Colmark I Ltd. Partnership v. Graubard, Mollen, Horowitz, Pomeranz & Shapiro (In Re Colmark I Ltd. Partnership)

189 B.R. 253, 34 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1299, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 1716, 1995 WL 717186
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedNovember 13, 1995
Docket14-30995
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 189 B.R. 253 (Colmark I Ltd. Partnership v. Graubard, Mollen, Horowitz, Pomeranz & Shapiro (In Re Colmark I Ltd. Partnership)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colmark I Ltd. Partnership v. Graubard, Mollen, Horowitz, Pomeranz & Shapiro (In Re Colmark I Ltd. Partnership), 189 B.R. 253, 34 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1299, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 1716, 1995 WL 717186 (Conn. 1995).

Opinion

RULING ON DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT OR, IN THE ALTERNATIVE, TO DISMISS AMENDED COMPLAINT AS TO THE CO-PLAINTIFF, COLMARK I LIMITED PARTNERSHIP

ROBERT L. KRECHEVSKY, Chief Judge.

I.

In an amended complaint filed on December 8,1993, the co-plaintiff, Colmark I Limited Partnership (“Colmark”), seeks to recover $250,000.00 from the defendant law firm, Graubard, Mollen, Horowitz, Pomeranz & Shapiro, generally contending in Counts One, Two and Three of the complaint that the defendant’s receipt of such sum on September 13, 1990 constituted a fraudulent transfer, in Count Four that the court should impose a constructive trust on such sum, and in Count Five, that the monies are recoverable as property of Colmark’s estate. The defendant, on July 5, 1995, filed the above-entitled motion accompanied by affidavits, a statement of material facts not in dispute and a memorandum of law. Colmark, on August 7,1995, filed a memorandum of law objecting to the defendant’s motion together with an affidavit and a statement of material facts as to which it contends there exists a genuine issue to be tried. The defendant, on September 1, 1995, filed a reply memorandum.

II.

BACKGROUND

A.

The following background is derived from the pleadings, affidavits and other papers filed in the proceeding. The co-plaintiff, Col-mark, is a Chapter 11 debtor whose plan of reorganization the court confirmed on May 1, 1992. The co-plaintiff, Hal M. Hirsch, as Trustee of the Consolidated Estates of Colonial Realty Company, Jonathan Googel and Benjamin Sisti (“Hirsch”), is the Chapter 7 trustee of the named estates. Colonial Realty Company (“Colonial Realty”), together with its general partners, Jonathan Googel (“Googel”) and Benjamin Sisti (“Sisti”), prior to September 14,1990, had been the syndica-tors of numerous limited partnerships which invested mainly in income-producing real estate. Colonial Realty, as the managing general partner in many of these limited partnerships, handled the finances of each limited partnership out of an office located in West Hartford, Connecticut.

Googel and Sisti approached the defendant, a law firm located in New York, New York in early September, 1990, to represent them and Colonial Realty in a possible bankruptcy filing. The defendant accepted the representation upon requesting and receiving a $250,000.00 retainer. The retainer was paid by a check dated September 13, 1990 signed by Sisti, which bore the handwritten notations “Col. Clients Fund” and “#007” (the “Retainer Check”), and drawn on The Farmington Savings Bank (the “Bank”), located in Farmington, Connecticut, Account No. 01-57-40000136 (“The Account”). The Bank’s records described The Account as “Colonial Clients Fund,” and the Bank paid the check on September 19, 1990.

On September 14, 1990, an involuntary petition under Chapter 7 was filed against Colonial Realty. Colonial Realty converted its case to one under Chapter 11 on September 27, 1990, and the court authorized the defendant to represent Colonial Realty in the Chapter 11 case. The application for the defendant’s employment disclosed the $250,-000.00 retainer, and the court subsequently *255 approved payment of fees substantially in excess of that amount to the defendant.

Colonial Realty had opened The Account on or about September 1, 1990, and the plaintiffs allege The Account contained funds belonging to various of the limited partnerships syndicated by Colonial Realty. The defendant concedes that between September 1, 1990 and September 12, 1990, $405,584.50 of Colmark’s funds (checks payable to Col-mark) were deposited into The Account. On September 19,1990, after the payment of the Retainer Check, the balance in The Account was $1,699,390.60.

The court, at Colmark’s request, in July 1992 established a bar date in the Colonial Realty estate for parties to file claims to funds in The Account. On March 25, 1993, the court approved a compromise under which Colmark, Hirsch 1 and First Nationwide Bank, the only three claimants to these funds, each received one-third of $281,521.54, plus accrued interest, the then Account balance. The compromise noted that Colmark had filed a claim of $642,533.93, and that Hirsch had filed one claim of $1,369,889.37 on behalf of limited partnerships in which Colonial Realty was the general partner, a second claim in an undetermined amount representing general partner fees and loan repayments owed by limited partnerships to Colonial Realty and a third claim of $322,390.53 on behalf of limited partners. The compromise further stated that Colmark reserved all rights it may have against parties other than those to the compromise.

The defendant, at the time it received the Retainer Check, sought and received assurances from Googel and/or Sisti that the funds in The Account were lien free and unencumbered by claims of any third parties. Colonial Realty’s bankruptcy schedules listed Col-mark as owing Colonial Realty $3,685,000 for loans and advances made by Colonial Realty to Colmark.

B.

All of Colmark’s causes of action are based upon its contention that since (a) the defendant accepted the Retainer Check marked as drawn on a clients’ funds account, (b) the funds in this account were, in fact, not funds of Colonial Realty, and (c) Colmark received no benefit from the transfer of the $250,-000.00, the transfer constitutes a fraudulent transfer, an unauthorized transfer of estate property, or a transfer to which a constructive trust should be applied. Colmark asserts Hirsch represents all other limited partnerships whose funds had been deposited in The Account.

The defendant asserts it had no actual knowledge that any of the funds in The Account did not belong to Colonial Realty, if that is the ease, and that the notation of “Col. Clients Fund” is insufficient to deprive the defendant of its status as a good-faith transferee. The defendant further contends Col-mark cannot trace any part of the $405,-584.50, concededly deposited in The Account, as transferred to the defendant, and that Colonial Realty at all relevant times possessed a common-law right of offset for its loans and advances to Colmark against any monies of Colmark that Colonial Realty held.

Colmark contends material issues of fact exist as to whether: (1) the defendant is a good faith transferee; (2) The Account contained any funds of Colonial Realty; (3) Colonial Realty had the right to use The Account to pay a retainer to the defendant; (4) the funds in The Account were held in trust for the benefit of Colmark; (5) Colmark can trace funds out of The Account into the hands of the defendant; and (6) the defendant can assert a right of setoff belonging to Colonial Realty.

Colmark submitted an affidavit of Bruce Linton, its former property manager, averring The Account contained only funds of Colmark and other limited partnerships and no funds of Colonial Realty, that Colmark received no benefit from the $250,000.00 transfer and that Colmark and Hirsch can trace funds out of The Account to the defendant. The defendant submitted affidavits of George Riggs, a certified public accountant, *256 and Stoddard D. Platt, a member of the defendant firm. Mr.

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189 B.R. 253, 34 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1299, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 1716, 1995 WL 717186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colmark-i-ltd-partnership-v-graubard-mollen-horowitz-pomeranz-ctb-1995.