Hunter v. Shoup (In Re Shoup)

214 B.R. 166, 1997 WL 671484
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedJune 27, 1997
Docket19-10006
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 214 B.R. 166 (Hunter v. Shoup (In Re Shoup)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hunter v. Shoup (In Re Shoup), 214 B.R. 166, 1997 WL 671484 (Ohio 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND DECISION

RICHARD L. SPEER, Chief Judge.

This cause comes before the Court after Trial on Plaintiffs Complaints to Deny D’is- *168 charge in two separate adversary cases (Case No. 96-3007 and Case No. 96-3008). The Plaintiff in this case is the Chapter 7 Trustee in this Chapter 7 case. The Defendants in each of these two adversary eases are joint debtors in the related bankruptcy case, and the causes of action are identical in each adversary case. For procedural efficiency, the parties have agreed that the two cases would be tried together. At the Trial, the parties were afforded the opportunity to present evidence and make arguments they wished the Court to consider in reaching its decision. The Court has reviewed the arguments of counsel, exhibits, as well as the entire record. Based upon that review, and for the following reasons, this Court finds that the Debtors’ discharge should not be denied.

FACTS

The facts of this case revolve in large part around the Debtors’ (hereafter the “Shoups”) transfer of their one-half interest in a trucking business called Tech Trucking, Inc. (hereafter “Tech Trucking”). Mr. Shoup in currently employed at Tech Trucking as a dispatcher. The transfer at issue was not reported on the Shoups’ bankruptcy schedules, though it was revealed by the Shoups at the creditors’ meeting. The Shoups claim that the failure to report the transfer on their bankruptcy schedules was the result of a hasty bankruptcy filing brought upon by a creditor’s execution upon their personal property. The Shoups explain that the bankruptcy petition was filed the same day as the execution, so that they could regain possession of their motor vehicles.

Tech Trucking was previously owned by Dwight and Carolyn Fielding (hereafter the “Fieldings”). On January 1, 1991, the Shoups and the Fieldings entered into a close corporation agreement whereby each individual would own one-quarter of the corporation. All four individuals were identified as members of the board of directors, with Mr. Fielding as President and Mr. Shoup as Vice President, Treasurer, and Secretary. On January 15,1991, a total of one hundred fifty shares (150) of stock of Tech Trucking were issued to Mr. and Mrs. Shoup, with each receiving seventy-five (75) shares respectively-

The consideration given by the Shoups for the acquisition of one-half of the business was a 1984 Kenworth Tractor. Though it was Mr. Shoup who used the tractor, it was Mrs. Shoup who had purchased it through a lease purchase agreement with Mr. Fielding. It appears that Mrs. Shoup had acquired some equity in the tractor, and this equity was used by the Shoups to purchase half of Tech Trucking. The record does not reveal what equity Mrs. Shoup had in the tractor at the time the Shoups acquired their interest in Tech Trucking.

On August 17, 1991, Erica Lynn Shoup died while in the care- of the Shoups. She was the minor daughter of Mr. Shoup and his former spouse, Debbie Lynn Crago. At that time, the Shoups were residing in Texas. On May 4, 1993, Debbie Lynn Crago, personally and as Executrix for the Estate of Erica Lynn Shoup, filed a wrongful death action against the Shoups in the Lucas County, Ohio, Court of Common Pleas.

According to the Shoups, the wrongful death suit as well as litigation in the domestic relations court had been ongoing for some time, when in April of 1995 the wrongful death suit began to draw close to trial. (The trial began on June 12, 1995.) Also in April, their attorney in the state court litigation requested a significant retainer to cover the fees and costs of trial. They had been making relatively small payments to their attorney all along, a few hundred dollars at a time which had drained their savings, so that they were not in a position to pay the Five Thousand Dollar ($5,000.00) retainer the attorney requested. Further, according to the Shoups, they had exhausted loans and gifts of funds for litigation from family members, and had no other choice but to raise the necessary funds through their shares of stock in Tech Trucking.

The Shoups maintain that after discussions with the Fieldings, it was agreed that they would sell their shares of the business to the Fieldings for the sum of Ten Thousand Dollars ($10,000.00). Of the purchase price, the Shoups were to receive only Eight Thousand Dollars ($8,000.00), with the remaining Two *169 Thousand Dollars ($2,000.00) to be withheld by the Fieldings to pay the costs of having a valuation of the business performed. This valuation was never performed.

The Shoups also explained that it was the intention of the parties that the shares would ultimately be repurchased by the company from the Fieldings. It was only because the company did not have the money to repurchase the stock at that time that it was agreed that the money would be forwarded from the Fieldings personally, and that the stocks would be assigned to them. When the company had the money to repurchase the stocks, it would pay the Fieldings, and the company would redeem the stocks.

Upon a review of the depositions entered as exhibits in this case, this Court finds that though the Shoups were sometimes confused with terminology or details of the foregoing events, they were nevertheless consistent in their testimony through the three separate occasions during which they were deposed in this matter, as well as at trial.

The Shoups have also produced three documents which purport to memorialize this assignment and transfer: (1) the minutes of the board of directors of Tech Trucking held at the home of the Fieldings on April 15, 1995 to discuss the Shoups’ financial condition; (2) the minutes of a subsequent special meeting of the board of directors of Tech Trucking held on April 17,1995 at the offices of Tech Trucking; and (3) a letter dated April 17, 1995, assigning the Shoup’s shares of stock to the Fieldings, and appointing the Fieldings as the Shoup’s “attorney in fact to effect a transfer of the assigned shares on the books of Tech Trucking, Inc. with full power of substitution in the premises.” The minutes were signed by Mr. Fielding as chairmen, and Mr. Shoup as secretary. The letter of assignment was signed by the Shoups. The execution of these documents was not notarized or witnessed by anyone other than the Shoups or the Fieldings. Mr. Fielding testified at trial, and relates a consistent account of the events surrounding this assignment and transfer. Also, Richard E. Wolf, Esq., a partner at the law firm of Spengler Nathanson and the attorney for Tech Trucking, testified that he was made aware of the assignment and the minutes of the Tech Trucking meetings regarding this assignment in the spring of 1995.

Also produced at trial, along with the close corporation agreement, was a share ledger and share journal kept by the attorney for Tech Trucking. It contains entries which this Court believes were an attempt to memorialize the assignment and the July redemption of the certificates by the company. Mr. Wolf testified at trial that the share journal and share ledger were kept by his office.

The Shoups explain that the Fieldings paid them the money in cash at the time the letter of assignment was signed, in April of 1995. At trial, Mr. Fielding explained that he kept large amounts of cash on hand for truck •repairs in case there was a breakdown at night, when access to cash from bank accounts would be unavailable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
214 B.R. 166, 1997 WL 671484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunter-v-shoup-in-re-shoup-ohnb-1997.