Huffman v. Armenia

645 S.E.2d 23, 284 Ga. App. 822
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 20, 2007
DocketA06A2105, A06A2106, A07A0616
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 645 S.E.2d 23 (Huffman v. Armenia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huffman v. Armenia, 645 S.E.2d 23, 284 Ga. App. 822 (Ga. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Ellington, Judge.

This opinion addresses three consolidated appeals from contempt orders issued by the Superior Court of Cobb County in the same case. In Case Nos. A06A2105 and A06A2106, David Huffman challenges two orders in which the trial court found him in contempt of a temporary restraining order. In Case No. A07A0616, Huffman’s attorney, Neil Wilkinson, challenges the court’s order finding him in contempt of the same order and ordering him to pay the appellees $32,000 in attorney fees. For the following reasons, we reverse the *823 trial court’s contempt order in Case No. A06A2105. We affirm the court’s orders in Case Nos. A06A2106 and A07A0616.

The record shows the following relevant, undisputed facts. The appellees, Joseph Armenia, Keith Armenia, and Gary Milkwick, are minority shareholders of Home & Equity Loan Products, Inc. (“HELP”). Appellant David Huffman is the chairman and president of HELP and a member of the corporation’s board of directors. On December 20,2005, the appellees filed a verified complaint, directly and derivatively on behalf of the corporation, against HELP’S boar d of directors 1 for, inter alia, breach of fiduciary duty, gross negligence, fraud, civil RICO, and misappropriation of corporate opportunities. The same day, the appellees filed an emergency motion for a temporary restraining order and for the appointment of a receiver to assume control of HELP and another business, Dream Avenue Mortgage Corporation (“Dream Avenue”), which is owned by Huffman.

On January 6, 2006, the trial court conducted a hearing on the appellees’ motions. Huffman appeared pro se at the hearing. During the hearing, the court made a verbal ruling appointing a receiver for HELP and Dream Avenue, requiring the HELP directors to cooperate with the receiver, and prohibiting the directors from transferring any corporate assets, doing anything that would deplete the assets, or interfering with the business of HELP and Dream Avenue. On January 19, 2006, the court issued a written order appointing the receiver and restraining Huffman and the other HELP directors from “misappropriating, converting, transferring, or otherwise using or depleting” the assets of HELP (hereinafter, the “TRO”).

Despite the court’s admonition, on January 13, 2006, during the period between the TRO hearing and the court’s written TRO, Huffman, who is not an attorney, filed a pro se bankruptcy petition on behalf of HELP in the U. S. Bankruptcy Court of the Northern District of Georgia. There is no evidence, however, that HELP’s board of directors had authorized Huffman to file the petition on behalf of the corporation. 2 In addition, Huffman failed to attach the required schedules to the bankruptcy petition.

In response to Huffman’s filing of the petition, the appellees filed a motion with the trial court asking the court to find Huffman in contempt of the TRO. On January 26, 2006, the trial court conducted a motion hearing, during which it found that Huffman filed the *824 bankruptcy petition in a “deliberate attempt to destro/’ the appellees’ lawsuit and, as a result, was in wilful contempt of the TRO. The court told Huffman that he could purge himself of the contempt by immediately filing a motion to dismiss the bankruptcy petition. The court issued a written order reflecting these rulings on February 20, 2006, nunc pro tunc January 26, 2006 (hereinafter, “Contempt Order I”).

On January 31, 2006, Huffman filed a pro se motion to dismiss the bankruptcy petition. HELP’s receiver also filed a motion to dismiss the bankruptcy petition. On February 14, 2006, the bankruptcy court held a hearing on the motions to dismiss. At that hearing, Huffman’s attorneys, Neil Wilkinson and Paul Wright, withdrew Huffman’s pro se motion to dismiss the bankruptcy petition and argued in opposition to the appellees’ motion to dismiss the bankruptcy petition. When the bankruptcy court noted that the petition could not be properly filed unless there was a board of directors resolution authorizing it, Wilkinson specifically assured the court that HELP’s board of directors had approved a resolution authorizing Huffman to file the bankruptcy petition, telling the court that he had “seen it.” The bankruptcy court warned Wilkinson that “if you don’t have that board resolution, you’re sunk,” so “if the board resolution exists, you’d better produce it.” The court continued the hearing so Wilkinson could file the board’s resolution and cure the remaining defects in the petition.

Two days later, Wilkinson contacted an attorney representing another HELP board member, Ronald Baker. Wilkinson told the attorney that the bankruptcy court had directed Baker to sign a resolution authorizing the bankruptcy petition in order to “cure this defect” in the bankruptcy filing. After consulting with Baker, the attorney signed the resolution on behalf of Baker on February 16, 2006. Wilkinson filed the resolution with the bankruptcy court on February 21, 2006. On March 2, 2006, however, the bankruptcy court dismissed the petition, finding that “the undisputed evidence shows that the Chapter 7 Petition was filed without the appropriate Board authorization” and that Huffman had failed to cure the defects in the petition.

On March 7, 2006, the trial court conducted another hearing to determine whether to hold Huffman, Wright, and Wilkinson in contempt of the TRO for failing to withdraw the unauthorized bankruptcy petition and for opposing the appellees’ motion to dismiss the petition. In an order issued the next day, the court found that these acts were part of a deliberate effort to defeat the receivership, the TRO, and the appellees’ lawsuit, and that Huffman’s contumacious acts had cost the receiver and his attorney an “inordinate amount of *825 time and expense.” Consequently, the court found Huffman in continued contempt and ordered him to pay $17,899 in fees to the receiver and the receiver’s attorney (hereinafter, “Contempt Order II”).

In a subsequent hearing, the court considered the appellees’ motion for a citation of contempt and an award of attorney fees against Wilkinson. Following a hearing, the trial court found that, at the time Wilkinson filed the motion to withdraw Huffman’s pro se motion to dismiss the bankruptcy petition, Wilkinson knew about the TRO. The court then found that Wilkinson deliberately violated the order and that his actions constituted contempt. The court also found that the bankruptcy action was interposed for delay, lacked any justification, and was based upon grounds that were frivolous, groundless, vexatious, and totally without merit. The court ordered Wilkinson to pay $32,000 in attorney fees to the appellees, and ruled that Wilkinson could purge himself of his contempt by paying the fees (hereinafter, “Contempt Order III”).

1. As a preliminary matter, we address arguments by both Huffman and Wilkinson on appeal that the trial court found them in criminal, not civil, contempt of the TRO. In its contempt orders, however, the court specifically provided that Huffman and Wilkinson could purge themselves of the finding of contempt by paying the attorney fees and other expenses that resulted from their contumacious conduct or by taking other actions to bring them into compliance with the court’s orders.

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Bluebook (online)
645 S.E.2d 23, 284 Ga. App. 822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huffman-v-armenia-gactapp-2007.