In re C.D. Jones & Co.

482 B.R. 449, 23 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. B 481, 2012 Bankr. LEXIS 5168, 2012 WL 5390327
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Florida
DecidedNovember 5, 2012
DocketNo. 09-31595-KKS
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 482 B.R. 449 (In re C.D. Jones & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re C.D. Jones & Co., 482 B.R. 449, 23 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. B 481, 2012 Bankr. LEXIS 5168, 2012 WL 5390327 (Fla. 2012).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION GRANTING TRUSTEE’S MOTION TO COMPEL DISCLOSURE (DOC. 163) AND MOTION FOR DETERMINATION OF CAUSE OF ACTION AS AN ASSET OF THE ESTATE (DOC. m)

KAREN K. SPECIE, Bankruptcy Judge.

The Chapter 7 Trustee and the largest unsecured creditor, Thomas and Adele Daake (the “Daakes”) are fighting over which of them can pursue and collect on claims against third parties. The Daakes, who have been trying to collect a $5-$6 million claim against the Debtor for years, recently filed a state court law suit against third parties (one, a former insider of the Debtor) and want to keep the proceeds of any recovery for themselves. The Trustee wants to bring any recovery into the bankruptcy estate for distribution to all unsecured creditors. The defendants in the suit filed by the Daakes just want everyone to go away.

The primary legal issue boils down to whether certain claims and causes of action the Daakes filed, or that may be filed, in state court constitute property of the bankruptcy estate. A second issue is whether the Trustee has standing to pursue the state court claims or whether, as the Daakes assert, the Trustee no longer has standing because she did not take action to pursue any fraudulent transfer claims within the two years set forth in Section 546(a). Finally, the Court must decide whether to order the Daakes to give the Trustee any information they have about any pending actions that relate to this bankruptcy case.

The Court finds that any claims asserted in state court that belonged to the Debtor prepetition are Section 541 property of the bankruptcy estate that the Chapter 7 [452]*452Trustee has standing to pursue. Any recovery from state court fraudulent transfer claims became property of the estate by virtue of Section 544(a) and the Trustee had exclusive standing to pursue such claims until the expiration of the limitations period of Section 546(a), at which point the Daakes also had standing to pursue such claims. Whether the Trustee no longer has standing to pursue fraudulent transfer claims is an issue for the state court to decide. Finally, under the facts of this case it is appropriate, and necessary, to grant the Trustee’s motion to compel disclosure and require the Daakes and their counsel to provide the Trustee information about any pending actions that relate to this bankruptcy case.

BACKGROUND

The Debtor, CD Jones & Company, Inc., is a Florida corporation formed in 1989. At some point in 2003 the Daakes entered into a business transaction with the Debt- or; the Daakes contracted for the Debtor to perform certain construction for them in Escambia County, Florida. A dispute arose between the Debtor and the Daakes, and in 2004 the Daakes sued the Debtor for breach of contract, violation of certain building codes, and fraud. After costly and protracted litigation, including a jury trial, in July of 2009 the Daakes won a jury verdict against the Debtor in excess of five (5) million dollars, including $100,000.00 in punitive damages. Not surprisingly, the Debtor filed its Chapter 7 petition on July 30, 2009, after the jury verdict but before a Final Judgment was signed by the trial court.

The Daakes sought and were granted stay relief in order to obtain a final judgment and liquidate their claims against the Debtor for attorneys’ fees and costs.1 On October 1, 2009 the state court entered a Final Judgment for the Daakes against the Debtor in the amount of $5,196,706.67, which confirmed the Daakes as by far the Debtor’s largest unsecured creditor.

The Debtor’s original founders, principals and co-owners were Dennis and Cynthia Jones. Sometime in 2006, during the heat of the litigation between the Daakes and the Debtor, Dennis and Cynthia Jones transferred their ownership interests in the Debtor to their son, Chris Jones, and a business associate, William Clay. Later, in April of 2007, the Debtor completed a transaction with William Clay and Chris Jones that resulted in Mr. Clay becoming the Debtor’s sole remaining shareholder. At about the same time, the Debtor was sued by another creditor, Alcan Investments, LLC, for breach of contract, fraud, conspiracy to commit fraud, concealment, violations of the Interstate Land Sales Full Disclosure Act, and recovery of fraudulent transfers.

Sherry Chancellor was appointed Trustee of the Debtor’s estate on July 31, 2009. The Trustee has not filed any adversary proceedings against the Debtor or others. On May 11, 2011, the Trustee filed an application to employ the Daakes’ current counsel, then with another firm, to pursue and recover assets and avoidable transfers on behalf of the estate, but after a creditor objected the Trustee withdrew the application two days prior to the expiration of the Section 546(a) limitations period. The Daakes’ counsel then filed emergency motions to either compel the Trustee to bring such avoidance actions or alternatively grant the Daakes permission to bring the actions. The Trustee objected to the mo[453]*453tion to compel on the basis that the Daakes’ attorneys had been “unresponsive” to her requests for information and “vague” as to the details of alleged fraudulent transfers. The Trustee concluded that by filing the motion to compel, the Daakes’ counsel had placed itself in an “adversarial position with the Trustee which is not conducive to a healthy client-attorney relationship.”2 After a contested hearing on the motion to compel, this Court authorized the Daakes to bring a fraudulent transfer action on behalf of the Debtor’s estate, which they did. That action, which was filed within the two-year period provided under Section 546 of the Code, remains pending.

In June of 2012, after the expiration of the time provided under Section 546(a), but without notice to or consent by the Trustee, the Daakes filed a new law suit in state court against two people: one of the former owners of the Debtor, Dennis Jones, as Trustee, and April White, who is or was engaged to the Jones’ son, Chris Jones. It is the claims and causes of action in this new law suit (the “Jones’ Trust suit”) that are at the heart of this dispute.

In the Jones’ Trust suit, the Daakes allege that while Dennis and Cynthia Jones still owned their shares in the Debt- or they 1) formed and caused the Debtor to pay for the formation of two trusts for which Dennis Jones became Trustee: The Dennis Jones Grantor Trust and the Cynthia Jones Grantor Trust (the “Jones’ Trusts”); and 2) caused the Debtor to transfer to the Jones’ Trusts and a third party, April White, certain valuable land and other assets.3 In the Jones’ Trust suit the Daakes seek two types of equitable relief on their own behalf and “for CD Jones [the Debtor]”: imposition of a resulting trust and an equitable lien on the assets transferred to the defendants by the Debtor.4

To date, the Daakes are the only parties who have been willing (and able) to expend the time, money and effort to pursue claims thus far in this case.

PROCEDURAL POSTURE

Upon discovering that the Daakes had filed the Jones’ Trust suit, the Chapter 7 Trustee filed a Motion to Compel Disclosure, seeking an order compelling the Daakes and their counsel to “make a full and complete disclosure, under penalty of perjury regarding any knowledge they may have of any pending litigation that involves the Debtor in this matter in any way shape or form.”5 The Trustee also filed a

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
482 B.R. 449, 23 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. B 481, 2012 Bankr. LEXIS 5168, 2012 WL 5390327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cd-jones-co-flnb-2012.