In Re Gillespie

269 B.R. 383, 47 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 889, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1510, 2001 WL 1455836
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Arkansas
DecidedNovember 16, 2001
Docket00-51469S
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 269 B.R. 383 (In Re Gillespie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Gillespie, 269 B.R. 383, 47 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 889, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1510, 2001 WL 1455836 (Ark. 2001).

Opinion

ORDER SUSTAINING OBJECTIONS TO EXEMPTIONS

MARY D. SCOTT, Bankruptcy Judge.

THIS CAUSE is before the Court upon objections to exemptions filed by the chapter 7 trustee and the creditor, Agribank. In light of the irregularities in the manner in which the debtor conducted her financial affairs, the clerk will be directed to forward a copy of these findings to the United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Arkansas as well as the federal and state taxing authorities.

In 1993, the debtor’s adult son died intestate. Following the son’s death, there was apparently a great deal of disagreement between the debtor and her former spouse, the father. In an effort to ensure that her heirs never had to face similar disputes, she sought legal counsel. Rather than simply providing for disposition of her assets in a will, she formed an irrevocable trust and placed not only all of her assets into this trust, but also many of the assets of her current husband, including:

1. All of the shares of WSPS, Inc., a corporation which owned and operated a liquor store;

2. All of the shares of Cal-Ric, Inc., a corporation which owned a resort condominium in Hot Springs, Arkansas, a rental house, a certificate of deposit, a GNMA security, her residence, and an unimproved parcel of land adjoining her residence.

3. All of the shares of Hard Times, Inc., the farming entity operated by her husband.

Pursuant to the terms of the trust, all of the income from the trust is to be paid to the debtor annually. None of the principal is to be paid to her. Upon her death, the *385 trust is to be “held, administered and distributed to or for the benefit of’ her husband, Ronnie Gillespie. Specifically, he is to receive income on a quarterly basis. The principal is to be distributed to him only if it is necessary for his support. At Ronnie Gillespie’s death, the assets are to be distributed to her remaining son or his heirs. Carolyn Gillespie is the creator, settlor, beneficiary and trustee of the Carolyn Gillespie Trust. Although the trust is dated the 27th day of February 1997, the signature information indicates that it was executed on the 12th day of July of an unstated year.

Carolyn Gillespie was purportedly advised that the corporations, now owned by the trust, should be operated in the same manner as they always had been. In that manner, each corporation retained its own bank account and, apparently, its own set of books. The corporations continued to file separate tax returns, but, despite the purported transfer of ownership, the tax returns continued to reflect that Carolyn Gillespie and Ronnie Gillespie, were the shareholders of the corporation. It was not until the 1999 tax returns were filed in September 2000, on the eve of the filing of the chapter 7 petition, that the returns reflected that the corporations were owned by the Carolyn Gillespie Trust.

When dealing with other business entities, and particularly when seeking loans, the Gillespies neglected to advise the potential lenders that the trust was the purported owner of their assets. For example, when Carolyn Gillespie sought a loan to purchase her automobile, she claimed that all of the assets held by the trust in fact belonged to her. 1 In that application, she also claimed that, as the liquor store owner, she received a salary of $60,000. 2

Carolyn Gillespie operated, through WSPS, a liquor store. Although she worked in the store forty to sixty hours per week, she drew no salary from that operation. Rather, she simply took monies “in lieu of salary” as needed for household expenses. Although Ronnie Gillespie did all of the work for the entity Hard Times, Inc., and labored at the liquor store, he took no salary. Rather, Hard Times, Inc. and the other entities paid his personal expenses, including a rather exorbitant cost for his membership in a duck club. The Gillespies simply considered that they were working for these entities and thus deserved “compensation for [their] work.” The compensation, however, was apparently not wages because neither the corporations nor the trust ever issued any W-2’s to the Gillespies. The corporations withheld no income taxes or FICA taxes and did not pay FICA taxes. The Gilles-pies also did not report the “compensation” as income on their individual income tax returns or pay any self-employment taxes. Rather, they caused the corporations to fund their living expenses without regard to the federal or state tax laws or other laws governing the activities of corporations and trusts.

Just as the corporations funded the Gil-lespies’ personal and luxury expenses, the corporations funded each other. If the *386 obligations of one corporation were due but that corporation did not have enough funds, the debtor simply moved funds from the account of one corporation into the account of the needy entity. Similarly, there was no discernable respect for the trust entity. Funds from the corporations, owned by the trust, were funneled to Carolyn or Ronnie Gillespie as they wished. They did not distinguish between the trust income and res. Carolyn Gillespie simply directed the income or other property of the trust into her and the corporate accounts for her expenses as she desired, in contravention of the terms of the trust and the tax laws.

Just prior to the filing of her chapter 7 petition in bankruptcy, the debtor closed her personal bank account and opened an account in the name of the Carolyn Gillespie Trust. Although the account was opened in the name of the trust, this was admittedly the debtor’s personal account 3 and was used to pay all of her and her husband’s personal and household expenses. Ronnie Gillespie did not have a bank account in his name because he owes substantial sums to the United States for federal income taxes. 4

In March of 1998, Carolyn Gillespie and her husband, Ronnie, obtained a loan from Agribank for the farming operation, Hard Times, Inc., and subsequently defaulted on that loan. The Gillespies signed a consent judgment in September 2000. This is the only obligation listed on her schedules for which she appears to be liable. The only other debts listed are medical expenses of her husband, Ronnie Gillespie. 5

Approximately one month after opening the trust bank account and filing tax returns which, finally, reflected the trust’s ownership of the various corporations, that the debtor commenced this chapter 7 case, listing as her only unsecured debt the loan to Agribank. She listed a little over $2,000 as expenses for payments on her secured obligations, all of which were to be reaffirmed. These included $355 per month for a boat, $432 for a car, and $1,200 for mortgages on her residence and a condominium. The debtor scheduled as personal property her interest in two IRA’s and her interest in the Carolyn Gillespie Trust with an unknown value. She claimed an exemption in these three items.

Both the trustee and Agribank objected to the claim of exemption in the IRA’s and the Trust, 6

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
269 B.R. 383, 47 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 889, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1510, 2001 WL 1455836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-gillespie-areb-2001.