one, they are not related to each other by affinity. 9 The relationship of husband and wife being by marriage rather than affinity, statutes of descent and distribution typically make specific reference to the “husband” or “wife” of the decedent. 10

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 B.R. 153, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 124, 26 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 815, 1995 WL 49288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnhill-v-vaudreuil-in-re-busconi-mab-1995.