Hagar v. Beimel (In Re Beimel)

406 B.R. 660, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 1609, 2009 WL 1852752
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 26, 2009
Docket19-20216
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 406 B.R. 660 (Hagar v. Beimel (In Re Beimel)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hagar v. Beimel (In Re Beimel), 406 B.R. 660, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 1609, 2009 WL 1852752 (Pa. 2009).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

m. bruce McCullough, Bankruptcy Judge.

Nathan and Clara Hagar (hereafter “the *663 Hagars”) 1 and Rose Traficante (hereafter “Traficante”), the instant plaintiffs, via the instant adversary proceeding, seek to have their claims for investment losses that they incurred pre-petition declared nondis-chargeable pursuant to 11 U.S.C. §§ 523(a)(2)(A) and 523(a)(2)(C). The Ha-gars’ claim is for $207,000 and Traficante’s claim is for $10,000. The Hagars and Traficante have advanced such claims against Christopher Beimel, the instant debtor (hereafter “the Debtor”), in particular, on the ground that the Debtor, while working first as a stockbroker and then essentially as a chief executive officer at an entity that the Court will henceforth refer to as Penn Capital, perpetrated a fraud and/or made fraudulent misrepresentations to the Hagars and Traficante that caused their investment losses. 2 For the reasons that are set forth below, and subsequent to a trial on the matter that was held on April 8, 2009, the Court determines that such claims of the Hagars and Traficante shall not be excepted from the Debtor’s Chapter 7 discharge (i.e., such claims are not nondischargeable), that is, such claims shall be discharged by virtue of such Chapter 7 discharge.

STATEMENT OF FACTS

The investment losses of the Hagars and Traficante that comprise the entirety of their claims can be traced to their respective purchases of securities that were personally issued by an individual named Philip Roy, Jr. (hereafter “Roy”). The parties agree that the aforesaid securities were collateralized by real estate that Roy personally owned, which real estate Roy, in turn, operated as a shopping center; such realty has been referred to by the parties, and the Court shall henceforth refer to it, as the Roy Plaza. The Hagars and Trafi-cante have interchangeably described the securities that they received and which were personally issued by Roy (hereafter “the Roy Plaza Securities”) as either preferred stock or debt obligations. However, the Court concludes that the Roy Plaza Securities necessarily constituted debt obligations because (a) Roy personally, rather than a corporation that he might have owned, issued the Roy Plaza Securities, (b) an individual can issue a debt obligation but an individual cannot issue stock in himself or herself, (c) the Roy Plaza Securities were collateralized by the Roy Plaza, and (d) stock cannot, while debt can, be collateralized.

Roy also owned and worked at Penn Capital, a financial services firm that, as mentioned above, employed the Debtor. The Debtor commenced his employment with Penn Capital in April 1994. At some point prior to then (apparently in February 1994) the Hagars invested a substantial sum of money' — apparently approximately $207,000 — to be managed by Penn *664 Capital, which money Penn Capital then invested on the Hagars’ behalf in, and across, nine different mutual funds. The managers of the Hagars’ “account” at Penn Capital — that is, those who managed the Hagars’ investment — at the time of the mutual fund purchases were Roy and an individual named John Jarvis (hereafter “Jarvis”).

At some point in December 1994 (and perhaps also in early January 1995) the Hagars’ mutual fund investments were liquidated and the proceeds were then invested on the Hagars’ behalf in Roy Plaza Securities. 3 The Hagars contend that the aforesaid mutual fund liquidation and Roy Plaza Securities purchase (hereafter “the December 1994 Transaction”) was effectuated entirely without their consent. The Hagars also contend that it was the Debt- or who was the one who effectuated the December 1994 Transaction. The Hagars apparently contend as much because they contend, in turn, that (a) Jarvis had disappeared at some point prior to December 1994, (b) the Debtor, at some point subsequent to Jarvis’ disappearance, was anointed by Roy as a new manager of the Hagars’ “account,” and (c) the Debtor contacted the Hagars by telephone at some point in December 1994 and recommended to them that they engage in the December 1994 Transaction. The Debtor disputes all of the foregoing contentions by the Ha-gars excepting for the disappearance of Jarvis; in particular, the Debtor contends that (a) he was not the manager of the Hagars’ “account” when the December 1994 Transaction occurred, (b) he never contacted the Hagars by phone in December 1994 as they contend, and (c) he had nothing to do with either the decision to engage in, or the effectuation of, the December 1994 Transaction. The Debtor contends that the only contact that he had with the Hagars prior to the effectuation of the December 1994 Transaction was at a meeting between Roy (and/or Jarvis) and the Hagars, at which meeting the Debtor did nothing more than make a presentation regarding the Roy Plaza Securities. The Debtor contends that, with respect to the Roy Plaza Securities and the Roy Plaza, he knew nothing more at that time than that which was contained in a prospectus, and that he consequently represented nothing more regarding such securities than that which was contained in such prospectus.

The Hagars contend that they persistently demanded that the December 1994 Transaction be unwound, but that such demands were to no avail. On February 10, 1995 — and notwithstanding, contend the Hagars, that (a) they never authorized the December 1994 Transaction, and (b) they repeatedly demanded, without any success, that such transaction be unwound — the Hagars gave an additional $50,000 of cash to Penn Capital to invest on their behalf.

Roy died in April 1995. The estate for Roy (hereafter “the Roy Estate”) asked the Debtor to take over the management of Penn Capital’s affairs and the Debtor, at some point in May 1995, agreed to do so, effectively becoming its chief executive officer. The Debtor contends that it was not until May 1995 that he effectively took over management of the Hagars’ “account” with Penn Capital. The Debtor concedes that, in May 1995 when he took over management of Penn Capital, he then became *665 aware that perhaps at least one of the reasons why Roy had been issuing (i.e., selling) Roy Plaza Securities prior to his death was to repay some of those Penn Capital investors who had previously purchased such securities through Jarvis.

The Hagars consulted with an attorney named Louis Swartz (hereafter “Swartz”) in June 1995, and Swartz attempted to then aid them in recovering (a) all of the money that they had given Penn Capital to invest on their behalf, and/or (b) the investments that had been made on their behalf. Mrs. Hagar testified that the Ha-gars consulted Swartz in response to information that she had obtained from her doctor — who, according to Mrs. Hagar, is the individual that first recommended the Hagars to Penn Capital years earlier — to the effect that Penn Capital was experiencing financial difficulties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
406 B.R. 660, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 1609, 2009 WL 1852752, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hagar-v-beimel-in-re-beimel-pawb-2009.