In Re Dreske Greenway Trust

14 B.R. 618, 1981 Bankr. LEXIS 2931
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedSeptember 22, 1981
Docket19-20195
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 14 B.R. 618 (In Re Dreske Greenway Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Dreske Greenway Trust, 14 B.R. 618, 1981 Bankr. LEXIS 2931 (Wis. 1981).

Opinion

DECISION

D. E. IHLENFELDT, Bankruptcy Judge.

George Dreske, a creditor (hereinafter referred to as Dreske), has moved to dismiss this chapter 11 case on the ground that the court lacks subject matter jurisdiction in that the debtor is a trust which is not eligible to file for relief under the Bankruptcy Code. Its eligibility to file depends upon whether or not it is a “business trust” within the meaning of § 101(8) of the Code. 1 The issue of subject matter jurisdiction may of course be raised at any time. 2 In this case, the motion to dismiss was filed on August 31, 1981, some 5V2 months after the chapter 11 petition was filed on March 11, 1981, and after certain adversary proceedings were litigated and decided contrary to Dreske’s liking.

An evidentiary hearing was held on the dismissal motion on September 15 and 16, 1981. The evidence presented together with the court’s files, of which judicial notice is taken, gives the following picture.

Negotiations which began in October or November, 1979, in which Dreske and Frank Latina were the principal participants, bore first fruit on December 28,1979. On that date, after a number of false starts by the parties’ attorneys because of problems with tax consequences and financing, the following actions were taken. A trust instrument (Ex. 4) was executed creating the Dreske Greenway Trust, the debtor (hereinafter referred to as the Trust), naming as both grantors and trustees Dreske’s three children, Donald Dreske, Kenneth Dreske and Karen Ann Dreske Wiggins. Named as beneficiaries were “the issue of the grantors, including children, grandchildren and more remote issue.” The three grantors transferred $150 to the trust in the form of a check from Donald Dreske. 3 The Trust then borrowed $85,000 from Dreske which was used immediately as a down payment on a $287,000 land contract for the purchase of real estate from the Jungbluth family in New Berlin, Wisconsin, the total purchase price of such property being $405,-000.

*620 On January 28,1980, after negotiations in which Dreske was again the principal participant, the following additional transactions took place. The Trust borrowed an additional $100,000 from Dreske and used this as a down payment on a land contract for the purchase from Frank Latina of the Blue Crest Motel situated in Wauwatosa, Wisconsin. Included in the purchase were a bar and restaurant which were operated in conjunction with the motel. In addition to the land contract, the Trust entered into a lease-purchase agreement (Ex. 9) with Latina for the personal property on the premises. Dreske personally guaranteed the land contract obligation, and also gave a $25,000 personal note to Mrs. Frank Latina as additional security. As a part of the deal, the Trust sold the Jungbluth property to Latina by way of a $550,000 land contract (Ex. 10), Latina however being given a $100,000 credit on this amount in consideration of the Blue Crest Motel transaction, so that Latina owed only a net of $450,000 on the Jungbluth property contract. 4 Finally, Dreske and his children organized a new corporation, Bluecrest Management Corp., to operate the motel property. This corporation was wholly owned by another corporation, Aries, Ltd., a holding company which also owned a number of other corporations of the Dreske family. The officers and directors of the Bluecrest and Aries corporations, as well as the stockholders of Aries, Ltd., were the same three Dreske children who were the grantors and trustees of the Trust.

Latina vacated the motel property on January 31,1980, and the Dreskes took over on February 1,1980. On March 1,1980, the Trust entered into a 25 year lease agreement (Ex. 5) with the Bluecrest Management Corp. (hereinafter referred to as the corporation). Donald Dreske testified that he could not find the original of this lease, but that as trustee he had signed the lease on behalf of the Trust, and as an officer of the corporation, he had also signed it on behalf of the corporation. The lease provided for $20,000 monthly rental payments to be made by the corporation to the Trust beginning on March 1, 1980. The Trust in turn was obligated to pay Latina about $15,800 each month. An entry in the corporation’s minute book dated January 31, 1981, some 11 months later, recites that the corporation approved the lease on that date.

Donald Dreske managed the daily operations of the motel. He testified that he was paid by the corporation, as were the other employees, and that the corporation paid rent to the Trust which in turn made the monthly payments to Latina. In point of fact, the corporation never did pay any rent as such to the Trust, but instead merely transferred sufficient funds each month to enable the Trust to meet its $15,800 monthly obligation to Latina. 5 In not one single month did the Trust collect its $20,000 from the corporation. Later on when money became even tighter and it became necessary to speed up the payment process in order to avoid a default in payment to Latina, the corporation made a number of payments directly to Latina, ostensibly “on behalf of the Trust.” 6 At least a part of the cash shortage problem must have resulted from the fact that the Dreskes transferred funds from the motel operation to other corporations which they owned or controlled. Donald Dreske testified that funds were transferred back and forth between such corporations in this manner, depending upon which was in need of cash at the moment, and the corporation’s tax return for the year ending September 30, 1980 (Ex. 8) *621 showed as an asset on that date, “Advances to Affiliates ... $136,488.”

On February 11,1981, Latina commenced a land contract foreclosure action in the circuit court for Milwaukee County alleging that the trustees of the Trust had failed to make the monthly payments due on January 1 and February 1, 1981. Latina’s motion for judgment was scheduled to be heard on March 11, 1981. On the morning of that day, the Trust filed its petition under chapter 11.

On April 6, 1981, Latina filed an adversary proceeding seeking relief from the stay imposed by § 362 of the Code. On the scheduled trial date, April 29, 1981, the Dreskes indicated that they had a buyer for the motel and needed time to work out the financing. The parties then stipulated that an order might be entered vacating the stay, but that such vacation would not become effective until June 1, 1981. 7 It was understood that if the Dreskes could come up with an acceptable buyer and financing within that time, the stay would be continued in order to enable the sale to take place, but this did not happen.

This agreed order vacating the stay effective June 1, 1981 did not end the litigation in bankruptcy court, as had been anticipated by the court and Latina. On June 1, 1981, the Dreskes filed a petition for removal of the land contract foreclosure action from the circuit court of Milwaukee County to this court. Latina promptly moved to remand, but withdrew this motion provided he would receive a prompt hearing in the foreclosure action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 B.R. 618, 1981 Bankr. LEXIS 2931, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-dreske-greenway-trust-wieb-1981.