Frank v. Frithiof (In Re James)

463 B.R. 719, 2011 WL 841324
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 4, 2011
DocketBankruptcy No. 1-05-bk-05108MDF. Adversary No. 1-05-ap-00183MDF
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 463 B.R. 719 (Frank v. Frithiof (In Re James)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frank v. Frithiof (In Re James), 463 B.R. 719, 2011 WL 841324 (Pa. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

MARY D. FRANCE, Chief Judge.

I. Background

Barry and April James (“Debtors”) operate a business 1 known as “Prehistoric Journeys” in which they prepare and mount the skeletal remains of dinosaurs and other prehistoric animals for public or private display. Barry James (“Barry”) is a vertebrate paleontologist and April James (“April”) has a master’s degree in anthropology. Since 1986, they have prepared and mounted over 150 specimens, which are displayed in various museums and private collections.

On August 4, 2005, Debtors filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition. Lawrence G. Frank (the “Trustee”) was appointed to administer the estate. One of the estate assets reported on Debtors’ schedules was an account receivable due from Ron Fri-thiof (“Frithiof’) in the amount of $75,000. This purported receivable arose from services Debtors had provided preparing the fossilized remains of a juvenile Tyrannosaurus rex (nicknamed “Tinker”). On October 26, 2005, the Trustee filed the within Complaint to recover this receivable, asserting that Tinker was subject to an artisan’s lien to secure the estate’s interest in the value of professional services rendered by Debtors pre-petition. 2 The Trustee also argued that he was entitled to a recov *723 ery in quantum meruit from the Defendants. For the reasons set forth below, judgment will be granted in favor of the Trustee and against Defendants Frithiof and Hollrah on the artisan’s lien claim and against the Trustee and in favor of Defendants on the quantum meruit claim. 3

II. Factual Findings 4

The Trustee’s claim arises from a contract (the “Tinker Contract”) Debtors entered into on January 31, 2008 with Fri-thiof and Kim Hollrah (“Hollrah”) jointly as “The Tinker Group” and Fred Debrov-ner (“Debrovner”) and Cynthia Norrgran (“Norrgran”) for Colorado Dinosaur Co., Inc. (“Colorado Dinosaur”). 5 In the Tinker Contract, Debtors and Colorado Dinosaur were to prepare and mount the fossil and to help market it for sale on behalf of Frithiof and Hollrah, who owned the remains under the terms of the lease for the site where the bones were discovered. 6

Not all of the parties to the Tinker Contract knew each other before deciding to pursue this business venture. Debtors met Debrovner through his wife, Norrg-ran, who previously had been a client of Prehistoric Journeys. In late 2002 or early 2003, Debtors, Debrovner, and Norrg-ran discussed a separate project in which the parties would fabricate and sell dinosaur skeleton replicas incorporating dinosaur bones or bone fragments. In order to pursue this venture, Debtors moved from Sunbury, Pennsylvania to Norrgran’s and Frithiofs home in Colorado, nicknamed “Jurassic Pines.” At Jurassic Pines, Debtors were provided with living quarters and a workshop. 7

Debrovner and Frithiof became acquainted after Debrovner saw specimens from Frithiofs personal dinosaur bone collection at a Denver fossil show. Debrovner then contacted Frithiof to discuss the possibility of a business arrangement through which Frithiof would supply bones or bone fragments to be incorporated into the replicas that Colorado Dinosaur and Prehistoric Journeys would manufacture. Sometime in late 2002 or early 2003, Debrovner, Fri-thiof, and Barry met at Frithiofs Texas ranch to discuss the business proposal in more detail. These negotiations culminated in the Tinker Contract under which Debtors would prepare and mount the Tinker skeleton in exchange for a percentage of the price ultimately obtained from a buyer after the project was completed. Within several weeks following the execution of this contract, Barry and Debrovner *724 traveled to a facility in Iowa where approximately sixty bones belonging to the Tinker fossil were being stored, packed them into a truck, and drove them to Jurassic Pines. After a return trip to Pennsylvania, Debtors relocated to Colorado and began work on the Tinker project.

Around the same time Debtors signed the Tinker Contract, they entered into a second agreement (the “Jurassic Pines Agreement”) with Debrovner and Norrg-ran whereby Debtors would be permitted to use Jurassic Pines for preparing and mounting Tinker, as well as for other projects. Under the terms of the Jurassic Pines Agreement, Colorado Dinosaur would advance Prehistoric Journeys $50,000 “as deposit for the preparation and articulated mounting of Tinker,” which would be repaid when Tinker was sold.

In early May 2003, Frithiof twice visited Jurassic Pines. On his second trip, about May 12, 2003, Frithiof delivered the bones of two other specimens, a duckbill dinosaur, referred to as “TC,” 8 and a “tenas-pondelosis” or dimetrodon. 9 In a letter dated May 24, 2003 that April sent to friends describing Debtors’ activities at Jurassic Pines, she states that “[t]his past Friday marked our eighth week in Colorado.” She further reports that in addition to Tinker, most of the bones for TC were at their workshop. She also remarks that during the week prior to her letter, Barry “focused” on a “unique little reptilian dinosaur,” which seems to be a reference to the dimetrodon. The dimetrodon had been prepared and mounted incorrectly, so Fri-thiof asked Barry to reassemble the specimen. When Frithiof visited Jurassic Pines in June, the dimetrodon was substantially completed.

After Debtors began working on Tinker and other dinosaur projects at Jurassic Pines, issues arose regarding title to the bones being excavated from a site in Harding County, South Dakota. Frithiof had first obtained Tinker bone fragments around 1998 after they were discovered on or near a South Dakota ranch. Frithiof, Hollrah, and Mike Harrell executed a ground lease with the ranch owner to allow them to hunt for more fossils on the site. At some point thereafter, Frithiof became aware that the location of the excavation site was adjacent to land owned by Harding County. In November 2000, Frithiof and Harding County executed a five-year ground lease granting Frithiof legal title to all fossils found on the county-owned property. However, on May 23, 2003, Harding County issued a notice rescinding the lease and, shortly thereafter, filed an action in the United States District Court for the District of South Dakota against Frithiof, Hollrah, Melody Harrell, and others. The notice asserted that the lease was invalid because Frithiof had negotiated it without disclosing that he previously had found valuable fossils on the property. Harding County alleged that the lease was invalid, accordingly any fossils in The Tinker Group’s possession or control had been improperly removed and must be returned.

After receiving notice that Harding County had rescinded the lease, Frithiof drove to South Dakota to retrieve the remaining fossils extracted from the site. *725

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
463 B.R. 719, 2011 WL 841324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frank-v-frithiof-in-re-james-pamb-2011.