Duvoisin v. Wilde (In re Southern Industrial Banking Corp.)

173 B.R. 901, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 1735
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 13, 1994
DocketBankruptcy No. 3-83-00372; Adv. No. 3-84-0185
StatusPublished

This text of 173 B.R. 901 (Duvoisin v. Wilde (In re Southern Industrial Banking Corp.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duvoisin v. Wilde (In re Southern Industrial Banking Corp.), 173 B.R. 901, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 1735 (Tenn. 1994).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

JOHN C. COOK, Bankruptcy Judge.

This adversary proceeding is before the court on the complaint of Thomas E. DuVoi-sin, Liquidating Trustee, alleging that defendants, Anne B. Wilde and her two children, Ashley A. Wilde and Byron B. Wilde, received preferential transfers from the debtor, Southern Industrial Banking Corporation (“SIBC”), which are avoidable as preferences under 11 U.S.C. § 547(b). Having considered the evidence and the arguments of the parties, the court now makes its findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Fed. R.Bankr.P. 7052.

I.

As trustee for her two children, defendant Anne Wilde received the distributions of several trusts established by her father, Ed Browder, for the benefit of his grandchildren, defendants Ashley and Byron Wilde. Mr. Browder was a well-to-do businessman who owned and operated several businesses in the vicinity of Knoxville, Tennessee. His financial success allowed him to own stock in United American Bank, controlled by Jacob F. Butcher, and City & County Bank, controlled by C.H. Butcher Jr., as well as to sit on the boards of directors of both of those banks. At all times material hereto, Mr. Browder also sat on SIBC’s board of directors. Knowing that Mrs. Wilde had substantial trust distributions to invest on behalf of her children, her father suggested that she buy investment certificates from SIBC, which was then paying interest at rates higher than any comparable institution paid. Mr. Browder asked Brenda Burleson (formerly Pilson), the senior investment counselor who handled his investments at SIBC’s West Town branch, to assist Mrs. Wilde with her investments when she came in.

Between June 16, 1982, and November 15, 1982, Mrs. Wilde purchased five investment certificates that ranged in amount from $20,-[903]*903000 to $230,000, each of which was scheduled to mature on January 5,1983. Because each investment certificate was purchased on a different date, each certificate was given a maturity date in days, rather than months or years, so as to synchronize them for concordant maturity on January 5,1983. Thus, for example, one certificate matured in 203 days, another in 196 days, and still another in 51 days. Although the five certificates were purchased on diverse dates over a five-month period during which SIBC’s published rates varied widely, each of the investment certificates issued to Mrs. Wilde bore the interest rate of 16% per annum. With a few exceptions, this rate was substantially higher than the rate paid to other customers who bought investment certificates at the same times and in similar amounts. One of these few exceptions was Mrs. Wilde’s father, Ed Browder, who received the rate of 17% per annum on a comparatively small investment of short duration bought on June 15, 1982.

On January 5 or 6, 1983, after all five of her investment certificates had matured together on January 5, 1983, Mrs. Wilde went to the office of SIBC and met with Brenda Burleson for the purpose of redeeming her investment certificates and perhaps reinvesting the proceeds. Mrs. Wilde and her husband had decided to invest the childrens’ trust funds in one of her husband’s real estate ventures, Hearthstone Apartments, but due to the vagaries of the construction schedule Mrs. Wilde did not know exactly when the funds might be needed. Accordingly, she sought assurances from Brenda Burleson that, if she reinvested the funds, she would be allowed to withdraw them prematurely without any interest penalty. In her testimony she stated:

I told her that we had this project at Hearthstone that we were about to begin and I wasn’t sure when I would be needing the money; and she reassured me that there would be no problem. Whenever I needed the money I would be able to get it out without any penalty.

Thus reassured, Mrs. Wilde reinvested the proceeds of the five investment certificates by buying two new ones, the first in the sum of $100,000 payable at maturity in one month at the rate of 14% per annum, the second in the sum of $278,000 payable in ninety-nine days at the rate of 14% per annum.

Each of the investment certificates Mrs. Wilde bought on January 5 or 6,1983, and all the certificates she had previously bought at SIBC, bore the following standard penalty provision:

Withdrawal of the deposit represented by this Investment Certificate by the holder prior to maturity is subject to approval by the Corporation. In the event of such approved withdrawal, the Corporation will pay interest hereon at its prevailing Investment Account rate, less a penalty of ninety (90) days interest computed on such Investment Account rate.

Mrs. Wilde was familiar with this penalty provision and negotiated the terms of her reinvestment so as to avoid it specifically. As she stated in her trial testimony,

I knew that there were penalties involved, but I did discuss that with her [Brenda Burleson], and she said that if I needed to reinvest the money for a short period of time that there would be no penalty if I reinvested it.

(Emphasis added.) Thus, she reached an agreement with SIBC on January 5 or 6, 1983, that allowed her to invest a total of $378,000 without risking the usual penalty for early withdrawal.

According to the trial testimony of Brenda Burleson, the senior investment counselor who attended Mrs. Wilde, SIBC would waive the interest penalty for those who asked. This was apparently done on a purely discretionary basis.

Q. Now, SIBC had no policies or guidelines for the waiver of penalties, did they? It was just whatever the executive officer decided to do — nothing in writing, no formal policies.

A. It was just up to the judgment of the corporation’s management.

Q. But as far as you knew, there were no corporate policies that guided him in the exercise of that judgment, were there?

A. No, sir.

[904]*904Although Mrs. Burleson testified that she was never refused the authority to waive an interest penalty, she did not testify about the frequency with which SIBC waived these penalties, and there is no evidence in the record from which the court can determine the prevalence of this practice. Indeed, on cross-examination, Mrs. Burleson admitted its relative abnormality.

Q. In fact, didn’t you also testify at your deposition that a waiver of a penalty was very unusual and didn’t occur often?

A. Under normal rates and terms that people had, that’s correct.
Q. In the normal case?
A. In normal cases.

Q. In the normal case, if a person cashed in an investment certificate prior to maturity, they paid the interest penalty?

A. That’s correct.

Q. And, in fact, although there may have been some rare departures for that, you can’t recall any others anywhere this large, can you?

A. Not this large.

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