Ford Concepts, Inc. v. Jones (In Re Ford Concepts, Inc.)

85 B.R. 893, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 685
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Florida.
DecidedApril 15, 1988
Docket18-23401
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 85 B.R. 893 (Ford Concepts, Inc. v. Jones (In Re Ford Concepts, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Florida. primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ford Concepts, Inc. v. Jones (In Re Ford Concepts, Inc.), 85 B.R. 893, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 685 (Fla. 1988).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION

THOMAS C. BRITTON, Chief Judge.

This adversary proceeding, which was then at issue, was transferred here March 4 from New York on defendants’ motion. It was tried April 5.

Plaintiff, a Florida corporation, is a chapter 11 debtor-in-possession in a New York bankruptcy filed Christmas Eve, 1986. It seeks $100,000 in actual and punitive damages from defendants upon the ground that a truck and a concrete plant were sold, respectively, in June and August of 1987 by some of the defendants to other defendants.

It is alleged that the postpetition sale, which was without leave of the court, was in willful disregard of the pending bankruptcy. By a motion made at trial, plaintiff was permitted to amend to allege that the sale was a voidable preference.

At trial, plaintiff filed a written stipulation for the dismissal of the complaint as to the defendant, Fogt, the attorney who conducted the sales to the defendant, Krush Krete, on behalf of the remaining defendants.

At trial, plaintiff orally stipulated for dismissal also as to Krush Krete, an unrelated third party who purchased both items in good faith and for fair value, and Krush Krete withdrew its pending motion for sanctions (CP 20). The complaint is dismissed as to Krush Krete.

The defendants, American Rock & Stone and Jones Septic, are corporations owned and controlled by the defendant Clifford Jones and his wife. All are collectively referred to hereafter as “the Joneses”.

At trial, also, the Joneses moved for dismissal on the ground that plaintiff had been dissolved by the Florida Secretary of State on November 16, 1987 under Fla. Stat. § 607.357(6), which denies dissolved corporations standing to maintain or defend litigation. The trial proceeded and this decision is based upon plaintiffs representation that the corporation was reinstated by the Secretary of State on the date of trial.

The Relevant Facts

In December 1981, the Joneses sold the concrete plant to the debtor’s predecessor and leased a site where the plant continued in operation until late 1985. The truck was purchased later by the debtor for use with the plant.

In November 1986, the debtor defaulted on the lease, and owed two month’s rent, $1,500, when the petition was filed. By its terms, the lease expired December 31, 1986, one week after bankruptcy.

The Jones have never been scheduled as creditors in the New York bankruptcy, nor has either the truck or the concrete plant ever been scheduled in that bankruptcy as property of the debtor.

Both the truck and the plant remained unused and in inoperable but repairable condition on the leased property subsequent to suspension of the plant’s operation in late 1985.

Between November 14,1986 and May 19, 1987, the Jones’ attorney wrote five letters to the debtor at its headquarters on Wind-song Lane in Stuart, Florida, terminating the lease for nonpayment of rent and giving notice pursuant to Florida law that all equipment left on the premises, including specifically the plant and the truck, would be sold. (D’s Ex B through F).

The truck was sold June 26,1987 to the Joneses. The plant and the truck were sold later by the Joneses at public sale in August 1987 to an unrelated third party for, respectively, $55,000 and $21,000. It is not suggested, nor do I find, that the sale price was inadequate in either case. Both items, having been sold for value to a good *896 faith purchaser without notice of the pending bankruptcy, are beyond the reach of this court. 11 U.S.C. § 542(c).

The management of the debtor’s affairs appears to have been entrusted to a resident of Stuart, Sheehan, first as a consultant for some months before bankruptcy, and subsequently as the debtor’s executive vice president. He had been the principal of the debtor’s predecessor when the plant and the business were purchased in May 1983 from the party to whom the Joneses had sold two years earlier. He prepared the debtor’s bankruptcy schedules. He was responsible for the operation of the Stuart office of the debtor.

Though well aware of the plant, the truck, and the lease, Sheehan omitted them from the bankruptcy schedules, because (he tells us) until March 1987 he thought they were subject to liens and without equity. He has never requested or seen a lien search. He has offered no explanation for his failure to schedule the Joneses as creditors or the lease as an asset.

He acknowledges receipt, as he must, of the certified December 17,1986 notice from the Jones’ attorney (D’s Ex C) which refers to previous notices. He does not “remember” seeing the earlier or subsequent correspondence, all sent to the same address, which was then and still is the corporate office used and supervised by him. (D’s Ex B, pp. 32 and 33).

Neither he nor the debtor made any response to the Jones’ letters nor asserted any interest in this valuable property for six months until he called on the Joneses twice shortly before June 25, 1987. He claims he then advised the Joneses of the pending bankruptcy, gave them a copy of the bankruptcy petition and some other papers, and warned them against any disposition of the property.

The Joneses acknowledge his visits, but deny that he told them the debtor had filed for bankruptcy in New York or left them any papers that gave that information. He did give them a note with the name and telephone number of his New York attorney, which they promptly turned over to their attorney. His three immediate calls to that attorney, Solomon, were never returned. The Jones’ attorney verified with this bankruptcy court that no bankruptcy was pending. There was no reason for that attorney to suspect that this Florida corporation had filed for bankruptcy in New York.

On the crucial conflict as to whether the Joneses had actual knowledge of the debt- or’s bankruptcy, I believe the Joneses and disbelieve Sheehan. 1 I suspect that Shee-han, who certainly knew better, was attempting to buy and resell the debtor’s assets for his personal benefit without the knowledge of his counsel or the New York court. The excuse he gives for his actions, that he was inundated by the debtor’s problems, does not explain his two visits and his failure to advise his counsel and the New York court.

Sheehan is an attorney and an accountant who served at one time as a panel trustee for a Wisconsin bankruptcy court. With that background, he is strangely uninformed. For example, when asked on March 28 if the debtor has filed any plan, he did not know it had not. (Id. at 37). He neither replied to nor turned over the Jones’ correspondence to counsel. He called on the Joneses without any identification and without a witness. He made no record even of the dates of his visits, though he says the Joneses rejected his papers and told him they intended to ignore the bankruptcy.

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Bluebook (online)
85 B.R. 893, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-concepts-inc-v-jones-in-re-ford-concepts-inc-flsb-1988.