Ben Franklin Hotel Associates v. Gilbert (In Re 815 Walnut Associates)

183 B.R. 423, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 870, 1995 WL 382273
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 26, 1995
Docket19-10923
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 183 B.R. 423 (Ben Franklin Hotel Associates v. Gilbert (In Re 815 Walnut Associates)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ben Franklin Hotel Associates v. Gilbert (In Re 815 Walnut Associates), 183 B.R. 423, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 870, 1995 WL 382273 (Pa. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

STEPHEN RASLAVICH, Bankruptcy Judge.

Introduction.

Before the Court is yet another Motion in this contentious adversary proceeding between Ben Franklin Hotel Associates (the “Debtor”) and one of its two general partners, CAA/Kennington Properties (“Kenning-ton”), on the one hand (collectively the “Mov-ants”) and unsecured claimant Alfred A. Gilbert (“Gilbert”), on the other hand. At bottom, the underlying litigation involves Gilbert’s claim of entitlement to a share of a certain fee payable by the Debtor under the terms of a construction contract. The instant Motion seeks 1) an Order judicially estopping Gilbert from asserting positions in this litigation contrary to positions which the Debtor and Kennington assert were taken by Gilbert in a 1987 District Court litigation, and 2) an Order both compelling Gilbert to provide supplemental responses to interrogatory answers and imposing sanctions against Gilbert in connection with his initial, allegedly deficient, discovery responses. Oral argument was held June 1, 1995, and both matters have been extensively briefed by the parties. For the reasons hereinafter discussed, the Movants’ request relative to judi- *424 eial estoppel will be granted. This disposition, from the Court’s perspective, will likely render moot many of the pending disputes between the parties with respect to discovery, and in fact portends disposition of the substantive claim at issue. Accordingly, rather than disposing of the discovery issues herein, the Court will reserve them for the time being and hold a supplemental pre-trial conference to consider the future course of this litigation.

Background

Certain factual background relevant to the parties’ dispute is by now well familiar to the Court. It has been detailed in several previous opinions and is again, for convenience, repeated here:

The Debtor is a Pennsylvania Limited Partnership formed to own, refurbish and develop the Ben Franklin Hotel, a well known landmark located at the corner of 9th and Chestnut Streets in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. In October of 1984, the Debtor entered into a written agreement with Altman Bros, Inc. (“ABI”) for extensive renovation work at the Hotel property. (the “Contractor Agreement.”) Subject, of course, to many terms and conditions set forth in its text, the Contractor Agreement provided for payment of a substantial fee (the “Contractor Fee”) by the Debtor to ABI. On the same date as the Contractor Agreement was executed, ABI entered into a separate written agreement (the “Indemnity Agreement”) with the Claimant Gilbert, and others, which agreement created various obligations of indemnity for certain of the parties thereto, vis a vis, the Contractor Agreement. The Indemnity Agreement further provided for payment of the Contractor Fee over to the indemnitors as and when the same was collected from the Owner (i.e, the Debtor) by the Contractor, ABI.
The Contractor Fee was never paid by the Debtor to ABI and the Debtor maintains that none is owed. In this regard, the Debtor’s Summary Judgment Motion has appended to it a 1993 Settlement Agreement that arose from an arbitration proceeding ostensibly convened to address this very question. The Settlement Agreement on its face does purport to resolve the issue of the Contractor Fee. Gilbert, however, claims that the arbitration was a sham for a number of reasons, including a commonality of ownership interests among the arbitration petitioner and respondents, and that the Arbitration Settlement Agreement should therefore be disregarded. The arbitration purported to pit the Debt- or/Petitioner, through its sole general partner, CAA/Kennington Properties, against Respondent’s ABI and B.F. General Associates, a Pennsylvania Limited Partnership (“BFG”). 1 BFG is a limited partnership comprised of an entity known as DEVCO (another partnership) and individuals Albert Eisen and Gilbert. The Arbitration Settlement Agreement was signed on behalf of BFG by General Partners, Devco and Eisen only, and not Gilbert. Gilbert accordingly disavows the Settlement Agreement for this reason also. By virtue of Claim # 4 filed in this Bankruptcy case, Gilbert now seeks to litigate his own entitlement to be paid the Contractor Fee.

Certain additional background is essential to an analysis of the present Motion. As noted above, the general partners of BFG are Gilbert, Albert Eisen and an entity known as DEVCO. DEVCO is a limited Partnership, the general partners of which are Berel Altman, Irving Altman and David Altman, (collectively the “Altmans”). These same individuals own and control the above named contractor, ABI. During the course of above referenced renovation work at the hotel property a dispute arose between Gilbert and the Altmans over costs that were being incurred in connection with the construction project. Specifically, there came a time when the Debtor possessed insufficient funds to meet the operating expenses of the hotel and the costs of its renovation work. *425 This produced for the Debtor what are known in the vernacular as “cash shortfalls.” A method adopted by the Debtor to address these cash shortfalls was to issue “cash calls” to its respective general partners, Kenning-ton and BFG. On receipt of such a cash call, BFG would in turn raise its share of the Debtor’s cash shortfall through a cash call of its own to its general partners Gilbert, Eisen and DEVCO.

As the renovation project proceeded, the Debtors’s cash shortfalls grew ever larger. This prompted a protest from Gilbert to the Altmans over the latter’s supervision of the construction project through their company ABI. The upshot of this protest and subsequent negotiations between Gilbert and the Altmans, was an agreement between the two which provided, inter alia, that Gilbert would be relieved from an obligation to fund future cash shortfalls, but in exchange would have his percentage partnership interest in BFG reduced. Prior to consummation, this agreement somehow went awry, prompting Gilbert to initiate a lawsuit in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania at Civil Action No. 87-4797, styled: Alfred A Gilbert v. DEVCO, Berel P. Altman, Irving Altman, David Altman, and B.F. General Associates. In this suit, Gilbert sought essentially to have the District Court confirm the terms of Gilbert’s agreement with the Altmans (as he understood it) over their alleged refusal to honor the agreement. A copy of Gilbert’s complaint in the foregoing litigation is attached as Exhibit F to the Motion now before this Court.

The Debtor and Kennington argue that a fair reading of Gilbert’s 1987 complaint suggests that at that time it was Gilbert’s position that the Debtor’s cash shortfalls were attributable to construction cost overruns which, in turn, were attributable to gross mismanagement of the renovation project on the part of the Altmans and/or ABI. This they assert is diametrically opposite to the position Gilbert now advances to the Court, which is that the cash shortfalls were attributable to 1) excessive hotel operating expenses, or 2) construction costs related to latent defects or owner authorized changes.

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183 B.R. 423, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 870, 1995 WL 382273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ben-franklin-hotel-associates-v-gilbert-in-re-815-walnut-associates-paeb-1995.