In Re Oxridge Investment Group

43 B.R. 418, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 4764
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedOctober 23, 1984
Docket19-10130
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 43 B.R. 418 (In Re Oxridge Investment Group) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Oxridge Investment Group, 43 B.R. 418, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 4764 (N.H. 1984).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION and ORDER

JAMES E. YACOS, Bankruptcy Judge.

The matter before the court is the Petition of the New Hampshire Insurance Company (hereinafter “NHIC”) filed on July 6, 1983 seeking leave to file a formal proof of claim, also submitted on July 6, 1983, subsequent to the April 6, 1983 claims bar date established by this court’s prior order of September 23, 1982. The claim in question is in the amount of $783,018.95, based upon wrongful conduct of Robert M. Stewart, one of the debtors in these consolidated proceedings, in his administration of the estate of Carl T. Witherell (hereinafter the “Witherell Estate”) in a probate proceeding in which NHIC was the surety for Stewart’s probate bond as executor of the estate.

There is no controversy about the losses caused by Stewart’s actions in this context, and any proof of claim that may be allowed would go against all the assets of all the debtors in these proceedings inasmuch as the court entered an order of substantive consolidation in this case on May 14, 1982.

The trustee objects to NHIC’s claim purely on the basis of its untimely filing under the claims bar deadline established by the prior court order. NHIC counters that it in effect asserted its claim by prior writings placed in the hands of the trustee and that the formal proof of claim can properly be considered an “amendment” of those prior writings consistent with bankruptcy law principles relating to the finality of claim deadlines.

NHIC also contends that the trustee violated court requirements to give it specific notice of the claims bar order as a “known creditor” and that this failure violated the due process of law to which it was entitled.

NHIC finally contends that it was entitled to a “commercially reasonable” period after the April 6, 1983 deadline within which to file its proof of claim as surety, in accordance with § 501(b) of the Bankruptcy Code, since the Witherell Estate, its principal, failed to file a proof of claim for these damages prior to the April 6, 1983 deadline. *

*420 Most of these related bankruptcy proceedings were filed before May 14, 1982. The individual proceedings relating to Robert Stewart and James Meyers were filed on May 28, 1980. The cases created a great deal of notoriety and caused considerable public comment throughout New Hampshire at the time of their filing. The extensive commingling of funds and interrelated activities of the various debtors created considerable confusion which ultimately led to the order of substantive consolidation described above.

Prior to May 14, 1980, the attorney for NHIC contacted the trustee in bankruptcy appointed in all of the cases then filed and discussed the contingent claim of NHIC in the event it was held liable on its bond to the Witherell Estate. The attorney, John C. Ransmeier, asked about the appropriate procedure for asserting a claim in the confused circumstances, and was told by the trustee that he ought to “put something in writing” back to the trustee.

Ransmeier thereupon sent the trustee a letter dated May 14, 1980, under a caption stating “Bankruptcies of Stewart Meyers and Companies Investment Groups— Claims of New Hampshire Insurance Companies Derived from Probate Bonds for Carl T. Witherell Estate”, and stating in the body of the letter the following:

“I recently advised you on the phone that this office represents New Hampshire Insurance Company (“NHIC”), which issued the probate bond for the Carl T. Witherell Estate, of which Robert M. Stewart was executor. It is our present understanding that Robert M. Stewart has admitted to staff of the Attorney General’s Office that he embezzled funds both from the Carl T. Withe-rell Estate and from Twin Cable TV, Inc. (“Twin State”), a corporation wholly owned by the Carl T. Witherell Estate. We understand that these funds may well have been diverted into at least some of the fifteen Stewart Meyers & Co. investment groups for which you are now acting as trustee.
“We wish hereby formally to inform you that NHIC is interested in these bankruptcies as a result of the possibility that NHIC may be required to pay claims based on Robert M. Stewart’s failure to perform his lawful duties as executor and that, if it pays such claims, NHIC may itself have claims against any investment groups which benefited from Stewart's embezzlement of funds properly belonging either to the Witherell Estate, or to Twin State.
“We understand that you are going to be retaining accountants, as well as the Boston law firm of Herrick & Smith, to advise you with respect to the movement of funds into, from, and between various investment groups for which you are acting as trustee, and to advise you with respect to the rights of various interested persons and entities. When your investigations are completed, we would appreciate learning any information you may acquire with respect to the extent of losses sustained by the Carl T. Witherell Estate and by Twin State, and, also, any information you may acquire identifying which, if any, of the various investment groups may have benefited by the receipt of funds properly belonging either to the Estate or to Twin State.
“May we ask you please to be in touch with us when you, your accountants, and your attorneys are in a position to give us information on these points sufficient to assist us. In the interim, we understand from you that this letter will serve to protect the interest of New Hampshire Insurance Company with respect to any claims which it might assert against any of the fifteen investment groups for which you are acting as trustee. If our understanding is incorrect, please advise us what you would have us file, and we will promptly do so.”

In July of 1980, due to the numerous parties involved in and inquiring about the various “Stewart-Meyers” bankruptcy proceedings, the then bankruptcy judge directed that the trustee send a letter to credi *421 tors, advising that if they wanted to be on the “notice list” for further information as to the progress of the proceedings' that they reply in writing to the trustee. The trustee did not include Ransmeier or NHIC in his July 1980 letter to creditors. He also never gave any written reply to Ransmeier’s letter of May 14, 1980.

During the 1980-1982 period, Ransmeier had numerous conferences with the trustee concerning possible assets recoverable for the bankruptcy estate and generally concerning the progress of the bankruptcy proceedings. The trustee noted in his testimony that he had no more contacts with any one creditor then with Ransmeier. Ransmeier even prepared an extensive memorandum [Sealed Exhibit Number 7] concerning the possible asset recoveries and sent a copy of the same to the trustee at the latter’s request. It would be apparent to anyone that Ransmeier would have no reason to engage in these activities with the trustee except by virtue of the contingent claim liability that NHIC had under its probate bond for Robert Stewart in regard to the Witherell Estate.

Ransmeier, for whatever reason, kept inquiring of the trustee as to whether a claims deadline had yet been established rather than just filing a contingent proof of claim.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Wilbert Winks Farm, Inc.
114 B.R. 95 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1990)
Commodore Savings Ass'n v. Allen (In Re Smith)
100 B.R. 293 (D. South Carolina, 1989)
In Re Smith
100 B.R. 289 (D. South Carolina, 1988)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 B.R. 418, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 4764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-oxridge-investment-group-nhb-1984.