Cedar Tide Corp. v. Mintz (In Re Cedar Tide Corp.)

164 B.R. 808, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3073, 1994 WL 85691
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMarch 10, 1994
DocketCV 92-5138 (ADS). Bankruptcy No. 187-71386-352 (MAH)
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 164 B.R. 808 (Cedar Tide Corp. v. Mintz (In Re Cedar Tide Corp.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cedar Tide Corp. v. Mintz (In Re Cedar Tide Corp.), 164 B.R. 808, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3073, 1994 WL 85691 (E.D.N.Y. 1994).

Opinion

DECISION AND ORDER

SPATT, District Judge.

Sidney Mintz, an attorney, appeals from the September 1, 1992 judgment by United States Bankruptcy Judge Marvin Holland which imposed sanctions against him in the amount of $35,000. Those sanctions were assessed as the result of an adversary proceeding brought in the Bankruptcy Court by the law firm of Pinks, Brooks, Stern & Ar-beit based upon six purportedly frivolous motions filed by defendant Mintz on behalf of his client, Chandler’s Cove Ltd.

This Court previously signed an order to show cause pursuant to Fed.R.Bank.Proc. 8005. After oral argument on the motion, the Court granted that portion of the appellant Mintz’s application which requested a stay of the enforcement of the judgment in the adversary proceeding pending the hearing and determination of this appeal.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The appellant Sidney Mintz has been an attorney since 1955. His counsel states that the appellant has never been the subject of any prior disciplinary proceeding. In order to fully comprehend the nature of the action now before the Court, it is necessary to review certain information concerning both the debtor in the bankruptcy proceeding, namely, Cedar Tide Corporation (“Cedar Tide”) and the relationship of Sidney Mintz to the Cedar Tide bankruptcy proceeding.

Apparently, Cedar Tide’s primary asset is a forty (40) acre parcel of undeveloped land — waterfront property on Mt. Sinai Harbor. The two shareholders of Cedar Tide are Elizabeth Chandler, a 90 year-old widow, and her son Frederick Chandler.

Counsel for the appellant states that in 1983 or 1984, Elizabeth Chandler entered into one or more stipulations in state court in lieu of a judgment of foreclosure by which she agreed, on behalf of Cedar Tide, to sell the 40-acre parcel in Mount Sinai to Mint Factors, a partnership which held mortgages on the property and on which no payment had been made. According to counsel, before a judgment and order could be entered to effectuate the state court’s decision that *811 Mint Factors was entitled to the property, Cedar Tide filed a petition for reorganization under Chapter 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code on December 10, 1985. Thereafter,

“Harold Spivack, the attorney for [Cedar Tide] at the time, subsequently moved for leave to withdraw as counsel in the Bankruptcy Court, citing the fact that'the principals of [Cedar Tide] had concealed from him the fact that [Cedar Tide] was a defunct entity which had been dissolved by the State of New York for failure to pay its franchise taxes for a period of more than six years, and expressing his belief that the bankruptcy was consequently invalid because under New York law a dissolved corporation could only liquidate its assets and wind up its affairs. A deed was recorded in the Suffolk County Clerk’s office on March 27, 1986, transferring ownership of forty acres of real property located in Mt. Sinai, New York from CT [Cedar Tide] to CCI [Chandler’s Cove Inn]” (Appellant’s Brief at pp. 5-6).

By contrast, counsel for the appellee Cedar Tide provides a somewhat different scenario. Counsel states that the Mt. Sinai Harbor parcel has been owned by Mrs. Chandler or Cedar Tide for over 50 years. After Cedar Tide filed a Chapter 11 petition on December 10, 1985, a deed was purportedly signed on behalf of Cedar Tide Corp. in March, 1986, transferring the parcel to Chandler’s Cove, the appellant’s client. Counsel for Cedar Tide states that Paul Scott, the father of counsel for the appellant here, allegedly formed the corporation known as Chandler’s Cove Inn Ltd. (“Chandler’s Cove”), and caused the deed to be drawn.

However, Cedar Tide’s counsel states that no one obtained the approval of the Bankruptcy Court for that transaction. Cedar Tide’s counsel further asserts that the deed was signed by one Stanley Kommissar, whose signature was then notarized by Sidney Mintz. Elizabeth Chandler and Frederick Chandler deny ever having authorized the transaction transferring the parcel.

Based on the transfer, counsel for Cedar Tide commenced an adversary proceeding in the Bankruptcy Court against Chandler’s Cove to set aside the conveyance. Subsequently, Cedar Tide filed a motion for summary judgment on the transfer issue.

Four days before oral argument on the summary judgment motion, Chandler’s Cove filed a Chapter 7 petition in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York. Appellee’s counsel contends that when Cedar Tide’s summary judgment motion was argued before United States Bankruptcy Judge Cecilia Goetz in the Eastern District of New York, appellant’s counsel did not reveal the fact that Chandler’s Cove had filed a bankruptcy petition in the Southern District. Further, Chandler’s Cove had apparently claimed as its main asset the same piece of property purportedly owned by Cedar Tide. Ultimately, in October, 1986, Judge Goetz granted Cedar Tide’s motion for summary judgment and signed a judgment setting aside the transfer of the Mt. Sinai Harbor property to Chandler’s Cove.

During the course of Cedar Tide’s bankruptcy proceeding, Sidney Mintz filed a number of motions before the Bankruptcy Court. These included, among others, the following:

1. a March 20, 1987 motion seeking to enjoin the law firm of Pinks, Brooks, Stern & Arbeit from contacting and harassing Douglas Durnin, Esq. who purported to be representing Chandler’s Cove Inn Ltd. on its appeal of Judge Goetz’s judgment of October 16, 1986, and further seeking the discharge of interim Trustee Robert Pryor;
2. a March 20, 1987 motion seeking the dismissal of Cedar Tide’s bankruptcy on the grounds that the petition was filed in the absence of good faith and with the specific intent to defraud creditors;
3. two motions made in April, 1987, one in the Cedar Tide case and the other in the Chandler’s Cove ease, each seeking to have Judge Goetz recuse herself;
4. an order to show cause signed May 12, 1987 by Judge Goetz which was withdrawn prior to the return date and a May 26, 1987 motion for reargument; said order denied defendant’s cross-motion for summary judgment and other relief, and di *812 rected that a hearing be held to resolve three additional issues: (a) the sanctions to be imposed on defendant Mintz for filing the enumerated motions; (b) whether the proof of claim signed by Susan Fortuna and submitted on behalf of Chandler’s Cove in Cedar Tide’s bankruptcy case on April 18, 1991 subjected Fortuna and Mintz to sanctions pursuant to Fed. R.Bankr.P. 9011 and the court’s inherent powers; and (c) whether the submission of certain papers by the defendant’s then attorney, Charles E. Morrison, subjected the defendant to Rule 9011 sanctions.

The attorneys for Cedar Tide argued that these motions were “frivolous” and renew that argument in this appeal.

ADVERSARY PROCEEDING IN THE BANKRUPTCY COURT

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 B.R. 808, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3073, 1994 WL 85691, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cedar-tide-corp-v-mintz-in-re-cedar-tide-corp-nyed-1994.