In Re Babbidge

175 B.R. 708, 32 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 146, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 1652, 1994 WL 630402
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedOctober 6, 1994
Docket18-61227
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 175 B.R. 708 (In Re Babbidge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Babbidge, 175 B.R. 708, 32 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 146, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 1652, 1994 WL 630402 (Mo. 1994).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

KAREN M. SEE, Bankruptcy Judge.

On March 7, 1994, a hearing was held on Timothy Seyferth’s Amended Second Motion for Contempt, the final motion in a series of contempt pleadings. The bankruptcy trustee supported Mr. Seyferth’s current motion and previous motions for contempt, and by order entered January 31, 1994, was permitted to intervene in the contempt proceedings which are the subject of this order. Appearances of counsel were: Carson W. Elliff and JoAnne Jackson for Mr. Seyferth, Erlene Krigel and Gerald Handley for Mr. Opdahl, and Raymond Plaster for Trustee Thomas J. Carlson.

*710 An order of civil contempt will be entered against Gary Opdahl. The court has reviewed the court file; evidence, arguments and pleadings for previous hearings regarding contempt; and arguments, briefs and evidence produced for this hearing on the Amended Second Motion for Contempt. This order is intended to be a final order in a core proceeding, reviewable by appeal. In the alternative, if it is determined that it should be construed as a report and recommendation pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(c)(1), it shall become final unless a party serves written objections within 10 days pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 9033(b). Any findings of fact which should be denominated conclusions of law or vice versa shall be so construed.

I. INTRODUCTION

The motion for contempt and the hearing which are the subject of this order were the culmination of a series of contempt motions and hearings which started in October, 1993. Gary Opdahl has represented since 1991 that he would tender funds he said he was holding as a stakeholder, yet despite an order from a California state court, five orders from the bankruptcy court, and numerous orders made in open court at hearings, Opdahl has failed to turn over the funds or books, records and an accounting which were also ordered to be turned over to the bankruptcy trustee. During the series of contempt hearings, it was finally revealed that Opdahl had misappropriated the funds in July, 1991 and had concealed the act for the next two and one-half years by making false statements under oath in an affidavit and deposition, false statements in pleadings, and false statements made through counsel in open court. Opdahl’s concealment of the theft while representing repeatedly to courts and parties that he still had the funds and stood ready to turn them over constitutes a fraud perpetrated on the court and parties and has caused the parties to incur legal expenses.

At the outset, in order to avoid confusion during discussion of numerous pleadings, proceedings and orders, it is noted that five written orders were entered from October 24, 1991 through January 31, 1994, ordering Mr. Opdahl to turn over books and records, an accounting, and funds he supposedly held as a stakeholder. The turnover proceedings have been in two stages, but the fact that there are two stages does not affect Mr. Opdahl’s obligation to turn over the items. The second stage merely refined the turnover directive.

The first stage was an adversary action between the trustee on behalf of the estate and Opdahl as a stakeholder of funds and a partner in possession of books and records. The order in the core proceeding determining rights in the funds as between the bankruptcy estate and Opdahl was not appealed and is final. Opdahl was ordered to turn over to the estate the funds and partnership books and records and to provide an accounting. In the first stage, Seyferth intervened after the trial and before the ruling on a motion to reconsider, and the court ordered that his right to claim the funds from the trustee would be preserved, so it was contemplated then that subsequent proceedings would occur involving the trustee and Sey-ferth.

The second stage of proceedings was between the trustee and Seyferth over whether Seyferth had a secured claim which would give him an interest superior to the estate’s in the funds which Updahl was obligated to turn over but had not yet delivered to the trustee. In the second stage, Seyferth prevailed over the trustee, so the second stage merely refined the earlier directives to permit turnover of the funds directly to Seyferth instead of to the trustee. Substantively, there was no change as to Opdahl, because the earlier turnover order was final. If Op-dahl preferred to comply with the earlier order, he could have turned over the funds to the trustee, who would in turn have delivered them to Seyferth after the second-stage order. In addition, Opdahl remained obligated to turn over to the trustee records and an accounting.

Seyferth filed his Second Amended Motion for Contempt because Opdahl has failed and refused to comply with orders to turn over funds held by Opdahl as a stakeholder. The trustee was permitted to intervene in support of Seyferth’s Second Amended Motion by an *711 order entered January 31, 1994. Turnover orders include: the order in the adversary action entered October 24, 1991 for an accounting and turnover to the trustee of funds and partnership books and records; an order denying reconsideration of the 1991 turnover order and preserving Seyferth’s right to claim the funds from the estate, entered July 9, 1992; an order entered September 16, 1993, 159 B.R. 532, which held that Seyferth had a secured claim in the bankruptcy case and a perfected security interest in the funds, and which in effect duplicated the 1991 and 1992 turnover orders but permitted turnover directly to Seyferth instead of first turning the funds over to the estate; an order entered December 10,1993 for an accounting and turnover of the partnership records and the funds; and an order entered January 31, 1994 to produce an accounting and partnership records and to show cause why Opdahl should not be held in contempt.

The court concludes it has authority to find Opdahl in civil contempt for failure to comply with any or all of the turnover orders, to order Opdahl to turn over to either the trustee or Seyferth the funds of which he was stakeholder, and to pay the attorney fees and expenses incurred by the estate and Seyferth in their efforts to compel Opdahl to comply with orders of this court and honor his stakeholder obligations.

The purpose of civil contempt is to ensure compliance with the lawful orders of a court and to compensate parties who have been damaged by the contempt. Opdahl is-ordered to comply immediately with the turnover orders and pay to either Seyferth or the trustee $134,235.25, the amount he misappropriated while holding it as a stakeholder, plus interest from the date Opdahl first received the funds. Opdahl is also ordered to pay attorney fees of $15,885.50 to Seyferth and $18,012.40 to the trustee.

II. FACTS

The evidence of contempt presented • by movant Seyferth is undisputed. In opposition, Opdahl offered only a box of records supposedly pertaining to the partnerships for the trustee and Seyferth to review in court. During Opdahl’s testimony, he frequently invoked the Fifth Amendment privilege.

Seyferth, seriously injured in an industrial accident, received a settlement for his support. He invested part of the settlement in California limited partnerships formed by Steve Babbidge and Gary Opdahl.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
175 B.R. 708, 32 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 146, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 1652, 1994 WL 630402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-babbidge-mowb-1994.