Ellwanger v. Budsberg (In Re Ellwanger)

140 B.R. 891, 1992 Bankr. LEXIS 722, 1992 WL 103622
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Washington
DecidedMay 6, 1992
Docket18-42924
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 140 B.R. 891 (Ellwanger v. Budsberg (In Re Ellwanger)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ellwanger v. Budsberg (In Re Ellwanger), 140 B.R. 891, 1992 Bankr. LEXIS 722, 1992 WL 103622 (Wash. 1992).

Opinion

DECISION: OWNERSHIP OF CAUSES OF ACTION

PHILIP H. BRANDT, Bankruptcy Judge.

I. ISSUES

A. Jurisdiction: Whether the Bankruptcy Court has jurisdiction over a malpractice claim which arises out of legal representation both pre- and post-petition, but which became irremediable, and therefore accrued under state law, post-petition.

B. Property of the Estate: Whether that malpractice claim is property of the estate.

II. HISTORY

In 1981 Debtors Will and Helen Ellwan-ger, then married, lived in Gig Harbor, Washington. In late August of that year, Helen Ellwanger went to visit her terminally ill mother, Betty Joyce McBroom, who was hospitalized in California. During the visit, Ms. Ellwanger received a quitclaim deed to her mother’s home. The mother’s will, apparently also executed during the visit, provided for undivided one-fifth interests in her estate to go to her husband and each of her four children. Mrs. McBroom died a week later, and Helen Ellwanger was appointed administratrix.

Rather than probate the will, Helen Ell-wanger recorded the quit-claim deed. Thereafter, other family members brought action against Helen Ellwanger in California Superior Court (Estate of Betty Joyce McBroom, No. PW 4011, San Bernadino County) to recover the residence. When Helen was sued by the new administrator, the Ellwangers retained James B. Eglin to represent her. Although Will Ellwanger was neither named a defendant nor served, Eglin entered a general appearance for both. After some initial activity in the case, Helen Ellwanger substituted herself for Eglin. In September of 1983, Roger Meadows was retained to represent Will Ellwanger in the suit.

After a four day trial, the Court found Helen Ellwanger had knowingly made false representations and obtained the residence by fraud and trickery. The Court ordered the property returned to the estate, and appointed Martin McBroom as administrator. Mr. McBroom then brought action against Helen Ellwanger under Cal.Prob. Code § 612 (West.1989), which imposes a penalty of twice the value of property embezzled or concealed from decedent’s estate. On 23 March 1984, the Superior Court entered judgment for a penalty of $240,000, plus a surcharge of $53,792.63 on *894 Mr. McBroom’s objection to Helen Ellwan-ger’s inventory. 1

Ellwangers filed for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code 2 on 11 June 1984. Meadows continued to handle the McBroom Estate matter, initiating an appeal of the judgment. The McBroom Estate obtained relief from stay on 15 October 1984. On 30 October 1984, Helen Ell-wanger filed a Motion to Maintain Stay, which was heard 6 November. Judge Robert W. Skidmore reinstated the stay until 15 November 1984; an Order so providing was entered 14 November 1984, and ends, “... at which time it shall be lifted without further order of this Court to allow proceedings in the Superior Court for the State of California to continue.”

On motion of the Creditors’ Committee, Kenneth Graybeal was appointed trustee in the Chapter 11 by order entered 29 November 1984.

The Ellwangers’ marriage was dissolved in late December of 1984.

On 29 January 1985, the trustee moved for an order authorizing him to discontinue the appeal, on the basis that the California court had sufficient evidence to make the findings it made. The motion was heard 12 February 1985, and Judge Robert W. Skid-more authorized the discontinuance if debtors did not make the necessary appeal arrangements and pay the costs by 20 February 1985, entering his Order re: Trustee’s Motion to Discontinue Appeal on that date. The California Court of Appeals, Fourth District, dismissed the appeal 4 March 1985 for failure to pay transcript fees. Helen Ellwanger filed a Motion and Declaration to Reinstate Appeal, which was heard 3 May 1985; Judge Skidmore took the matter under advisement. There is no disposition of record of the Motion to Reinstate Appeal.

On the trustee’s motion, the Ellwanger bankruptcy was converted to Chapter 7 on 11 June 1985.

Will Ellwanger filed a malpractice action against Eglin and Meadows, No. OCV 36849 in the Superior Court of California, San Bernadino County, on 31 October 1985, alleging legal malpractice committed by Eglin between January and August of 1983, legal malpractice by Meadows from September 1983 through February of 1985, and fraudulent concealment of material facts against Eglin, and breach of fiduciary obligation and conversion against Meadows (herein collectively the “malpractice claims” or “causes of action”). Ellwanger sought damages for “judgment for $240,-000.00 against the plaintiff, injury to reputation, bankruptcy, loss of business, other past and future pecuniary loss, and past and future emotional distress and mental anguish.” Helen Ellwanger evidently also filed her own separate malpractice actions against Meadows; the record here does not disclose when, the damages alleged, the identity of any other parties, or its disposition or present status, although at hearing counsel indicated that both Ellwangers are plaintiffs in the pending action: apparently, the two cases have been consolidated.

The malpractice claims were never scheduled as assets in the bankruptcy, nor were they disclosed to the trustee. The trustee’s Final Report was approved on 27 August 1986, and an order approving his Amended Final Report was entered 24 November 1986. Debtors (at least Will Ellwanger), assert(s) that they (or he) requested the prior trustee to pursue the malpractice action, who declined, and that they (or he) believed it had been abandoned; Mr. Gray-beal’s affidavit is that he was unaware of any malpractice action. At the 12 February 1985 hearing, the Trustee’s counsel indicated a willingness to abandon the estate’s interest in the appeal of the California Superior Court decision, and the Order entered 20 February 1985 concludes:

If the arrangements for the costs of appeal and the employing of an attorney for Feb 22, 1985, is not completed by *895 February 20,1985, the trustee may abandon the property involved in that appeal to the debtors and shall no longer be responsible for processing the appeal.

The docket discloses neither any notice of the trustee’s intention to abandon such property, or any malpractice claim, nor any order or other document from the trustee actually abandoning the appeal, the property, or the malpractice claims.

Debtors’ Discharge was entered 4 April 1988.

The malpractice cases went on independent of any bankruptcy proceedings until late 1990, when the McBroom Estate became aware that a settlement of Will Ell-wanger’s Eglin malpractice claim was in the offing. The McBroom Estate’s counsel advised Mr. Ellwanger’s counsel that the proceeds were property of the bankruptcy estate, and requested the settlement be turned over to the estate. Counsel declined to do so, at least without court order. Through Washington counsel, the McBroom Estate moved to reopen the bankruptcy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
140 B.R. 891, 1992 Bankr. LEXIS 722, 1992 WL 103622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellwanger-v-budsberg-in-re-ellwanger-wawb-1992.