Gialamas, Thomas v. Fiduciary Partners

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Wisconsin
DecidedFebruary 17, 2023
Docket3:21-cv-00481
StatusUnknown

This text of Gialamas, Thomas v. Fiduciary Partners (Gialamas, Thomas v. Fiduciary Partners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gialamas, Thomas v. Fiduciary Partners, (W.D. Wis. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN

THOMAS G. GIALAMAS,

Appellant (Debtor), v. OPINION AND ORDER

FIDUCIARY PARTNERS, a/k/a FIDUCIARY 21-cv-481-wmc PARTNERS TRUST COMPANY and Bankr. Case No: 3-18-13341 OSTP, a/k/a OLD SAUK TRAILS PARK LIMITED Adv. Proc. 3-20-00062-tml PARTNERSHIP,

Appellees (Creditors).

Debtor Thomas Gialamas is appealing from the bankruptcy court’s decision dismissing the adversary complaint he filed in a Chapter 11 adversary proceeding in which he sought a declaration as to whether certain claims relating to a spendthrift trust were property of his bankruptcy estate, and as such, were administered and released under the confirmed reorganization plan. The bankruptcy court dismissed Gialamas’s adversary complaint for failure to state a claim on which relief could be granted. (Dkt. #2-2.) On appeal, Gialamas contends that the bankruptcy court erred by focusing on the details of his claims relating to the spendthrift trust, which were not before it, rather than the underlying questions raised in his declaratory judgment complaint filed in the adversary proceeding. Appellees (creditors) argue that the bankruptcy court properly dismissed Gialamas’s adversary complaint. The court agrees with Gialamas and will reverse the bankruptcy court’s decision and remand this case for further proceedings. A. Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Proceedings Thomas Gialamas was placed into involuntary bankruptcy under Chapter 7 by petitioning creditors in October 2018. His case was converted to a Chapter 11 case in early 2019. Gialamas then proposed a Chapter 11 reorganization plan, but he withdrew it after failing to garner support for the plan from his creditors. One of his creditors, appellee Old Sauk Trails Park Limited Partnership (“OSTP”), also proposed an alternative plan under which OSTP would contribute a cash infusion to Gialamas’s

unsecured creditors, as well as a settlement and discharge of the largest claims against Gialamas,1 to which Gialamas objected. In particular, Gialamas objected to the waiver and release provisions in the plan, including § 4.5(d) of OSTP’s proposed plan, which provided in pertinent part that: On the Effective Date, the Debtor and Reorganized Debtor are deemed to have waived and released any and all causes of action, controversies, suits, liens, lawsuits, debts, damages, breaches of contract, breaches of fiduciary duties, business torts, or any other claims in law or equity whatsoever whether known or unknown that the Debtor has, or can have at any point in time prior to the Effective Date against Adelphia, LLC, OSTP, [Gialamas Family Holdings, LLC (“GFH”)] (and all other companies directly or indirectly controlled by GFH), The Gialamas Company, Inc., Park Center II, LLC, George Gialamas, Aris G. Gialamas, Gina M. Gialamas, Demetria Gialamas-Bull, George T. Gialamas 2012 Endowment Trust, Thomas G. Gialamas Cosmos II Trust, Aris G. Gialamas Cosmos II Trust, Demetria L. Gialamas-Bull Cosmos II Trust, Gina M. Gialamas Cosmos II Trust, Gialamas Family Endowment Trust, and each of foregoing’s employees, fiduciaries, attorneys’ and advisors. (Dkt. #5-1, ¶ 20.)

1 OSTP is a closely-held Wisconsin partnership owned by members of Gialamas’s family. OSTP’s proposed reorganization plan under Chapter 11 on March 30, 2020, with an effective date of April 20, 2020. (Dkt. #2-9, at 30.) Gialamas did not appeal or seek reconsideration of that confirmation order.

B. Gialamas’s Spendthrift Trust and State Probate Court Proceedings Meanwhile, Gialamas had sued creditors (now appellees) Fiduciary Partners and OSTP in state probate court for breach of their fiduciary duties as trustee and fiduciary of the Thomas

G. Gialamas Cosmos II Trust (“TGG Trust”), a spendthrift trust created originally by Gialamas’s parents, to which he was the primary beneficiary. More specifically, in February 2020, six weeks before the entry of the confirmation order in the Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings, Gialamas had filed a petition in Dane County probate court seeking removal of Fiduciary Partners as trustee of his spendthrift trust based on alleged misconduct. Gialamas also sought damages on behalf of the trust based on actions by Fiduciary Partners and other, so-called trust fiduciaries. While Gialamas’s petition was still pending in probate court, the bankruptcy court

confirmed the Chapter 11 reorganization plan. Fiduciary Partners then asserted in probate court that Gialamas had waived and released all his claims against them consistent with the release provision in § 4.5(d) of the Chapter 11 plan as quoted above. Not surprisingly, Gialamas objected, pointing out that under well-established law, spendthrift trusts are excluded from property of the bankruptcy estate.2 He further argued that his state law breach of

2 All parties agree that the Thomas G. Gialamas Cosmos II Trust is a spendthrift trust that was properly excluded from Gialamas’s bankruptcy estate under 11 U.S.C. § 541(c)(2). (OSTP Br. (dkt. #6) at 19) (“OSTP agrees that the corpus of the TG Subtrust was properly excluded from the Estate in this case.”) In particular, that statute exempts the corpus of a spendthrift trust from the not released as part of the Chapter 11 reorganization plan. In contrast, Fiduciary Partners and OSTP took the position that although the corpus of the spendthrift trust was properly excluded from the bankruptcy estate, there was a distinction between the corpus of the trust and causes of action stemming from a beneficiary’s interest in the trust. The probate court concluded that whether Gialamas’s claims were property of his bankruptcy estate released under the Chapter 11 plan or part of the spendthrift trust was a matter that should be decided by the bankruptcy court in the first instance.

C. The Adversary Proceeding In light of the parties’ dispute in probate court, Gialamas filed an adversary complaint in his bankruptcy case against Fiduciary Partners Trust Company and OSTP, seeking declaratory relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2201 that his claims as the beneficiary of the spendthrift trust (including, but not limited to claims against the trustee and other fiduciaries of the trust) were not property of Gialamas’s bankruptcy estate and were not barred by § 4.5(d) of the Chapter 11 reorganization plan. OSTP and Fiduciary Partners answered Gialamas’s adversary

complaint, arguing that the claims Gialamas was asserting in state probate court in his capacity as primary beneficiary of the spendthrift trust were personal to him, property of his bankruptcy estate, and waived/released under the confirmed Chapter 11 plan. Gialamas and OSTP also filed cross motions for judgment on the pleadings on the same basis.

property of the bankruptcy estate, so long as the trust is enforceable under state law. Magill v. Newman (In re Newman), 903 F.2d 1150, 1152 (7th Cir. 1990); Resop v. McCoy (In re McCoy), 464 B.R. 832, 836 (Bankr. W.D. Wis. 2011). The dispute here, however, is whether the legal claims by or causes of action for injury to the spendthrift trust were part of the estate if asserted by Gialamas as the trust’s primary beneficiary. Judge Thomas Lynch entered a memorandum decision on March 30, 2021, granting judgment on the pleadings in favor of OSTP and Fiduciary Partners and holding that Gialamas’s adversary complaint failed to state a claim on which relief could be granted. (Dkt. #1-3.) After receiving the bankruptcy court’s ruling, Gialamas filed a pro se motion for reconsideration, which the bankruptcy court denied. (Dkt.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Gialamas, Thomas v. Fiduciary Partners, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gialamas-thomas-v-fiduciary-partners-wiwd-2023.