Harold C. Lampe, Jr V.

665 F.3d 506, 2011 WL 6849057
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedDecember 30, 2011
Docket11-1819
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 665 F.3d 506 (Harold C. Lampe, Jr V.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harold C. Lampe, Jr V., 665 F.3d 506, 2011 WL 6849057 (3d Cir. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

GREENBERG, Circuit Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

Jestyn G. Payne, successor custodian for shares of stock owned by L.L., a minor, appeals from an order of the District Court affirming the Bankruptcy Court’s order dismissing an adversary proceeding that Payne brought against the debtor, Harold C. Lampe, Jr. (“Harold”), the prior custodian for the shares, and sustaining Harold’s objections to Payne’s proof of claim. In the Bankruptcy Court, Payne sought to recover $345,000 from Harold, claiming that Harold breached his fiduciary duties owed to L.L. when he secured and retained that sum in partial satisfaction of a judgment that he obtained against WEL Management, Inc. (“WEL”), a family business of which he was a director and in which he and L.L. were the shareholders of record. In particular, Harold held one WEL share and was the custodian for L.L. of nine WEL shares, the remaining 90% of its outstanding shares. Despite the potentially conflicting interests between his role both as a WEL director and custodian of L.L.’s shares on the one hand, and his status as a creditor of WEL on the other, the District Court and the Bankruptcy Court determined that Harold did not breach his fiduciary duties either as a WEL director or as the custodian for L.L.’s shares when he secured the judgment and partially obtained satisfaction for it from the sale of WEL’s assets. For the following reasons, we will reverse.

II. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

A. The Lampe Family Businesses

In approximately 1983, Harold, a paper salesman for a company not involved in this case, wrote a book about problems associated with the use of paper in commercial printing operations. About two years later, Harold and his son William Lampe (“William”) started Paper Complaints, Inc. (“PCI-1”), a Pennsylvania corporation, to market Harold’s book and to provide consulting services to the printing industry. Harold and William were PCI-l’s sole shareholders. After they formed *509 PCI-1, Harold continued to work as a paper salesman while William ran PCI-1’s day-to-day operations. Between 1985 and 1991, Harold made loans to PCI-1 to assist its business, either by writing checks to PCI-1 or paying bills on its behalf. Although there were no written agreements memorializing the terms of the loans, Harold testified in the Bankruptcy Court that he and William agreed that PCI-1 would repay the loans with around nine or ten percent interest.

Around 1985 William married Theresa Lampe (“Theresa”) and during the marriage, L.L. was born. In 1991 William told Harold that Theresa wanted to start a new company, Printing Consulting, Inc. (“Pei-s’’), that Theresa and William would own equally, to replace PCI-1. Harold agreed to the arrangement on the condition that the loans he had made to PCI-1 were repaid. In 1992, as agreed, PCI-1 ceased operating and William and Theresa formed PCI-2, another Pennsylvania corporation to take its place. Nevertheless, Harold’s loans were not repaid. PCI-2 engaged in the same kind of business as PCI-1 but it differed to the extent that it focused more on consulting services than on selling Harold’s book. Between 1991 and 2003, Harold made loans to PCI-2, both to help with the formation of the company and with its ongoing operations. As had been the case with Harold’s loans to PCI-1, there was no documentation evidencing his loans to PCI-2. Harold testified at the adversary proceeding, however, that he made the loans with the understanding that, like his loans to PCI-1, they would be repaid at nine or ten percent interest. In total, Harold lent almost $300,000 to PCI-1 and PCI-2.

In addition to forming PCI-2, between 1991 and 2003 William and Theresa formed or acquired a number of other closely-held Pennsylvania corporations as well as substantial real estate holdings. As significant here, in 1991 William and Theresa formed WEL to provide a variety of services to the couple’s other businesses. William, Theresa, and Harold were WEL’s directors. WEL made intercompany financial transfers, provided accounting services to PCI-2, and made investments. Theresa was primarily responsible for running WEL and served as its president, while William devoted his time to PCI-2 and GTP Plastics, another company that he and Theresa owned. As we stated above, WEL issued one share of stock to Harold around the time that it was formed, 1 and, in addition, issued a certificate dated January 14, 1993 — soon after L.L.’s birth — that certified that it had issued nine shares of stock to Harold as custodian for L.L. under the Pennsylvania Uniform Gifts to Minors Act, the predecessor to the Pennsylvania Uniform Transfers to Minors Act.

B. Harold’s Lawsuits and Judgment Against WEL

Eventually Harold came to believe that WEL was using and managing some of the money he was lending to PCI-2. 2 The evidence in the Bankruptcy Court adversary proceeding showed that PCI-2 made significant payments to WEL marked as “loans,” but there was no evidence that *510 WEL ever repaid PCI-2 for any loans. Notably, the Bankruptcy Court found that PCI-2 transferred income to WEL for the purpose of making payments, to Royal Bank on a loan that the bank made to a Lampe company, apparently GTP Plastics. 3

In September of 2002, Harold filed a state court action against WEL, PCI-2, William, Theresa, and several other entities, seeking repayment of his loans. Theresa retained separate counsel to represent her and WEL in this litigation. Harold, however, dismissed the 2002 lawsuit without prejudice. At the adversary proceeding, Harold offered several reasons to the Bankruptcy Court explaining why he dismissed the 2002 lawsuit, including one explanation that Harold’s lawyer was “in over her head,” and another that William told him that the lawsuit was interfering with divorce proceedings then pending between Theresa' and him. App. at 208.

On December 8, 2003, Harold and William held a WEL directors’ meeting to remove Theresa as its president though they did not remove her as a director at that time. Harold testified that he called the meeting because Theresa had defaulted on all of WEL’s bank loans and he and William needed to regain access to company records. The Bankruptcy Court found that “there is no evidence in the record that [Harold] agreed to vote Theresa out as President of WEL so that he could obtain a judgment against WEL for the loans that had [been] made to [PCI-1] or [PCI-2].” 4 App. at 35.

On May 28, 2004, Harold filed a second loan repayment lawsuit against WEL and PCI-2 in the Court of Common Pleas of Berks County, Pennsylvania. Harold alleged in this action that PCI-2 owed him over $800,000, consisting of nearly $300,000 in loan principal and over $500,000 in interest calculated at ten percent per year. Harold asserted that he also had lent WEL $31,000 by borrowing from his personal line of credit and that WEL now owed him over $96,000, a figure that included accrued interest.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
665 F.3d 506, 2011 WL 6849057, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harold-c-lampe-jr-v-ca3-2011.