In Re Frank Giorgio and Pauline Giorgio, Debtors. John Boyajian, Trustee v. Alan J. Defusco, Etc.

862 F.2d 933, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 16787, 1988 WL 130919
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedDecember 12, 1988
Docket88-1166
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 862 F.2d 933 (In Re Frank Giorgio and Pauline Giorgio, Debtors. John Boyajian, Trustee v. Alan J. Defusco, Etc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Frank Giorgio and Pauline Giorgio, Debtors. John Boyajian, Trustee v. Alan J. Defusco, Etc., 862 F.2d 933, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 16787, 1988 WL 130919 (1st Cir. 1988).

Opinion

BREYER, Circuit Judge.

In 1977 Pasco DeFusco obtained a Rhode Island state court judgment for $38,500 against Frank and Pauline Giorgio. Pasco DeFusco died in 1981; the Giorgios went bankrupt in 1983. The DeFusco estate then tried to collect the judgment from the Giorgios’ bankruptcy estate. The bankruptcy court refused to allow the DeFusco estate to collect the debt on the ground that it represented the proceeds of loans that Pasco had made to Frank Giorgio at usuriously high interest rates. Indeed, the bankruptcy court concluded that usury was so prevalent that state usury and rackeer-ing laws entitled the Giorgio estate to a $138,000 judgment, against Pasco’s executors (his wife and son), and (in part) against the son as an individual. R.I. Gen. Laws § 6-26-4 (1985) (contract charging interest in excess of maximum rate is void, and borrower entitled to recover amount paid); R.I. Gen. Laws §§ 7-15-1 et seq. (1985) (Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act).

The DeFuscos appealed to the district court. That court pointed out that the Rhode Island courts, in effect, had found Pasco’s loan contract enforceable. The court held that the bankruptcy court’s $138,000 judgment lacked any basis in law. It added that, in respect to the $41,000 claim (the judgment plus interest), the bankruptcy court should have treated the DeFusco estate like any other judgment creditor, 81 B.R. 766.

The trustee of the Giorgio estate now appeals the district court’s determinations. After reviewing the record, we have concluded that the district court was legally correct; the bankruptcy court was wrong; the DeFusco estate may collect the debt to Pasco.

I

Background

The record in this case suffers from certain weaknesses. The only witnesses able to describe the details of the usurious loan transactions are the Giorgios themselves. The one other knowledgeable person is Pasco DeFusco who died in 1981. Important portions of the Giorgios’ testimony lack specificity, and, in certain key respects (related to payment collection by Pasco’s son, Alan), their bankruptcy court testimony contradicts earlier testimony they gave in state court. Nonetheless, we shall, for the most part, take the basic underlying facts to be those that the bankruptcy court found. In our view, the evidence might be read to show the following:

a. Frank Giorgio is an habitual gambler. He owned and operated the Club 400 where gambling frequently took place. He often fell into debt. He sometimes borrowed money from Pasco DeFusco, who played poker at his club.

b. Between 1969 and 1973 Frank Gior-gio borrowed, perhaps, $20,000 from Pasco DeFusco. He would pay DeFusco back usually at a rate of $200 per week. This repayment was meant to include 10 percent interest per week, or 520 percent per year. By 1973 Giorgio thought he might have paid DeFusco as much as $50,000.

c. In 1973 Pauline Giorgio, Frank’s wife, met with Pasco DeFusco. She insisted that Frank pay Pasco all remaining debts and borrow no more. She and Pasco reached an agreement, the essential parts of which (in her opinion) were (1) Frank *935 then owed Pasco $19,000, (2) Frank would repay that $19,000 through weekly $200 payments, (3) once the amount of the $200 weekly payments reached $19,000, Frank would no longer owe Pasco anything.

d. Between 1973 and 1975 the Giorgios gave Pasco DeFusco $200 per week until the amount paid reached $19,000.

e. In 1975 Frank decided to borrow another $25,000 from Pasco. Pasco agreed to lend him the money provided he would sign a promissory note. When the time to sign arrived, Frank and Pauline, meeting with Pasco and his lawyer, found that the note said they owed Pasco $44,000, though Pas-co had given them only $25,000. When questioned, apparently Pasco or his lawyer said that the extra $19,000 represented interest that Pasco should have charged them for the $19,000 he loaned them between 1973 and 1975; he said that he had accepted repayments without interest which, in his view, he should not have done. Frank and Pauline signed the note.

f. During 1976 the Giorgios made payments on the note, amounting to about $15,000, but then stopped paying. Pasco sued them in Rhode Island state court. They asserted a “usury” defense. R.I.Gen. Laws § 6-26-4. On November 17, 1977, the day of trial, they entered into a consent judgment, which specified that they still owed Pasco $38,500 (an amount that included interest on late payments, costs and attorney’s fees).

g. The Giorgios did not pay the amounts specified in the consent judgment; Pasco levied on their real estate; the Giorg-ios then collaterally attacked the consent judgment in Rhode Island state court. They claimed that the consent judgment rested upon usurious transactions and that they had agreed to it by mistake and under duress. See R.I.Super.R.Civ.P. 60(b) (permits a party to obtain relief from a final judgment for mistake, inadvertence, excusable neglect, fraud, or newly discovered evidence). The Rhode Island Superior Court rejected their claim. The Rhode Island Supreme Court affirmed that rejection. The Supreme Court, noting that “facts” that “might support” the Giorgios’ “claim of usury are hotly disputed,” pointed out that normally Rhode Island law does not permit a borrower to waive a usury defense, but that the facts revealed at trial brought the Giorgio’s case “within ... [the] narrow category of cases in which a debtor’s release of a usury claim is not merely a subterfuge to evade the usury statutes.” Since the facts permitted a finding of no duress and showed that the reason the Giorgios signed the consent judgement was “to avoid ... adverse publicity, ... the Giorgios should be bound by their decision to release any potential defense of usury.” DeFusco v. Giorgio, 440 A.2d 727, 732 (R.I.1982).

h.In 1981 Pasco DeFusco died. In 1982 the Rhode Island Supreme Court issued the decision we have just described. DeFusco v. Giorgio, supra. In April 1983 the Giorgios filed for bankruptcy. And, in July 1983 the DeFusco estate filed the claim at issue here. As we have previously pointed out, the bankruptcy court not only rejected that claim, but also entered judgment on behalf of the bankruptcy trustee, against DeFusco’s wife and son, for $138,-000. The district court reversed the bankruptcy court; and we now consider the Giorgio trustee’s appeal of that reversal.

II

The $138,000 judgment against the DeFuscos

The bankruptcy court’s award against the DeFuscos consisted of two basic parts: a) about $15,000 which the Giorgios paid Pasco DeFusco between 1975 and 1977 under the note that led to the consent judgment; and b) $19,000, which the Giorgios paid Pasco DeFusco between 1973 and 1975, before they signed the note. The bankruptcy court held that DeFusco’s wife and son must pay these amounts in their capacity as executors of the DeFusco estate.

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Bluebook (online)
862 F.2d 933, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 16787, 1988 WL 130919, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-frank-giorgio-and-pauline-giorgio-debtors-john-boyajian-trustee-v-ca1-1988.