Dean Witter Reynolds Inc. v. Printy (In Re Printy)

188 B.R. 61, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 1485, 1995 WL 616564
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 13, 1995
Docket19-10814
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 188 B.R. 61 (Dean Witter Reynolds Inc. v. Printy (In Re Printy)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dean Witter Reynolds Inc. v. Printy (In Re Printy), 188 B.R. 61, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 1485, 1995 WL 616564 (Mass. 1995).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

JOAN N. FEENEY, Bankruptcy Judge.

1. INTRODUCTION

The matters before the Court are the Motion for Summary Judgment and the Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings, filed by *63 Dean Witter Reynolds Inc. (“Dean Witter”) with respect to its Complaint and the Debt- or’s Counterclaim, respectively. 1 The Debtor opposed both motions. The Court heard the motions on April 25, 1995, following which the Court directed the parties to depose two Dean Witter employees and the Debtor and file supplemental briefs.

II. FACTS

Based upon the affidavits, depositions and admissions on file, the Court now makes the following findings of fact. The Debtor, David L. Printy, and his two sons, Charles B. Printy, II and David Luther Printy, were the co-trustees of the Andrea L. Printy Family Trust (the “Trust”), which was established in October of 1986. On August 26, 1992, the Debtor arranged for the transfer of the administration of the Trust from First Trust to the Minneapolis, Minnesota office of Dean Witter, a broker-dealer of securities registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission and a member of the National Association of Securities Dealers (“NASD”). The Debtor opened the account in the name of the Trust and funded it with a wire transfer of $50,000.00 from First Trust to Dean Witter.

Michael Krmpotich (“Krmpotich”) was the account executive at Dean Witter charged with oversight of the Trust account. Krmpo-tich was not a stranger to the Debtor. The Debtor had attempted to recruit Krmpotich as an employee for State Bond Sales Corporation, a broker-dealer located in New Ulm, Minnesota with which he was affiliated at one time. Additionally, according to the affidavit of Thomas B. Heffelfinger on file in this case, “Mr. Krmpotich had previously demonstrated to Mr. Printy that he was willing to extend credit to Mr. Printy on closely held securities. [H]e had extended a $300,000 loan to Mr. Printy and his wife based on a closely held security.” When Krmpotich solicited the Debtor’s business and presented Dean Witter’s financial services to him, the Debtor accepted the offer on behalf of the Trust. Moreover, at the time the Debtor arranged for the transfer of the Trust assets from First Trust to Dean Witter, he was a sophisticated and knowledgeable investor, having obtained a broker’s license himself and having held senior management positions in a number of financial services companies and entrepreneurial enterprises spanning almost two decades.

The Debtor and his co-trustees executed an Active Assets Account agreement with Dean Witter, which was notarized on September 30, 1992. Pursuant to the agreement, the Debtor, on behalf of the Trust, agreed to the arbitration of controversies arising in connection with the account. 2 Additionally, the Debtor, on behalf of the Trust, granted-Dean Witter a security interest in *64 any securities or property held by the Trust to secure repayment of any obligations owed by the Trust to Dean Witter. 3 In conjunction with the Active Assets Account, the Trust took advantage of three financial services: a checking account, a margin account and an investment account.

On or around September 8, 1992, First Trust transferred and Dean Witter received the following assets: a U.S. Treasury Note and stock holdings in Baxter International Inc., Marion Merrill Dow Inc., Vital Heart Systems Inc., Eastman Kodak Co., Wyer-haeuser Co., Bankamerica Corp., and J.P. Morgan & Co. Additionally,- First Trust transferred interests in two non-publicly traded entities: 150,000 shares of Health Concepts, Inc. (“Health Concepts”) and an interest in MCI Medical Seed Limited Partnership. The Debtor was the president, secretary and an individual shareholder of Health Concepts, a closely held research and development firm, engaged in the production of conducive adhesives. As president of Health Concepts, the Debtor knew that the stock in the company “[did] not freely trade on any exchange or the OTC [over-the-counter] market.”

Dean Witter prepared and mailed to the Debtor at his home in Rockport, Massachusetts monthly statements both summarizing and detailing assets, income and activities for cash and money market funds, stocks/options, municipal .bonds, corporate fixed income investments, government securities, and other investment vehicles. The Debtor admitted receiving the monthly statements. The following charts summarize information sent to the Debtor with respect to the Trust account. In the charts, the categories in column one are as follows: A=TOTAL ASSET VALUE/VALUE OF STOCKS/OPTIONS; B = INCOME; C = DEPOSITS; D=ASSETS SOLD; E= TOTAL OF CHECKS WRITTEN; F = TOTAL WITHDRAWALS; G=ASSETS BOUGHT; H=ASSETS RECEIVED (credited to the account); I = ASSETS DELIVERED (debited from the account); and J = DEBIT BALANCE/AUTHORIZED LIMIT (of borrowing).

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The total asset value of the Trust for the month ending September 30, 1992 was approximately $190,000.00. The statement for that period did not reflect receipt of either the Health Concepts stock or the interest in MCI Medical Seed. However, the statement for the month ending October 1992 reflected receipt of 150,000 shares of “Coastal Health Care GP Del” (“Coastal Health Care”) on October 28, 1992 with a value of $3,637,-500.00. The value of Coastal Health Care stock represented over 96% of the total value of all stock in the Trust account, and stocks and options represented over 98% of the total value of all assets in the account. In his deposition, the Debtor testified that he never authorized the purchase of 150,000 shares of Coastal Health Care and never received confirmation slips with respect to any such purchase.

The reason for the misinformation appearing on the Trust’s monthly statements was, as Dean Witter admits, a transcriptional error made in its Midwest Operations Center. At the center, the wrong stock identification code for Health Concepts derived from a so-called CUSIP number was entered into the computer. This error caused the Trust statements to show a position in Coastal Health Care, a company whose stock was publicly traded.

On November 16, 1992, the Debtor sent a fax to Krmpotich and his assistant, Lynn Jorgenson, stating the following: “... please deliver from the trust account 15,000 shares of Coastal Health Care — leave them in the name of the trust and mail them to my Rockport address.” Ms. Jorgenson informed the Debtor that Dean Witter was unable to arrange for the delivery of anything but the entire position. The Debtor authorized the delivery of all the shares, and, eventually, he received a certificate for 150,000 shares of Health Concepts, not Coastal Health Care, as he had requested.

The statement for the month ending November 30, 1992, though perpetuating the mix-up between Health Concepts and Coastal Health Care, reflected this transaction. The statement showed that, as of November 25, 1992, the value of 150,000 shares of Coastal Health Care stock, valued at $3,712,500.00, had been debited from the account.

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Bluebook (online)
188 B.R. 61, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 1485, 1995 WL 616564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dean-witter-reynolds-inc-v-printy-in-re-printy-mab-1995.