Beaulac v. Tomsic (Beaulac)

294 B.R. 815, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 703, 2003 WL 21536743
CourtBankruptcy Appellate Panel of the First Circuit
DecidedJuly 2, 2003
DocketBAP No. MW 02-092. Bankruptcy No. 99-40131-HJB
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 294 B.R. 815 (Beaulac v. Tomsic (Beaulac)) 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
Beaulac v. Tomsic (Beaulac), 294 B.R. 815, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 703, 2003 WL 21536743 (bap1 2003).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Before the panel is Chapter 7 debtor Roland' L. Beaulac’s appeal of the bankruptcy court’s order, entered December 10, 2002, approving an amended stipulation of settlement between the Chapter 7 trast-ee, Mr. David Perry, and others. We affirm the bankruptcy court’s order today, and do so without extensive elaboration. Beaulac’s appeal advances arguments he failed to make below. Thus, he has waived them. In any event, we note that his arguments lack convincing force and he lacks standing.

Background

Roland Beaulac filed a voluntary petition for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code 1 on January 7, 1999. His schedules revealed assets valued at $745,024 and liabilities of $1,198,506.60. On November 23, 1999, the case was converted from Chapter 11 to Chapter 7. Tali A. Tomsic was appointed Chapter 7 trustee on November 30, 1999. In January 2001, Beaulac filed schedules for Chapter 7. They disclosed total assets of $1,045,471 and total liabilities of $1,529,639.78.

Mr. Beaulac’s affairs were somewhat complex, mostly in ways we need not examine here. However, among the assets listed in the Chapter 7 schedules was Beaulac’s purported ownership of 25 shares of stock in Can-Am of Webster, Inc., represented to be of “unknown” value. Investigation determined that Beaulac had controlled the affairs of Can-Am since 1989. He had either purchased control of 48 shares, or the shares themselves, from other shareholders of Can-Am that year. 2

David Perry, who claimed to hold 27 shares of Can-Am stock, contended, among other things, that Beaulac had seized corporate control in contravention of Can-Am’s bylaws. Perry also asserted that he had been wrongfully “frozen out” of the corporation’s affairs, that the corporation owed him $60,000 as a valid debt, and that, over time, Beaulac had wrongfully diverted substantial corporate funds.

Trustee Tomsic determined that Can-Am held valuable real property which, if sold, might realize substantial funds for Beaulac’s creditors. She held undisputed title to 25 Can-Am shares, but needed to resolve outstanding issues with Perry and others who claimed to be Can-Am shareholders to effect sale of the corporation’s valuable asset. 3 After extensive negotiations, she and they arrived at a stipulation of settlement which provided, among other things, that Can-Am’s real estate would be *817 sold for a determined amount (or more); that the shareholders, including Perry, would not oppose the sale; that Perry would receive a $60,000 distribution from the sale proceeds, with the balance of his claims allowed as a $60,000 unsecured claim against Beaulac’s estate. They also agreed that two other purported shareholders would be treated as (Beaulac’s) unsecured creditors under a formula whereby they would obtain an initial, early distribution, but then await distributions to other creditors and, ultimately, share pro rata in the estate.

The trustee filed the settlement stipulation in early April 2002, seeking approval from the bankruptcy court. In June 2002, the court authorized the trustee to vote her Can-Am shares in favor of the real estate sale, but her ability to close the sale was stalled while she continued to negotiate the final details of settlement with Perry and others. Hearings on the settlement were continued repeatedly. In December 2002, the trustee sought to amend the settlement stipulation in the face of changed circumstances, including a lately-recorded mortgage (for the benefit of Beaulae or his spouse) against the Can-Am real estate.

The court held a hearing on the stipulation of compromise on December 3, 2002. By that time, the bankruptcy case was nearly three years old. It had been in Chapter 7 for over two years. Beaulae opposed the sale. In a nutshell, he sought to avoid liquidation of Can-Am’s real estate. He asked for additional time to locate cash to pay his creditors in full to eliminate the necessity that the land be sold. Beaulac’s attorney expressed a lack of confidence in the trustee’s ability to liquidate assets efficiently. He stated that Beaulae had a right to be heard in opposition to the settlement and stated, “It has always been our contention that if the assets had been liquidated in a reasonable and timely manner, there would have been significant equity left over for my client with which to effectuate his fresh start .... ” Transcript of hearing conducted December 8, 2002, at 21 (hereafter Tr. at_) (emphasis supplied). After articulating specific complaints about the trustee’s actions, Beaulac’s counsel continued, “[Beau-lac’s] expectation in this case was that he was going to pay his creditors off and that he was going to have money when he was all over with this case. Three years later we are not very close to paying off his creditors, and we are not very close to Mr. Beaulae realizing his equity in this case. And if the sale of Can-Am takes place, it is just going to cut off all of those things and make this case even more complicated and more uncertain.” Tr. at 25. 4

In the end, the court continued consideration of the settlement one last time to provide Beaulae with an opportunity to stave off the sale of Can-Am’s assets. The judge remarked:

The continuance is until December 20[sic]. And Mr. Beaulae has to show me two things: he has to show me, number one, that he has an unconditional commitment for $200,000 from a source that I don’t doubt. A sub part of that is I’d like to know that it’s not coming from his own personal funds. And second — unless they’ve been earned since 1999.
And then second, Mr. Beaulae has to show me where in the estate the trustee is going to be able to find sufficient funds to pay the gross amount of all claims filed in the estate, assuming that *818 the trustee loses the arguments with the other shareholders who have claims against the estate. So if Mr. Beaulac says well, okay, here’s $200,000 from this place and here is I don’t know, $300,000 in assets that the trustee can go and get without substantial risk,’ then I’ll seriously consider denying these proposed settlements. But if it isn’t that clean — for example, if Mr. Beaulac tells me to find, tells the trustee to find $100,000 or $140,000 and I think it was from somebody who just showed up after six years, then that’s not a clean amount of money. Then I don’t have any option but to take the Trustee, at least partially out of her misery and allow these settlements to go forward. December 10, 11:00. It’s going to be a short hearing, I think.

Tr. at 35-36.

As the hearing came to a close, the court reemphasized that Beaulac would either provide the trustee with firm assurances of sufficient funds to pay all claims, or the settlement would be approved. The judge explained what might happen if Beaulac came up with the funds:

Well, the suggestion that Mr. Weinberg initiated and then I approved was that Mr. Beaulac has to provide the estate with a source of money in which to pay all the claims in full. Now at that point the trustee has all that money. Now it goes through the claims review process, and if there are claims against Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
294 B.R. 815, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 703, 2003 WL 21536743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beaulac-v-tomsic-beaulac-bap1-2003.