In Re Kuhns

101 B.R. 243, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 1010, 1989 WL 69238
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Montana
DecidedJune 23, 1989
Docket19-60197
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 101 B.R. 243 (In Re Kuhns) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Montana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Kuhns, 101 B.R. 243, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 1010, 1989 WL 69238 (Mont. 1989).

Opinion

ORDER

JOHN L. PETERSON, Bankruptcy Judge.

Pending before the Court in this Chapter 11 case are two Stipulations and Agreements and Motions proposing settlement of claims and disputes between the Debtor, Rocky Mountain Capital and Allan G. Holms. Hearing on the proposed agreements was held May 16, 1989. The Official Unsecured Creditors Committee (Committee) and Montana Bancsystem, Inc. (MBI) filed objections to the proposed agreements on the grounds the agreements violate § 1125 and Bankruptcy Rule 3001. The Committee and MBI characterize the purchase of claims as bizarre, and as an effort to control Committee activity and seek favorable voting on the Plan of Reorganization.

The facts show that the Debtor is controlling stockholder and President of Rocky Mountain Capital, Inc., a Montana corporation, which has commenced legal action against Allan G. Holms for over 1.9 million dollars for loans and advances made to Holms. 1 Beginning in late 1988, according to Holms, he devised a plan to negotiate with creditors of the Debtor’s estate to “purchase” their claims so that Holms could then accomplish a dismissal of the Rocky Mountain action against him in full satisfaction of the claims against the estate. As will be discussed later, that plan was expanded by the Debtor and his wife to protect her interests in an action brought against JoAnn C. Kuhns by the Official Unsecured Creditors Committee. Judgment in that action for over $362,-000.00 has now been entered against JoAnn C. Kuhns. The Debtor claims through his testimony that he had very limited knowledge of the Holms/creditors transactions, yet the evidence reflects that some of the preparation of the assignments of claims were prepared by personnel of Rocky Mountain Capital, which the Debtor controls, long before the present Stipulation was presented to the Court in this case. More important, Holms paid over $270,-000.00 2 in cash for the purchase of claims which total $1,996,693.92. The unsettling factor of Holms’ purchase of claims is that the funds came from an insider of the Debtor, being the Debtor’s wife. 3 I find this financing arrangement to be suspect because the Debtor testified that Rocky Mountain’s chance of recovery on its action against Holms was slim due to Holms’ precarious financial condition. Nevertheless, Debtor’s wife took non-recourse promissory notes from Holms, without any security, to finance the Holms’ scheme. Thus, we have an insider with a personal interest in the estate due to the Unsecured Creditors Committee action providing the financing to settle large claims due from the estate with a person (Holms), who is ostensibly antagonistic to the estate by reason of the large amount owed to the estate by him. The Debtor and Holms would have the Court believe such arrangement was undertaken without the Debtor’s knowledge or participation as if he were completely innocent of the Holms’ scheme. I do not accept such testimony, for the Debtor, despite his plea to the contrary, had to know of the *245 Holms’ scheme through his wife’s financing and preparation of assignment documents. Indeed Holms and the Debtor are long time business associates, and that is how Holms now owes the Debtor’s alter ego corporation over 1.9 million dollars of unsecured debt. Further, the Debtor’s counsel, not Holms, prepared each “Notice of Transfer of Claims” so as to comply with Bankruptcy Rule 3001. This is another example of the cozy relationship between the three parties. Finally, after purchase of the claims, Holms and Debtor negotiated estate assets in the form of three collectible promissory notes to be transferred to Holms in the sum of $77,-910.00. Obviously, it was not enough that the Debtor walked away from the Rocky Mountain law suit, but in order to provide Holms with some cash to repay Debtor’s wife or his note for $50,000.00, three valuable assets of the estate are to be transferred to him.

Thus we have a situation where Holms, on the hook for a potential 1.9 million judgment, ends up with estate assets of over $77,910.00, dismissal of the 1.9 million dollar law suit, and personal (and probably uncollectible) notes due Debtor’s wife. For this, the Debtor walks away from 2.1 million dollars of claims, which in all likelihood, he could not pay in any event. And Debtor’s wife is freed from a $362,-000.00 judgment in return for $315,000.00 of promissory notes due from Holms, who concededly has no assets from which to pay said notes. If Holms does have assets then the Rocky Mountain action should continue. The query is whether any reasonable person, acting in good faith and at arms length, would loan $315,000.00 to a person already in debt to her husband for over 1.9 million dollars under circumstances where collection is dubious at best? I doubt that would happen absent collusion. I find Holms’ testimony incredible, and unworthy of belief as well as that of the Debtor. Of course, such finding could not be made as to JoAnn C. Kuhns because she never testified at the hearing. The testimony is incredible because Holms, under any ordinary lending practice, simply would not have been able to secure the claims without insider’s help in financing, help which was generated by the Debtor from the outset. As a result, the Stipulations and Agreements have not been proposed or filed in good faith.

Up until the time of Holms’ activity, the file in this case reflects the creditors were vigorously objecting to Debtor’s proposed reorganization, and some were acting with fervor as members of the Creditors Committee to pursue the voidable transfers from the Debtor to his wife. 4 Through the Debtor’s insider, forbearance of legitimate Committee action against the Debtor, approved by this Court, has now been sought. This type of activity smacks of violation of 18 U.S.C. Sec. 152, which provides, inter alia, whoever offers or attempts to offer any money “for acting or forbearing to act in any bankruptcy proceeding” is guilty of a felony. This statute and its predecessor, 44 St.Ct.L.P. 665, Sec. 29, sub. b.(5), 11 U.S.C.A. § 52 (1938), has been on the books for decades. See, e.g., Sigman Furniture Mfg. v. Massey, 192 Okl. 436, 137 P.2d 793, 795 (1943), stating:

“Any arrangement in consideration of a creditor’s withdrawal of his opposition to a bankrupt’s discharge was illegal as against public policy and the salutary purposes of the insolvent or bankruptcy laws.
The law desires and encourages a full and free exposure and revelation of all the bankrupt’s acts, conduct and property. Any agreement whereby a creditor undertakes to keep silent or inactive when his work or deed might arrest the purposes of the bankruptcy proceedings is illegal.”

*246 United States v. Dunkley, 235 F. 1000 (N.D.Cal.1916), held long ago regarding 18 U.S.C. Sec. 152:

“The statute in question does not say that one shall not extort money from another as a consideration for acting or forebearing to act unlawfully, but for acting or forebearing to act at all.” (Emphasis added).

In Crandall v. Dunham, 348 Mo. 240, 152 S.W.2d 1044

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 B.R. 243, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 1010, 1989 WL 69238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kuhns-mtb-1989.