GL Master Inc

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. California
DecidedJuly 24, 2020
Docket2:18-bk-24302
StatusUnknown

This text of GL Master Inc (GL Master Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
GL Master Inc, (Cal. 2020).

Opinion

1 MARK FANG ATTORNEY AT LAW, APC Mark Fang, Esq., SBN 199073 2 mfang@markfangapc.com FILED & ENTERED William G. Short, Esq., SBN 132479 3 bshort@markfangapc.com JUL 24 2020 4 400 Camarillo Ranch Road, Suite 203 Camarillo, CA 93012 5 Telephone: (805) 383-2788 CLERK U.S. BANKRUPTCY COURT F acsimile: (805) 388-9488 C Be Yn g t r h a a l l tD c i hs it r i c Dt E o Pf UC Ta Yli f Cor Ln Eia RK 6 Attorneys for Unsecured Creditors Wei Dong, 7 Wenrui Wang, and Zongzhi Hu CHANGES MADE BY COURT

8 IN THE U.S. BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE 9 CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 10

11 In re Case No. 2:18-bk-24302-NB

12 Chapter 7 13 GL MASTER, INC., [Proposed] ORDER GRANTING MOTION BY 14 UNSECURED CREDITORS WEI DONG, WENRUI WANG, AND ZONGZHI HU FOR 15 Debtor. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE RE: CIVIL CONTEMPT AND DIRECTING (i) DEBTOR, 16 (ii) FREDA WANG, (iii) THOMAS POLIS, (iv) 17 LYNN CHAO AND (v) THE LAW OFFICES OF LYNN CHAO, A.P.C. TO APPEAR AND 18 SHOW CAUSE WHY THIS COURT SHOULD NOT FIND THEM IN CONTEMPT AND 19 IMPOSE SANCTIONS [Ref.: Dkts. 95, 106, 107, 108, 111, 128, 131, 132, 20 133, 136, 137, 138, 139, & 140] 21 Original Hearing Held 22 Date: July 7, 2020 Time: 2:00 p.m. 23 Place: Courtroom 1545 255 E. Temple St. 24 Los Angeles, CA 25 OSC Hearing: Date: August 19, 2020 26 Time: 9:00 a.m. Place: Courtroom 1545 27 255 E. Temple St., 1 The Motion by Creditors Wei Dong, Wenrui Wang, and Zongzhi Hu for an OSC re Contempt 2 (dkt. 95, “Motion for OSC”) was heard at the above-described time and date. Per the Court’s attached 3 Tentative Ruling, no appearances were required. Nevertheless, Thomas J. Polis, Esq., appeared for 4 himself, the Law Offices of Lynn Chao APC, and the debtor GL Master, Inc. William G. Short 5 appeared for the moving party. Trustee Ed Wolkowitz appeared pro se. 6 The Court notes that the word “form” found in the second line of the second full paragraph of 7 page 31 of the Tentative Ruling should be correct to read: “forum.” With that correction and the 8 following additional amendments, the Court adopts its Tentative Ruling, attached hereto, as the ruling 9 of the Court. 10 [The following text has been added by this Court to the proposed form of this order.] 11 (1) Debtor and its designated Person Most Knowledgeable (“PMK”), Ms. Freda Wang 12 The Alleged Employees request that this Court issue an Order to Show Cause (“OSC”) against 13 several persons. Principal among those persons are Debtor and its PMK designee, Ms. Freda Wang. 14 The Alleged Employees assert that Ms. Wang and Debtor failed to comply with this Court’s 15 Order Granting Motion Authorizing 2004 Examination (dkt. 12, the “Debtor 2004 Order”) because 16 Ms. Wang was unprepared and/or unwilling to provide answers to several topics of questioning. This 17 Court is persuaded that the Alleged Employees papers establish more than sufficient grounds to issue 18 the OSC. 19 One example is cited in this Court’s (now adopted) Tentative Ruling, which was posted prior to 20 the hearing: Ms. Wang’s testimony concerning the alleged misuse of her signature stamp. At the 21 hearing on the Motion for OSC, Debtor’s counsel argued that Ms. Wang has provided all information 22 known to her and otherwise answered this line of questioning in good faith. 23 Having once again reviewed the record following the hearing, this Court remains unconvinced 24 by Debtor’s counsel and is mystified by his and Debtor’s apparent attempts to deny the obvious. By 25 way of background, in response to the Motion for OSC, Ms. Wang provided a declaration in which she 26 states that she “testified on January 30, 2020 that after [she] left employment of the Debtor in 2016, 27 that various bookkeepers the Debtor used would use a ‘signature stamp’ to sign hundreds of checks 1 states that she “also testified on January 30, 2020 that [she] had no idea where any of the Debtor’s 2 bookkeepers or other financial management staff could be located” and that she has “tried [her] best 3 to piece together the information requested.” Id., para. 6 & 11 (emphasis added). 4 First, Ms. Wang does not point to any specific excerpts from the Rule 2004 examination 5 transcript. Such a half-hearted response inappropriately places the burden on the Alleged Employees 6 and this Court to hunt through the transcript for her alleged testimony. That leaves the Alleged 7 Employees and this Court either to conclude that her declaration falsely alleges what she actually 8 testified, or that she must be referring to some other portion of the deposition transcript that she has 9 failed to provide. Ms. Wang’s half-hearted response may constitute a waiver or forfeiture of Debtor’s 10 and her argument that she adequately responded. See generally Hamer v. Neighborhood Housing 11 Svcs., 138 S.Ct. 13, 17 n.1 (2017) (“Forfeiture is the failure to make the timely assertion of a right; 12 waiver is the intentional relinquishment or abandonment of a known right.”) (citations and internal 13 quotation marks omitted); Independent Towers, WA v. Washington, 350 F.3d 925, 929-930 (9th Cir. 14 2003) (issues forfeited when supported by “little if any analysis to assist the court” and when 15 “[n]otably absent is any explanation of why” alleged legal doctrine applied or why “well-defined 16 exceptions” did not apply; citing authority that court is not required to search out those things like 17 buried “truffles”).1

18 1 In contrast to Debtor’s failure to cite or provide deposition excerpts, the Alleged Employees cited and provided clearly marked excerpts of the deposition transcript that fully support their allegations about what occurred at the 19 deposition. They also lodged a complete copy of the transcript under seal, after Debtor asserted that this was required by 20 LBR 7030-1 (this Court assumes solely for purposes of this discussion, without deciding, that LBR 7030-1 is applicable, even though this is not an adversary proceeding, pursuant to Rule 9014(c) and (d) and 9017(c) or other applicable rules). Debtor’s failure to provide its own deposition excerpts is particularly notable because it simultaneously complains 21 that the Alleged Employees’ submission of excerpts was somehow defective. Having quoted LBR 7030-1(a)(3) (dkt. 106, pp. 11:5-12:7), Debtor clearly knew that it could have requested a complete copy of the deposition transcript from the 22 Alleged Employees as stated in that local rule, so it has no apparent excuse for having failed to file relevant excerpts. See, 23 e.g., Rule LBR 7026-2(c). But Debtor ignores its own non-compliance with the rules, and instead focuses on the Alleged Employees’ alleged non-compliance with rules that, so far as this Court can tell, are completely irrelevant. For example, Debtor has objected 24 both in writing and orally that the Alleged Employees did not make notations in the margin of the deposition transcript that allegedly are required by LBR 7030-1(b)(2). See dkt. 106, pp. 11:5-12:7. Debtor has never explained how this discovery 25 dispute is governed by that LBR’s requirement to note anticipated questions and answers “at trial” (which is part of the 26 language that Debtor emphasizes in quoting LBR 7030-1(b)(2)). Nor has Debtor ever explained how it was prejudiced in the slightest way by whatever the Alleged Employees allegedly failed to do in compliance with the Local Rules. In these circumstances, this Court must conclude that Debtor is advancing frivolous arguments, and lacks standing to do so. See, 27 e.g., Summers v. Earth Island Inst., 555 U.S. 488, 496 (2009) (“[D]eprivation of a procedural right without some concrete 1 Second, from this Court’s own re-review of the examination transcript (e.g., dkt. 95, Ex. 8, 2 pp. 46:4-48:23 and pp. 60:5-61:12) she did not actually testify as she now declares that she did. On 3 the present record, it appears that she has fabricated such alleged testimony.

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

Related

United States v. Shepherd
23 F.3d 923 (Fifth Circuit, 1994)
Commodity Futures Trading Commission v. Weintraub
471 U.S. 343 (Supreme Court, 1985)
Summers v. Earth Island Institute
555 U.S. 488 (Supreme Court, 2009)
Federal Trade Commission v. Swedish Match North America, Inc.
197 F.R.D. 1 (District of Columbia, 2000)
Sony Electronics, Inc. v. Sound View Technologies, Inc.
217 F.R.D. 104 (D. Connecticut, 2002)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
GL Master Inc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gl-master-inc-cacb-2020.