In Re Avon Townhomes Venture

433 B.R. 269, 2010 WL 3063074
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. California
DecidedJuly 3, 2010
Docket19-50213
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 433 B.R. 269 (In Re Avon Townhomes Venture) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Avon Townhomes Venture, 433 B.R. 269, 2010 WL 3063074 (Cal. 2010).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION REGARDING COURT’S ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE

ROGER L. EFREMSKY, Bankruptcy Judge.

Before the Court for decision is the Court’s Order to Show Cause, which was entered on May 15, 2008, as Docket # 222 (the “OSC”). The Court conducted evi-dentiary hearings on the OSC on July 25, 2008, August 22, 2008, September 10, 2008, September 24, 2008, October 6, 2008, October 15, 2008, October 27, 2008, October 30, 2008 and December 15, 2008. The Court received evidence and heard testimony from James McClenehan (“Mr.McClene-han”), Raymundo Lujano (“Mr.Lujano”), Joe Guerra (“Mr.Guerra”), Robert Jaram-illo (“Mr.Jaramillo”), Samuel Goldstein (“Mr.Goldstein”), Stanley Zlotoff (“Mr.Zlo-toff”) and Nanette Dumas (“Ms.Dumas”). The Court also reviewed the papers filed by the parties following the conclusion of the December 15, 2008 hearing.

The following constitutes the Court’s Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, pursuant to Rule 7052 of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure.

I. INTRODUCTION

This case started out simple; it was a typical single asset bankruptcy case in which Debtor, Avon Townhomes Venture, sought to sell its sole asset — a parcel of partially developed real property in La-throp, California. A motion to sell was filed, a hearing was held, and the sale was approved. However, the sale and this case became complicated, expensive, and time consuming due to the dishonesty of the participants in the sale and the mismanagement of the case by its professionals.

Specifically, when Debtor’s principal, Mr. Guerra, filed a declaration in connection with the sale, stating that he had no relationship or connection with the proposed buyer (Metricz), he was not telling the truth. In fact, he was orchestrating every side of the sale, including, but not limited to, controlling Metricz and having his son make $125,000 in required nonrefundable deposits for the purchase. Further, for reasons that are not entirely clear to the Court, Mr. Guerra was able to convince the real estate agent/loan broker (Mr. McClenehan), Metricz’s alleged principal (Mr. Lujano), and Metricz’s alleged president (Mr. Jaramillo) to go along with and advance the fiction that the Property *273 was being purchased by an independent third party. All the while, Debtor’s counsel (Mr. Zlotoff), turned a blind eye to the irregularities and inconsistencies, while disregarding specific directives in the Court’s order approving the sale.

Even when the trustee, Mohamed Poon-ja, was appointed and began investigating the transaction, the parties held firm to the fictions they had created regarding the sale. Metricz hired Mr. Goldstein, who, because he had a prior relationship with Mr. Guerra and was because he was representing Mr. Guerra in unrelated matters at the time, also seemed intent on perpetuating the fiction that Metricz had purchased the Property and that Mr. Guerra had no connection with the sale or with Metricz. This led directly to the trustee’s and his counsel’s expenditure of hours upon hours of time and expense, in an attempt to figure out what really happened. Ultimately, the trustee was left with no choice but to bring the matter to the Court, which issued the OSC and conducted nine days of evidentiary hearings in an attempt to find out the truth.

At any point, Mr. Guerra, Mr. Lujano, Mr. McClenehan and/or Mr. Jaramillo could have come clean, and admitted their respective roles in perpetuating the fiction of an arms-length sale. Mr. Goldstein could have admitted that Mr. Guerra was involved with Metricz and that he treated Mr. Guerra as an agent of Metricz. Mr. Zlotoff could have admitted that his lack of oversight contributed to the problem. There was little risk in any of the parties taking these actions, given that the sale ultimately appeared to have been for a price that was higher than the Property’s actual value and the estate had apparently not yet been harmed. The OSC would likely have been dissolved. Instead, Mr. Guerra, Mr. Lujano. Mr. McClenehan, Mr. Jaramillo and Mr. Goldstein steadfastly refused to tell the truth and Mr. Zlotoff refused to take responsibility for his failure to monitor the case. The end result was a web of incredible and inconsistent tales, which wasted the trustee’s and the Court’s time and resources, all the while exponentially increasing the cost to the estate.

Unfortunately for the parties, the Court did not buy their tales. And while the Court recognizes that it may still not know exactly what happened and why, nine days of evidentiary hearings have convinced the Court that Mr. Guerra, Mr. Lujano, Mr. Jaramillo and, most likely, Mr. Goldstein acted in bad faith, lied under oath, and committed fraud on the Court. As a result, sanctions are appropriate and will be levied as specifically identified below. 1 Further, the Court has tentatively determined that Mr. MeClenehan’s company, Eagle Home Loans, 2 received an $18,300 commission as Debtor’s real estate agent, *274 to which it was not entitled and which must be disgorged. Finally, a sanction in the form of disgorgement of the entire amount of fees that were paid to Mr. Zlo-toff during the course of this case shall be levied against Mr. Zlotoff for his failure to comply with the specific terms of the Court’s sale order and his failure to properly administer this case as Avon’s counsel.

I.PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. Events Leading to the Bankruptcy

1. In January 2001, Luis Aguilar (“Mr.Aguilar”) and his wife purchased property located at 14416 and 14429 Avon Avenue, Lathrop, California (the “Property”), with the intention of developing it into twelve townhomes. See Declaration of Mohamed Poonja in Support of Motion to Approve Compromise of Controversy, Docket # 136, at ¶ 2. At some point, after determining that he needed a partner to assist him in the development project, Mr. Aguilar answered an advertisement placed in the newspaper by Mr. Guerra. Id. The advertisement represented that Mr. Guerra had experience in joint real estate development projects. Id.

2. In early January 2002, Mr. Aguilar and Mr. Guerra entered into a Development Agreement, whereby they agreed that the Property would be transferred to, and developed by, a newly-formed entity, Avon Townhomes Venture (“Debtor” or “Avon”). 3 Pursuant to the Agreement, Mr. Aguilar agreed to transfer the Property to Avon and to continue making the mortgage payments. Id. at ¶ 4.

3. Along with the Development Agreement, Mr. Guerra and Mr. Aguilar prepared and executed Bylaws, which vested sole management control of Avon in Mr. Guerra, and subordinated Mr. Aguilar’s stock to that held by Mr. Guerra. Id. Pursuant to the Bylaws, Mr. Aguilar’s stock was subject to forfeiture if the mortgage payments fell more than two months behind. Id.

4.

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Bluebook (online)
433 B.R. 269, 2010 WL 3063074, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-avon-townhomes-venture-canb-2010.