Bartl v. Walsh (In Re Claxton)

76 B.R. 539, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 1249
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedAugust 4, 1987
Docket19-70591
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 76 B.R. 539 (Bartl v. Walsh (In Re Claxton)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bartl v. Walsh (In Re Claxton), 76 B.R. 539, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 1249 (Va. 1987).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

MARTIN V.B. BOSTETTER, Jr., Chief Judge.

This matter arises on the filing herein by the Trustee in Bankruptcy of a “Complaint to Determine Interest in Property, Sell Property Free and Clear of Encumbrances, and for Equitable Subordination.” 1 The property at issue is an improved 7.3-acre lot located in McLean, Virginia, formerly owned by the debtor, Philander P. Claxton, III (“Claxton, III”) and constitutes the sole asset of the estate.

Following a hearing on April 22, 1985, the Court granted the Trustee in Bankruptcy (“trustee”) partial summary judgment on Counts I and II of his complaint. An order was entered determining that defendants Bandierante Corporation (“Bandier-ante”) and Ballantrae Manor had no interest in the property. The order also allowed the property to be sold free and clear of liens and encumbrances, with the liens and encumbrances to attach to the proceeds of sale. 2 Remaining for trial was Count III, which asserted that the liens of the first, second, and third deeds of trust on the property should be equitably subordinated to the interests of all other creditors. The Court may order equitable subordination, *541 argue the plaintiffs, because the holders of the three trusts acted at the direction of Claxton, III “in furtherance of his continuing effort to keep the property out of the bankruptcy estate, unavailable to Claxton, Ill’s creditors, and retain it for the benefit of Claxton, III, those occupying the position of insider to him, and those creditors which he may desire to prefer.” 3

As a preliminary matter at trial on November 13, 1985, counsel for the trustee and for defendants Bandierante and Susan P. Williams advised the Court that the trustee had agreed to dismiss Count III as to the second and third trusts and to pay the second and third trust notes from the proceeds of the sale of the property. 4 Consequently, the only issue litigated at trial was whether the lien of the first trust note held by defendant Ned Walsh (“Walsh”) should be equitably subordinated to the claims of administrative and unsecured creditors.

The evidence presented by the trustee in support of his request for equitable subordination concerned the circumstances surrounding Walsh’s acquisition of his interest in the first trust note, Bandierante’s acquisition of an interest in the same note, and Walsh’s issuance at the direction of Clax-ton, III, of Certificates of Participation in Bandierante’s interest in the note.

Providence Savings & Loan, the original holder of the first trust note, conveyed the note to D. Gay Walde. Walde, in turn conveyed the note to Mrs. Mildred A. Lov-eridge, who in July of 1984 resold the note to Ned Walsh, the defendant herein. Before her conveyance to Walsh, Loveridge transferred the note to an entity named Court of Flags, which in turn transferred the note back to Loveridge.

During his tenure as holder of the first trust note, Walsh has, at the direction of the Bandierante Corporation, issued Certificates of Participation in Bandierante’s share of the note. The debtor, Philander P. Claxton, III, held the office of president of Bandierante, and Walsh acknowledged that the instructions regarding the certificates came from Claxton, III. The origin of Ban-dierante’s alleged share of the note is uncertain; although Philander P. Claxton, Jr., secretary of Bandierante, testified that Bandierante purchased its interest in the note from D. Gay Walde for the sum of $250,000.00, Claxton, Jr.’s testimony was based solely on his conversations with his son, Claxton, III. Claxton, Jr. testified that Bandierante and Loveridge together purchased the note from Walde; the note was transferred from Walde to Loveridge, who paid $150,000.00, “as holder”. Walsh testified that, at the time of his purchase from Loveridge, he understood that he would own only a portion of the note. Walsh, however, could point to no document evidencing Bandierante’s interest in the note; in succession, the endorsements on the note read: Providence Savings and Loan by Vivien M. Harn, D. Gay Walde, Mildred L. Loveridge, I. Vance Henderson, President, Court of Flags Associates, Inc., Mildred L. Loveridge.

In an affidavit dated April 17,1985, Clax-ton, III described the transaction by which Bandierante acquired its interest:

Bandierante purchased the [Providence] note from D. Gay Walde in 1981 for approximately $250,000 and subsequently sold portions of the note.... Mildred Loveridge purchased a $150,000 portion of the Providence note from Ban-dierante in May 1981 and then sold back Bandierante $75,000 of it in a series of transactions between September 1981 and May 1982.

Yet another characterization of Bandier-ante’s participation in the Note is contained in a Trust Agreement between Bandier- *542 ante, Ned Walsh, Emerald Electronics, Inc., and H. Gilman Williams, dated July 16, 1984, under authority of which Walsh issued Certificates of Participation.

As of July 15, 1984, the portions of the Note owned by each of the Owners in the Order they are to be paid is as follows:
Ned Walsh $115,000.00
H. Gilman Williams 50,000.00
Emerald Electronics 75,000.00
Bandierante Corp. 125,000.00 (the balance) 5
... The Owners want the Note to be held in trust for them by the Holder [Ned Walsh], and he agrees to do so under the following terms and conditions:
... 4. The Owners may sell, assign, or transfer their portions of the note by notifying the Holder in writing of their intentions. The Holder will then issue a new Certificate of Participation in favor of the new Owner.

Despite the apparent lack of documentation of the transaction by which Bandier-ante acquired its interest in the note, Walsh issued, at Claxton, Ill’s direction, documents entitled Certificate of Participation which parceled out to others Ban-dierante’s supposed share of the note. The recipients of Certificates were, without exception, claimants against the bankruptcy estate of Claxton, III. The Certificates make no mention that the recipient was to receive a portion of a share held by Ban-dierante. Instead the pertinent portion of these documents recited:

I [as “holder of a promissory note made by Philander P. Claxton, III on August 21, 1978”] certify that as of this date, name is the owner of a amount portion of the Note without the accrual of interest thereon. Said portion shall have preference and priority to other portions of the note except for amount, with respect to the proceeds of sale, retirement or hy-pothecation of the Note.
September 4, 1984
/s/ Ned Walsh, Holder

From these facts the Trustee requests that the court find good cause for equitable subordination of the first deed of trust.

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76 B.R. 539, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 1249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bartl-v-walsh-in-re-claxton-vaeb-1987.