Fox v. Hathaway (In Re Chi. Mgmt. Consulting Grp., Inc.)

929 F.3d 803
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 10, 2019
Docket17-2354
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 929 F.3d 803 (Fox v. Hathaway (In Re Chi. Mgmt. Consulting Grp., Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fox v. Hathaway (In Re Chi. Mgmt. Consulting Grp., Inc.), 929 F.3d 803 (7th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

Sykes, Circuit Judge.

Frank Novak tragically took his own life in February 2012. He left his company, Chicago Management Consulting Group, Inc., to his close friend Debra Comess. She was not in a position to manage the struggling firm, so she initiated bankruptcy proceedings almost immediately after Novak's death.

The Chapter 7 Trustee discovered numerous transfers from Chicago Management Consulting Group's coffers to Comess and Julia Hathaway-another Novak companion who ran a small yoga studio. Believing the transfers to be fraudulent under the Bankruptcy Code, the Trustee sought to reclaim their value for the Estate. After a bench trial, the bankruptcy judge ruled that the transfers to Comess and Hathaway were voidable on grounds of actual and constructive fraud and imposed sanctions on Hathaway for discovery lapses. The district court affirmed.

Comess settled her case; this appeal concerns the transfers to Hathaway. She launches several arguments. First, she contends that the bankruptcy judge committed clear error by ignoring one of the Trustee's trial exhibits when evaluating the company's financial health. Second, she challenges the bankruptcy judge's finding that the company did not receive reasonably *807 equivalent value in return for its transfers. Third, she argues that the company did not have "creditors" under the Illinois Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act ("IUFTA" or "the Act") at the time of the transfers. Finally, Hathaway vigorously disputes the sanctions ruling.

We affirm. As a preliminary matter, Hathaway failed to comply with multiple rules of appellate procedure. On the merits, our review of a bankruptcy court's factual findings is constrained; we reverse only for clear error. Not one of Hathaway's arguments meets this high bar. The bankruptcy judge was amply justified when he concluded that the company was insolvent, the transfers to Hathaway were gratuitous, and the company had creditors under the Act. And we see no reason to disturb the imposition of discovery sanctions.

I. Background

Novak was the sole shareholder of Chicago Management Consulting Group, an information-technology consulting firm he started in 1997. His primary client was BP America. By 2008 the company's solvency was questionable. In February 2012 Novak committed suicide, leaving his company to his good friend Debra Comess. She was not equipped to run the firm, so she initiated bankruptcy proceedings, filing a voluntary Chapter 7 petition in the Northern District of Illinois on May 2, 2012.

For four years prior to the bankruptcy filing, Comess and Julia Hathaway, another close friend of Novak's, had received significant payments from the company, though they were not employees. Hathaway alone received $45,400.81 between 2008 and 2012. Hathaway runs a small yoga studio, and her email correspondence with Novak during this period suggests that the payments were personal, not professional. The emails document Hathaway's repeated requests for gifts and payments and Novak's expressions of affection for her and willing acquiescence in her requests.

Trustee Horace Fox brought an avoidance action targeting the transfers to Comess and Hathaway. He later moved for sanctions against Hathaway alleging dilatory behavior during discovery.

The bankruptcy judge determined that the women had indeed received money from Chicago Management Consulting Group and that Novak typically failed to record the transactions. The judge also found that the company was insolvent at the time of the transfers, relying on an accounting expert's report introduced by the Trustee. The judge rejected Hathaway's argument that a list of gross receivables proffered by the Trustee refuted the expert's conclusion.

Moving on, the judge ruled that the company did not receive reasonably equivalent value in exchange for its transfers to Hathaway. He based this finding on evidence of Novak's close personal relationship with her, his habit of paying for her personal expenses on demand, the lack of evidence that Hathaway performed any work for the company, the irregularity and vagueness of her apparently hastily prepared invoices, and the inconsistency of those invoices with the company's bank records.

The judge concluded that the transfers were voidable as actually and constructively fraudulent under 11 U.S.C. § 548 and the IUFTA. The latter applied via § 544(b)(1) of the Code because the Trustee had established that the consulting firm had "at least one [unsecured] creditor" at the time of the conveyances-the Internal Revenue Service-and that an unpaid credit-card company counted as another.

*808 The judge took a cautious approach to the Trustee's motion for discovery sanctions. He declined to impose sanctions for Hathaway's failure to respond to interrogatories and produce tax returns. And although Hathaway was slow to turn over certain emails despite multiple discovery orders, the judge was satisfied that she had generally complied and that much of the delay was caused by her email service provider. Finally, the judge considered a set of emails that Hathaway unquestionably possessed but failed to produce. He found that those emails were improperly omitted but that they contained no relevant information. In the end, the judge determined that sanctions were appropriate only to the extent that Hathaway's delay and failure to comply with court orders caused the Trustee to expend additional time and resources litigating the recurring discovery disputes. He ordered "payment of the [T]rustee's attorney fees and expenses reasonably incurred in pursuing the discovery matters." The judge later entered judgment against Hathaway for the fraudulent conveyances in the amount of $45,400.81 and imposed $11,187.25 in discovery sanctions.

Hathaway appealed to the district court under 28 U.S.C. § 158 (a)(1). The district judge affirmed across the board. He discerned no clear error in the bankruptcy judge's finding that Chicago Management Consulting Group was insolvent. He was unimpressed by Hathaway's attempts to contradict the finding that the company had not received value for its transfers. Nor did he see fit to question the bankruptcy court's identification of unsecured creditors for § 544(b) purposes. On the issue of discovery sanctions, he deferred to the bankruptcy judge's broad discretion and found no reason to set aside the award.

II. Discussion

Hathaway's appeal repeats the arguments she raised in district court. We note at the outset that she did not approach this appeal with the seriousness our rules demand. She failed to provide an adequate record to facilitate our review. Because she claims that several of the bankruptcy court's factual findings were unsupported by the evidence, it was her responsibility to "include in the record a transcript of all evidence relevant to that finding or conclusion." FED. R. APP. P .

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929 F.3d 803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fox-v-hathaway-in-re-chi-mgmt-consulting-grp-inc-ca7-2019.