Dock C-Food Ltd. v. Cherry (In Re Cherry)

78 B.R. 65, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 1551, 16 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 645
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 22, 1987
Docket19-10777
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 78 B.R. 65 (Dock C-Food Ltd. v. Cherry (In Re Cherry)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dock C-Food Ltd. v. Cherry (In Re Cherry), 78 B.R. 65, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 1551, 16 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 645 (Pa. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Bankruptcy Judge.

A. INTRODUCTION AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The instant matter, which we consider to be, in substance, a Motion for relief from the automatic stay in the form of an Adversary proceeding, presents a difficult issue of determining whether and on what grounds a former employer is entitled to seek to enforce a state court decree upholding a pre-petition restrictive employment-contract covenant against a Chapter 13 debtor. We believe that none of the several grounds asserted by the employer — including the alleged inapplicability of the stay to civil contempt proceedings and the alleged absence of a “claim” of the employer against the Debtor — are in themselves a sufficient basis for relief. However, balancing the relative hardships of the parties in light of, inter alia, the employer’s disavowal of any attempt to seek monetary damages, and the Defendant/Debtor’s dogged, post-petition defiance of a state court injunction, cause us to grant relief co the employer.

The Defendant/Debtor, ROBERT CHERRY (hereinafter referred to as “the Defendant”), and his co-Debtor Wife, SHEILA CHERRY, filed this joint Chapter 13 bankruptcy case on April 9, 1987. The instant Adversary Complaint was filed by DOCK C-FOOD, LTD. and its principal shareholder, ELLIOT MENKOWITZ, a practicing surgeon (hereinafter referred to as “the Plaintiffs”), on August 25,1987. The Complaint was in two Counts, the first of which requested a declaration that conducting a state court hearing on August 27, 1987, to hold the Defendant in contempt of a state court injunction enforcing a restrictive employment-contract covenant would not be violative of the automatic stay arising from the bankruptcy; and the second of which, alternatively, sought relief from the stay to conduct the hearing in the event that the court determined that the stay did apply. Contemporaneously with the Complaint, the Plaintiffs filed Motions for a Temporary Restraining Order (hereinafter referred to as “TRO”) and for a Preliminary Injunction..

We refused to grant the TRO and expressed a belief that the automatic stay did apply to the state-court contempt proceedings. After consultation with the Defendant’s then-counsel, we scheduled a hearing on the stay motion on September 1, 1987. However, on September 1, 1987, the Defendant’s then-counsel advised that new counsel had been retained, and requested a continuance until the following day, when the new counsel was available. We granted this request over the Plaintiffs’ objection.

On September 2, 1987, the Defendant’s new counsel appeared and requested a further continuance in order to file and be heard on a proposed Motion to reject the Defendant’s employment contract with the Plaintiffs in the Debtors’ main bankruptcy case. We denied that Motion, and directed that the hearing proceed. However, at the close of the hearing, we agreed to hold the stay motion under advisement until the Mo *67 tion to reject was filed and heard on September 10, 1987, and we requested both counsel to submit Briefs on all outstanding matters on or before September 9, 1987. Although the Motion to reject was filed on September 3, 1987, the parties decided that the record made on September 2, 1987, could suffice for the resolution of all outstanding matters, and the hearing of September 10, 1987, was cancelled. The Plaintiffs’ Brief was filed on September 8, 1987, and that of the Defendant arrived on September 10, 1987.

Because the Plaintiffs’ filing is in the form of an Adversary proceeding, we are obliged to present our decision in the form of Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and a Discussion. We note that, at the hearing, the Debtor called its general counsel, Douglas Breidenbach, Esquire, and Robert Kearney, apparently its fiscal officer, as witnesses. The Defendant also testified briefly.

B. FINDINGS OF FACT

1. The corporate Plaintiff was formed by erstwhile longtime friends, the individual Plaintiff, who provided essentially financial backing; the Defendant, who has been a successful vender of seafood to restaurant establishments from age 12 to his present age of 48;. and Mr. Kearney, who apparently managed the business’s books.

2. The Defendant was employed pursuant to an Agreement of January 13, 1986, which included a “non-competition covenant,” whereby the Defendant agreed that, for a period of three years after any termination of the Agreement “for whatever reason,” the Defendant would not engage in the business of “acquiring seafood, and other food products” for sale to businesses similar to those served by the corporate Plaintiff “within the marketing area of the Company.”

3. On October 29, 1986, the Defendant was fired by the Plaintiffs, for allegedly repeatedly taking funds from the business for personal use without authority to do so.

4. In the 10-month period from the commencement of the business through the date of the Defendant’s separation, the corporate Plaintiff had gross sales of $1.2 million.

5. Subsequent to his separation, the Defendant, by his own admission, continued to work in the business of selling seafood in the Philadelphia metropolitan area. As a result, the corporate Plaintiff filed an action in the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County, Pennsylvania (hereinafter referred to as “the state court”) to, inter alia, prevent the Defendant from continuing in this business in violation of the Agreement of January 13, 1986.

6. On December 3, 1986, the state court issued an Order enjoining the Defendant from working in any business concerning the sale of any foods in Philadelphia, Chester, Montgomery, Bucks, and Delaware Counties, Pennsylvania, and in Camden, Ocean, and Atlantic Counties, New Jersey for a period of two years.

7. By his own admission, the Defendant continued to work in the seafood sales business after the issuance of this injunction, and the corporate Plaintiff commenced contempt proceedings against the Defendant. This resulted in a conference before the state court judge who issued the injunction on March 4, 1987, who warned the Defendant to obey his previous order without entering any further order.

8. The Defendant did not inform the Plaintiffs of his bankruptcy filing on April 9, 1987, and they were unaware of it until August 21, 1987.

9. In the meantime, after the filing of the bankruptcy Petition, the Defendant continued to work in the seafood sales business as before, and the Plaintiffs filed another contempt Petition which was relisted for a hearing in the state court on August 27, 1987.

10. In the 10-month period between the Defendant’s separation through the date of the hearing, the corporate Plaintiff’s gross sales were but $276,000.00.

11. Attorney Breidenbach certified that the corporate Plaintiff would not pursue any monetary claims against the Defendant in the state court action, but would confine *68 relief sought to prospective, injunctive relief.

12. A hearing on the contempt petition in the state court could probably not be scheduled until November, 1987.

13.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 B.R. 65, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 1551, 16 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dock-c-food-ltd-v-cherry-in-re-cherry-paeb-1987.