First Leasing Co. v. McGalliard (In Re McGalliard)

183 B.R. 726, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 1183, 1995 WL 404162
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. North Carolina
DecidedMay 19, 1995
Docket16-11328
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 183 B.R. 726 (First Leasing Co. v. McGalliard (In Re McGalliard)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Leasing Co. v. McGalliard (In Re McGalliard), 183 B.R. 726, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 1183, 1995 WL 404162 (N.C. 1995).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

WILLIAM L. STOCKS, Bankruptcy Judge.

This adversary proceeding came before the court for trial on March 22 and March 29, 1995. Both parties called witnesses and offered documentary evidence. Having heard and considered the evidence offered by the parties and having considered the arguments of counsel, the court makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law.

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. First Leasing Company (“FLC”) obtained a judgment against Thomas Dean McGalliard (“Debtor”) on November 1, 1991 in the amount of $18,219.26 plus attorneys’ fees of $5,730.48 in the District Court of Wake County.

2. On February 5, 1992, Debtor filed a motion to claim exempt property in the District Court of Wake County. FLC objected to the motion and a hearing was held in the District Court of Wake County during the week of April 3, 1992, concerning the motion and FLC’s objection thereto.

3. Debtor’s motion was allowed except:

a. A 1978 Dodge automobile was declared to be non-exempt property;

b. Certain cameras owned by Debtor were declared to be non-exempt property;

c. Certain stock consisting of 43,000 shares of Investors Technology Company, *729 which is listed on NASDAQ as IVES, was declared to be non-exempt property; and

d. Debtor was ordered to deliver the title to the 1978 Dodge automobile to FLC, make the cameras available to the sheriff of For-syth County, furnish all available information to FLC’s attorney regarding the IVES stock and “cooperate with” FLC to determine the status of Debtor’s interest in the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company (“RJR”) deferred compensation plan administered by his employer, RJR.

4. Having received no information from Debtor regarding the RJR deferred compensation plan, on June 15,1992 FLC issued and served a subpoena on RJR seeking information regarding Debtor’s interest in the RJR deferred compensation plan. RJR responded with information furnished to the attorney for FLC reflecting that Debtor had retired on May 1, 1992, that at retirement Debtor’s interest in the RJR/Nabisco Capital Investment Plan was $93,355.71, and that his interest in the RJR/Nabisco Capital Investment Plan had been distributed to Debtor on May 29, 1992.

5. On June 25, 1992, Debtor opened an individual retirement account with his broker, Cowen & Company, and deposited $81,-968.21 which was the taxable portion of his distribution from RJR.

6. Following a series of correspondence between counsel for Debtor and counsel for FLC regarding the RJR distribution and whether the funds in the IRA account at Cowen & Company were exempt, on July 23, 1992, FLC moved in the District Court of Wake County for further examination of Debtor and to hold Debtor in contempt for not complying with the earlier district court order directing Debtor to turn over property, etc.

7. On Friday, September 18, 1992, a hearing on the FLC motion was held in the District Court of Wake County at which Debtor was examined under oath regarding the RJR distribution and his disposition of the funds received from RJR upon his retirement.

8. Several days prior to the hearing on September 18, 1992, Debtor communicated by telephone with Cowen & Company and requested that Cowen & Company issue a check for the full amount in his IRA account payable to the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”). Following this conversation, Cowen & Company realized that it could not issue a check payable to the IRS because it did not have written authorization from Debtor to do so. Cowen & Company attempted to communicate with Debtor but was unable to reach him. Cowen & Company then issued a check payable to Debtor (not the IRS) for $83,653.77, representing the value of Debt- or’s IRA account, and forwarded the cheek to King Studio, Clemmons, North Carolina, Debtor’s business address. King Studio is a business operated by Debtor’s wife. The issuance of this check and the forwarding of the check by Cowen & Company occurred prior to September 18, 1992.

9. During his testimony in district court on September 18, 1992, Debtor testified that he had requested that his account at Cowen & Company be closed and that the check for the proceeds of the account be issued payable to the IRS. A recess was taken by the district court in order to permit Debtor to call Cowen & Company to determine if the check issued by Cowen & Company had been cashed by the IRS. During the recess, Debtor placed a telephone call to Cowen & Company. According to Debtor, the information which Debtor received from Cowen & Company was that the check had been issued by Cowen & Company but had not cleared as of that time. According to Debtor, he was not told during this conversation that Cowen & Company had issued the cheek to him rather than to the IRS as he had requested. There was no evidence to contradict this testimony by Debtor, nor was there any direct evidence that Debtor was made aware that the cheek had been mailed to Debtor’s business address instead of to the IRS.

10. When the hearing resumed, Debtor stated under oath to the court that Cowen & Company had issued the check as requested by Debtor, but that the check issued by Cowen & Company had not been cashed as of that time. According to Debtor, at the time he gave this testimony to the district court, he was not aware that the check had *730 actually been issued payable to him, rather than to the IRS as he had requested. Plaintiff presented no evidence contradicting Debtor’s testimony in this regard.

11. Following the testimony of Debtor, the District Court of Wake County issued an order directed to Cowen & Company and ordering Cowen & Company to immediately “stop payment on its check to IRS representing a distribution in excess of $81,000.00 on the account of Thomas D. McGalliard, Account No. 13962 or 3852216, and to hold such funds pending ruling by this court as to plaintiffs entitlement thereto.” Before leaving court on September 18,1992, Debtor was aware that this order had been or would be entered by the court on September 18, 1992.

12. Later in the afternoon on September 18, 1992, after the conclusion of the hearing in district court, counsel for FLC called Cow-en & Company and learned that the check from Cowen & Company had been sent to Debtor at King Studio and was payable to Debtor. Upon receiving this information, counsel for FLC returned to the district court and informed the judge of this additional information. At that time, which was after 5:00 p.m., the district court judge issued a “verbal order” that Debtor not dispose of the funds and that he tender such funds to his attorney to be held by the attorneys until the priorities could be resolved. This development occurred without notice to Debtor or his attorney; however, a letter was faxed by the attorney for FLC to Debtor’s attorney on the late afternoon of September 18, 1992, which stated that the district court judge had “ordered Mr. McGalliard not to dispose of any such funds, Mr. McGalliard is to immediately tender all such funds to you and that you and I are to put them in a joint escrow account and hold them until the priorities can be resolved.”

13.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 B.R. 726, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 1183, 1995 WL 404162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-leasing-co-v-mcgalliard-in-re-mcgalliard-ncmb-1995.