In Re Bell & Beckwith

93 B.R. 569, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 1997, 1988 WL 129526
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedNovember 4, 1988
Docket19-50066
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 93 B.R. 569 (In Re Bell & Beckwith) 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
In Re Bell & Beckwith, 93 B.R. 569, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 1997, 1988 WL 129526 (Ohio 1988).

Opinion

*571 MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

RICHARD L. SPEER, Bankruptcy Judge.

This cause comes before the Court after Hearing on the Trustee’s Motion for Approval of and Authority to Perform Compromise and Settlement Agreement with Zula J. Wolfram. The Securities Investor Protection Corporation filed a Memorandum in opposition to the proposed settlement. At the Hearing, the parties had the opportunity to present the evidence and arguments they wished the Court to consider in reaching its decision. The Court has reviewed the testimony, exhibits, and the arguments of counsel, as well as the entire record in this case. Based on that review, and for the following reasons, the Court finds that the Objection of the Securities Investor Protection Corporation should be Overruled, and the Proposed Settlement should be Approved.

FACTS

The facts in this case are not in dispute. Bell & Beckwith, the Debtor, was a stock brokerage located in Toledo, Ohio. The movant in this action is the Trustee for the liquidation of Bell & Beckwith pursuant to the provisions of 15 U.S.C. § 78aaa et seq. The Objector is the Security Investor Protection Corporation (hereinafter “SIPC”), a nonprofit membership corporation created by the Securities Investor Protection Act (hereinafter “SIPA”). SIPC administers a fund, financed by membership assessments, which insures that customers of insolvent broker-dealers receive the protection provided for in the SIPA. Having reimbursed Bell & Beckwith’s customers as provided for in the SIPA, SIPC is now the Debtor’s largest creditor pursuant to its right of subrogation.

This settlement concerns claims involving Zula Wolfram, former wife of Bell & Beckwith’s managing partner, Edward F. “Ted” Wolfram, Jr. (hereinafter “Mr. Wolfram”). Beginning approximately Ten (10) years prior to the initiation of this liquidation proceeding, Mr. Wolfram began systematically and fraudulently diverting cash and securities, held by the brokerage in customer margin accounts, into accounts which he controlled. Many of these accounts were held in Zula Wolfram’s name. At the time Mr. Wolfram’s fraud was discovered by a Securities & Exchange Commission examiner in February of 1983, Mr. Wolfram had stolen approximately Forty-six Million Dollars ($46,000,000.00).

On February 6, 1983, a few days after Mr. Wolfram’s fraud was discovered, both Mr. Wolfram and Zula Wolfram signed a blanket assignment of all of their property to the Debtor. The District Court granted SIPC’s application for the appointment of a Trustee on February 10, 1983, and selected Patrick A. McGraw to serve in that capacity. On February 16, 1983, Zula Wolfram and her husband signed a second assignment, modeled on the first, which assigns, inter alia, “any and all real and personal (tangible and intangible) property that the Wolframs and Wolfram entities, individually and jointly, now or hereafter own or acquire and all interests in such property that they now own or hereafter acquire to secure repayment of the margin accounts and their performance of this Assignment. The property covered by this paragraph includes any and all property of the Wol-frams and Wolfram entities, including without limitation claims, choses in action, and partnership interest.”

At the time this case was filed, on February 5, 1983, there were a number of customer accounts at Bell & Beckwith which were held in Zula Wolfram’s name. Those customer accounts had a debit balance of approximately Twenty-four Million Dollars ($24,000,000.00). The Trustee filed a Complaint seeking to recover the amount owed on the accounts. Because Zula Wolfram requested a trial by jury, the case was transferred to the District Court where it was assigned to the Honorable John W. Potter, United States District Judge. Zula Wolfram has contested her liability on the debit balance existing in accounts maintained in her name. She has denied that she maintained sufficient control over the accounts to be charged with responsibility for the amounts owed on those accounts.

*572 Subsequent to the execution of the assignments, some of the securities declared dividends and paid interest. The dividends and interests were received by Zula Wolfram, who refused to turn these assets over to the Trustee, despite her assignment of the underlying securities. On March 13, 1984, the Trustee filed a Complaint against Zula Wolfram in this Court, seeking to recover dividends and interest payments in excess of Thirty-six Thousand Dollars ($36,-000.00). A jury trial was also demanded in this case, which was transferred to the District Court and consolidated with the Trustee’s action on the customer accounts.

The Wolfram assignments covered not only property that was acquired after the fraud began, they also include so called “pre-fraud” assets. It appears that the Wolframs’ home was purchased prior to 1973, as were a number of other less valuable assets. Zula Wolfram contends that she was not advised that the distinction between pre-fraud and post-fraud assets could affect the Trustee’s entitlement to those assets.

One of the major issues in this litigation is the extent to which Zula Wolfram was represented by counsel. Attorney Frank McManus was the Wolfram’s family attorney prior to the collapse of Bell & Beck-with. He was a childhood friend of Mr. Wolfram’s, and while the brokerage was open, had lunch with Mr. Wolfram frequently. Mr. McManus’s relationship with Zula Wolfram was also a close one. For example, Zula Wolfram testified that Frank McManus was her godparent. After Mr. Wolfram’s fraud was discovered, William Connelly was retained to handle Mr. Wolfram’s defense. Mr. Connelly testified that Mr. Wolfram was his “primary client”. However, SIPC introduced a letter, signed by Mr. Connelly, indicating that he would retain certain funds for legal services “on behalf of Mr. and Mrs. Wolfram”.

Counsel for Zula Wolfram has argued that there was a clear conflict of interest to the extent that Mr. McManus and Mr. Con-nelly attempted to represent both Zula and Edward Wolfram. It would appear from the facts in this case that the dual representation was far from ideal. It is less clear that the facts in this case amount to the absence of representation. It should be noted that Mr. McManus continued to represent Zula Wolfram on the tax problems arising from her signing joint tax returns which had failed to include the income Mr. Wolfram procured by fraud. Zula Wolfram testified that she is satisfied with Mr. McManus’s representation of her interests in the tax case, which is currently on appeal in the Ninth Circuit.

In the Trustee’s suit to recover the dividends and interest, Zula Wolfram filed an answer and counterclaim, and later an amended answer and counterclaim. Among the affirmative defenses asserted by counsel for Zula Wolfram are: lack of consideration to support the assignment; failure of consideration; that the assignments were the result of duress, undue influence, or both; that Zula Wolfram was incompetent at the time the assignments were executed; unconscionability of the assignments; and her lack of capacity to enter into the assignments. In her counterclaim, Zula Wolfram restates her defenses as affirmative causes of action against the Trustee.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 B.R. 569, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 1997, 1988 WL 129526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bell-beckwith-ohnb-1988.