Hodgin v. Conlin (In Re Conlin)

294 B.R. 88, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 599, 2003 WL 21395617
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedJune 16, 2003
Docket19-40616
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 294 B.R. 88 (Hodgin v. Conlin (In Re Conlin)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hodgin v. Conlin (In Re Conlin), 294 B.R. 88, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 599, 2003 WL 21395617 (Minn. 2003).

Opinion

ORDER FOR JUDGMENT

DENNIS D. O’BRIEN, Bankruptcy Judge.

This adversary proceeding came before the Court for trial on the plaintiffs complaint under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2)(A) seeking to have the defendant’s debt excepted from discharge in the above captioned main bankruptcy case. Harvey H. Eekart appeared on behalf of the plaintiff, Marvin Hodgin, and Joseph D. Dudley appeared on behalf of the debtor-defendant, Michael Conlin. A trial was conducted at the conclusion of which the Court took the matter under advisement.

Based on the files, records and proceedings herein, and after due consideration and careful review of the arguments and evidence adduced at trial, the Court now makes this Order pursuant to the Federal and Local Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure.

I. Factual Findings

Although unable to enter into a stipulation of facts in preparation for trial, the consistent testimony given by both sides demonstrates that the central facts of this contest are largely not in dispute. Michael Conlin graduated from high school in 1978, entered and completed technical college, and shortly thereafter entered the business of selling life insurance. He became licensed in 1982 to sell term and whole life insurance, S & P indexed annuities, and health insurance. Conlin worked with a partner, John Marlow, for many years, under the assumed name Integrity Financial. In 1998, they formed Integrity Financial, Inc., in which they were each 50% shareholders. Through the incorporated Integrity, Conlin continued to sell insurance and annuities.

Marvin Hodgin is a retired sheet metal worker. He first met Conlin by attending an annuities seminar held by Integrity in 1996. Hodgin and his wife Clara pur *93 chased approximately $300,000 in single premium, fixed return, tax deferred life insurance annuities through Integrity. Conlin continued to service the annuity accounts to the extent of issuing quarterly statements and in this manner developed an ongoing relationship with Hodgin as his client.

In 1997, Conlin learned through an insurance trade magazine advertisement of Sebastian International Enterprises, Inc. Brokers solicited insurance agents through such industry literature offering promissory notes and limited liability partnership interests in Sebastian and in other companies. Conlin spent nearly a year looking into such opportunities. In particular with regard to Sebastian, Conlin checked with government agencies and better business bureaus in search of complaints against Sebastian. 1 He explored whether any of the companies were bonded, and found many, including Sebastian, to be bonded by the same company, New England International Surety (NEIS). He also investigated the nature of the companies in which the LLP interests and notes were being offered. Sebastian’s business was producing Christian educational television programs, videos and interactive web pages for children, apparently in response to legislation mandating more and better youth programming.

The notes and LLPs in Sebastian were offered through at least three brokers: Lloyd’s Financial Group, Saferate Financial Service, and World Vision. Conlin inquired of at least one of them, probably World Vision, whether he had to have a special license, in particular a securities license, to sell the Sebastian products. He was referred to an attorney by whom he was told that the Sebastian products were exempt, unregistered, and did not require a special license because the products were not solicited beyond current clients. 2 Con-lin did not make the same inquiry to any other attorney, to the Minnesota Department of Commerce (the agency responsible for issuing licenses to sell insurance), the Florida Department of Banking and Commerce, nor to the Securities Exchange Commission.

Ultimately Conlin applied to Lloyd’s to offer the Sebastian LLP and promissory notes to Integrity clients. Under the agreement with Lloyd’s, Integrity received a commission on the sales of Sebastian products in the amount of 14% of each actual investment. The terms of the products were short-term, renewable, high-yield investments with no tax-deferred status. To make the investment attractive, Sebastian would pay 5% of the 8% tax penalty that would be assessed against investors using funds withdrawn prematurely out of annuities to invest in Sebastian, plus an interest rate of approximately 10.25%. In spite of the fact that such figures together amount to Sebastian paying something near $50,000 altogether to borrow $186,000 for less than a year, it did *94 not occur to Conlin that the terms were too good to be true. According to Conlin, “the market was flying high and these types of investments were being touted all over the place,” on television, for example, in trade advertisements, and in continuing education programs.

One of the reasons Conlin had faith in the Sebastian promissory notes was that they were purportedly bonded by a major company involved primarily in bonding just these types of enterprises. He viewed NEIS as “an important safety net.” Con-lin reviewed a copy of a $5 million master “blanket” bonding agreement between NEIS and Sebastian. The collateral for the bond was (and is) all the Sebastian assets. Conlin was informed and understood that each actual bond certificate was issued directly to the note holder, and that the same would therefore not pass through him nor be a part of his record of the transaction with his clients who bought the notes.

Sometime in the Spring or Summer of 1998, Conlin encountered Clara Hodgin at a garage sale and mentioned that he had new investment products available with better returns and to have Marvin Hodgin give him a call at the office. Hodgin thereafter contacted Conlin, and both Con-lin and Marlow presented the Sebastian materials to the Hodgins at their home a short time later. Marlow did the major part of the presentation, including going over “thoroughly but not too long on any one part” the entire packet of information and forms. Conlin recommended the note for Hodgin because of the added safety of the bond. Conlin and Marlow left the information with Hodgin on his request in order to have time to review the documents.

Included in the presentation and the materials left for Hodgin to review were many professionally prepared, Sebastian promotional items, including a glossy, color photo filled folder pamphlet describing of the “Real Life 101” children’s television and internet programming produced by Sebastian, a 60% national coverage listing of television markets in which the programming was purportedly secured to air, a copy or sample of the master bonding agreement with NEIS, information on the Federal Communications Commission’s new children’s programming rules, letters from major sponsors, 3 and resumes indicating major Hollywood expertise at work in the Sebastian projects. The question and answer packet was likewise optimistic: “Why is it called a HIGH INTEREST promissory note? The reason for the name is simple. What else would you call a promissory note currently paying over 9%, when short-term bank instruments are paying around 1% or less?”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
294 B.R. 88, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 599, 2003 WL 21395617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hodgin-v-conlin-in-re-conlin-mnb-2003.