In Re Chaim Einhorn Vacation Planning Center, Inc.

59 B.R. 179, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 6388
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMarch 27, 1986
Docket8-19-70773
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 59 B.R. 179 (In Re Chaim Einhorn Vacation Planning Center, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Chaim Einhorn Vacation Planning Center, Inc., 59 B.R. 179, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 6388 (N.Y. 1986).

Opinion

*180 DECISION AND ORDER

CONRAD B. DUBERSTEIN, Chief Judge.

FACTS

These cases were commenced on July 29, 1982 with the filing of separate involuntary petitions in bankruptcy against Chaim Ein-horn (“Einhorn”), individually and Vacation Planning Center, Inc. (“Vacation”), (collectively, the “debtors”), a travel agency of which Einhorn was president and sole stockholder. The petitions were filed by three airlines, Pan American World Airways (“Pan Am”), British Airways (“BA”) and Trans World Airways (“TWA”) (collectively, the “petitioning creditors”). They alleged that the debtors were generally not paying their debts as they became due, thus entitling the creditors to entry of orders for relief against both debtors pursuant to Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code. 1 The creditors contended that Vacation, which was a travel agency appointed pursuant to a Standard Passenger Sales Agreement with the Air Traffic Conference of America (the “ATC Agreement”), failed to remit to them the proceeds of tickets which it sold on behalf of each airline. The creditors maintained that the debtors owed them the following amounts:

Pan Am $498,367.58
TWA 210,364.71
BA 309,639.63

It is further undisputed that subsequently the sum of $250,000 was paid to the above creditors and after allocating a portion thereof to each, the following amounts remain due and owing:

Pan Am $341,462.47
TWA 174,922.9 2
BA 251,981.53 2

Einhorn individually and as the sole representative of Vacation, interposed answers to the involuntary petitions, stating in essence, that he lacked sufficient information to form a belief as to the truth of the allegations or that he declined to answer on the ground that it might tend to incriminate him. In accordance with discovery rules 26-37, Fed.R.Civ.P., made applicable to bankruptcy by Bankruptcy Rule 114 (presently Bankruptcy Rule 1012), the debtors appeared for examination before this court regarding the issues raised by the involuntary filings. 3 At the Rule 1012 *181 hearing Einhorn invoked his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination by refusing to testify and by failing to produce his books and records as well as those of Vacation. This court thereupon invoked sanctions against both debtors in accordance with Rule 1012(b) and pursuant to its provisions, orders for relief under Chapter 7 were entered against both debtors.

The debtors appealed from entry of the orders for relief. On appeal the District Court found that Einhorn had established a plausible, factual basis for his Fifth Amendment claim and remanded the cases to this court for hearings on the issues raised in the involuntary petitions, consistent with the debtor’s constitutional right to assert the Fifth Amendment.

The petitioning creditors again conducted discovery pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 1012. Einhorn appeared before this court for pre-trial examination by them. Ein-horn’s attorney prefaced the hearing by summarizing the factual basis upon which Einhorn would invoke the Fifth Amendment. He stated that Einhorn faced potential criminal prosecution under federal statutes including the use of the mails to defraud, fraud by wire, engaging in a pattern of racketeering (referred to as RICO), the transportation and/or sale of stolen goods in interstate commerce, income tax evasion and flight to avoid prosecution. (Tr. of 5/24/84 at 7).

Einhorn testified that he was the president of Vacation and its sole officer. He asserted that he had authority to make rent payments for Vacation and did so by check. Id. at 20. He also testified that it had been more than five years since he had custody of Vacation’s books and records, that he did not presently have possession of them and that he did not know where they were. Id. at 9-19. He invoked the Fifth Amendment and refused to answer questions regarding whether he personally kept any financial records or employed an accountant and whether he owed debts to the telephone company, Con Edison and his landlord at the time the petitions were filed. Id. at 43. The petitioning creditors thereafter proceeded to a trial of the allegations raised by the involuntary chapter 7 petitions.

In order to establish the allegations in an involuntary chapter 7, it is necessary for the petitioning creditors to prove: (i) that they hold claims aggregating at least $5,000 in unsecured debt, (ii) that the debtors were generally not paying their debts as such debts became due, and, (iii) such debts were not the subject of a bona fide dispute. 11 U.S.C. Sections 303(b) and (h). One witness testified on behalf of each of the petitioning creditors. Einhorn was the fourth and final witness. The court received numerous documents in evidence.

A staff assistant of TWA was the first witness to testify. She explained the procedure utilized by a travel agent for the sale of airline tickets to the general public and remittance of the proceeds of those sales to the airline whose ticket was sold. She testified that a travel agent writes a ticket on approved “stock”, that is a blank ticket impressed with the appropriate airline’s plate. The travel agent then submits the ticket coupons and proceeds of the sale by midnight of the following Tuesday to a “settlement bank”, which, upon receipt, distributes them to the appropriate airline. When a passenger uses the ticket it is processed by the airline. If the airline has not received the travel agent’s coupon and remittance from the settlement bank, it categorizes the ticket as an “unrecorded sale”. According to the witness, the usual procedure at TWA for an unreported ticket was to process a Debit Memo form to the appropriate travel agent advising it that there was an unreported sale and that the money must be paid to the airline either directly or through the area settlement bank. In . summary, the witness’ testimony was that Vacation had sold TWA tickets to *182 airline passengers but had not sent it a matching payment.

The Debit Memos which were issued to Vacation together with supporting documentation were placed into evidence. According to the witness, the Debit Memos represented tickets presented by passengers for which TWA had no record of a matching remittance from the area settlement bank. From those documents the witness testified that debts due TWA from Vacation prior to filing of the involuntary petitions were not paid. (Tr. of 10/10/84 at 20). A letter from TWA to the ATC dated May 19, 1980 prior to filing of the petitions indicated that there was $205,088.24 due TWA from Vacation on that date. Id. at 15.

The witness for Pan Am, one of its collection managers, testified that its practice of dealing with travel agents who sold tickets to the general public was identical to that employed by TWA.

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Bluebook (online)
59 B.R. 179, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 6388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-chaim-einhorn-vacation-planning-center-inc-nyeb-1986.