In Re Petroleum Products, Inc.

150 B.R. 270, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1556, 1993 WL 30632
CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedJanuary 25, 1993
Docket91-4056-R
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 150 B.R. 270 (In Re Petroleum Products, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Petroleum Products, Inc., 150 B.R. 270, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1556, 1993 WL 30632 (D. Kan. 1993).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

ROGERS, District Judge.

This is a bankruptcy appeal from an order granting summary judgment on behalf of creditor Karolyn Stevens, who filed a claim against debtor, Petroleum Products, Inc. The bankruptcy court found that Stevens had an equitable lien upon the proceeds from property in which debtor had an interest.

The facts of this case, which appear un-eontroverted, are as follows. Karolyn Stevens is the former wife of Charles T. Hin-shaw. On May 9, 1979, a divorce decree and division of property for Stevens and Hinshaw was filed in the District Court of Reno County, Kansas. The decree required the sale of a condominium in Vail, Colorado. Stevens was to receive h of the net proceeds from the sale, or not less than *272 $200,000.00, before May 9, 1980. The divorce decree was registered in Eagle County, Colorado on September 25, 1980. By December 24, 1980, a sale of the condominium from Hinshaw to the Burke Energy Corporation of Texas (“Burke-Texas”) had been negotiated for $373,500.00. On the same day, three checks were tendered for the payment of the purchase price. One check for $215,000.00 was postdated January 7, 1981 and delivered by Hinshaw’s attorney, Gerald Haag, for subsequent delivery to Stevens to satisfy the lien on the property. Also on December 24,1980, Hin-shaw filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition and signed a deed to the condominium in favor of Burke-Texas.

Haag delivered the check for $215,000.00 to Stevens’ attorney with the understanding that it would not be cashed until the lien was released. Burke-Texas stopped payment on the check on February 17, 1981. On April 6, 1981, Burke-Texas received a title insurance policy which excepted Stevens’ judgment lien on the condominium. Ten days later, on April 16, 1981, Stevens signed a satisfaction of judgment to release the lien. Then, she received the check. She tried to negotiate the check and learned that payment had been stopped.

Stevens and Hinshaw’s bankruptcy trustee both filed suits against Burke-Texas in the United States Bankruptcy Court in Wichita, Kansas and the United States District Court in Wichita, Kansas. Stevens filed a notice of lis pendens in Colorado on May 28, 1982, four days after she had filed suit in U.S. District Court. Both lawsuits sought redress for Burke-Texas’ retention of the property without fully paying for it.

In 1984, while these lawsuits were pending, Burke-Texas conveyed the condominium by corporate warranty deed to Burke Energy Corporation of Nevada (“Burke-Nevada”) in exchange for a discharge of indebtedness of $450,000.00. Both Burke-Texas and Burke-Nevada were owned by Martin M. Burke. He was the president and principal shareholder of both companies. Burke-Nevada is the predecessor to the debtor in this ease, Petroleum Products, Inc. (“PPI”).

Stevens’ and the Trustee’s lawsuits were consolidated. Bankruptcy Judge Morton ordered, in May 1985, that Burke-Texas pay into the bankruptcy court’s registry $215,000.00. This was never done. In November 1985, the deed conveying the condominium from Burke-Texas to Burke-Nevada in 1984 was recorded.

Judge Morton rendered a decision in May 1986 holding that the sale of the condominium from Hinshaw to Burke-Texas was incomplete when Hinshaw filed for bankruptcy and, therefore, the condominium was part of Hinshaw’s bankruptcy estate. Judge Morton concluded that merchantable title had not been conveyed to Burke-Texas. He ordered Burke-Texas to pay $215,-000.00 to the trustee to complete the sale and receive clear title to the property. His decision was ultimately affirmed after appeals to the district court and the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals. However, the money was never paid.

While Judge Morton’s decision was being appealed, the debtor in this case, PPI, formerly known as Burke-Nevada, filed the underlying bankruptcy action on September 17, 1986. This bankruptcy petition was assigned to Judge Pusateri. Stevens filed a proof of claim for the money at issue in this case. On March 29, 1989, the trustee in the Hinshaw bankruptcy was ordered to assign the judgment issued by Judge Morton to Stevens. This was done.

On April 25, 1990, Judge Pusateri granted a motion to direct the sale of the condominium by PPI and deposit of the proceeds in an escrow account. The condominium sold for $337,490.10. This appeal arises from Judge Pusateri’s order granting summary judgment in favor of Stevens’ claim and directing that she be paid $215,000.00 from the escrow account, plus accrued interest.

In the order granting summary judgment to Stevens, Judge Pusateri stated:

Burke-Texas’ and Burke-Nevada’s actions in this matter have been wholly inequitable. Burke-Texas obtained title *273 to the Colorado property without paying the full agreed price. It obtained a release of lien knowing that the party releasing the lien believed that the consideration for that release, i.e., $215,000, had been received. It disobeyed a court order to pay in the $215,000 to conclude purchase of the property. It transferred the property to another related entity when both knew, through Mr. Burke, the president of each, that the property had not been paid for and that the deed was improperly obtained. It appealed the orders and judgment by which it was ordered to pay the purchase price before receiving good title and lost the appeals, but nevertheless failed to comply with the rulings. Now PPI, formerly Burke-Nevada, seeks to have these actions condoned and retain the benefits of ownership although it knew its grantor had not paid for them.
The Court concludes that Mrs. Stevens should finally be paid from the funds derived from PPI’s sale of this property in this proceeding. Initially, Mrs. Stevens had a lien on the Colorado property by virtue of a judgment. This judgment was released in error as a result of Mr. Burke’s questionable tactics. Mr. Burke knew that the judgment release was obtained through an error he caused and that knowledge permeates all the entities he owned and controlled as their president and primary shareholder. Prior to the transfer from Burke-Texas to Burke-Nevada, two suits had been filed against Burke-Texas attempting either to impose an equitable lien or to obtain the purchase money Mr. Burke had withheld from Mrs. Stevens and from the Hinshaw bankruptcy estate. Additionally, Mrs. Stevens had filed a lis pendens notice in Eagle County, Colorado. The Burke enterprises had both actual and constructive knowledge of the flaw in title and the likelihood that a lien would be recognized in favor of either Mrs. Stevens or Mr. Hinshaw’s bankruptcy estate. See Leyden v. Citicorp Industrial Bank, 782 P.2d 6, 12-13 (Colo.1989) (en banc) (recorded dissolution decree and lis pendens gave at least constructive notice of equitable lien to mortgagee and subsequent purchaser). A lien was recognized in favor of the Hinshaw estate, that lien was transferred to Mrs. Stevens, and she is entitled to recover the $215,000 plus interest which now resides in an escrow account awaiting the victor in this action.

Generally, on appeal, the factual findings of the bankruptcy court are reviewed under a clearly erroneous standard, and the bankruptcy court’s legal conclusions are reviewed de novo.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
150 B.R. 270, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1556, 1993 WL 30632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-petroleum-products-inc-ksd-1993.