In Re Reveley

148 B.R. 398, 1992 WL 394622
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 28, 1992
Docket18-08293
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 148 B.R. 398 (In Re Reveley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Reveley, 148 B.R. 398, 1992 WL 394622 (N.Y. 1992).

Opinion

DECISION ON ALLEGED BAD FAITH UNDER § S08(i)

TINA L. BROZMAN, Bankruptcy Judge.

Three creditors, Whirlpool Financial Corporation (“WFC”), First American Bank of New York (“FABNY”), and BSI-Banca del-la Svizzera Italiana (“BSI”) (collectively, “Petitioning Creditors”), set in motion a lengthy course of litigation when they filed involuntary bankruptcy petitions under 11 U.S.C. § 303 against Robert Reveley, James Fusco, William Folberth III, and Nicholas Kaufmann (the “Alleged Debtors”), all of whom are partners in a particular enterprise. The Alleged Debtors moved to dismiss the involuntary petitions pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 303(b)(1), Bankruptcy Rule 1011 and Rule 12(h) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure on the grounds that the claim of each of the Petitioning Creditors is subject to a bona fide dispute and therefore the Petitioning Creditors lacked standing to file the petitions against the Alleged Debtors. With the agreement of the parties, an initial hearing was conducted with respect to the claim of WFC only. Finding that its claim was subject to bona fide dispute, I dismissed the petitions because no additional creditors had intervened, as a result of which the number of qualified petitioning creditors was insufficient to meet the statutory mandate.

I subsequently bifurcated the proceedings under 11 U.S.C. § 303(i)(l) and (2), denominating the latter as an adversary proceeding under Fed.R.Bankr.P. 9014. (I did this to impose some order since the Alleged Debtors indicated that they intended to seek damages in the magnitude of $160,000,000.) The Alleged Debtors thus filed a pleading to which the Petitioning Creditors responded. At a pretrial conference and with the concurrence of the Petitioning Creditors, I determined to deal first with the issue of attorneys’ fees and expenses. Following an evidentiary hearing, I awarded attorneys’ fees and expenses pursuant to section 303(i)(1) 1 and ordered the bifurcation of liability and damages for the purposes of the trial on bad faith.

Shortly after the close of the Alleged Debtors’ case in chief on liability, I accepted the negotiated settlement and dismissal of all claims asserted by the Alleged Debtors against FABNY. The trial resumed with respect to BSI and WFC. This decision deals only with the Alleged Debtors’ contention that BSI and WFC filed the involuntary petitions in bad faith. Should I determine that the petitions were filed in bad faith, as the Alleged Debtors contend, they will then seek an additional award of professional fees, costs, and expenses incurred in connection with the proceedings subsequent to dismissal of the petitions; all damages proximately caused by the filing of the petitions; punitive damages; and *401 cancellation of the indebtedness allegedly owed by each Alleged Debtor to each Petitioning Creditor. 2

I.

Each of the Alleged Debtors is a general partner of Metropolis Capital Group (“MCG”), a New York partnership specializing in nationwide real estate development, which purchases and operates its real estate projects through affiliated corporations and partnerships. Among the partnerships is Cannery Park I and II Associates, L.P. (“Cannery Park”), a California limited partnership in which each of the Alleged Debtors is a beneficial interest holder.

WFC’s Debt

Pursuant to a loan and security agreement dated December 27, 1989, WFC made two term loans each of $3.04 million to Cannery Park. These loans were evidenced by two notes of the same date which were to mature on March 31, 1991. The Alleged Debtors executed limited guarantees also of the same date in which they guaranteed certain percentages of the obligations of Cannery Park to WFC. At some point, the notes were returned by WFC to Cannery Park marked “Paid.” Cannery Park executed two new notes dated April 1, 1990, but actually signed three days later, each in the principal amount of $3,120,097 and carrying a maturity date of June 1, 1990. No new guarantees were issued by the Alleged Debtors.

WFC Sues the Alleged Debtors

On September 19, 1990, WFC demanded payment from the Alleged Debtors under the limited guarantees. The Alleged Debtors refused to comply. The following month, WFC commenced an action in the Illinois federal district court claiming that the Alleged Debtors had defaulted on their obligations under the limited guarantees (the “Illinois action”). In their answer, the Alleged Debtors contested the allegations contained in the Illinois complaint and raised several counterclaims and affirmative defenses. WFC moved to strike the affirmative defenses on the theory that they failed to state claims as a matter of law. The Alleged Debtors countered with a motion to stay the Illinois action pending the resolution of a California foreclosure action which WFC had commenced against Cannery Park and MCG (the “California action”). In that action, the Alleged Debtors, through their status as general partners of MCG, asserted virtually the identical defenses and counterclaims pleaded in the Illinois action on the guarantees. At the time that the involuntary petitions were filed, both these motions were sub judice. FABNY’s Debt

In November 1988, FABNY had granted MCG a $5 million line of credit partially secured by the pledge of a $3 million certificate of deposit and guaranteed by the Alleged Debtors. In 1990, in utilization of this line of credit, MCG had executed two promissory notes for $2.5 million each. The first was payable on September 10, 1990 and the second on November 1, 1990. On September 25, 1990, MCG advised FAB-NY that it would be unable to meet these scheduled maturity dates. On October 3, MCG consented to the setoff of its $3 million certificate of deposit against the outstanding debt to FABNY.

BSI’s Debt

In October 1989, BSI loaned Metropolis Seaport Associates (“MSA”), another of the MCG affiliates, $3 million which was secured by a letter of credit issued to BSI by Bankers Trust Co. (the “Bankers Trust LOC”). Additional loans of $3 million and $4 million were made to MCG in January and April 1990. These loans were secured by cash balances maintained at BSI as well as by the Alleged Debtors’ guarantees and personal assets, including cash and marketable securities held by Reveley and Fusco in separate accounts at Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co. (“Boston Safe”).

MCG’s Cash Flow Difficulties are Revealed

In June 1990, MCG informed BSI that due to cash flow constraints MCG would *402 have difficulty making interest payments of approximately $200,000 due July 1. MCG requested that it be permitted to use some of the $500,000 cash collateral on deposit at BSI to offset the July interest payment on the BSI loans.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 B.R. 398, 1992 WL 394622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-reveley-nysb-1992.