In Re Wolverton Associates, Debtor. Wickland Oil Company v. Official Creditors' Committee

909 F.2d 1286, 116 B.R. 1286, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 12273, 1990 WL 102642
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJuly 25, 1990
Docket88-15747
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 909 F.2d 1286 (In Re Wolverton Associates, Debtor. Wickland Oil Company v. Official Creditors' Committee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Wolverton Associates, Debtor. Wickland Oil Company v. Official Creditors' Committee, 909 F.2d 1286, 116 B.R. 1286, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 12273, 1990 WL 102642 (9th Cir. 1990).

Opinion

*1289 OVERVIEW

CHOY, Circuit Judge:

This case involves a dispute among creditors of Wolverton Associates. The Official Creditors’ Committee (“Committee”) contended at trial that the appellant creditor, Wickland Oil Company (“Wickland”), engaged in a course of conduct that allowed it to receive a postpetition transfer of Wol-verton Associates’ interest in property located in Vacaville, California. The Committee asserted that the leasehold had a bonus value of approximately $100,000.00. Additionally, the Committee averred that Wickland acted in conscious disregard of the rights of the other creditors, thereby justifying the imposition of punitive damages.

Appellant Wickland argued that Wolver-ton Associates legally surrendered its leasehold interest prior to the filing of the involuntary bankruptcy petition. Thus, the proceeds Wickland received were from the individual owners of the property, who had personally guaranteed the payment of Wickland’s account. Further, Wickland contended that even if a voidable postpetition transfer had occurred, the bonus value of any leasehold interest Wolverton Associates had in the property was worth at most $17,000.00. Wickland also argued that its conduct did not justify imposing punitive damages.

The bankruptcy court decided in favor of the Committee. It held Wickland liable for actual damages of $100,000. It also awarded prejudgment interest in the amount of $31,811.11, and punitive damages in the amount of $50,000.00. Wickland appealed to a Bankruptcy Appellant Panel, which affirmed the bankruptcy court’s decision. Wickland timely appealed to this court.

We affirm the bankruptcy court’s finding that there was a voidable postpetition transfer. We reverse the court’s damages determination, however, and remand with instruction to recalculate actual damages and prejudgment interest. The court should also reconsider its punitive damages award in light of our decision and its recalculation of actual damages.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In the late summer and early fall of 1981, Wolverton Associates, a gasoline and diesel retailing business owned by Charles Wolverton, his father’s estate, his sister Ann Bernier and her husband Marcel Ber-nier, fell behind in paying its trade creditors. Among the creditors were Wickland Oil Company, and the companies that later became the members of the Committee: Golden Gate Petroleum Co., Getty Refining & Marketing Co., 1 and G.N. Renn, Incorporated.

On September 10, 1981, representatives for Charles Wolverton and the Berniers arranged a meeting to discuss a possible workout of Wolverton Associates’ debt. Representatives of the companies on the Committee attended, as well as Wickland’s credit manager, John Masterson, and Wick-land's outside collection counsel, Jerrold B. Braunstein. At the meeting, Charles Wol-verton and the Berniers proposed a plan to use their personal and business assets to pay off Wolverton Associates’ debts. The assets they proposed to use included any proceeds from a planned sale or lease of a gas station in Vacaville, California, which Wolverton Associates had been operating since 1977. The creditors, however, did not accept the proposal.

On November 10, 1981, representatives of the various creditors met to discuss the problem of the outstanding indebtedness of Wolverton Associates. Mr. Masterson and Mr. Braunstein attended on behalf of Wick-land. The representatives agreed to have Braunstein file a petition for involuntary bankruptcy in the Sacramento Bankruptcy Court on behalf of three petitioning creditors: Wickland, Golden Gate, and Getty.

Venue for the involuntary bankruptcy would have been proper in either San Jose or Sacramento. The creditors decided to *1290 file in Sacramento primarily because the docket of the Sacramento court was less crowded, and the creditors wished to move the bankruptcy along as rapidly as possible. Wickland’s representatives concurred, and all those present understood and agreed that Braunstein would proceed accordingly.

Braunstein had represented Wickland in collection matters on a regular basis since 1975. He had already filed suit on behalf of Wickland against Wolverton Associates and its guarantors for the Wickland account (Charles Wolverton and the Berniers) in Yolo County Superior Court on August 21, 1981. On October 14, 1981, the court in the Yolo County lawsuit issued Wickland a writ of attachment against three properties; one of these was the Vacaville service station run by Wolverton Associates. Record title was held by Charles Wolverton and the Berniers. Wolverton Associates had no recorded interest in the property, although it actually held a long term lease with a fixed monthly rent. On October 30, Wickland filed the writ of attachment in Solano County, the site of the Vacaville property.

Mr. Braunstein filed an involuntary bankruptcy petition against Wolverton Associates on November 25, 1981. Braun-stein did not serve Wolverton Associates or Charles Wolverton and the Berniers with the petition or in any other manner inform them that the petition had been filed. Despite attempts by representatives of Golden Gate and Renn to ascertain the status of the matter during November and December, 1981, Braunstein did not inform any of the other creditors that the petition had been filed until after December 31, 1981. On December 16, 1981, Braunstein had a conversation with Cynthia Leahy, an attorney for Golden Gate, that led her to believe that the petition had not yet been filed.

On November 30, 1981, Braunstein filed a request for appointment of an interim trustee without notice. The order granting the request was not signed by the court or filed until December 30, 1981. Braunstein did not inform Charles Wolverton or the Berniers, or any of the other creditors, that a trustee had been appointed until after December 31.

The Vacaville property had been listed for sale since the spring of 1981. On October 15, 1981, a Mr. and Mrs. Obermuller entered into a binding purchase agreement with Charles Wolverton and the Berniers, subject to the Obermullers obtaining an acceptable lessee. This “new lessee” requirement was apparently nothing more than an inartful way to say the property would be sold free and clear of the existing lease. In early December, 1981, Braun-stein learned of the sale of the Vacaville property and that Wickland’s attachment lien was an obstacle to the closing of escrow on the sale.

Wickland indicated to Charles Wolverton and the Berniers, through Braunstein, that only upon payment in full of Wolverton Associates’ obligation to Wickland would the company release its lien. On December 30, 1981, Braunstein tendered into the Va-caville escrow a dismissal with prejudice of Wickland’s Yolo County suit conditioned on payment of $108,430.27 from the proceeds of the sale. Escrow closed on December 31, 1981; on January 5, 1982, Wickland received from Braunstein a check for $98,-430.27, representing Wickland’s claim against the individual guarantors, plus interest, less $10,000 for attorney fees.

Relevant History of The Vacaville Station

In 1977, Charles Wolverton and the Ber-niers noticed the Vacaville property, which had an old gas station on it, and thought it would be a good site for one of their stations.

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Bluebook (online)
909 F.2d 1286, 116 B.R. 1286, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 12273, 1990 WL 102642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-wolverton-associates-debtor-wickland-oil-company-v-official-ca9-1990.