In re W.O.L.F.

574 B.R. 233, 2017 Bankr. LEXIS 2279, 64 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 141
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Colorado
DecidedJuly 25, 2017
DocketBankruptcy Case No. 14-23662 EEB
StatusPublished

This text of 574 B.R. 233 (In re W.O.L.F.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re W.O.L.F., 574 B.R. 233, 2017 Bankr. LEXIS 2279, 64 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 141 (Colo. 2017).

Opinion

ORDER INTERPRETING PLAN PROVISION

Elizabeth E. Brown, Bankruptcy Judge

THIS MATTER comes before the Court on the Debtor’s Motion for Determination of Effect of Confirmed Plan on Partition of Debtor’s Property. The parties have asked this Court to determine whether the plan’s language, which mirrors 11 U.S.C. § 1141(c)1 and vests property of the estate in the Debtor upon confirmation “free and clear” of claims and interests, extinguishes the partition rights of a co-owner of real property. Both the Debtor and Mr. Frank Wendland (‘Wendland”) hold an undivided one-half .interest in real property on which the Debtor conducts its non-profit business. For the reasons set forth below, the Court hereby FINDS and CONCLUDES that the “free and clear” language in the statute and the plan do not eliminate whatever state law partition rights Wendland may possess as a co-owner.

I. BACKGROUND

Debtor is a non-profit corporation that provides a sanctuary for wolves and hybrid wolf-dogs. Wendland and his now ex-wife, Patricia Lanteri (“Lanteri”), started to rescue these animals by providing a home for them in their backyard. Eventually, they formally incorporated the Debtor to carry on this mission. As Debtor rescued more animals, it became necessary to relocate to a larger property. In 1994 and 1995, Lanteri purchased four parcels of land for a total purchase price of $211,900 (collectively, the “Real Property”). Although the Real Property totals over 170 acres, the Debtor only uses about five acres, which is known as the “Fletcher Parcel.” Those five acres contain animal enclosures and a cabin. For many years, this cabin served as both the Debtor’s headquarters and as a home for Wendland and Lanteri.

The Real Property is in a remote mountainous area of Colorado, only accessible by a private dirt road that crosses neighboring parcels. In 1999, county officials advised Debtor that it needed a special use permit to operate an animal sanctuary. The permit it ultimately granted placed significant restrictions on Debtor’s operations, including a limit of thirty animals, a limitation of access to seven round trips per day, and a prohibition against use of the road by buses or vans. Later neighbors sued Lanteri over use of the dirt road. She settled the litigation by agreeing that the [235]*235Debtor would be restricted to only five round trips per day.

In 2007, Wendland and Lanteri began discussing divorce. Lanteri wanted to protect the Real Property for Debtor’s continued use and to ensure that it would pass to Debtor after her death. To accomplish this goal, she transferred ownership to a revocable trust, giving the Debtor a remainder interest that would vest on the twenty-first anniversary of her death. While this may have been Lanteri’s original intent, it changed sometime before the end of the couple’s divorce. On October 27, 2008, Wendland and Lanteri signed a series of documents that essentially set aside the transfer to the Trust and extinguished Debtor’s remainder interest. Lanteri agreed to transfer a fifty-percent interest in the Real Property from her Trust to Wendland. On the same day, they also executed a purchase and sale agreement, selling both of their fifty-percent interests to Debtor. The total purchase price was $481,000, evidenced by two promissory notes—one to Wendland in the amount of $240,500 and one payable to Lanteri in the amount of $228,000. The Debtor secured both notes with a deed of trust. The sale documentation expressly reserved for Wendland a life estate in the Fletcher Parcel, allowing him to occupy the cabin during his lifetime.

At the time of entering into this sale and loan transaction, Wendland and Lanteri were the only directors of Debtor. As such, they signed the documents individually as the sellers and on Debtor’s behalf as the buyer. Five months later, after Debtor had elected outside directors, Wendland and Lanteri obtained a consent resolution from those directors, retroactively approving the transaction. Wendland, however, did not disclose several material aspects of the transaction to these outside directors.

On June 9, 2012, a major forest fire broke out in the area, requiring the Debtor to evacuate its facilities and to move the animals under its care. The Debtor relocated most of the animals to the home of one of its directors. After the fire abated, a disagreement arose between Wendland and Debtor’s board regarding the return of the animals. In the heat of the disagreement, Wendland tendered his resignation as president and as a director.

The fire, which came to be known as the High Park Fire, did substantial damage to the Real Property. It burned or scorched trees and vegetation, buildings and fencing, equipment, and items of personal property. Lacking vegetation, the Real Property flooded on a number of occasions in 2012 and 2013, resulting in substantial ash deposits, damage to ponds and an associated spillway, and damage to the dirt road. As a result, Debtor had to perform substantial repair and restoration work. The Debtor submitted claims against its insurance policy for reimbursement of its repair expenses and compensation for its damages.

Following Wendland’s July 2012 resignation, the relationship between Wendland and Debtor continued to deteriorate. Wendland presented Debtor’s board with a list of demands, the majority of which the board rejected. Wendland then attempted to exclude Debtor from the cabin and related facilities. This required Debtor to install new facilities on the Fletcher Parcel. Wendland responded with attempts to evict the Debtor, which led the Debtor to file bankruptcy on October 7, 2014.

Wendland filed two claims in the bankruptcy, one for an unsecured debt based on' undocumented loans and a second for a secured claim based on the Wendland note and deed of trust. As a secured creditor, he also claimed. entitlement to the fire insurance proceeds. Shortly after the [236]*236petition date, Debtor filed an adversary-proceeding, objecting to his claims and alleging its own claims against Wendland, Lanteri, the insurance carrier, and a former employee of Debtor. Debtor subsequently settled its claims against all defendants except Wendland. As part of its settlement with Lanteri, she quit claimed her one-half interest in the Real Property to Debtor.

Debtor and Wendland proceeded to trial on their claims and on Debtor’s request for confirmation of its plan. The Court entered an order (the “Combined Order”), addressing all of the disputes between the parties. It found that the purchase and loan transaction was a conflicting interest transaction in breach of Wendland’s fiduciary duties to the corporation and in violation of Colo. Rev. Stat. § 7-128-501(3). The Court held that none of the safe harbors in that statute had been satisfied. Wendland had failed to disclose the material terms of the transaction when he sought ratification of it by the outside directors. Moreover, the transaction had not been fair to the Debt- or. Among other things, it obligated the Debtor to pay twice the value of the property and gave it far more land than it could ever use. The Debtor requested rescission of the transaction rather than damages and so that was the relief the Court imposed. The Court also ruled that the Debtor did not owe Wendland on any undocumented loans and, in fact, Wend-land owed the Debtor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
574 B.R. 233, 2017 Bankr. LEXIS 2279, 64 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-wolf-cob-2017.