J. Rettenmaier USA LP v. Riddle, III

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Kentucky
DecidedSeptember 29, 2021
Docket20-03021
StatusUnknown

This text of J. Rettenmaier USA LP v. Riddle, III (J. Rettenmaier USA LP v. Riddle, III) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. Rettenmaier USA LP v. Riddle, III, (Ky. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY LOUISVILLE DIVISION IN RE: ) ) WILLIAM W. RIDDLE, III ) CASE NO. 20-30026(1)(7) ) Debtor(s) ) ) J. RETTENMAIER USA LP ) AP NO. 20-3021 ) Plaintiff(s) ) ) vs. ) ) WILLIAM W. RIDDLE, III ) ) Defendant(s) ) MEMORANDUM-OPINION

This matter came before the Court for trial on the Complaint of Plaintiff J. Rettenmaier USA LP (“Rettenmaier”) to Object to Debtor’s Discharge. Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. §§ 727(a)(2)(A), (B), (a)(3), (a)(4)(A), (a)(5) and (a)(6)(A). The Court considered the testimony of the Debtor/Defendant William W. Riddle, III (“Debtor”), the deposition testimony of Greg Boozer, the exhibits submitted at trial and the arguments of counsel. At the close of the Plaintiff’s case, the Debtor made an Oral Motion for Directed Verdict. After considering the evidence and testimony, as well as the arguments of counsel, the Court granted the Debtor’s Motion for Directed Verdict. The following constitutes the Court’s Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law in support of the entry of the Directed Verdict. FINDINGS OF FACT Debtor was the Chief Executive Officer of Sunstrand LLC, (“Sunstrand”) from 2014 to 2020. The Debtor has a Ph.D and three mechanical engineering degrees. Sunstrand was in the business of converting hemp into finished goods. Sunstrand began having financial problems in late 2018 and

2019. This was a result of a breach by potential investors of two binding Letters of Credit in excess of $20 million. By mid-2019, Sunstrand owed $10 million in secured and unsecured debt to approximately 200 creditors. Secured creditors began repossessing their collateral. In 2019, Sunstrand was notified by an attorney representing Plaintiff that it was in default on a Promissory Note from Plaintiff that listed Sunstrand as the Borrower and Debtor as the Guarantor in the amount of $400,000 pertaining to an Equipment Purchase and Sale Agreement between the parties. Sunstrand had missed four monthly payments of $7,548.49 each and owed the Plaintiff

$238,835.60. Plaintiff sued Sunstrand and Debtor individually, in Michigan State Court, and obtained a default judgment on August 23, 2019 in the amount of $244,261.88, plus interest at the rate of $32.72 per day. Plaintiff then had the default judgment domesticated in the Jefferson Circuit Court in Kentucky on August 20, 2019. Debtor was aware that on September 20, 2019, Plaintiff could begin collecting on the default judgment in Kentucky. Despite Debtor’s best efforts to keep Sunstrand afloat, the company began to wind down its business operations due to overwhelming debt. Of its 45 investors and nearly 200 creditors, none

instituted legal proceedings against Debtor and Sunstrand, with the exception of the Plaintiff. Debtor had personally guaranteed a large portion of Sunstrand’s debt, and although Debtor was forced to file for bankruptcy protection, Sunstrand did not file for bankruptcy protection. -2- Plaintiff, however, failed to properly perfect its security interest in any collateral of the Debtor or Sunstrand. On January 6, 2020, Debtor filed his Voluntary Petition seeking relief under Chapter 7 of the United States Bankruptcy Code. On Schedule E/F, Creditors Who Have Unsecured Claims, Debtor

listed a debt of $244,261 owed to the Plaintiff. Debtor had secured debts totaling $39,602 and unsecured debts totaling $10,120,251.37. Despite Plaintiff’s efforts at trial to elicit extensive testimony from the Debtor regarding his bank accounts and financial transactions prior to the date Debtor filed his Chapter 7 Petition on January 6, 2020, Plaintiff’s claims of nondischargeability under 11 U.S.C. §§ 727(a)(2)-(6), can be distilled down to three transactions. First, Plaintiff contends that because Debtor removed all of his funds from his account at

Republic Bank, prior to September 20, 2020, the first day Plaintiff could garnish the account, his discharge should be denied. Debtor testified that he closed both Sunstrand’s and his own personal bank accounts at Republic Bank because he could no longer conduct business with Republic Bank. He had several convertible Notes with Republic Bank and had discussed getting a business loan from the Bank, however, after exchanging documents with the Bank, it was clear that Republic was not going to loan the Debtor or Sunstrand any further funds. Debtor then closed the Republic account and opened a new bank account at First Savings Bank. The Debtor’s testimony on this issue was unrefuted. Plaintiff did not call any witnesses or

representatives from Republic Bank to discredit the Debtor’s testimony and the Court found the Debtor credible.

-3- Shortly after opening the Republic Bank account, Plaintiff garnished the account and recovered approximately $700 from Sunstrand’s account. After this happened, Debtor no longer put funds in this account. Debtor then opened an account at PNC Bank one week later. Debtor did not inform Plaintiff that he and Sunstrand had opened a new account at PNC. However, Debtor had no

legal obligation to do so. On December 9, 2019, Debtor wired $10,000 from the PNC account to a bank account at Opportunity Bank in Montana. The records produced at trial indicated that Debtor then made a $10,000 withdrawal from the account. Debtor used that $10,000 to pay toward the balance owed on his wife’s American Express credit card. Debtor explained that he and his wife had used his wife’s credit card to pay their family expenses. Sunstrand owed Debtor money because he had used the credit card to pay many out-of-pocket business related expenses. Debtor testified that the $10,000

payment on the American Express card was Debtor’s reimbursement for the out-of-pocket business expenses he charged to the card. Plaintiff failed to prove there was anything nefarious about this payment. Plaintiff called no witnesses to refute the Debtor’s testimony on this transaction. The next transaction questioned by Plaintiff was a $25,000 payment Debtor received from Gibbs International (“Gibbs”) in 2019. Debtor explained that Gibbs was a secured creditor of Sunstrand that foreclosed on its lien. Debtor and Sunstrand assisted Gibbs in finding buyers for the equipment Gibbs had foreclosed upon. Debtor testified that he had no expectation of being paid for assisting Gibbs in finding buyers for the equipment.

Debtor also testified that the day before they received the $25,000 payment, he received a call from Greg Boozer with Gibbs in late November 2019. Mr. Boozer told him that Gibbs wanted to pay him a $25,000 commission on the equipment sales. Debtor told Mr. Boozer not to deposit the -4- money into his account because his accounts were tied up at the time. He had been in discussions with his attorney about filing a bankruptcy petition, although no petition had been filed at that time. Therefore, he told Mr. Boozer to deposit the $25,000 into his wife’s bank account. Debtor regularly deposited funds in this account to pay for family expenses. Gibbs then deposited the $25,000 into

his wife’s bank account the following day, an account used by Debtor and his wife for family expenses. Gibbs also issued a 1099 for the $25,000 payment to Debtor’s wife and she included it as income on her 2019 taxes. Plaintiff contends that this payment was not disclosed by Debtor when he was specifically asked at his deposition one week before the payment was made whether or not he was expecting any income in the next 90 days. Debtor truthfully answered that at that time he was not expecting any payments. He only learned that Gibbs was going to pay the money one day before the payment was

made.

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