Gianakas v. Exchange National Bank of Chicago (In Re Gianakas)

75 B.R. 272, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16262
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedDecember 18, 1986
Docket86 C 0708
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 75 B.R. 272 (Gianakas v. Exchange National Bank of Chicago (In Re Gianakas)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gianakas v. Exchange National Bank of Chicago (In Re Gianakas), 75 B.R. 272, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16262 (N.D. Ill. 1986).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

ASPEN, District Judge:

This case returns to us after an all too brief sojourn through the bankruptcy court system. Once again, 1 we have been invited to address a procedural problem involving this case bouncing between our Court, the bankruptcy court and state court. The Chapter 11 debtors, Steven P. Gianakas, Condesa del Mar, Inc. and Hickory Properties, Inc. (referred to collectively herein as “Gianakas”), filed a suit against the Exchange National Bank of Chicago (“Exchange”) in state court seeking recovery of payments allegedly made by Gianakas to Exchange under economic duress and also requesting an accounting of attorneys’ fees and interest calculations on a loan agreement. Exchange filed counterclaims and a petition for removal to the bankruptcy court and, after some dilemma over the propriety of the removal process, this Court affirmed the bankruptcy judge’s de *273 nial of Gianakas’ motion to remand the case to state court. Upon remand to Bankruptcy Judge Charles McCormick, Giana-kas filed a motion for abstention and subsequently moved this Court to withdraw the reference on that motion. Before this Court had a chance to act on the motion to withdraw the reference, Judge McCormick granted the pending motion for abstention on April 22, 1986. Subsequently, Exchange filed motions to vacate the April 22 order before both the bankruptcy judge and this Court. In accordance with this opinion, the motion to withdraw the reference is granted nunc pro tunc, the motion to vacate the April 22 order is allowed and the motion for abstention is denied.

We first turn to a dispute over the technical aspects of the motion to withdraw the reference filed by Gianakas following a status conference before the bankruptcy judge where the parties appeared to agree to have the district court deal with the abstention motion. Gianakas subsequently filed a motion to withdraw in the district court, and the proceeding was assigned by lot to Judge Susan Getzendanner. The local rules require, however, that where there has been an adversary bankruptcy proceeding previously assigned to a district judge on appeal, any subsequent motions or appeals in the same proceedings requiring district court attention must be assigned directly to the calendar of the same district judge. Local Rule 2.33(d), Northern District of Illinois. In compliance with this rule, we had the cause transferred from Judge Getzendanner’s calendar to ours, and by minute order dated March 3, 1986, set a briefing schedule on the motion for abstention. We inadvertently did not enter a formal order withdrawing the reference on this matter, however, and that omission has caused some confusion among the parties. Because it was our original intention to withdraw the reference on the motion for abstention, we hereby grant the motion to withdraw nunc pro tunc to the March 3, 1986 date and will deal with the abstention motion on its merits.

Additionally, although Judge McCormick technically had jurisdiction to deal with the abstention motion since the motion to withdraw the reference was not formally granted, the parties filed their response and reply memoranda with the district court rather than the bankruptcy judge. Accordingly, it is not clear that Judge McCormick had the benefit of fully-briefed arguments from the parties at the time he made his ruling granting the motion for abstention. We deem it prudent, therefore, to vacate his April 22, 1986 order granting the motion for abstention and consider that motion anew.

The abstention motion stems from a state court action filed by Gianakas in January 1985 regarding payments allegedly made under duress to Exchange in relation to a loan transaction which had resulted in a secured claim under the Second Amended Integrated Plan of Reorganization (“the Plan”), which was approved by the bankruptcy judge in March 1983. Also included in this suit was a count seeking an accounting of certain attorneys’ fees and interest on the underlying loan. Exchange filed counterclaims in the state court action which alleged that to the extent it was required to incur additional attorneys’ fees in connection with determining the proper amount of its secured claim, those fees should be recoverable under the underlying loan documents and the confirmed Plan as an additional secured claim. It also sought to reinstate liens on Gianakas’ assets in conjunction with these claimed fees and to seek remedies under the Plan for enforcement of certain obligations.

A brief description of the events leading up to the state court action may be helpful in evaluating the abstention claim. Exchange was a secured creditor of Gianakas when the latter filed a Chapter 11 petition. On March 2, 1983, the bankruptcy judge approved the Plan which provided for the payment of all secured claims. Exchange was to receive the entire amount of its secured claim which arose from the loan transaction mentioned above, although it was apparently not scheduled to receive the principal amount until November 1, 1984. Gianakas (actually Hickory Properties, Inc., one of the three entities whom we refer to as “Gianakas”) was the beneficial interest *274 holder in certain real property, but it assigned its interest to Exchange to secure certain loan indebtedness. Gianakas alleged in its state court suit that it was attempting to sell the property in question following an annexation and rezoning which made the property more valuable, but that it needed a letter of direction from Exchange (as the beneficial interest holder) to the trustee approving the sale. According to the complaint, Exchange requested a payment of $115,000 in return for sending such a letter, and Gianakas claims that this constitutes a payment made under economic duress actionable under Illinois law. The sale of property was eventually approved, and in May 1984 Gianakas was able to close the sale and pay its secured creditors, including Exchange, with the proceeds.

Not surprisingly, Exchange’s version of the $115,000 payment it received from Gia-nakas is quite different. According to Exchange, Gianakas approached it with a proposal that undisclosed investors wanted to buy an option to purchase Exchange’s secured claim (the one due by November 1, 1984) at a discount. Exchange contends that the $115,000 payment was the price of the option and that Gianakas signed the option agreement for the purpose of certifying that the debtors were not the undisclosed principals nor the source of the money. Exchange also claims that Gianakas was in several respects in default of certain requirements of the confirmed Plan and that as part of the option agreement Exchange promised not to enforce the terms of the Plan at the time. According to Exchange, the letter of direction was not issued in return for the payment, but was simply given following Exchange’s receipt and review of the proposed annexation agreement.

In addition to the economic duress claim, Gianakas’ state court complaint includes a count for an accounting of Exchange’s calculation of accrued interest, its application of Gianakas’ principal payments made between November 1,1982 and May 1984 and attorneys’ fees which Exchange was claiming with respect to the secured claim. Exchange counterclaimed with a request for additional attorneys’ fees incurred in determining the appropriate amount of the secured claim and arguing that such attorneys’ fees constitute an additional secured claim.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 B.R. 272, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gianakas-v-exchange-national-bank-of-chicago-in-re-gianakas-ilnd-1986.