Haden v. Edwards (In Re Edwards)

100 B.R. 973, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 942, 1989 WL 64461
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Tennessee
DecidedJune 15, 1989
DocketBankruptcy No. 3-88-00621, Adv. No. 3-89-0036
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 100 B.R. 973 (Haden v. Edwards (In Re Edwards)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haden v. Edwards (In Re Edwards), 100 B.R. 973, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 942, 1989 WL 64461 (Tenn. 1989).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM ON DEFENDANT FIFTH THIRD BANK’S MOTION TO DISMISS

RICHARD STAIR, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

This matter is before the court on a “Motion To Dismiss” filed April 14, 1989, by the defendant Fifth Third Bank (Bank). The Bank seeks a dismissal of Plaintiff’s claims against it pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1) and (2), incorporated into Fed.R. Bankr.P. 7012(b), averring that the bankruptcy court lacks subject matter and personal jurisdiction. 1 For reasons discussed infra, the court has determined, that Counts I through VII in Plaintiff’s complaint, asserting causes of action against the Bank, are “related” to the bankruptcy case. Consequently, this court has jurisdiction to hear and adjudicate Plaintiff’s claims against the Bank consistent with the procedures dictated by 28 U.S.C.A. § 157(c) (West Supp.1989). 2

I

Charlyne E. Haden (Plaintiff or Haden) initiated this adversary proceeding with the filing of a complaint on February 15,1989. 3 She alleges that she and the debtor are two of the three children of C.P. Edwards, Jr. (Edwards); that Edwards, a successful businessman, established profitable business ventures in many fields, including insurance, publishing and real estate; that by the 1950s he had established some twenty (20) corporations to carry on his business interests; and that Edwards made his three children majority shareholders in thirteen (13) of these corporations referred to in the Complaint as the “Children’s Companies.” 4 *975 Haden further alleges that in the mid 1960s, the debtor began to manage “the Companies”; that she entrusted the management of her interests in “the Companies” to Edwards and the debtor; and that the debtor later occupied the positions of shareholder, officer and director in many of “the Companies.”

Haden further alleges that starting in approximately 1962, a number of “the Companies” began to borrow funds from the Bank; that all assets of “the Companies” were pledged as collateral to secure the Bank’s loans; that without her knowledge, the loans were cross collateralized; and that she was not aware of the details concerning the relationship between the Bank and “the Companies.”

Haden’s Complaint is grounded upon eight (8) separate counts: seven (7) assert causes of action against the Bank; one (1) asserts a cause of action against the debt- or. In general, the Plaintiff outlines a course of dealings which she alleges evince joint conduct on the part of the Bank and the debtor to enrich themselves to her detriment and to the detriment of “the Companies.”

Count I of Haden’s complaint alleges an agreement between the three Edwards children, the Bank and a third party under which the third party was to pay $650,000 to the Bank in satisfaction of the Bank’s loans to “the Companies.” In exchange, the collateral pledged to the Bank was to be released to the three children. Haden avers that most of the collateral was improperly released by the Bank directly to the debtor; that this was accomplished without her knowledge or consent; that the Bank and the debtor concealed from her the release of the collateral; that she has received none of the collateral despite her ownership interest in “the Companies”; and that the Bank and debtor have refused to provide her with explanations concerning the status of the collateral. Haden avers that the Bank’s conduct constitutes fraud, negligent misrepresentation, breach of contract and negligence.

The second count of Plaintiff’s complaint avers an agreement between the Bank and debtor to sell certain collateral and to divide the sale proceeds equally. According to the complaint, assets of “the Companies” exceeding $2,000,000 in value were sold, the proceeds divided between the Bank and debtor, with no portion of the sales proceeds credited to the Bank’s loans to “the Companies.”

In the third count of her complaint, Plaintiff alleges a complicated series of transfers of real property from two corporations, one of the “Edwards Companies” and one of the “Children’s Companies,” to a corporation owned by the Bank. Haden contends these transfers took place without any credit or reduction in the Bank’s loans to “the Companies.”

Count IV relates to one of the “Children’s Companies,” Bald Mountain Development Corporation (Bald Mountain). Plaintiff avers that an outside corporation, Dynamic Systems, Inc. (Dynamic), acquired an 80% interest in Bald Mountain; that the Bank owned and controlled Dynamic; that as a result of its acquisition of Bald Mountain, Dynamic became liable to the Bank on a $502,200 Bald Mountain debt; that the Bank did not release Dynamic from this obligation; that the loan apparently went into default; and that the Bank foreclosed upon some of the collateral pledged by “the Companies.” Haden further alleges that the Bank did not apply the proceeds from the foreclosed collateral to the loans owed by “the Companies.”

In her fifth count, Haden avers that the Bank allowed the debtor to transfer real property collateralizing the Bank’s loans owned by Bald Mountain to Wolf Laurel Properties, a corporation whose majority owner was the debtor; that this transfer occurred without Haden’s knowledge or consent; that the Bank removed these assets as collateral for its loans to “the Companies”; and that the Bank failed to properly credit or reduce the loans by the value of the real property transferred.

In Count VI of her complaint, Haden alleges that the debtor transferred part of *976 the Bank’s collateral, real estate known as Swim Halle, to himself for inadequate consideration. According to the complaint, the debtor then conveyed Swim Halle to Bald Mountain in satisfaction of a debt owing Bald Mountain. After Bald Mountain was acquired by Dynamic, Bald Mountain conveyed Swim Halle back to the debtor. Ha-den asserts that the Bank consented to these transfers. As a result, Haden claims that Swim Halle was not available to be credited toward the Bank’s loans nor was it available for distribution to Plaintiff upon payment of these loans.

Plaintiff’s seventh count, entitled “General Dealings,” incorporates the previous counts as follows:

[The Bank’s] conduct ... demonstrates a pattern of failing to properly credit family debts, self-dealing in family collateral, usurping in violation of its fiduciary duties the corporate opportunities of the Children’s Companies and Edwards Companies and transferring for no or inadequate consideration family assets.

On the basis of these and other averments, Haden seeks an accounting of the Bank’s transactions with the debtor, “the Companies,” and any companies or businesses in which the debtor holds an interest.

In the eighth and final count of her complaint, Haden objects to the debtor’s discharge on grounds premised upon 11 U.S. C.A. § 727(a)(3), (4) and (5) (West Supp. 1989).

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Bluebook (online)
100 B.R. 973, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 942, 1989 WL 64461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haden-v-edwards-in-re-edwards-tneb-1989.