Committee of Unsecured Creditors v. Swaffar (In Re Swaffar)

253 B.R. 441, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14388, 2000 WL 1477123
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 29, 2000
Docket4:98CV00202 GH
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 253 B.R. 441 (Committee of Unsecured Creditors v. Swaffar (In Re Swaffar)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Committee of Unsecured Creditors v. Swaffar (In Re Swaffar), 253 B.R. 441, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14388, 2000 WL 1477123 (Ark. 2000).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

HOWARD, District Judge.

Joe Thomas Swaffar and Sandra Carol Swaffar (Debtors) appeal the February 18, 1998, order of the Bankruptcy Court containing recommended findings holding Debtors in criminal contempt for violating the Bankruptcy Court’s orders of May 23 and June 24, 1996. The Bankruptcy Court further recommended a $10,000.00 fíne against each Debtor aggregating a total fíne of $20,000.00 and, in addition, a term of incarceration of thirty days for each Debtor. The Court adopts the recommended findings, in part, holding the Debtors in criminal contempt, but, due to exceptional circumstances existing in this proceeding, this Court, sua sponte, in the public’s interest and, in order to avoid unfairness to Debtors, as well as protecting the integrity of the judicial proceedings, reduces the $10,000.00 fine against Sandra Carol Swaffar to $1,500.00 and the $10,000.00 fine against Joe Thomas Swaf-far to $3,500.00, and vacates the term of incarceration of thirty days for each Debt- or for the reasons hereinafter discussed.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

I.

Debtors voluntarily filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition on March 1, 1995, and their plan of reorganization was due June 29, 1995. On April 4, 1996, Debtors filed their disclosure statement and plan of reorganization. 1

On May 23, 1996, the Committee of Unsecured Creditors (Committee) filed a verified complaint alleging that Debtors were receiving income and paying personal expenses from the Swaffar and Associates Bank Account, the estate’s bank account, and that Debtors were conducting and using the estate account in a manner to avoid the bankruptcy rules. The Committee fur *443 ther alleged that Debtors had not disclosed this activity to either the creditors or the Bankruptcy Court. The Committee requested a temporary restraining order (TRO) and a permanent injunction against the Debtors in an effort to prevent the alleged wrongdoing. The Bankruptcy Court granted the TRO, without prior notice to Debtors, enjoining the Debtors from “making any further transfer of their assets, or of assets over which they have direction or control, including but not limited to any bank accounts on which they have signatory authority or in which the name of any defendant appears in the style of the account, pending further ruling ... on the Committee’s request for a preliminary injunction.” The Debtors, however, were permitted to make use of funds in a bank account with Metropolitan Bank for reasonable living expenses “based upon a monthly budget to be approved by the Committee and the United States Trustee and which expenses shall be accurately detailed and described in the Debtors’ sworn monthly operating report.”

On June 24, 1996, the Debtors consented to the entry of an order that provides, in relevant part, the following:

1. The temporary restraining order entered on May 23, 1996, incorporated herein as Exhibit “I”, shall be come a preliminary injunction upon the entry of this order, nunc pro tunc to June 3, 1996.
2. The debtors shall file and provide the Committee and U.S. Trustee with accurate monthly operating reports reflecting actual, accurate and itemized cash receipts and disbursements for the debtors individually, Swaffar and Associates, Inc., and the Bentonville Super 8 Motel. Separate operating reports shall be prepared for each entity and each operating report will identify in detail the sources of revenue for the respective entities.
4.The debtors will fully complete and file new, accurate schedules and a statement of affairs as required by Bankruptcy Rule 1007, in the form provided by the Official Bankruptcy Forms prescribed by the Judicial Conference of the United States. The new schedules and statement of affairs to be completed and filed by the debtors shall, among other things, accurately describe all of their current assets and liabilities.
5. The debtors shall destroy all of their credit cards and terminate all of their credit card accounts.
6. The debtors shall provide the United States Trustee and the Committee with an inventory of their two safety deposit boxes located at the Bank of Malvern and Pulaski Bank & Trust Company.
7. The debtors will immediately produce and make available to counsel for the Committee all of the items of property (specifically including jewelry and furs) and books and records subpoenaed prior to this hearing.
8. The debtors will retain the right to incur and pay for ordinary and reasonable living expenses only from the debt- or-possession bank account located at Metropolitan Bank limited by a monthly budget to be approved by the Committee and United States Trustee.

On August 8, 1996, pursuant to a Committee’s motion for appointment of a Chapter 11 Trustee, the Bankruptcy Court entered an order directing the United States Trustee to immediately appoint a trustee in this proceeding which resulted in the designation of Richard Cox (Trustee) as Trustee for the estate. The Bankruptcy Court’s order further enjoined the Debtors “from taking any non-business trips, vacations, or supplying funding for any travel or trips for themselves or their immediate family.”

On March 10, 1997, the Trustee filed a motion requesting the Bankruptcy Court to convert Debtors’ Chapter 11 action to a Chapter 7 proceeding which was granted on May 6, 1997, by the Bankruptcy Court after being advised that all parties agreed *444 to the conversion. After converting the proceedings to a Chapter 7 action, the bankruptcy judge advised the Debtors as follows:

Mr. and Ms. Swaffar, as of this moment, you-all are converted to a Chapter 7. That means that all of your assets— everything that you own, corporations that you own, everything that you have any kind of interest in, regardless of the business entity that you have — becomes the property of the Chapter 7 Trustee. And that includes exempt property. That includes cash in your house. It includes all cash in all bank accounts. It includes all accounts receivable, any money due either one of you; every piece of property, tangible, intangible; life insurance, vehicles, vehicles in somebody else’s name. Everything belongs to Mr. Cox, technically.
I want you to go to the respective banks at the start of the business day tomorrow and stop payment on any checks that might be outstanding. Because that money belongs to the Trustee, and it’ll be up to the Trustee to distribute it according to the Bankruptcy Code.

Mr. Hicks, attorney of Debtors, posed the following question to the bankruptcy judge:

Q. Your Honor, your Order wouldn’t apply to anything that they earned after 3:00 o’clock today?
Judge Mixon: It does not.

Debtors filed operating reports for March, 1995 through May, 1996 on August 9, 1996. On April 29, 1997, the Committee moved for sanctions against Debtors for failing, allegedly, to comply with the Bankruptcy Court’s order of June 24, 1996. A hearing was held on May 6, 1997.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
253 B.R. 441, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14388, 2000 WL 1477123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/committee-of-unsecured-creditors-v-swaffar-in-re-swaffar-areb-2000.