Carter Engineering Co. v. Carter (In Re Carter)

236 B.R. 173, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 876, 1999 WL 528861
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 21, 1999
Docket19-11230
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 236 B.R. 173 (Carter Engineering Co. v. Carter (In Re Carter)) 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
Carter Engineering Co. v. Carter (In Re Carter), 236 B.R. 173, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 876, 1999 WL 528861 (Pa. 1999).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION 1

JUDITH K. FITZGERALD, Bankruptcy Judge.

Before the court is the complaint of Carter Engineering Company seeking to deny Debtor Charles Carter 2 a discharge under the provisions of § 727(a)(2)(A) and § 727(a)(5). In addition, the complaint seeks a declaration that the debt owed by Debtor to Carter Engineering Company is nondischargeable pursuant to the provisions of 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2)(A) and § 523(a)(4). Foj* the reasons which follow, *177 the Debtor’s discharge will be denied under § 727(a)(5) and § 727(a)(2)(A).

Based upon the testimony of the witnesses, the following are relevant facts. In 1989, William Daniel Carter and his father, George William Carter, owned Carter Engineering and signed a contract to sell all their stock in their company to C3 Enterprises, Inc. (C3). Although C3 paid part of what it owed, by 1991 it failed to complete the deal, leaving William Daniel Carter unpaid for his 49 percent interest. Debtor was a shareholder in C3 from its beginning. C3 was organized as a holding company to acquire all of the stock of Carter Engineering. C3 had no operations. The other shareholders of C3 at its inception were Thomas Coffey and William Castine.

In 1991, C3 filed a bankruptcy petition in California. To preserve its interest in Carter Engineering, C3 wanted to complete its purchase. The bankruptcy judge required C3 to establish an escrow in an amount sufficient to finish the payments. C3 needed $300,000 for the escrow. Debt- or contributed $200,000 from an IRA that he owned and delivered it to C3 for its use in funding the escrow. 3 Debtor knew that in so doing he ran the risk that he would incur penalties for early withdrawal.

Although he testified that he did not demand repayment within the appropriate time period to avoid the penalty, nonetheless, within that time he was repaid. He received a payment of $40,000 (which is not at issue herein) from one of the directors (Castine). In addition, his co-shareholders in C3, which had control of Carter Engineering, caused a wire transfer of $140,000.00 from the account of Carter Engineering to Debtor. 4 The wire transfer took place on or about July 23, 1992. Debtor did not consider this transfer to be a loan. He considered it to be a repayment for the $140,000 escrow contribution. 5 Nonetheless, on or about July 30, 1992, Debtor executed a promissory note on the stationery of Carter Engineering in favor of Carter Engineering for the $140,-000.00 it had transferred to him. The note Debtor executed bore interest at the rate of 9 percent on any unpaid balance but contained no specified date for repayment and, therefore, was payable on demand. Debtor deposited the $140,000.00 into personal accounts and when he had collected all he could, he made a collective deposit back into an IRA account. Before August of 1992, largely as a result of the $140,-000.00 paid to him by Carter Engineering, Debtor replaced his entire IRA account.

The evidence established that there was no corporate purpose for Carter Engineering to have loaned Debtor $140,000.00. In addition, no evidence was produced that its Board of Directors had authorized this transaction which, Debtor concedes, was out of the ordinary course of its business. The evidence established that the only purpose was to repay Debtor for the amount he had taken from his IRA account to fund the escrow C3 needed to could complete its purchase of the stock of Carter Engineering.

Debtor and William Castine testified that they intended at some unspecified time in the future to operate the corporations, Carter Engineering and C3, as though they were one entity. Both Debtor and Castine testified that because of their intent to change the form of business operations in the future, they regarded Debt- or’s loan to C3 and Carter Engineering’s transfer to Debtor as offsetting debts that were legitimate business concerns for both *178 corporations. There was no evidence that the corporations were ever merged, or that C3 had any business other than holding the stock of Carter Engineering.

On or about August 3, 1992, C3 signed a note to Debtor for $355,917.78 at 9 percent interest. This note was signed by the other shareholders, Castine and Coffey, allegedly to recognize funds Debtor had previously advanced to C3 over and above the loan from his IRA. C3’s bankruptcy apparently did not go well. At the same time, Carter Engineering was losing money. Despite the losses, in February of 1994, Castine and Coffey were authorized bonuses of $160,000 by Carter Engineering’s Board of Directors (Coffey, Castine and Derringer) which they assigned to Debtor to offset the debt that Debtor owed to Carter Engineering pursuant to the promissory note dated July 30, 1992. The evidence substantiated that at the time, Carter Engineering was insolvent and Castine and Coffey were not entitled to bonuses. In March of 1994, well within the preference period for the bonuses and assignment, Carter Engineering filed bankruptcy. Debtor testified that he could not state what, if any, consideration he gave to Castine and Coffey in exchange for this assignment.

In August of 1994, William Daniel Carter purchased Carter Engineering from the trustee in bankruptcy. In investigating the finances of Carter Engineering, William Daniel Carter uncovered the fact that the July 23, 1992, transfer of $140,-000.00 had been made from Carter Engineering to the Debtor with no corporate purpose. He sued on behalf of Carter Engineering and won a judgment against Debtor. 6 Judgment of $170,264.36 was entered on May 23, 1995, at a time when there was at least $190,000.00 in the Debt- or’s IRA account.

Beginning in June of 1995 and through September of 1996, Debtor withdrew all but about $55,000.00 from his IRA. He testified that he used some of the IRA disbursements for the tax liabilities incurred for early withdrawal penalties, for personal purposes and for legal fees. Legal fees totaled over $98,000 and have never been fully itemized. He testified that he purchased a very expensive, custom-made stereo cabinet for his home. He was unable to explain the purpose for, or what use was made of, a large percentage of his withdrawal — nearly $55,000.00. Debtor testified that he was unemployed for a brief part of this time and was withdrawing money from his IRA for living expenses. William Daniel Carter points to the surreptitious manner in which Debtor withdrew from the IRA. Although the IRA was in a broker’s account, Debtor did not transfer funds to cash or to his own checking account. Rather, he had checks issued to relatives, who then cashed checks on his behalf. Debtor acknowledged that he did the withdrawals this way to avoid Carter Engineering’s attachments on his bank accounts.

The evidence substantiated that Debtor systematically dissipated the funds in his IRA to support a lavish life style and to frustrate Carter Engineering’s attempt to execute on the judgment it had obtained in May of 1995. By January of 1997 there was essentially nothing left in Debtor’s IRA account.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 B.R. 173, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 876, 1999 WL 528861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-engineering-co-v-carter-in-re-carter-paeb-1999.