In Re Carolina Tobacco Co.

375 B.R. 602, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 2998, 2007 WL 2499927
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Oregon
DecidedAugust 30, 2007
Docket19-60600
StatusPublished

This text of 375 B.R. 602 (In Re Carolina Tobacco Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Carolina Tobacco Co., 375 B.R. 602, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 2998, 2007 WL 2499927 (Or. 2007).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION RE OBJECTION TO CLAIM OF CPI NV

ELIZABETH PERRIS, Bankruptcy Judge.

In 2005, debtor Carolina Tobacco Company (CTC) filed a petition under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. 1 In its schedules filed in this case, CTC listed a claim by CPI NV in the amount of $534,765.73. A number of states that are creditors in this case object to this claim, arguing that it is not a debt of debtor CTC, but instead is an obligation of Tideline International Company (Tideline), an affiliated company of debtor. Because there is no credible evidence to prove that the claim is a debt of CTC, I conclude that the objection is well taken, and will disallow the claim.

FACTS

CPI NV is a Belgian company that engages in the international trading of goods. Its managing director is Axel Caudron. In the early 1990s, Caudron met David Redmond, who owned Tideline. Caudron on behalf of CPI NV and Redmond on behalf of Tideline engaged in extensive international trading through the 1990s, including trading of tobacco products. These trades could involve millions of dollars worth of goods and were done primarily over the telephone. Such trades were rarely if ever supported by any written documentation between the two firms. The two orally agreed to share profits fifty-fifty.

In the late 1990s, Redmond approached Caudron with the idea of creating a generic, private label cigarette for the United States market. The goal was to produce a cigarette that tasted like the United States version of Marlboro cigarettes. This cigarette later became known as the Roger brand.

Redmond wanted Caudron to use his contacts in the international tobacco trading business to help locate a manufacturer for the new label cigarette and to assist in the product’s development. Caudron *604 agreed to work on the project. He made contacts with cigarette manufacturers around the world, looking for a manufacturer that could produce the quality of product that Redmond and Tideline wanted. Eventually, Caudron introduced Redmond to House of Prince, which had manufacturing facilities in Latvia. House of Prince was able to work with Tideline to create the taste that Redmond wanted and to provide manufacturing facilities for the cigarettes.

Caudron also provided certain other services related to the Roger brand, including taste testing and focus groups. Caudron and Redmond did not discuss compensation for those services until after they were provided. Redmond sought to make Caudron a fifty-fifty partner in the brand; Caudron did not want a partnership and instead sought compensation for his services.

In the meantime, the two men continued to engage in trading transactions on behalf of CPI NV and Tideline.

During the time that Redmond and Cau-dron were working to create and market the Roger brand cigarette, Redmond formed CTC to manufacture and market the new brand. CTC was incorporated in 1999. Tideline owns the Roger brand, but CTC has an exclusive license for the brand, which it now manufactures 2 and markets.

When CTC filed its chapter 11 petition in 2005, CTC scheduled a debt of $534,765.73 owing to CPI NV. The nature of the claim was described in the schedules as “Ten-year note payable due to over distribution of profits from previous years.” Exh. 1 at 2. In response to discovery requests made by the states, debtor and CPI NV both provided two different documents as supporting documentation for the claim. One was an invoice dated February 1, 2001, purportedly from CPI NV to CTC/Tideline, for $575,228.45. That invoice said it was for:

Payment concerning CPI NV’s commission and finder’s fees for worldwide factory search resulting in producing the ROGER® brand cigarettes for Carolina Tobacco Company for the North American Market (via House of Prince Riga); Management and staff feasibility for American tobacco blend with USA Marlboro-like taste; location of tobacco buyers and blenders to nearly duplicate Marlboro USA taste (via House of Prince Riga, Latvia).

Period of October 1997 to January 1999. Exh. 7.

The other document was an internal Tideline document dated February 5, 2004 and signed by Redmond, which said:

RE: Payment to CPI NV for incorrect division of profits-Previous Years
As we have discussed and agreed upon, Tideline International Company owes CPI NV exactly EURO 331.729 for previous years (sic) business transactions. Therefore, this letter is to confirm the agreement by and between Tideline International Company (“Tideline”) and CPI NV as follows:
1. As of September 30, 2003 the outstanding balance owed by Tideline to CPI NV is EUR (sic) 331.729,
2. This amount will be paid by Tideline over the next 10 years at a rate of about EURO 33.000 per year starting in year 2004, and agrees to make the year 2004 payment on or before September 15, 2004.
*605 3. This letter confirms that payment from Tideline shall be completed in 10 years with the first (1st) payment in 2004 and the last payment in 2013 for the balance owed (e.g. about Euro 33, 172, 90 (sic))
4. Funds for the year 2004 payment are to be wired to CPI NV account at KBC Bank [account number].

Exh. 8. This document came to be referred to as “the promissory note.”

Later, in April 2007, another document labeled “invoice” appeared in response to a subpoena on Tideline’s accountant. That invoice, which was in the same form as the 2001 invoice, was directed to Tideline. It was dated February 1, 2004, for $575,228.45, and said that it was for:

Settlement for Imperial Tobacco Company (Regal® and Superking® brands) business, and
Settlement for outstanding balances regarding Marlboro and RJR business in the USA (jointly with CPI USA), and
First Payment concerning CPI NV’s commission and finder’s fees for producing the ROGER® brand for the North American Market (via House of Prince Riga).

Exh. 31 at 5,18.

The obligation to CPI NV was carried on Tideline’s books until it was transferred to CTC’s books in March, 2005, shortly before debtor filed its chapter 11 petition. Although Redmond testified that he had tried to get his Chief Financial Officer (CFO) to transfer the obligation earlier, because he considered the debt to be related to the Roger brand cigarettes and thus the obligation of CTC, his CFO Kevin Richeson testified that he was not asked to transfer the debt from Tideline to CTC until he received an email communication from Redmond on March 14, 2005.

The explanation for the obligation changed during the course of this case. In June 2006, Caudron on behalf of CPI NV signed a one-page declaration saying that CPI NV issued the 2001 invoice to Tide-line/CTC for a commission and finder’s fee. Exh. 37 at 8. 3 The 2001 invoice was attached to that declaration.

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Bluebook (online)
375 B.R. 602, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 2998, 2007 WL 2499927, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-carolina-tobacco-co-orb-2007.