Daniels v. Agin

CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedNovember 25, 2013
Docket17-1846
StatusPublished

This text of Daniels v. Agin (Daniels v. Agin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daniels v. Agin, (1st Cir. 2013).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals For the First Circuit

No. 12-2376 WILLIAM M. DANIELS,

Appellant,

v.

WARREN E. AGIN, Chapter 7 Trustee, and WILLIAM K. HARRINGTON, United States Trustee for Region 1,

Appellees.

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS [Hon. Denise J. Casper, U.S. District Judge]

Before

Lynch, Chief Judge, Howard and Kayatta, Circuit Judges.

Timothy J. Burke, with whom Burke & Associates was on brief, for appellant. John G. Loughnane, with whom Charlotte L. Bednar and Eckert Seamans Cherin & Mellott, LLC were on brief, for appellee Warren Agin. Cameron M. Gulden, with whom Ramona D. Elliott, Deputy Director/General Counsel, Executive Office for U.S. Trustees, Department of Justice, P. Matthew Sutko, Associate General Counsel, Executive Office for U.S. Trustees, Department of Justice, John P. Fitzgerald, Assistant United States Trustee, Wendy L. Cox, and Jennifer L. Hertz, were on brief, for appellee William Harrington.

November 25, 2013 KAYATTA, Circuit Judge. Ruling on motions for summary

judgment in a bankruptcy proceeding, the bankruptcy court made two

determinations that are the primary subject of this appeal. First,

the court ruled that the debtor failed to maintain his profit-

sharing plan in substantial compliance with the applicable tax

laws. This ruling meant that assets in the profit-sharing plan and

two IRAs funded with plan assets were part of the bankruptcy

estate, available to satisfy the claims of creditors. Second, the

bankruptcy court ruled that the debtor intentionally failed to

disclose, and in fact deliberately concealed, the existence of the

two IRAs into which the debtor had transferred assets from his

profit-sharing plan. This ruling provided alternative grounds for

treating the IRAs as nonexempt. It also provided the basis for the

bankruptcy court to revoke the debtor's discharge. Daniels, the

debtor, challenges both rulings on appeal. For the reasons set out

below, we affirm.

I. Background

Both Daniels and the Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Trustee,

Appellee Agin, moved for summary judgment on the question of

whether Daniels's profit-sharing plan was exempt from inclusion in

the bankruptcy estate. In accord with Rule 56.1 of the Local Rules

of the District of Massachusetts,1 each filed a statement of

1 Mass. Local Rule 56.1 is made applicable to bankruptcy proceedings by Mass. Local Bankruptcy Rule 7056-1.

-2- material facts that they claimed were undisputed. Under the rule,

each was then required to file a statement in response to the

other's statement of material facts, identifying which facts were

disputed, with citations to record evidence establishing the

existence of a dispute. Agin did not file such a responsive

statement, instead filing an opposition brief and moving to strike

Daniels's motion, "reserv[ing] the right to object to the

introduction of" documents offered in support of Daniels's motion.

Daniels did file a response, but it rarely referred to record

evidence.

The bankruptcy court made sense of the procedural

defalcations by comparing Agin's statement of material facts with

Daniels's two statements and deeming all of Agin's averments to be

admitted except where these documents conflicted. Without

suggesting that the bankruptcy court was required to grant such an

indulgence, we will construe the record in the same manner and

apply the same approach to any part of Daniels's statement of

material facts that Agin did not adequately dispute.

A. Daniels's Retirement Accounts

William Daniels was engaged in a decreasingly profitable

business as a broker of fishing boats. He was also the trustee,

administrator, employer and sole participant in the William Daniels

Profit-Sharing Plan ("Plan"). The Plan was a prototype plan

obtained through MassMutual Financial Group. MassMutual, however,

-3- did not manage the Plan or approve its transactions. From time to

time, MassMututal received letters from the Internal Revenue

Service ("IRS") opining that the form of the prototype plan

qualified it for favorable tax treatment. Nothing in those

letters, however, purported to bless the manner in which the Plan

was operated.

Before 1988, Daniels's wife had been the beneficiary of

a trust, the Walker Realty Trust ("Realty Trust"). Daniels

maintains that the Realty Trust is a Massachusetts nominee trust,

and so is only a titleholding device for its beneficiaries.

Daniels's wife assigned her beneficial interest to the Plan in

1988. The Plan paid fair value for the real estate held by the

Realty Trust.

Since 1988, the Realty Trust has engaged in a number of

real estate transactions, including transactions with Daniels's son

and with the daughter of Tom Florence, a man who had provided

services for the Realty Trust. All transactions with Mr. Florence

and his family were for fair value.

Daniels's uncle, Maurice Lopes, lived with Daniels and

the two held several joint accounts. Jensen v. Daniels, 57 Mass.

App. Ct. 811, 813 (Mass. App. Ct. 2003). After Lopes died in 1996,

Daniels withdrew money from those accounts and placed some into the

Plan. Id. at 813-14. Daniels reported the money from the joint

accounts that he put into the Plan as a tax deduction, and avers

-4- that the transaction was never challenged "by a tax authority."

Daniels's aunt, as the executrix of Lopes's estate, later sued

Daniels and his wife, alleging that they were not entitled to those

funds. The probate court entered judgment against Daniels and his

wife. The Massachusetts Appeals Court affirmed the judgment in the

amount of $238,538.16, plus interest, but only as to Daniels. Id.

at 819-20. That judgment was not satisfied before Daniels filed

for bankruptcy. Including interest, it totaled more than

$440,000.00 by 2007.

In or around February 2007, Daniels transferred $469,894

from the Plan into two new MassMutual Individual Retirement

Accounts (IRAs) held in his own name.

B. Daniels's Bankruptcy

Approximately six months later, Daniels filed for Chapter

13 bankruptcy. That bankruptcy petition was later converted to a

Chapter 11 bankruptcy, and then into a Chapter 7 bankruptcy.

Bankrupt debtors must file several bankruptcy schedules,

including Schedule B (in which a debtor identifies his personal

property) and Schedule C (in which he lists the property that he

claims is exempt from the bankruptcy estate). Schedule B requires

debtors to disclose any "[i]nterests in IRA, ERISA, Keogh, or other

pension or profit sharing plans," and directs debtors to "[g]ive

[p]articulars." On both his Schedules B and C, Daniels wrote: "As

of 8/06/07: Debtor's 401-qualified pension: 'William Daniels

-5- Profit-Sharing Plan' (tax ID # [XX-XXX]2459/ formed 8/15/88;

approved by IRS 08/07/01), held by Walker Realty Trust, Wm M.

Daniels, Trustee: inventory and valuations separately

documented[.]"2 Daniels failed to mention the IRAs on his

schedules. Rather, he showed all of the funds--both those

remaining in the Plan and moved out of the Plan--as still being

owned by the Plan.

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