Bel-Bel International Corp. v. Barnett Bank of South Florida, N.A.

158 B.R. 252, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11919, 1993 WL 327825
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedAugust 17, 1993
Docket89-2510-CIV
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 158 B.R. 252 (Bel-Bel International Corp. v. Barnett Bank of South Florida, N.A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bel-Bel International Corp. v. Barnett Bank of South Florida, N.A., 158 B.R. 252, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11919, 1993 WL 327825 (S.D. Fla. 1993).

Opinion

ORDER ON MOTIONS TO STAY PROCEEDINGS AND TO DISMISS COUNTERCLAIMS

NESBITT, District Judge.

This cause comes to the Court upon the following motions: (1) Defendants’ Steven Torcise and Sam Torcise ( Brothers ) Motion to Stay Proceedings; (2) Plaintiff Bel-Bel International Corp.’s (“Bel-Bel”) Motion to Dismiss Counterclaim by Defendants Community Bank of Homestead, Kenneth Graves and Vito Strano; (3) Plaintiff Bel-Bel’s Motion to Dismiss Counterclaim by the “Brothers”.

Factual and Procedural Background

This action is based on Plaintiff Bel-Bel’s alleged security interest in crops grown by Defendant Joseph A. Torcise, individually and d/b/a Joe Torcise Farms and/or Tijo-dee Farms. Bel-Bel initiated suit on Nov. 13, 1989. 1 The Court dismissed the initial complaint and two subsequent amended complaints for failure to properly plead diversity jurisdiction. The operative pleading at this stage is the Third Amended Complaint.

Bel-Bel is a Panamanian bank whose principal place of business is in New York, N.Y. Bel-Bel alleges: In January and February 1988, Joseph A. Torcise individually and d/b/a Joe Torcise Farms and/or Tijodee Farms executed two promissory notes to Bel-Bel and executed two loans totalling $2.5 million in value. Bel-Bel alleges the loans were secured by Torcise’s 1988-89 tomato crop. The security agreements covered the crops and up to $2.5 million in proceeds from the sale of the crops. By agreement between Bel-Bel and *254 Torcise, the proceeds were to be deposited into designated accounts at Community Bank of Homestead and Barnett Bank of South Florida. 2 Bel-Bel claims it perfected its security interest under Florida law, which was superior to that of any other party’s interest.

Bel-Bel claims that Torcise failed to comply with the terms of the loans and promissory notes, but instead engaged in a fraudulent scheme to avoid payment of Bel-Bel’s security interest. Some co-defendants are alleged to have participated in some portions of the scheme, others are alleged to have participated in other portions of the scheme. Most pertinent to the motions now before this Court is Bel-Bel’s claim that Torcise’s 1988-89 tomato crop was sold by defendant Growers and that proceeds which were to be deposited in special, designated accounts at Community and Barnett banks were instead diverted into a “lock box” account controlled by Community. Bel-Bel maintains that after certain payments were made to other secured creditors, 60 percent of the proceeds remaining in the “lock box” account, or $3.5 3 million, was extracted by Community to repay loans made by Community to Defendants Graves, Strano and “Brothers.” The other 40 percent of the remaining proceeds are claimed by Bel-Bel to have been used by Torcise in his tomato farming operations.

Bel-Bel further alleges that the money ostensibly loaned by Community to Strano, Graves and Brothers was instead immediately transferred by those defendants to Torcise, that the loans were made to those defendants because Community had reached the regulatory limit of loans it could make directly to Torcise, that Torcise was overdrawn on his Community Bank checking account by approximately $3.5 million, and that those loans were arranged specifically to cover Torcise’s overdrafts. Bel-Bel further claims that the loans to Graves, Strano and Brothers were secured by the same 1988-89 tomato crop proceeds Torcise used to secure his $2.5 million in loans from Bel-Bel, and that defendants knew of Bel-Bel’s security interest in the crop proceeds when the loans were made.

Shortly after this action commenced, Tor-cise and Growers on December 8, 1989 sought relief and protection from creditors in U.S. Bankruptcy Court under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. In re: Growers Packing Company, et al., No. 89-16287-BKC-AJC. The bankruptcy court (Cristol, A.J.) approved an Amended Joint Liquidating Plan of Reorganization on March 29, 1991. The plan included appointment of a three-person creditor’s committee of unsecured creditors to oversee the plan and authorized Torcise and Growers, as debtors in possession, to maintain adversary proceedings against Community seeking return of the $3.5 million extracted from the “lock box.” The debtors’ in possession actions against Community, filed Dec. 12, 1990, were based on federal bankruptcy law claims that the $3.5 million paid to Community constituted an unlawful preference and fraudulent conveyance. The adversary proceedings by the debtors in possession against Community were consolidated before U.S. District Court Judge James W. Kehoe, Growers Packing Co. v. Community Bank of Homestead, 134 B.R. 438 (S.D.Fla.1991). On June 24, 1992, the debtors in possession recovered a verdict and judgment for the $3.5 million paid to Community, which judgment is currently before the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals.

Following bankruptcy court approval of the reorganization plan, Bel-Bel filed a timely complaint objecting to the discharge-ability of debt 4 , alleging grounds to exclude the obligations due Bel-Bel from the discharge. Unlike the debtors’ in possession claims under federal bankruptcy law, Bel-Bel’s action against Torcise, Growers, Community, Brothers and the other defen *255 dants presently is based on state tort claims, including conversion, unlawful interference in a business relationship and fraud.

On November 4, 1991, The bankruptcy court identified Bel-Bel as a secured creditor and granted Bel-Bel leave from the automatic stay provision of the bankruptcy code, 11 U.S.C. § 362, to pursue its claims against the debtors in possession in this court. The bankruptcy court also stayed Bel-Bel’s adversary proceeding regarding dischargeability of the debtors’ in possession obligations to Bel-Bel. In its order granting Bel-Bel relief from the automatic stay, the bankruptcy court stated that the Plaintiff had already endured “unconscionable” delay in its efforts to obtain recovery, while the debtors had “had the benefit of the automatic stay” under § 362 for some 20 months. The bankruptcy court noted that while stayed from pursuing its claim against the debtors in possession, Bel-Bel had diligently pressed its claims against the alleged co-tortfeasors in this court. The bankruptcy court further noted that Bel-Bel’s complaint to determine the dischargeability of the debt was “well pled and, if proven, would exclude the debt due Bel-Bel from the operation of a discharge.” 5

It is important to note here that Community has previously sought leave from both the bankruptcy court and the district court in the Growers Packing Co. case to join Bel-Bel as an indispensable party. Both courts denied Community’s motions for joinder.

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158 B.R. 252, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11919, 1993 WL 327825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bel-bel-international-corp-v-barnett-bank-of-south-florida-na-flsd-1993.