Computer Dynamics Inc. v. Merrill (In Re Computer Dynamics Inc.)

252 B.R. 50, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 2356, 1997 WL 1878756
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedJune 17, 1997
Docket19-70738
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 252 B.R. 50 (Computer Dynamics Inc. v. Merrill (In Re Computer Dynamics Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Computer Dynamics Inc. v. Merrill (In Re Computer Dynamics Inc.), 252 B.R. 50, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 2356, 1997 WL 1878756 (Va. 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

DAVID H. ADAMS, Bankruptcy Judge.

We must now determine a difficult facet of this long and contentious case; i.e. did counsel for the creditors who sought the appointment of a trustee for the debtor violate Rule 9011 of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure (“Rule 9011”). The Court has jurisdiction over the joint Motion for Sanctions (“Motion”) filed by the debtor and Robert L. Starer (“Starer”) pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334, 157 and 11 U.S.C. § 105(a).

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

We deem it appropriate and helpful to set forth the procedural history of these proceedings to provide a better understanding of the path thus far taken and the Court’s analysis of the issues raised by the Motion. The Computer Dynamics, Inc. (“CDI”) case began as an involuntary Chapter 11 proceeding with a petition filed on May 5, 1995, by Tweed’s Locksmiths, *54 Inc, First Hospital Corporation of Portsmouth and Audio Fidelity Communications Corp. d/b/a The Whitlock Group. In response, on June 16,1995, the debtor filed a voluntary petition under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code and requested that the involuntary petition be dismissed. By an agreement reached among the petitioning parties, the matter proceeded as a voluntary Chapter 11 case and the order of relief was entered on September 12, 1995.

Significantly, on November 22, 1995, a Motion to Appoint a Trustee (“Trustee Motion”) was filed by Stephen Gary Merrill (“Merrill”) on behalf of Phoenix Capital Inc. (“Phoenix”), First Hospital Corporation (“First Hospital”), The Whitlock Group (“Whitlock”), Norfolk Wire & Electric, Inc. (“Norfolk Wire”), and John Atkinson, Treasurer of the City of Virginia Beach (“Atkinson”) as the moving creditors. Starer, as the designated representative of the debtor, intervened in the Trustee Motion without opposition on November 29, 1995. After a motion to strike certain of the allegations was granted by the Court at a preliminary hearing held on January 24, 1996, the moving creditors filed an Amended Motion to Appoint a Trustee (“Amended Trustee Motion”) a week later. An inordinate amount of discovery was conducted by the parties, and the trial of the issues raised in the Amended Trustee Motion was conducted over a period of seven days, concluding on March 8, 1996, at which time the Court denied the Amended Trustee Motion.

On April 17, 1996, the debtor and Starer filed the joint Motion under Rule 9011 seeking sanctions against Merrill and the moving creditors. We deal here with the issue of sanctions as it relates to Merrill.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Merrill testified that he held himself out to the public as a bankruptcy practitioner and that he is comfortable in this Court doing a good job for his creditor and debt- or clients. He indicated that he was familiar with the Bankruptcy Code and with Sections 1104 and 1112 in particular, relative to seeking the appointment of a trustee in Chapter 11 and to the conversion or dismissal of a Chapter 11 case. He also testified that he understands and always complies with Bankruptcy Rule 9011.

Prior to filing the Motion in November, 1995 Merrill talked extensively with Alan Fuentes (“Fuentes”), the former owner and CEO of the debtor. Merrill met Fuentes in 1994, and they became good friends shortly thereafter. Later, Fuentes hired Merrill to assist him with his personal bankruptcy and to pursue CDI after a trustee was appointed for Fuentes in his Chapter 11 proceedings, resulting in Fuentes’ loss of control of his own assets, including his claim to ownership in CDI and his claim against Starer. Their early discussions related to filing an involuntary petition against CDI, but in the Fall of 1995, those discussions turned to the filing of the Motion. Merrill described Fuentes as Merrill’s “chief investigator”; he sent Fuentes out to find witnesses and then Merrill interviewed them to determine the facts they had knowledge of in order to support the drafting and filing of the Motion. As a result, Merrill interviewed several former employees of the debtor to determine the internal operations of CDI after the departure of Fuentes from the debtor. Merrill did not talk to any member of the board of directors of CDI and he did not review any minutes of the meetings of the board of directors. He did not review the transcript of the Rule 2004 examination of Starer taken by counsel for the debtor, only the exhibits introduced during the examination. Merrill admitted that he speculated on what happened in the operation of the debtor principally from what former employees told him pri- or to drafting the Motion.

Merrill did not talk to the petitioning creditors to obtain facts to establish the allegations contained in the Motion. He relied on Fuentes to recruit the creditors to petition for a trustee and Merrill felt that he needed several petitioning credi *55 tors to join in the Motion in order to lend credibility to his cause. He did not talk to any CDI lender prior to filing the Motion, yet he talked at length several times with the investigator from Chicago, Hiam Zit-man, hired by Phoenix Capital Corporation to discover “dirt” on and the financial condition of Starer.

Merrill felt it was critical to have several petitioning creditors in order to lend credibility to the Motion, so he sent Fuentes out to round up creditors who would agree to be petitioners for a trustee in order to oust Starer from operational control of the debtor. Creditors were solicited by Fuentes and told by Merrill that the appointment of a trustee was the only means by which they would have any hope of recovering any of the money due them from the debtor. They recruited six cooperative creditors, but only five would allow their names to be used as petitioners. Of the five original petitioning creditors, Phoenix, First Hospital, Atkinson, Norfolk Wire and Whitlock, Merrill only spoke with representatives of those creditors, if at all, after the Motion was drafted and filed.

In preparation for the drafting of the Motion, Merrill interviewed twelve people who supplied him with information upon which he based the allegations detailed in the pleading he signed on behalf of the moving parties. In addition, Merrill reviewed documents provided to him by the witnesses, consisting primarily of internal operating reports, correspondence and papers, and he reviewed the bankruptcy petition filed by the debtor, as well as talking to counsel who prepared the involuntary petition for the creditors who put CDI in bankruptcy. Merrill also reviewed the testimony given by Starer and an accountant at Fuentes’ personal Chapter 11 plan confirmation hearing. From these sources and the information provided and from other research, Merrill drew his own conclusions and formulated the allegations set forth in the Motion. 1

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
252 B.R. 50, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 2356, 1997 WL 1878756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/computer-dynamics-inc-v-merrill-in-re-computer-dynamics-inc-vaeb-1997.