Dorfman v. Moorhous (In Re Moorhous)

180 B.R. 138, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 454, 1995 WL 214659
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedApril 6, 1995
Docket19-31025
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 180 B.R. 138 (Dorfman v. Moorhous (In Re Moorhous)) 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
Dorfman v. Moorhous (In Re Moorhous), 180 B.R. 138, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 454, 1995 WL 214659 (Va. 1995).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

STEPHEN S. MITCHELL, Bankruptcy Judge.

This case presents an issue of first impression as to whether a retired officer of the Air Force may effectively seH a fixed number of future monthly payments of his mihtary retired pay to which he is entitled so that title to those payments is vested in the assignee. The question arises because the debtor entered into a financial transaction structured in just such a manner but subsequently filed bankruptcy. The assignees seek a declaratory judgment that the monthly retired pay being received by the debtor belongs to them, and they have asked this Court to impose a constructive trust on it in the hands of the debtor, to grant injunctive rehef requiring the debtor to remit such pay to the assignees, and to award damages for breach of contract and conversion. The United States Air Force was originally made a defendant to this action but was voluntarily dismissed by the plaintiffs.

Trial was held on March 22 and 24, 1995. At the conclusion of the evidence, the Court made findings of fact and conclusions of law orally on the record, and an order was signed on March 24, 1995 entering judgment in favor of the debtors on aU counts. In entering judgment, the Court reserved the right to supplement the oral findings of fact and conclusions of law. This memorandum opinion, accordingly, supplements the findings of fact and conclusions of law stated orally upon the record.

Findings of Fact

The debtor, Colonel Dudley M. Moorhous, Jr., is a 61-year old retired Air Force officer, unemployed at the time of trial. He retired from the Air Force on June 1, 1985 after completing more than 27 years of active service. He is married to the co-defendant, Dorothy (“Dottie”) Moorhous. Col. Moor-hous resides in Virginia and is entitled to receive monthly retired pay from the Air Force. Following his retirement, Col. Moor-hous went to work for a start-up company called Pilot Research Associates. In late 1989, having identified what appeared to him to be a lucrative investment opportunity, he took out a classified advertisement in the “Capital Wanted” classified section of the newspaper USA Today. The advertisement, printed in the edition of November 17, 1989, read as foHows:

WILL PAY 17% ANNUALLY!

For $190,000 for 15 years, paying $3,250/mo from government retirement.

*142 This advertisement was read by Mr. and Mrs. Earl Dorfman, who are residents of Pennsylvania. Mr. Dorfman, a 65-year old retired former grocery store owner, contacted Col. Moorhous by telephone, and on November 23, 1989, Col. Moorhous responded with a written proposal to borrow $190,000 for the purpose of purchasing “run-down” residential properties to refurbish and resell. He also assured Mr. Dorfman that, based on the approximately $100,000 a year he was earning with bonuses and the approximately $30,000 per year his wife was earning, he did not need the military retirement to live on. Following a number of letters and phone calls negotiating the tentative terms of the transaction, Joel S. Luber, a Pennsylvania attorney, became involved on behalf of the Dorfmans. Mr. Luber was concerned from the outset over the enforceability of an assignment of Col. Moorhous’s retirement pay and wrote to the Air Force Accounting and Finance Activity on March 18, 1990 to determine whether Col. Moorhous could effectively make an irrevocable assignment of his pension. Even before receiving the reply, Mr. Luber evidently had reached a preliminary conclusion that the Air Force might not treat such an assignment as irrevocable, because in a letter of March 20, 1990, he advised Col. Moorhous:

* * * the structure of this transaction will not be a loan. Rather, we intend to structure a private commercial annuity, in which you are, in -effect, the insurance company, and the Dorfmans are the annuitant * * *.

Col. Moorhous, in a letter of the same date to Mr. Dorfman, specifically acknowledged that the Air Force reply might be to the effect that Col. Moorhous could “interrupt the flow” of pension payments at any time, “since there is no precedent for this procedure of irrevocably giving up in this case 180 payments of retirement pay,” but he sought to reassure Mr. Dorfman “the honor code that was instilled * * * at West Point is ever foremost in * * * my mind. My word is still my honor and it will forever be.” The Court finds that both Mr. Dorfman and Mr. Luber had concerns over the issue of enforceability and relied on Col. Moorhous’s assurances that his high sense of honor would ensure that the agreement was observed.

At some unspecified time prior to the actual signing of the agreement at issue in this case, Mr. Luber spoke with personnel at the Air Force Finance Center and was advised that the Air Force would only disburse retired pay to the retired member or by direct deposit to an account in the retired member’s name. In any event, an agreement was ultimately crafted by Mr. Luber that was signed on April 18, 1990. In a letter to the principals of Housing Renovations, Inc., the company in which Col. Moorhous was investing, Mr. Luber characterized the agreement as follows:

Very simply, the Agreement provides for a straight up exchange of a single lump sum payment of $125,000 in return for a future stream of income, much is [sic ] the nature of a single premium commercial annuity.

The agreement is entitled “Annuity and Assignment Agreement.” The recitals state that Col. Moorhous desired to obtain the sum of $125,000 for the purpose of investing in Housing Renovations, Inc., and that the Dorfmans were “prepared to make available” that sum in exchange for an irrevocable assignment of 112)6 consecutive monthly payments of his Air Force pension. The agreement then defines “Purchase Price” as the sum of $125,000 and provides,

In exchange for the purchase price paid by Dorfman, Dudley agrees to pay to Dorf-man a 9 year 5 month term certain annuity, paying a monthly benefit in the amount of no less than $3,288.37, with the last payment being one-half of that amount, in the form of an irrevocable assignment to Dorfmans [of] the next 112)6 consecutive monthly payments due to him from the Pension.

Several documents signed contemporaneously with the agreement, and intended as part of it, provided for the implementation of the agreement by the creation of an account in Col. Moorhous’s name at Jefferson Bank, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and the direction — which Col. Moorhous asked to be treated as irrevocable — to the Air Force for direct deposit of his pay to that account. Col. Moorhous gave an irrevocable written *143 authorization to the bank to withdraw the payment as received each month and to transfer it to an account in the same bank in the name of the Dorfinans. In addition to the direct deposit arrangement, Col. Moor-hous and his wife granted, as additional security for the obligation to make the required payments, a first mortgage on two lots in St. John’s County, Florida; a third deed of trust on their home in Springfield, Virginia; a collateral assignment of a $250,000 life insurance policy on Col. Moorhous’s life; and. a pledge of Col. Moorhous’s shares in HRI.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Structured Investments Co. v. Dunlap (In Re Dunlap)
458 B.R. 301 (E.D. Virginia, 2011)
In Re Schena
439 B.R. 776 (D. New Mexico, 2010)
Structured Investments Co. v. Price (In Re Price)
313 B.R. 805 (E.D. Arkansas, 2004)
In Re U.S. Lan Systems Corp.
235 B.R. 847 (E.D. Virginia, 1998)
In Re Meyer
211 B.R. 203 (E.D. Virginia, 1997)
Moorhous v. Dorfman
Fourth Circuit, 1997
Harmon v. Scott (In Re Scott)
203 B.R. 590 (E.D. Virginia, 1996)
Dutton v. Kondora (In Re Kondora)
194 B.R. 202 (N.D. Iowa, 1996)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 B.R. 138, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 454, 1995 WL 214659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorfman-v-moorhous-in-re-moorhous-vaeb-1995.