Burm v. Johnson (In re Burm)

554 B.R. 5, 2016 Bankr. LEXIS 2563
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJuly 12, 2016
DocketCase No. 14-12139-HJB; Adversary Proceeding No. 14-1131
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 554 B.R. 5 (Burm v. Johnson (In re Burm)) 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
Burm v. Johnson (In re Burm), 554 B.R. 5, 2016 Bankr. LEXIS 2563 (Mass. 2016).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

Henry J. Boroff, United States Bankruptcy Judge

Before the Court after trial is a complaint filed by Susan D. Burm, the debtor in the underlying Chapter 11 bankruptcy case (the “Debtor”), objecting to two claims filed by creditor Raymond Piling Products, Inc. (“RPP”). The Debtor argues that RPP does not hold valid claims against her because the underlying bases for those claims, two promissory notes and accompanying mortgages, are void and unenforceable for various reasons, including, inter alia, that they violate the federal Equal Credit Opportunity Act and the Massachusetts usury statute.

I. FACTS AND TRAVEL OF THE CASE1

In 1979, the Debtor’s husband, Joseph Burm (“Joseph”) organized Tuckerman Steel Fabricators, Inc. (“Tuckerman Steel”), a now-defunct Massachusetts corporation that fabricated steel structures for use in the construction industry. At all relevant times, Joseph served as Tucker-man Steel’s president and sole shareholder. The Debtor was not a director, shareholder, or employee of Tuckerman Steel and had no involvement in Tuckerman Steel or any other steel business at that time.

Raymond Johnson (“Johnson”) is and has been president and owner of RPP (together with Johnson, the “Defendants”) [9]*9since 1996. RPP is a steel manufacturer agent, buying and selling used steel. From 2005 through 2012, RPP and Tuck-erman Steel worked on several projects together, with RPP both selling steel to Tuckerman Steel and providing Tucker-man Steel with subcontracting jobs. Eventually, RPP began providing financial assistance to Tuckerman Steel. On numerous occasions between 2005 and 2012, Joseph and Tuckerman Steel’s general manager, Harry Webster (“Webster”), approached Johnson seeking financing for certain Tuckerman Steel projects. Typically, Joseph or Webster would e-mail Johnson with a proposal for RPP to purchase certain of Tuckerman Steel’s third-party invoices at a discount. On some occasions, Tuckerman Steel arranged for its customer to pay RPP directly. On other transactions, RPP relied on Tucker-man Steel to collect the payment from the customer and forward it to RPP.

In September of 2009, Johnson became aware of occasions when Tuckerman Steel failed to remit to RPP customer payments that Tuckerman Steel had received on invoices RPP had purchased. As Joseph testified with regard to payments on invoices sold to RPP, “[sjometimes we gave it to Mr. Johnson, sometimes we didn’t.” Dec. 15, 2015 Trial Transcript 22:17-23:1. Toward the end of 2010, when a number of Tuckerman Steel checks to RPP had been returned for insufficient funds, Johnson called for a meeting with Joseph and Webster. At that meeting, the parties came to an understanding that Tuckerman Steel owed approximately $2 million to RPP and RPP would not continue any further financing activities.

After that meeting, Johnson discovered that Tuckerman Steel had collected and failed to turn over yet another payment on an invoice purchased by RPP. On February 22, 2011, Johnson met with Joseph and again stated that RPP would no longer engage in financing transactions with Tuckerman Steel. Furthermore, Johnson said he intended to notify certain general contractors working with Tuckerman Steel that Joseph had been lying and stealing from RPP. In lieu of such drastic measures, however, Johnson alternatively proposed to convert all of Tuckerman Steel’s obligations to RPP into a 15-year note secured by a mortgage on property that Johnson believed was owned by Joseph on Martha’s Vineyard, at 65 Slough Cove Road, Edgartown, Massachusetts (the “Vineyard Property”).

Johnson soon learned, however, that Joseph was not the titleholder of the Vineyard Property. Instead, the Vineyard Property was owned by the Slough Cove Trust (the “Trust”), a nominee trust under which Joseph and the Debtor were co-trustees. After reviewing a copy of the deed reflecting that title to the Vineyard Property was held by the Trust, Johnson asked that the promissory note and mortgage also be signed by the Debtor.

On February 24, 2011, Joseph and the Debtor executed a note (the “First Vineyard Note”), in the principal amount of $2,077,886.39 made payable to “Raymond B. Johnson, III, individually and/or as President of Raymond Piling Products, Inc.,” with a stated interest rate of 5 percent per annum and a stated default rate upon demand of 8 percent. PLEx. 1. Although the First Vineyard Note identifies the makers as “Joseph W. Burm, Individually, Susan D: Burm, Individually, and Joseph W. Burm and Susan D. Burm as Trustees of Slough Cove Trust” (emphasis supplied), it is signed by “Joseph W. Burm, Individually and as Trustee of Slough Cove Trust” and “Susan D. Burm, Trustee of Slough Cove Trust.” However, the associated mortgage (the “First Vineyard Mortgage”) (executed the same day [10]*10in favor of Johnson, “individually and/or as President of Raymond Piling Products, Inc.”), is signed by “Joseph W. Burm, Individually and as Trustee of Slough Cove Trust” and “Susan D, Burm, Individually and as Trustee of Slough Cove Trust.” Pl.Ex. 2 (emphasis supplied).

In early 2012, Tuckerman Steel ceased its operations. Miraculously, however, the Debtor — with no previous role whatsoever in the steel business — incorporated a new steel fabricating business, Boston Bridge & Steel, Inc. (“BBS”) which, coincidentally, hired Joseph as' one of its employees. Like a phoenix rising from the ashes, BBS occupied the same space that had previously been occupied by Tuckerman Steel and hired some of the same employees that had previously worked at Tuckerman Steel, including Tuckerman Steel’s former bookkeeper, Debbie Driscoll (“Driscoll”), According to the Debtor, the Debtor performed administrative functions for BBS, such as communicating with engineers and reviewing payroll, while Joseph was responsible for sales. Despite Johnson’s negative experiences with Tuckerman Steel, he assisted BBS in early 2012 during its nascent stage by providing BBS with a number of welding jobs that served as BBS’s sole source of income.

On September 27, 2011, the Vineyard Property was transferred from the Trust to the Debtor individually. Seven payments were made on the First Vineyard Note, but no payments were made after October 15, 2011. On December 22, 2011, Johnson sent Joseph an e-mail with the subject line “Joe please confirm you have forwarded to your wife Thanks.” (sic) In that e-mail, Johnson explained that the mortgage payments on the First Vineyard Note were two months in arrears. He offered to provide the Burms with a six-month forbearance period during which Johnson would refrain from foreclosing upon the First Vineyard Note and freeze principal and interest payments in order to give the Burms an opportunity to sell the Vineyard Property and pay off the note. In exchange for agreeing to forbear on collection under the First Vineyard Note, Johnson requested that an additional $186,000.00 be secured by a mortgage on the Vineyard Property, representing amounts paid by RPP on behalf of Tucker-man Steel subsequent to the execution of the First Vineyard Note and Mortgage.

The Debtor testified that she wanted to take advantage of the offered forbearance. On January 20, 2012, Joseph (individually and on behalf of Tuckerman Steel) and the Debtor (individually) ' signed a ■ second promissory note in the amount of $192,271.68 (the “Second Vineyard Note”) made payable to “Raymond Piling Products, Inc. and Raymond B. Johnson, III.” PLEx. 3.

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Bluebook (online)
554 B.R. 5, 2016 Bankr. LEXIS 2563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burm-v-johnson-in-re-burm-mab-2016.