In Re: Yukon Energy Corporation, Debtor. Yukon Energy Corporation v. Brandon Investments, Inc., Charles Clayton, Kent Knudson, John Doe Jane Roe

138 F.3d 1254, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 4937, 1998 WL 113199
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 17, 1998
Docket96-3967
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 138 F.3d 1254 (In Re: Yukon Energy Corporation, Debtor. Yukon Energy Corporation v. Brandon Investments, Inc., Charles Clayton, Kent Knudson, John Doe Jane Roe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re: Yukon Energy Corporation, Debtor. Yukon Energy Corporation v. Brandon Investments, Inc., Charles Clayton, Kent Knudson, John Doe Jane Roe, 138 F.3d 1254, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 4937, 1998 WL 113199 (8th Cir. 1998).

Opinion

MAGILL, Circuit Judge.

Brandon Investments, Inc. (Brandon) and its president, Kent Knudson, appeal the district court’s 1 adoption of the bankruptcy court’s 2 decision that held Knudson liable for fraudulently reviving an extinguished hen against the bankruptcy estate of Yukon Energy Corporation (Yukon) but absolved Brandon from respondeat superior liability. In an *1256 earlier order that was not appealed to this Court, the bankruptcy court had determined that the lien was without value. Because Brandon’s. interests were not adversely affected by the district court’s ruling presently before us, we dismiss Brandon’s appeal. Appealing pro se, Knudson claims that the bankruptcy court erred when it exercised jurisdiction over the fraud claim, denied his request for a jury trial, and excluded Knud-son from a proceeding because of Knudson’s repeated disruptions in court. Knudson also claims that the district court erred in adopting the bankruptcy court’s report and recommendation. We affirm.

I.

Yukon engaged in the wholesale heating and air conditioning business. In 1991, Yukon entered into a contract with L.A.W. Machining and Manufacturing, Inc. (LAW), in which LAW agreed to manufacture a large number of furnaces for Yukon. The sale price was calculated by a certain formula, subject to an agreed-upon maximum amount. Almost immediately LAW began charging Yukon in excess of the maximum price. Yukon responded by paying LAW only in part and withholding the remainder. Determined to continue their relationship despite their price disagreement, in February 1992 Yukon' granted LAW a security interest on Yukon’s inventory and equipment “to secure payment to LAW ... of all indebtedness of Yukon to LAW for completed furnaces delivered to Yukon and invoiced to Yukon.” Yukon Energy Corp. v. Brandon Invs., Inc. (In re Yukon Energy Corp.), Case No. 4-93-7221, Adv. No. 4-94-33, slip op. at 3 (Bankr.Minn. Mar. 15, 1995) (quotations and emphasis omitted) (Yukon I).

In September 1992, LAW’S creditors initiated involuntary bankruptcy proceedings against LAW. The amount of Yukon’s indebtedness to LAW remained in dispute; the trustee alleged that the debt was $250,000, while Yukon claimed it owed no more than $33,000. Also in the fall of 1992, Knudson, an investor in Yukon, helped instigate a power struggle for control of Yukon. Using proxy statements that a state court later found deceptive, Knudson was elected to Yukon’s board of directors. With Yukon under the control of Knudson and his associates, Yukon and LAW agreed to settle Yukon’s debt to LAW for $56,657.07 in return for a release and discharge of the security interest held by LAW. Both Knudson and Charles Clayton, Yukon’s attorney at the time, were involved in the negotiations leading to the settlement.

By February 1993, Yukon was facing tough financial times of its own. Unable to pay for the LAW settlement from its own funds but desiring to clear the lien on its assets, Yukon (through Knudson) solicited funds from Yukon shareholders and outside investors. In return for their loans, the investors were told they would receive a new secured position. However, hoping to lure new creditors with lien-free assets, Knudson did not secure the position of the new investors. Yukon used the new funds to pay off the LAW lien, which was released by the bankruptcy court on February 11, 1993. See Yukon Energy Corp. v. Brandon Invs., Inc. (In re Yukon Energy Corp.), Case No. 4-93-7221, Adv. No. 4-94-33, slip op. at 7-8 (Bankr.Minn. Sept. 19, 1995) (Yukon II).

In March 1993, a Minnesota state court invalidated the shareholders election which had placed Knudson on Yukon’s board of directors, partly because of false and misleading information in the proxies concerning Knudson’s professional background. 3 The state court also invalidated all actions taken by the illegally-constituted board, subject to ratification by the court. Undeterred in his effort to control Yukon’s fate, 4 Knudson devised a plan to revive the extinguished lien by treating the lien’s release as an assignment to a dummy corporation controlled by Knudson. This would enable the dummy corporation to hold the priority lien on Yukon’s assets. Knudson enlisted Clayton’s *1257 help in activating a corporate shell entitled Brandon Investments, Inc., with Knudson as president and sole director. Knudson and Clayton then issued shares of Brandon stock to the investors in proportion to their original investments used to finance the LAW settlement. The Brandon shares were backdated to the date on which the investors had advanced the funds, a date prior to the creation of the Brandon corporate entity.

Acting in concert with Knudson, Clayton— still attorney of record for Yukon — petitioned the bankruptcy court for an amendment to the February 11,1993 approval of the settlement of the LAW lien. Knudson and Clayton, purportedly acting on Yukon’s behalf, requested that the order be modified to state that the lien had been assigned to Brandon. Clayton did not inform Yukon’s new directors of the pending change, and as a result Yukon failed to object to the motion. On May 11, 1993, the bankruptcy court entered an order as requested.

On December 30, 1993, Yukon filed for bankruptcy protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. On February 15,1994, Yukon commenced an adversarial proceeding against Knudson, Clayton, and Brandon, alleging under several different theories of recovery that Brandon’s revived lien was valueless and that Knudson and Clayton had fraudulently revived the extinguished lien. 5 The proceedings were converted to Chapter 7 proceedings on May 12, 1994. In August 1994, Alpha American Company (Alpha) paid $29,500 for virtually .all of Yukon’s assets, on condition that Alpha bear the expenses of the adversarial proceeding against Brandon. Alpha and Yukon agreed to split the proceeds of any recovery. Because the purported lien “diminished the price at which Yukon’s trustee could sell the assets of the bankruptcy estate,” Yukon II, slip op. at 20, $1500 of the purchase price was specifically allocated for machinery, equipment, and inventory, the fair market value of which totaled in excess of $275,000.

The bankruptcy judge severed the claim pertaining to the valuation of the lien from the fraud claim and tried the lien valuation issue first. 6 On March 15, 1995, the bankruptcy court entered an order in favor of Yukon declaring that the lien against Yukon’s estate was without value. See Yukon I, slip op. at 11. Taking core jurisdiction over the claim as a proceeding to determine “the validity, extent, or priority of liens” under 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(K), the bankruptcy court calculated that Yukon owed less to LAW than the amount by which LAW had overcharged Yukon under the contract. Yukon thus owed nothing to LAW and the LAW lien had no value.

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Bluebook (online)
138 F.3d 1254, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 4937, 1998 WL 113199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-yukon-energy-corporation-debtor-yukon-energy-corporation-v-ca8-1998.