Hamm v. Hiler (In Re Smyth)

242 B.R. 352, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18375, 1999 WL 1244000
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Texas
DecidedMarch 3, 1999
Docket5:95-cv-01201
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 242 B.R. 352 (Hamm v. Hiler (In Re Smyth)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hamm v. Hiler (In Re Smyth), 242 B.R. 352, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18375, 1999 WL 1244000 (W.D. Tex. 1999).

Opinion

*355 ORDER AFFIRMING BANKRUPTCY COURT’S RULING

ORLANDO L. GARCIA, District Judge.

This is an appeal from the bankruptcy court’s order imposing significant sanctions against attorney Morris Hamm (“Hamm”) for actions he took in apparent representation of the Debtor, Marsha Smyth (“Marsha”) and her mother, Erma Lee Smyth (“Erma Lee”). In a somewhat rambling argument, Hamm raises a litany of errors which he contends merit reversal of the sanctions order. The Court has reviewed those arguments, but finds them to be without merit. Accordingly, the Court affirms the bankruptcy court’s ruling. 1

I. Background.

The facts of this case present one of the more egregious examples of attorney misconduct that the Court has seen. The centerpiece of this litigation is approximately 3200 acres of property in Uvalde County that make up the Smyth family ranch. Until 1992, Erma Lee held title to the property, which was subject to certain deed of trust liens held by Appellee Farm Credit Bank of Texas (the “Bank”). Erma Lee’s daughter, Marsha, helped Erma Lee manage the property and operated a hunting business on it.

In October of 1988, Erma Lee filed her first bankruptcy petition, listing the property as an asset on her schedules. That petition was voluntarily dismissed a few months later, but Erma Lee was forced to file again in September of 1989. She was able to work out a reorganization plan with the Bank, which was confirmed in May of the following year. But once again, Erma Lee ran into financial difficulty, and in February of 1992, she filed her third bankruptcy petition, again listing the property on her schedules. A few months later, in April, the Bank was granted relief from the stay to foreclose on the property, relief that Erma Lee did not contest.

Nevertheless, on the eve of the foreclosure, Marsha went to the Bank and presented it with a copy of a deed purporting to convey the property from Erma Lee to her, dated January 20, 1992 (but not actually recorded until May of 1992). Marsha further informed the Bank that she had filed for bankruptcy (thus commencing this case) and had listed the property on her schedules, thereby preventing the foreclosure from going forward. The following morning, May 5, 1992, the Bank responded by immediately moving for relief from the stay in bankruptcy to allow the foreclosure to proceed. The bankruptcy granted the *356 motion that day and the foreclosure went forward.

Hamm’s involvement with the Marsha’s bankruptcy proceeding did not become apparent until June 1, 1992, when he filed a motion for leave to appear pro hac vice (subsequently denied as improper in form) and a response to the Court’s order to show cause why Marsha’s bankruptcy proceeding should not be dismissed. In its May 15, 1992 order to show cause, the bankruptcy court clearly was concerned that something was amiss with Marsha’s bankruptcy filing. The order stated that dismissal appeared appropriate because (1) Marsha was unrepresented, “rendering the likelihood of an effective reorganization virtually impossible,” (R. at 135), and (2) Marsha’s sole motivation appeared to be to hinder the Bank from foreclosing on the property, even though the bankruptcy court suspected that Marsha had obtained title in a manner “entirely outside the law.” (Id.)

In his written response to the order to show cause, Hamm represented that “the Debtor [Marsha], through her mother, Erma Leigh [sic] Smyth, has interest [sic] in approximately 3,200 acres of land in Uvalde County, Texas upon which the Debtor has lived and worked for many years,” (R. at 167), and that this interest “was acquired by her prior to the filing of this bankruptcy,” (id.). Hamm went on to argue that Marsha had the potential for a successful reorganization because she and another gentleman, Mr. Al. Barnes, had developed a new technology for drying sanitary sludge to produce a fertilizer and could use the property for such an operation, despite the fact that the Bank had rejected such a proposal in connection with Erma Lee’s 1990 bankruptcy filing. Hamm kept to this story during the hearing on the order to show cause, even when directly questioned about when the property was transferred from mother to daughter:

THE COURT: Great. So why was [the property] listed in her mother’s schedules as her mother’s property?
MR. HAMM: Well, her mother had held legal title for some time. The debtor has actually operated the ranch for her mother for some time, and this was a means of effecting the transfer from mother to daughter to reflect the actual—
THE COURT: But if the transfer was done prior to mother’s bankruptcy filing, why was it listed in mother’s bankruptcy estate?
MR. HAMM: The deed had apparently been dated prior to there but had not been recorded as a legal transfer at that point. So—
THE COURT: So it wasn’t transferred until after the filing of the bankrupt—
MR. HAMM: It wasn’t transferred until after the fifing.
THE COURT: Then if it wasn’t filed [until] after the fifing, then mother couldn’t transfer it because mother didn’t own it.

(R. at 174-75.) At the conclusion of the hearing, the bankruptcy court did not dismiss the case, even though it indicated its skepticism that any reorganization would be possible without the property, because it was concerned over the Bank’s report that Hamm had counseled Marsha to deny the Bank access to the property in connection with the foreclosure of a second parcel and it wanted to ensure access would be permitted.

Hamm’s next action was to prepare a lawsuit on behalf of Marsha and Erma Lee in state court against the Bank, an officer of a Bank-related entity, Mark Hiler, and one of its in-house attorneys, Caroline Jones. The complaint alleged claims for breach of fiduciary duty and sex discrimination under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, premised on the Bank’s action in rejecting Erma Lee’s above-mentioned proposal to use the property for the sludge disposal .and fertilizer production operation, and plead dam *357 ages of one million dollars. Hamm sent the petition to the state court for filing by cover letter dated June 10, 1992. The suit was actually filed on June 23, 1992. On July 28,1992, the Bank removed the action to bankruptcy court and filed a separate motion to convert Marsha’s proceeding to a Chapter 7 liquidation.

These potential claims against the Bank and related individuals set forth in the lawsuit were never listed as an asset of Marsha’s estate; nor did Hamm contact the Chapter 7 trustee for Erma Lee’s estate regarding them. Likewise, Hamm did not seek the bankruptcy court’s approval for his employment to prosecute the case. Several weeks later, however, Hamm moved to dismiss Marsha’s bankruptcy proceeding, but that motion was summarily denied for failure to attach a form order.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
242 B.R. 352, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18375, 1999 WL 1244000, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamm-v-hiler-in-re-smyth-txwd-1999.