In Re Bennett, Remick & Bennett

84 B.R. 182, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 314, 1988 WL 22376
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Montana
DecidedMarch 11, 1988
Docket16-61203
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 84 B.R. 182 (In Re Bennett, Remick & Bennett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Montana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Bennett, Remick & Bennett, 84 B.R. 182, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 314, 1988 WL 22376 (Mont. 1988).

Opinion

ORDER

JOHN L. PETERSON, Bankruptcy Judge.

In this Chapter 11 case, filed on December 15, 1987, a secured creditor, The First National Bank of St. Paul, Minnesota, has filed a Motion to Dismiss the case on grounds the filing of the petition was not in good faith, and there is not an existing partnership of the Debtor. In the alternative, the Bank seeks a declaration that the sole asset of the Debtor is no longer an asset of the estate, and therefore there is no reasonable prospect of rehabilitation of the Debtor. Hearing, after due notice on the motion, was held on February 18, 1988, and both parties have submitted briefs in support of their respective positions. The Debtor resists the motion and claims this Chapter 11 case will result in a liquidating Plan of Reorganization of the sole asset of the Debtor so that the filing was indeed made in good faith.

The salient facts, except for the existence of a legal partnership, are not in dispute. The sole asset of the Debtor is 21,-647 shares of stock held in the First National Bank of Libby, which shares represent about a 20% interest of the outstanding stock of the Libby Bank. A 62% majority interest in the Libby Bank is held by a holding company called Kootenai Bancorp, Inc. Of the Debtor’s shares in the Libby Bank, 20,462 shares are represented by Certificate No. 1158, dated October 1,1987, and issued by the Libby Bank to “Martha W. Bennett, Steven M. Bennett and Douglas B. Remick, as joint tenants with right of survivorship and not as tenants in common”. Certificate No. 1158 was issued at the request of a First Bank officer who possessed stock powers of transfer from previous owners from whom Bennett, Bennett and Remick (Bennett et. al.) had purchased the shares through a financing arrangement between the Debtor and First Bank. It is on the basis of that financial dealing that the Bank now seeks dismissal of this Chapter 11 case.

Shortly before July 17, 1986, Douglas Remick approached the Bank for a loan of $645,344.52 to purchase the 20,462 shares *183 held by Douglas Remick, his father Bernard Remick and Darrell K. Olson, together with relations of Bernard Remick. The Bank approved the loan, and a note, security agreement, pledge agreements and stock assignments, were executed for the above amount by the three individuals, Martha Bennett, Steven Bennett and Douglas Rem-ick, after submission of individual personal financing statements. The June, 1986, note was renewed, after some payments, by note dated January 31, 1987, again signed individually by the three borrowers, upon conditions which included the right of First Bank to sell the stock in the event of default in the payment of the note. The renewal note payable April 30, 1987, went into default, which resulted in the Bank notifying the borrowers that the stock would be sold to satisfy the obligation. After delaying sale on two occasions on request of the borrowers, who had attempted to sell the stock beginning early in 1987, the Bank on October 20,1987, notified each borrower that the stock would be sold on December 16, 1987. After publication of the sale, together with notification of sale to fifty bank officers and ten holding companies, Kootenai Bancorp submitted a sealed bid for the stock. The Debtor, on December 15, 1987, through counsel, requested the Bank to delay the sale for 30 days, to allow the borrowers more time to sell the stock, to which the Bank assented. Nevertheless, the Debtor on December 15, 1987, filed this Chapter 11 case under the partnership of Bennett, Remick and Bennett, which has now delayed the sale due to the automatic stay provisions of Section 362 of the Code. The Kootenai Bancorp bid was opened and revealed a bid of $773,-855.00 or $37.78 per share. The Debtor testified they are desirous of seeking $60.00 to $75.00 per share. The Bank officer who negotiated the loan at the Bank testified he never knew of the existence of any partnership, and had he possessed such knowledge, would not have made the loan due to Bank policy. No Articles of Partnership have been presented in evidence and of the many notes, security agreements, purchase agreements, checks, stock powers and certificates presented in evidence, the only written evidence of the existence of a partnership is a copy of 1986 Internal Revenue Service Tax return, filed by “Bennett, Remick, Bennett” as a partnership. Indeed, each promissory note executed by the borrowers contains the printed matter “Name of Borrower if Corporation or Partnership”, yet each note is signed individually, without any designation of a partnership name. Further, a purchase agreement of January 10, 1986, between Douglas B. Remick, Steven M. Bennett and Martha W. Bennett, signed by each individually, recites the parties are “jointly purchasing stock in the First National Bank of Libby, Montana, with an intent to acquire controlling interest in the same * * * ”. Again, the Debtor failed to submit any joint venture agreement between the parties or books and accounts of the partnership, although they contend there is a partnership between them. The bankruptcy petition describes the Debtor as a “Joint Venture Partnership consisting of Martha W. Bennett, Douglas B. Remick and Steven M. Bennett”, with tax Identification No. 81-0431902. Due to the holding of the Court on the Motion to Dismiss on the issue of good faith, I do not deem it necessary to decide whether the Debtor is a partnership or merely an association of three individuals.

The Court has been provided a copy of the transcript of the Section 341 first meeting of creditors held on February 17, 1988, at which Douglas Remick and Martha Bennett testified upon request of the First Bank after the Debtor’s counsel announced he would not call or interrogate any of the Debtors. Upon reading of the transcript, it is readily apparent the entire purpose of the meeting was frustrated by the refusal of the Debtor’s principals to either refuse to answer pertinent questions about the financial affairs of the Debtor or plead they did not know or recollect. For example, when showed a copy of the Purchase Agreement described ’above, and asked whether that agreement forms the basis of the partnership, Remick answered, “I will not answer to that”. No records were brought to the meeting on which Remick or *184 Martha Bennett could refresh their recollection, and the entire stonewall effort is reflected in the statement of Debtor’s counsel at the first meeting of creditors, Mr. Hash, who stated, “The entire [partnership] file is with Mr. Bartlett (Debtor's counsel at the hearing on February 18, 1988), and he’s the attorney that’s going to be representing them in trial in Missoula tomorrow”. When questioned about the loan due Glacier National Bank for the 1,187 shares of Libby Bank stock, and who signed the note and security agreement, Remick answered, “I don’t know right now. I didn’t bring any of the records”. The schedules fail to describe when the debt was incurred, so the inquiry by Bank’s counsel was clearly pertinent and necessary. Again, Remick was asked and answered:

“Q. Who does the partnership books and records?
A. I do.
Q. You have them with you here?
A. I didn’t — no, I don’t.
* * * * * *
Q. So, the partnership has books and records but you don’t have them here today?
A. Right.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 B.R. 182, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 314, 1988 WL 22376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bennett-remick-bennett-mtb-1988.