Havee v. Belk

589 F. Supp. 600, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15593
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. North Carolina
DecidedJune 25, 1984
DocketC-C-83-0183-M
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 589 F. Supp. 600 (Havee v. Belk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Havee v. Belk, 589 F. Supp. 600, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15593 (W.D.N.C. 1984).

Opinion

*601 FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

McMILLAN, District Judge.

FINDINGS OF FACT

I. BACKGROUND INFORMATION

William Henry Belk, Sr. went into the retail drygoods business in the late 1880’s. Starting with one store in Monroe, Union County, North Carolina, he added various other “Belk” stores, under varying ownerships, and at the time of his death in the early 1950’s there were several hundred “Belk” stores scattered throughout the southeast. The business begun by William Henry Belk, Sr., has continued to thrive through the present day.

Most Belk stores have one or more substantial local shareholders who are referred to as “partners.” Some “partners” own substantial amounts of stock in more than one store. The stores and groups of stores are known as “Belk’s,” or “Belk-Tyler,” or “Belk-Hensdale,” or “Belk-Leggett,” or “Belk-Gallant,” or “Hudson-Belk,” and so on. Each store is a separate entity and many stores are separate corporations. Some “partners” own stock in two or a dozen or more stores. There is no single corporate structure for the Belk “chain”; at the present time there are more than three hundred stores in seventeen states, and the number of corporations owning those stores is about two hundred. There is no management and no ownership common to all the stores.

The Belk Buying Service in one period performed purchasing services for various stores. Those services are now performed by Belk Stores Services. Belk Stores Services does not manage the stores. However, for those stores which request it, Belk Stores Services provides, on essentially a cost basis, services in the form of purchasing, insurance information, merchandising advice, real estate, advertising, and other services.

William Henry Belk, Sr. left six children: William Henry Belk, Jr., Sarah Belk Gambrell, Irwin Belk, John Belk, Henderson Belk and Tom Belk. Those children inherited his stock in the various Belk corporations.

The six Belk children, thirty years after the death of their father, owned the great majority of the stock in an investment company, Belk Enterprises, Inc., and large portions of the stock in the two hundred or so corporations which owned the more than three hundred separate department stores throughout the southeastern part of the United States.

The stock in the various Belk stores and in Belk Enterprises, Inc. is closely held; most of the stock in the various corporations is owned by the Belk brothers and sister and their “partners,” and a relatively few colleagues, associates, employees, family and friends. None of the stock is listed on any stock exchange and nobody maintains a market or regularly quotes prices for it. It is not “freely traded.”

II. THE TRANSACTIONS COMPLAINED OF.

On March 1, 1982, William Henry Belk, Jr. (“Henry”), filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy in the United States Court for the Southern District of Florida. Claims against his estate were filed in an amount of about eight and one-half million dollars, and his assets, at that time, were a minor fraction of his liabilities.

Many years previously, Henry Belk, Jr., had become an investor in a number of department stores in Florida, Alabama and points south and west. His chief co-adventurer in those stores was Richard Avery, and the stores are referred to as “Avery’s” or “Avery’s, Inc.” or “William Henry’s.”

By late March, 1980, Avery’s, Inc. had borrowed considerable sums, and Henry Belk had signed papers with Citibank of New York and Maryland National Leasing Corp., guaranteeing debts of Avery’s, Inc. in amounts apparently totaling several million dollars.

To secure the borrowings by Avery’s, Inc., Henry Belk had pledged and assigned to Citibank of New York and Maryland National Leasing Corp. as collateral a num *602 ber of shares of stock in forty-seven different Belk corporations, including Belk Enterprises, Inc. (List “A,” attached).

The Avery’s, Inc. loans came due and Avery’s, Inc. did not have the money to pay.

Avery’s, Inc. and Henry Belk sought help from other sources, including Belks. A meeting was held in Charlotte among various people, including Henderson Belk, Henry Belk, Larry Estridge, attorney for Sarah Belk Gambrell, Richard Avery, Irwin Belk, Sarah Belk Gambrell, Leroy Robinson, attorney for Belk Enterprises, Inc., David M. McConnell, attorney, Theresa Duncan, bookkeeper for Avery’s, Inc., and perhaps others.

An agreement was made at that meeting that Irwin Belk and Sarah Belk Gambrell would buy from Citibank of New York, for the sum of $3,367,000.00, the shares of stock which had been pledged to and assigned to Citibank and Maryland National Leasing Corp. by Henry Belk as collateral for the loans to Avery’s, Inc. A condition of the agreement was that Henry Belk would have the option to repurchase the stock at any time within twelve months, for the purchase price plus 25%. (Since the prime rate at the time was just a shade under 20% and rising, this was the approximate financial equivalent of the amount Irwin Belk and Sarah Belk Gambrell paid for the stock, plus a year's interest on the purchase price, plus expenses.)

The 47 stocks listed on List “A” as “Citibank/Maryland National” were transferred to Irwin Belk and Sarah Belk Gambrell on April 8, 1980, nearly two years before Henry Belk filed for bankruptcy on March 1, 1982. The other 109 stocks on List “A” were transferred on various dates between April 25, 1980, and June 22, 1980.

Several years before these transactions (apparently in 1976), and independent of them, Sarah Belk Gambrell had obtained an agreement with Henry Belk which gave her the right, until 1985, of first refusal of any stock in one of the corporations, Belk Enterprises, Inc. which Henry Belk might offer for sale.

In June of 1981, Sarah Belk Gambrell and Irwin Belk purchased from Henry Belk shares of stock in forty-five other “Belk” corporations for total consideration of $1,587,522.00. One of those corporations was Belk Brothers, Inc., of Charlotte, which apparently operates the Charlotte group of department stores, and the other forty-four are corporations operating stores in North Carolina, South Carolina, Alabama, Virginia, Kentucky, Florida, Mississippi, Tennessee, Georgia and Arkansas.

On March 23, 1983, these two suits were filed against Irwin Belk and Sarah Belk Gambrell and various other defendants by plaintiffs, Union Bank of Bavaria (as creditor) and Justin P. Havee, Trustee in Bankruptcy for Henry Belk. The suits seek, on various state and federal law theories, to have set aside as fraudulent conveyances the transfers of stock described above. The cases were consolidated for preparation and trial. On May 21, 1984, the day the trial began, Case # C-C-83-0184-M was, by consent, dismissed with prejudice. Upon motion of plaintiffs, the remaining case, # C-C-83-0183-M, was tried to a jury.

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Related

Havee v. Belk
775 F.2d 1209 (Fourth Circuit, 1985)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
589 F. Supp. 600, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/havee-v-belk-ncwd-1984.