In Re Liptak

304 B.R. 820, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 44, 42 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 186, 2004 WL 114933
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJanuary 22, 2004
Docket19-05757
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 304 B.R. 820 (In Re Liptak) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Liptak, 304 B.R. 820, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 44, 42 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 186, 2004 WL 114933 (Ill. 2004).

Opinion

AMENDED MEMORANDUM OPINION

JACQUELINE P. COX, Bankruptcy Judge.

Chapter 11 debtor Virgil Liptak (“Lip-tak”), a resident of Dallas, Texas, filed this *825 Chapter 11 bankruptcy case in Chicago on July 16, 2003, as a business bankruptcy case involving his sole proprietorship Designed Financial Services, a provider of financial-planning and business-management services. The assets and liabilities regarding this case, however, have no direct links to Liptak’s business; his most recent source of income is the interest and dividends from savings and investments, including approximately $100,000 during the two years prior to filing this case and $1800 per month at the time of filing.

The controversy herein stems from the debtor’s 1993 divorce from Elizabeth Thornhill (“Thornhill”) and the June 11, 2001 judgment she received against him in the District Court of Dallas County in Texas that essentially vacated and amended parts of the December 1993 Agreed Decree of Divorce and Agreement Clarifying Agreed Decree of Divorce. In the original property settlement which he drafted, Liptak received a 35% interest in a partnership, R.E. Colgin I, Ltd., and the right to receive 63.8% of the profits from the same while in active management. He also obtained a right to receive 39% of the first $500,000 in proceeds from a personal-injury lawsuit in which he and Thornhill were co-plaintiffs against Showa Denko at the time of the divorce. By the time the parties settled and dismissed the lawsuit against Showa Denko in 1995, the divorce decree and property settlement were already final, and Liptak received $195,000 of the proceeds of that lawsuit in accordance with the property-division stipulation of the divorce decree. Liptak continued to provide financial and management services for R.E. Colgin I, Ltd. until Thornhill as the majority interest holder terminated his employment with the business and sued him in the 95th Judicial District of Texas to enforce the termination provision of his employment contract and to require the turnover of business documents.

A variety of state-court litigation involving both the property-division decree from the divorce and Liptak’s work for R.E. Colgin I, Ltd. ensued over the next seven years in state and federal courts, most of which was not clearly delineated, explained, or documented for this Court by either party. Apparently, though, Thorn-hill ultimately prevailed in most if not all of this litigation. Liptak, not being as fortunate, according to the assertions of Thornhill’s attorney, resorted to suing every person to whom he could attribute fault for his litigation losses — state-court judges, law firms, Thornhill’s next husband, a sheriff, a court reporter, and a district court clerk — with the end result being that he was deemed a vexatious litigant under Texas’s statutory law. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 11.054 (Vernon Supp.2002); Liptak v. Thornhill, 2002 WL 31730926, at *3 (Tex.App.2002). Liptak did not rebut or deny any of these assertions.

The one prior lawsuit and resulting judgment clearly presented to this Court was Thornhill’s aforementioned “bill of review” action, which alleged that Liptak fraudulently withheld information and assets from her during their divorce proceeding. The resulting judgment attached to Thornhill’s proof of claim, see Bankruptcy Rule 3001(c), was ultimately successful in attacking their agreed 1993 property settlement and comprises virtually all of the debt in this Chapter 11 case and therefore would present the centerpiece for dispute in this bankruptcy case. Based on the jury’s answer to various questions, the judge presiding over the “bill of review” action redistributed portions of the their marital estate by awarding Thornhill (1) the $195,000 plus prejudgment interest for the settlement proceeds from their joint *826 lawsuit against Showa Denko; (2) the 35% interest in Richard E. Colgin I, Ltd.; (3) $1,100,000 in exemplary damages; (4) attorneys’ fees for all present and future stages of the bill-of-review lawsuit in the amount of $303,000; and (5) courts costs in the amount of $2043.17. The June 11, 2001 judgment explicitly voided and superseded portions of the December 1993 “Agreed Decree of Divorce and Agreement Clarifying Agreed Decree of Divorce” and additionally dismissed with prejudice Lip-tak’s counterclaims and third-party claims against Elizabeth Thornhill, Kerry Thorn-hill, and Richard E. Colgin Company. The Texas Court of Appeals subsequently affirmed the judgment, which is now awaiting a decision concerning whether discretionary review by the Texas Supreme Court will proceed.

Given the nature and extent of the litigation occurring between the two parties, Thornhill not surprisingly had great difficulty collecting her judgment during the two and a half years following her court victory, even though Liptak never actually posted an appeal bond to stay enforcement and collection of the June 2001 judgment. Thornhill proceeded with her collection attempts by initiating various garnishment and foreign-money-judgment collection lawsuits against the third parties holding Liptak’s accounts. Thornhill successfully collected $2014.28 through a garnishment suit against World Savings & Loan Association in Dallas County; froze $390,000 that is currently being held by the district court clerk for Dallas County; and also sued the Vanguard Group in a garnishment suit in Pennsylvania to recover one of Liptak’s accounts worth approximately $1,774,000 to $1,784,000.

Liptak managed to stall two of the pending collection proceedings by filing the instant Chapter 11 bankruptcy case with its concomitant automatic-stay protections in § 362(a), but only after failing in his effort to obtain an emergency stay of Thornhill’s Pennsylvania action against the Vanguard Group from the 68th Judicial District of Texas. In the 68th District, he argued that the court had an obligation to reopen the Showa Denko lawsuit to protect its award of $195,000 to Liptak against Showa Denko (not against Thornhill). Liptak then tried to get this same argument in front of the federal court administering his bankruptcy case by filing a notice of removal for the Showa Denko lawsuit and then asking a bankruptcy judge for the federal judicial district embracing the 68th Judicial District of Texas to transfer it as an “adversary proceeding” 1 to the Northern District of Illinois where his bankruptcy case was pending. On September 15, 2003, the bankruptcy judge for the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Texas remanded 2 the civil action back to the Texas state court where it had been dismissed eight years earlier rather than transfer the venue of the “adversary proceeding” under 28 U.S.C. § 1412 to the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Illinois. As part of his bankruptcy case, Liptak filed the exact same lawsuit as Adversary Proceeding # 03-03732 against Thornhill in this Chapter 11 case. The ensuing confusion over the Texas bankruptcy court’s remand of the same basic lawsuit has produced cross motions for dismissal or for partial summary judgment on Adversary Proceeding # 03-03732.

Liptak filed another notice of removal in the U.S.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
304 B.R. 820, 2004 Bankr. LEXIS 44, 42 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 186, 2004 WL 114933, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-liptak-ilnb-2004.