In re Kearney

590 B.R. 913
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Mexico
DecidedSeptember 14, 2018
DocketCase no. 17-12274-t11
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 590 B.R. 913 (In re Kearney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Mexico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Kearney, 590 B.R. 913 (N.M. 2018).

Opinion

Hon. David T. Thuma, United States Bankruptcy Judge

This matter came before the Court on Victor Kearney's (the "Debtor") Amended Motion for 2004 Examination of Alvarado Realty Company (the "Rule 2004 Motion"). For the reasons set forth below, the Court will grant the 2004 Motion in part.

I. BACKGROUND

The Court finds the following facts, for the limited purpose of ruling on the Rule 2004 Motion:1

Benjamin and Pat Abruzzo owned and developed the Sandia Peak Ski Area and the Sandia Peak Tramway, both owned by Alvarado Realty Company ("ARCO"). The Abruzzos died in a plane crash in 1985, and were survived by their four children, Louis, Benny, Richard, and Mary Pat. The *916children took over the management of ARCO after their parent' death.

Mary Pat Abruzzo married the Debtor in 1988, when she was 22 years old. She executed a last will and testament on July 8, 1988.

Mary Pat Abruzzo died in 1997, at the age of 31. At the time of her death, she owned about 18.5% of ARCO's stock. Under the terms of her will, the stock was bequeathed to two testamentary trusts (together, the "Trusts" or the "MPK Trusts").

During his lifetime, Debtor is the income beneficiary of the MPK Trusts. Upon his death, the corpus of the trusts is to be distributed to Louis, Benny, and Richard Abruzzo or their children.2

Mary Pat Abruzzo's will appointed the Debtor, Louis, and Benny Abruzzo as co-trustees of the MPK Trusts.

Income from the ARCO stock held by the MPK Trusts is substantial. Between 1998 and 2018, the Trusts paid the Debtor a total of about $16,000,000, or about $800,000 per year.

Despite this substantial annuity, relations between the Debtor and Louis and Benny Abruzzo soured. In 2014, the Debtor sued the Abruzzo brothers in New Mexico state court, cause no. D-202-CV-2013-07676 (the "State Court Action"). In his amended complaint, filed October 9, 2014, the Debtor alleged, inter alia:

• Since 2006 ...Mr. Kearney has received a cash distribution in the amount of 70% of his distributive share of income from ARCO;
• ARCO has not provided a justifiable reason for withholding payment of the additional 30% of the distributive share of income;
• Since the creation of the Trusts in 1997, the only investments made by the Trusts have been in ARCO stock. No diversification of Trust assets has occurred;
• Defendant have acted in a manner that constitutes self-dealing;
• Defendants have made decisions and undertaken actions that were beneficial to their self-interest and that were in conflict with their fiduciary duties to Mr. Kearney;
• Defendants have taken discretionary actions as fiduciaries which have directly or indirectly benefited the Defendants and their families and that conflict with their fiduciary duties to Mr. Kearney as income beneficiary

The presiding judge assigned to the State Court Action is Hon. Alan Malott.

The Debtor sought discovery from ARCO in the State Court Action. In connection with the discovery, on November 13, 2014, Judge Malott entered a Stipulated Amended Confidentiality and Protective Order (the "Confidentiality Order") covering, inter alia , ARCO's trade secrets and private or proprietary information.3

Pursuant to the Debtor's discovery requests, and subject to the Confidentiality *917Order, ARCO produced the following documents to Debtor:

• Alvarado Consolidated Financial Report, 12/31/13;
• Alvarado Realty Co. & Subsidiaries Consolidated Reports, 12/31/13;
• Alvarado Management Co. & Other Book Depreciation Report GAAP, 1/1/13-12/31/13;
• Alvarado Realty Combined Holder Certificate; Bond Stockholder Accounting System, 12/31/13;
• Annual Meeting of Stockholder of Alvarado Realty Co. (04/28/2008-04/30/2013);
• Recent History of Stock Purchases, 10/11/13;
• Alvarado Realty & Subsidiaries: Financial Statements, 12/31/05;
• Alvarado Realty & Subsidiaries: Consolidated Financial Report, 12/31/08;
• Alvarado Realty & Subsidiaries: Projected Cash Flow Summary, 1/1/07-12/31/08;
• US Corporation Income Tax Return 2004-2005; Alvarado Realty Co., Santa Fe Peak Ski Co.;
• US Income Tax Rerun for Alvarado Realty Co., 2006-2007;
• Financial Statements; 10/31/06; Sandia Properties Ltd, Co.;
• Alvarado Realty Co.: Quarterly and Annual Meeting of the Shareholders; Quarterly and Annual Meeting of the Directors; Statements of Assets and Liabilities (1998-2007);
• Stock Purchases;
• Alvarado Consolidated Financial Report, 12/31/14;
• BelAir Corp.: Semi-Annual Meeting of the Shareholders; Annual meeting of the Directors (1998-2007); Plan of Recapitalization- 2005;
• Sandia Peak Ski: Annual Meeting of the Shareholders; Quarterly and Annual Meeting of the Directors (1998-2007) Amendments to Bylaws; Agreement and Plan of Stock Exchange; Plan of Recapitalization- 2005; Affidavits of Director Consents (1998-2007); Statement of Assets and Liabilities (2005); and
• Sandia Peak Tram: Quarterly and Annual Meeting of the Shareholders; Quarterly and Annual Meeting of the Directors; Affidavits of Director Consents (1998-2007); Statements of Assets and Liabilities (2006),

(the "Produced ARCO Documents").

In violation of the Confidentiality Order, the Debtor disclosed confidential ARCO information to a Sierra Constellation Partners, a Mr. Kocon, and Mr. Kevin Yearout. These people, in turn, gave the confidential information to at least 28 other people.

On March 27, 2015, ARCO filed a motion for sanctions in the State Court Action, seeking monetary and other relief for Debtor's violation of the Confidentiality Order. The relief sought included an order that Debtor would not be given any more of ARCO's confidential information. Judge Malott has not ruled on the motion.

Judge Malott presided over a trial on the merits in June and July, 2015. On July 6, 2015, Judge Malott made the following findings of fact in open court:

• There has been no substantial evidence that the Abruzzos in fact control ARCO;
• I don't find that the Abruzzos misused any control they may have had in the circumstances. The totality on *918which the entire Plaintiff's case rests is if it's good for ARCO, it must be bad for Victor Kearney. That's not the law; that's not the evidence in this case.
• [T]he Abruzzos' efforts on behalf of ARCO ... have been ...extremely successful;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
590 B.R. 913, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kearney-nmb-2018.