In Re Aloisi

261 B.R. 504, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 697, 2001 WL 432378
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedFebruary 12, 2001
Docket00-03162-6J7
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 261 B.R. 504 (In Re Aloisi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Aloisi, 261 B.R. 504, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 697, 2001 WL 432378 (Fla. 2001).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW ON DONNA LEE WILLIAMS’ MOTION FOR PARTIAL RELIEF FROM THE AUTOMATIC STAY AND OBJECTION TO EXEMPTION

KAREN S. JENNEMANN, Bankruptcy Judge.

This case came on for hearing on August 24, 2000, on the Motion for Partial Relief from Automatic Stay (the “Motion”) (Doc. No. 7) and the Objection to Exemption (the “Objection”) (Doc. No. 12) filed by Donna Lee Williams (the “Movant”), Commissioner of Insurance for the State of Delaware, as receiver for National Heritage Life Insurance Company (“NHL”), and the Memorandum in Response (Doc. No. 17) filed by the debtor, Anna Patricia Aloisi (the “Debtor”). Both parties filed additional memoranda of law supporting their respective positions (Doc. Nos. 18 & 22). After reviewing the pleadings, hearing the arguments of counsel, and considering the evidence and applicable law, Movant’s Objection is overruled, and the Motion is denied.

The relief sought by the Movant is straight forward. Movant seeks relief from the automatic stay to proceed with an action pending in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida (the “District Court Action”) styled Williams v. Anna Patricia Aloisi, et al., Case No. 98-69CV ORL 18B. In the District Court Action, Movant seeks a money judgment and a constructive trust on funds received by the Debtor in connection with the sale of a condominium located in Winter Park, Florida. The Debtor used a portion of these monies to buy her current home. As a result, the Movant filed her recent Objection seeking to impose an equitable lien on the Debtor’s home. The underlying facts are somewhat more complicated and revolve around the liquidation of NHL and the role of the Debtor’s former husband in the company’s demise.

NHL was a large insurance company. Lambert Aloisi (“Aloisi”), the Debtor’s former husband, was an officer of NHL and a senior manager of its operations. In connection with this role, he, together with other senior officers of NHL, apparently stole or improperly diverted substantial funds from NHL and related companies. Ultimately, the business failed. The Mov-ant was appointed to liquidate NHL’s assets and to maximize the recovery to NHL’s abandoned policy holders. The Movant has obtained two judgments against Aloisi for his misconduct during his stint at NHL. The first judgment, dated May 13, 1997, was in favor of the Movant and against Aloisi in the amount of $55,756,727.51. (Debtor’s Exhibit No. 3). A second judgment, dated August 25,1999, similarly was entered in favor of the Mov-ant and against Aloisi in the amount of $3 million (Doc. No. 22, Debtor’s Exhibit D).

The Debtor married Aloisi in 1988. The marriage lasted approximately three and one-half years. A final divorce decree was entered on March 17, 1992. However, the parties took several years to divide the marital property between them. (Debtor’s Exhibit No. 1). Ultimately, in 1995, the Debtor obtained a judgment against her *507 former husband for $1.5 million. Aloisi did everything in his power to stop the Debtor from collecting upon this judgment.

For example, unbeknownst to the Debt- or, Aloisi had purchased a condominium located at 147 Interlachen Place, Unit 2, Winter Park, Florida (the “Winter Park Condo”). (Movant’s Exhibit No. 30). The Debtor never had an ownership interest in the Winter Park Condo; nor was she ever listed as an obligor on any note or mortgage encumbering the condo. Indeed, Al-oisi worked zealously to conceal the condo from the Debtor by engaging in a complex series of sham transactions.

Aloisi also used some of the funds he diverted from NHL to pay down the mortgage on the condo. He paid $472,667.56 to Barnett Bank (“Barnett”) who held a mortgage encumbering the Winter Park Condo (the “Mortgage Paydown”). (Mov-ant’s Exhibit No. 30, p. 2). At the time of the payment, the Debtor did not know of the condo or participate in any way in Aloisi’s decision to pay the mortgage due to Barnett. The Debtor had no active role with NHL or Aloisi’s fraudulent scheme. Consequently, the Debtor had no knowledge of Aloisi’s interest in the condominium or of the satisfaction of the condominium’s mortgage with NHL related funds until long after the divorce was final, nor was she a participant in his wrongdoing.

When the Debtor eventually learned of the existence of the Winter Park Condo, she expended considerable time and money trying to collect on her $1.5 million judgment and to defeat Aloisi’s schemes to frustrate her collection efforts. To understand the difficulties overcome by the Debtor, a short discussion of Aloisi’s complex scheme to hide the condo from the Debtor is necessary. Aloisi transferred title to the condominium for no consideration to Justin McClelland (“McClelland”), Aloisi’s private investigator, and McClel-land’s girlfriend, Jacqueline Gibson (“Gibson”). (Movant’s Exhibit 30, pp. 2-3). In order to create the appearance of a legitimate, third-party purchase, Messrs. Aloisi and McClelland engaged in a series of wire transfers whereby McClelland and Gibson received monies from Aloisi. (Movant’s Exhibit 30, p. 3). McClelland and Gibson then used Aloisi’s money to “purchase” the condominium, creating the appearance that they used their own money. (Movant’s Exhibit 30, p. 3). The sham sale of the condominium to McClelland and Gibson took place on September 28, 1994. (Mov-ant’s Exhibit 30, p. 3).

In order to obtain title to the condominium, the Debtor was forced to file supplemental proceedings in connection with her divorce proceedings to avoid the transfer. Eventually, on November 26, 1996, the Debtor succeeded in gaining title to the Winter Park Condo, after a long and arduous fight to undo the fraudulent transfers. The Debtor then sold the property to a disinterested purchaser for $405,000. The Debtor used a portion of the proceeds, $191,280.75, to purchase a home located at 1208 Chichester Street, Orlando, Florida, on April 8, 1998. The Debtor claims this home as exempt on her bankruptcy schedules pursuant to Art. X, § 4(a)(1) of the Florida Constitution.

Movant alleges that the proceeds from the Debtor’s third-party sale of the Winter Park Condo rightfully belong to creditors of NHL because the original mortgage on the condominium, held by Barnett, was satisfied with funds Aloisi allegedly stole from NHL or a related company. The Movant has sued the Debtor in the District Court Action to recover the Mortgage Paydown. In the District Court Action, Movant seeks a money judgment against the Debtor and to impose a constructive trust on the proceeds obtained by the Debtor from the sale of the Winter Park *508 Condo. The Movant did not seek to recover the Debtor’s home or to impose any type of equitable lien on the home in the District Court Action. Cross motions for summary judgment are now pending in that case.

On April 26, 2000, the Debtor filed this Chapter 7 bankruptcy ease because she has no money to pay her attorneys to defend her in connection with the District Court Action. The Debtor also has amassed additional debts due to her inability to collect upon her divorce judgment against Aloisi, other than to obtain title to the Winter Park Condo. She lives on a small pension and monthly social security payments. She has no money above that necessary to pay her minimal living expenses and has only one asset, her home. The Debtor received a discharge of all of her debts on August 8, 2000.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
261 B.R. 504, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 697, 2001 WL 432378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-aloisi-flmb-2001.