In Re Alwan Bros. Co., Inc.

112 B.R. 294, 1990 Bankr. LEXIS 583, 1990 WL 33647
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. Illinois
DecidedMarch 26, 1990
Docket15-80907
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 112 B.R. 294 (In Re Alwan Bros. Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Alwan Bros. Co., Inc., 112 B.R. 294, 1990 Bankr. LEXIS 583, 1990 WL 33647 (Ill. 1990).

Opinion

DECISION

WILLIAM V. ALTENBERGER, Bankruptcy Judge.

This matter comes before the Court on the motion filed by JANE GNIDOYEC, DAVID TOWELL and ROBERT DAWSON (MOVANTS), and joined in by FRANK HAMPTON, JR., Supersedeas Bond Trustee, to reconsider this Court’s opinion entered October 18, 1989. The facts of this case are fully set out in that opinion at In re Alwan Bros. Co., Inc., 105 B.R. 886 (Bkrtcy.C.D.I11.1989), and will not be restated here. In that opinion this Court held that (1) punitive damages are dis-chargeable, (2) a supersedeas bond is not property of the estate and (3) reconciling the rule that a supersedeas bond is not property of the estate with the determination that punitive damages are dischargea-ble, that the MOVANTS could proceed in accordance with the Kentucky State Court Supersedeas Bond Agreement (AGREEMENT) to sell so much of the real estate necessary to satisfy their claims for compensatory damages and interest thereon, but that the remaining real estate could not be sold, to satisfy their claim for punitive damages and could be used by the AL-WANS to reorganize and for which the MOVANTS may be entitled to adequate protection. In their Motion to Reconsider, the MOVANTS contend that this Court erred in so ruling, and erroneously state that this Court held that the bond properties were not property of the estate as of the date of bankruptcy, but that they “re-vested” to the extent that they are not necessary to satisfy the compensatory damage claim. While the MOVANTS’ motion to reconsider does not raise any matters which this Court did not consider previously, this Decision is issued to supplement the previous opinion. The issues decided therein arose from several separate pleadings, including an adversary proceeding. While the parties agreed that all of the issues should be decided at the same time, those issues were, for the most part, argued in isolation. It was only when this Court began to consider the matters in a seriatim fashion, that it determined that the interplay of certain issues was decisive. Because the ultimate ruling based on this interplay of issues was not one argued or anticipated by the parties, this Court will elaborate upon its prior opinion.

In ruling upon the specific contentions and technical points raised by the MOV-ANTS, it is important not to lose sight of the key issue in this case. That issue is whether the determination that a portion of the judgment awarded the MOVANTS is dischargeable alters the MOVANTS’ rights under the AGREEMENT. According to the MOVANTS’ position, the ALWANS are entitled to no relief in this Court because their filings simply came too late. The MOVANTS maintain that the ALWANS bet their real estate on the chance that they would prevail on appeal and in so doing relinquished their right to reorganize, and, ultimately lost the gamble. While neither may be characterized as fundamental, the right to appeal and the right to relief under the bankruptcy laws are significant rights. Pursuit of the former, however, is not absolute and as here, the losing party must afford the other side appropriate safeguards. Balancing the rights of the ALWANS to proceed in this Court against the protection to which the MOVANTS are entitled is what this case is about.

*296 In support of their motion to reconsider, the MOVANTS argue that this Court mis-characterized the issues presented as “unprecedented.” The MOVANTS point to the cases which this Court considered in determining that property which is being held pursuant to a supersedeas bond is not property of the bankruptcy estate and assert that those cases do not specifically indicate that nondischargeable debts were involved. That is this Court’s point: the question of the dischargeability of debts was not in issue. Even though the judgment in Moran v. Johns-Manville Sales Corp., 28 B.R. 376 (N.D.Ohio 1983), included an award for punitive damages, the court did not discuss the impact of that upon the creditor’s right to execute on the bond of the insurance .company.

It is the MOVANTS’ contention that upon the rendering of the adverse verdict and judgment thereon in the Kentucky state court, the ALWANS were faced with an arduous choice: post an appeal bond or file bankruptcy. And the MOVANTS contend that because the ALWANS chose the former they are forever denied the benefit of the latter. This Court disagrees. In Carter Baron Drilling v. Excel Energy Corp., 76 B.R. 172 (D.Colo.1987), the court stated the purpose of a supersedeas bond:

The purpose of a supersedeas bond is to preserve the status quo while securing the appellee from loss resulting from stay of execution. The bond is meant to secure the prevailing party against any loss, like insolvency of the debtor, sustained as a result of being forced to forego execution on a judgment during the course of an ineffectual appeal.

Thus, the purpose of the supersedeas bond is to “furnish indemnity to those who suffer damage as a result of the stay.” 4A C.J.S. Appeal and Error sec. 643. The purpose of the supersedeas bond is not to enhance the appellee’s recovery. Rather, the purpose is to preserve that property for the benefit of that creditor. On the day that the Kentucky judgment was rendered, the ALWANS could have filed bankruptcy and the dischargeability of the punitive damages would have been in issue. The ALWANS were as “insolvent” on that date as they are today. Put another way, they are not any less “solvent” today than they were when the judgment was entered. The MOVANTS have suffered no loss as a result of the delay in executing the judgment.

This Court’s ruling that so much of the real estate which is necessary to satisfy the MOVANTS’ claims for compensatory damages should be sold was premised upon a determination that the ALWANS’ bankruptcy filing did in fact require alteration of the terms of the Supersedeas Bond Trust Agreement. In this Court’s view, this result serves the purpose of the super-sedeas bond in that the real estate is appropriated to the benefit of the MOVANTS to make them whole while according the status of punitive damages its proper place in a bankruptcy proceeding. The MOVANTS’ contention that the very thing against which the bond was intended to protect— the Debtor’s insolvency — has destroyed the bond is not persuasive. The MOVANTS rely on Carter Baron Drilling, supra, where the court stated:

This result preserves the function of the supersedeas bond as protection for the party prevailing at the trial level from the possibility of future insolvency of the losing party. As the Colorado Supreme Court has correctly stated:
The principal risk against which such bonds are intended as a protection is insolvency. To hold that the very contingency against which they guard shall, if it happen, discharge them, seems to us bad law and worse logic. Stone v. Hole, 75 Colo. 115, 116, 223 P. 1085 (1924).

At issue in the Colorado decision quoted from was the liability of the surety after the principal had received a discharge in bankruptcy. Clearly the surety, a nondebt- or-third party, is not off the hook. But that is not the circumstance here. Unlike the typical supersedeas bond which is not property of the estate and cannot be used to fund a plan of reorganization, the property which is the subject of the Supersede-as Bond Trust Agreement is nine parcels of real estate.

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Bluebook (online)
112 B.R. 294, 1990 Bankr. LEXIS 583, 1990 WL 33647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-alwan-bros-co-inc-ilcb-1990.