In Re U.S. Physicians, Inc.

235 B.R. 367, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 784, 34 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 743
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 30, 1999
Docket19-11374
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 235 B.R. 367 (In Re U.S. Physicians, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re U.S. Physicians, Inc., 235 B.R. 367, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 784, 34 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 743 (Pa. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Bankruptcy Judge.

A. INTRODUCTION

Presently before us is the joint motion (“the Motion”) of HCFP Funding, Inc. (“HCFP”) and the Chapter 7 Trustee of certain of the affiliated Debtors, Christine Shubert, Esquire (“the Trustee;” with HCFP, “the Movants”), seeking authority to distribute monies pursuant to a Final Cash Collateral Order (“the Order”) entered by this Court on January 15, 1999. The Movants further seek compensatory and punitive damages against Donald B. Smith, M.D. and William D. Fritz, M.D. (“the Doctors”) due to the Doctors’ alleged conversion and/or violations of the automatic stay pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 362(a)(3) in light of their failure to turn over certain pre-petition accounts receivable (“the Receivables”) collected by the Doctors that arose from services rendered while the Doctors were employed by Debt- or U.S. Medical Services of Pennsylvania, P.C. (“PA PC”), one of several entities being jointly administered with the Chapter 7 bankruptcy case of Debtor U.S. Physicians, Inc. (“USP”).

We grant the Motion for the most part, thereby authorizing the Trustee to release to HCFP the Receivables collected from and relating to the Doctors and their wholly-owned professional corporation, Bone & Joint Specialists of Western Pennsylvania, P.C. (“B & J”), which have been deposited by the Trustee in a separate escrow account pursuant to the terms of the Order. We also conclude that the Movants are entitled to $65,000 in compensatory damages for attorneys’ fees and interest costs resulting from the Doctors’ conversion of the Receivables due to their retaining a substantial portion of this estate property *371 until confronted with the Motion. However, we find that the Doctors did not necessarily violate the automatic stay nor are they liable for punitive damages.

B. PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL HISTORY

On or about January 28, 1997, the Doctors entered into an Asset Purchase Agreement (“the APA”) pursuant to which the Doctors sold substantially all of the assets of B & J to USP, including the outstanding accounts receivable that they or B & J had generated. This transaction occurred in furtherance of USP’s plan to form a large physician practice management company which would acquire numerous physician practice groups by purchasing essentially all of their assets and then employing the physicians through affiliated professional corporations. This concept was believed to be beneficial to the member physicians because it offered them an opportunity to increase the liquidity of their practices. The operations of this large affiliated organization and a portion of the purchase prices for the various practices were to be funded by USP’s contemplated initial public stock offering (“the IPO”).

In accordance with the APA, the Doctors entered into five-year employment agreements with PA PC, thereby becoming its employees. Under these agreements, the Doctors were no longer responsible for any of the expenses associated with the B & J practice, and all of its employees were paid by PA PC, including the Doctors. In return, the Doctors were contractually obligated to turn over to PA PC any and all fees paid or assigned to the Doctors for all professional services which they performed during the term of their respective agreements.

To facilitate this arrangement, PA PC established a bank account in which all receivables collected by the Doctors were to be deposited. B & J accordingly regularly deposited all collected receivables into the PA PC account until October 22, 1998, when the Debtors fell behind in their payments to B & J’s vendors. We note that many of the acquisitions made by USP were contingent upon the consummation of the IPO, which was delayed and finally was deemed unlikely to occur at all. Once it became clear that the IPO was not going to materialize, it became obvious that USP’s general concept had failed and it would be necessary to unravel USP’s acquisitions of the pertinent physician practices. As a means of effecting this process, USP, PA PC, and several other affiliated entities filed voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy petitions on October 30, 1998. Perhaps not coincidentally, on that same day, B & J began depositing a portion of their collected receivables in a dormant B & J account over which the Doctors had exclusive control rather than into the PA PC account used previously.

The Doctors testified that they diverted the funds to their own account because of their growing concern about PA PC’s seeming inability to stay current with its payroll obligations to B & J or its obligations to B & J’s vendors. B & J'used some of these funds to pay past due utility bills and to make payroll advances to B & J’s support staff and to the Doctors themselves. Since the Doctors were at that time also in the process of separating their practices, they decided to use a portion of the diverted funds as a convenient source of start-up capital to help facilitate the establishment of their respective new offices.

On November 9, 1998, the Debtors’ five above-captioned cases were all converted to Chapter 7 cases when HCFP balked at proriding funding sufficient to keep the Debtors’ operations afloat without protections to which other interested parties, mostly various former or present affiliated physicians, refused to agree. The Trustee was appointed as interim trustee of all five Debtors on November 10, 1998. Daniel Grauman (“the USP Trustee”) was elected as the permanent Chapter 7 trustee in the USP case on April 12, 1999. The Trustee *372 thereafter served as permanent trustee for only the affiliated Debtors, including PA PC.

The Doctors received formal notice of PA PC’s bankruptcy filing on or about November 13, 1998, by means of what was apparently a form letter sent by the Trustee to all of USP’s affiliated physicians. This letter explained the concept of the automatic stay and informed the recipients that they were required to immediately turn over all estate property, including any collected pre-petition receivables, to the Trustee.

On December 18, 1998, we entered an interim Order authorizing the use of cash collateral pursuant to a Stipulation between HCFP and the Trustee. At the final hearing of January 8, 1999, to approve the Stipulation, the Doctors and B & J, inter alia, filed a response and a limited objection to the relief sought. This Court, after considering the various objections, entered the Order of January 15,1999, in a slightly-revised form.

The Order as entered permitted the Trustee to use a portion of HCFP’s cash collateral to effectively administer the Debtors’ estates. It also gave all interested parties until March 1,1999, to challenge HCFP’s claim to a valid first priority lien against all of the Debtors’ assets. Additionally, the Order contained specific carve-out language which limited the Trustee’s right to distribute certain assets relating to some of the affiliated practices, including B & J. In return, the practices were to turn over all pre-petition accounts receivable collected and to provide an accounting of same to the Trustee.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
235 B.R. 367, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 784, 34 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-us-physicians-inc-paeb-1999.