Industrial Clearinghouse, Inc. v. Mims Ex Rel. Estate of Coastal Plains, Inc. (In Re Coastal Plains, Inc.)

338 B.R. 703, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8805, 2006 WL 547833
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedMarch 7, 2006
Docket4:05-cv-00761
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 338 B.R. 703 (Industrial Clearinghouse, Inc. v. Mims Ex Rel. Estate of Coastal Plains, Inc. (In Re Coastal Plains, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Industrial Clearinghouse, Inc. v. Mims Ex Rel. Estate of Coastal Plains, Inc. (In Re Coastal Plains, Inc.), 338 B.R. 703, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8805, 2006 WL 547833 (N.D. Tex. 2006).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM ORDER

BOYLE, District Judge.

Before the Court is a consolidated appeal by Industrial Clearinghouse, Inc. (“Industrial”), Coastal Plains, Inc. (“Coastal Plains”), R. Wayne Duke (“Duke”), Dallas Valve and Instrument Company (“Dallas Valve”), and Intercontinental Bearing Company (“Intercontinental”), collectively “Appellants,” from a final judgment and related orders of the bankruptcy court. *706 Having conducted plenary review of the bankruptcy court’s judgment, the Court AFFIRMS that judgment for the following reasons.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND 1

A. The Coastal Plains Bankruptcy

This appeal results from appellant Coastal Plains’s filing of Chapter 11 bankruptcy. (Appellants’ Brief at 14) In 1985, Coastal Plains, a vendor and distributor of industrial parts, was experiencing financial problems and employed the law firm of Jackson Walker, L.L.P. to help the company formulate a restructuring plan. (Id. at 13) Integral to this plan was a transaction with Coastal Plains’s largest supplier, Browning Manufacturing, in which Coastal Plains would sell its inventory back to Browning and then reacquire the inventory on a consignment basis. (Id. at 14) Browning breached this agreement by refusing to pay for the returned inventory and refusing to provide the promised consignment inventory. (Id.) Because of this, Coastal Plains filed for bankruptcy on April 22,1986. (Id.)

Jackson Walker also represented Coastal Plains during the course of its Chapter 11 proceeding. (Appellants’ Brief at 14) Shortly after filing for bankruptcy, Coastal Plains filed an adversary proceeding against Browning, pleading causes of action for breach of contract, conversion, and tortious interference (the “Browning claims”) and requesting injunctive relief as well. (Id. at 15) The court ordered Browning to return the inventory to Coastal Plains but did not rule on the other claims. (Id.)

On June 6, 1986, Coastal Plains filed its Schedules and Statement of Financial Affairs that Jackson Walker had helped prepare, but the claims against Browning were not listed. (Appellants’ Brief at 16) In September 1986, Westinghouse Credit Corporation (“Westinghouse”), which had a super-priority lien on Coastal Plains’s property, requested that the court lift the automatic stay and allow it to foreclose on Coastal Plains’s assets. (Id.) In mid-September, Jackson Walker entered a Stipulation of Facts for Coastal Plains which again made no mention of the Browning claims. (Id.) The company’s general intangible assets were stated as worth less than $20,000. (Id.) In early October, Westinghouse foreclosed on the assets of Coastal Plains and bought them in the foreclosure sale. (Id. at 17)

Meanwhile, in September 1986, Jackson Walker began to represent the liquidating agent for Coastal Plains’s assets—Industrial. (Appellants’ Brief at 17) R. Wayne Duke was the CEO of both Coastal Plains and Industrial. (Id.) Industrial questioned Jackson Walker about how to ensure its acquisition of the Browning claims when it purchased the assets of Coastal Plains from Westinghouse; Jackson Walker, however, neglected to advise the company to identify the claims in the bankruptcy proceeding or to take any other action to preserve an interest in the claims. (Id.) Industrial then purchased Coastal Plains’s assets from Westinghouse, including, it believed, the Browning claims. (Id.) Because Coastal Plains retained no assets after this *707 series of purchases and would not have been able to reorganize under Chapter 11, Jackson Walker moved to dismiss the bankruptcy case in early January 1987. (Id.) Instead of dismissing the case, the bankruptcy court chose to convert the proceeding into a Chapter 7 bankruptcy and appointed a trustee. (Id.)

B. Adjudication of the Browning Claims

A trial on the Browning claims was set for May 1993 in federal district court; however, it was postponed by the intervention of Coastal Plains’s trustee, claiming that the Coastal Plains bankruptcy estate owned the claims against Browning. (Appellants’ Brief 18) The district court then referred the case back to the bankruptcy court for a determination of the ownership of the Browning claims. (Id.) In May 1994, the bankruptcy court ruled that Industrial owned the contract claims against Browning and that the trustee owned the tort claims. (Id.) Industrial and the trustee then entered into a court-approved sharing agreement under which Industrial would receive 85% of any recovery against Browning while Coastal Plains’s estate would receive 15%. (Appellants’ Brief at 18; Appellee’s Brief at 9) In 1995, the trustee resigned and Jeffrey Mims (the “Trustee”), the current trustee, was appointed as his successor. (R. 588)

With ownership of the Browning claims squared away, in March 1996 the parties went to trial on the Browning claims back in the district court. (Appellants’ Brief at 18) Industrial and the estate of Coastal Plains won a large jury verdict, which was later reduced by the district court. (Id. at 18-19) A judgment was entered against Browning. (Id. at 19) On appeal, the Fifth Circuit reversed the district court and rendered a judgment in favor of Browning based upon the doctrine of judicial estop-pel. (Id. at 19) Industrial and the estate of Coastal Plains were estopped from recovering against Browning because the Browning claims were not listed in either the bankruptcy schedules or the Stipulation of Facts, and the bankruptcy court relied on this representation in lifting the stay and allowing Westinghouse to foreclose on the assets of Coastal Plains. (Id.); In re Coastal Plains, Inc., 179 F.3d 197, 208-10 (5th Cir.1999). In light of Coastal Plains, Appellants believed that Jackson Walker had committed malpractice in failing to disclose the Browning claims in the bankruptcy filings. (Appellants’ Brief at 10) Sometime after January 2000, the Trustee met with Duke and counsel for Industrial to discuss ownership of the potential claim against Jackson Walker and how pursuit of that claim might progress. (Mims Dep. at 59-61, R. 695-696) No agreement was reached at that meeting. (Mims Dep. at 63-64, R. 696)

C. The Closing of the Bankruptcy Estate

In March 2000, Mims filed the Trustee’s final report and proposed distribution of assets of the estate, applied for compensation, and requested that the bankruptcy case be closed. (R. 205) The court then gave notice of the filing and set a deadline for objections to the fee application and proposed distribution. (R. 859) In June, the bankruptcy court approved the Trustee’s fees and the proposed distribution of the assets. (R.

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338 B.R. 703, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8805, 2006 WL 547833, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/industrial-clearinghouse-inc-v-mims-ex-rel-estate-of-coastal-plains-txnd-2006.