Jacobs v. Pierce (In Re Pierce)

208 B.R. 261, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7014
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedApril 29, 1997
DocketCivil Action No. 95-12557-REK, No. BK 89-13609-CJK, Adversary No. 92-1440
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 208 B.R. 261 (Jacobs v. Pierce (In Re Pierce)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacobs v. Pierce (In Re Pierce), 208 B.R. 261, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7014 (D. Mass. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

KEETON, District Judge.

What additional elements must a creditor of an attorney-debtor in bankruptcy prove to establish that the attorney’s pre-petition breach of a fiduciary duty, by nondisclosure of conflict of interests, constitutes a “defalcay *264 tion” under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(1) and that as a result a debt (of at least $100,000) is not dischargeable?

Is the law governing lawyers, bearing on the response of a lawyer in Massachusetts to conflict of interests, relevant to whether the lawyer’s debt to a former client or prospective client is nondischargecible as a “defalcation in a fiduciary capacity” of the lawyer-debtor in bankruptcy proceedings?

Can a corporation, whose sole shareholders, along with the corporation, have entered into key-person insurance arrangements that impose on the corporation an obligation to deliver over in cash the insurance proceeds payable upon the death of a shareholder to that shareholder’s nominee, legitimately substitute its promise to pay (creating a debt) and use the cash in other ways that serve the interests of the corporation and adversely affect the interests of the decedent’s intended beneficiaries?

Is the debt arising from the wrongful acts of a lawyer who was a shareholder and officer of the corporation, and also maintained a lawyer-client relationship with the shareholder whose death presented the opportunity for the wrongful corporate use of the cash delivered to the corporation by the insurer as insurance proceeds, a dischargeable debt?

This is a second appeal from the Bankruptcy Court to this court in this case. For the reasons explained in this opinion, the Order of the Bankruptcy Court from which this appeal was taken must be reversed on grounds apart from the first two questions stated above.

If, however, the second question and all issues of law or fact associated with it can be decided on the merits on the record in this second appeal, other proceedings in the Bankruptcy Court essential to final disposition may be very limited in scope. In that event, a final disposition of this Adversary Proceeding, on the merits rather than on procedural or preclusionary grounds, can occur promptly.

Also, if debatable legal issues raised by the third and fourth questions should be decided in a way that terminates this Adversary Proceeding without a need for further evidentiary proceedings in the Bankruptcy Court, early disposition on the merits may be possible.

I. Introduction

On previous remand, the Bankruptcy Court concluded that even if an attorney-client relationship existed between each of the creditors (Lewis and Stuart Jacobs) and the attorney (Pierce, the debtor in this bankruptcy case), the debt at issue was discharge-able because no “defalcation in a fiduciary capacity” had occurred.

After stating the central issue another way, at the outset, the Bankruptcy Court added:

In other words, does the existence of an attorney-client relationship, without more, give rise to the requisite “fiduciary capacity” under [11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(4) ]?

Memorandum of Decision on Remand, September 25, 1995, at 19 (emphasis added). Later in the Memorandum of Decision the Bankruptcy Court stated:

“Defalcation” does not encompass the type of wrongful conduct that Pierce is alleged to have committed. Rather, it refers to a failure of a fiduciary to produce or account for funds entrusted to him or her____ In other words, defalcation refers only to those breaches of fiduciary duty that involve the mishandling or misappropriation of entrusted funds or other entrusted property.

Id. at 18-19 (citations omitted).

These statements of the Bankruptcy Court, framing the issue and declaring a ruling, were based on an error of law that led to the Bankruptcy Court’s order dismissing the Adversary Proceeding, without consideration of factual issues this court’s earlier decision (of June 1994) had left for consideration in the Bankruptcy Court after remand. If in fact an attorney-client relationship existed — a question of fact not yet decided — then it did not exist “without more.” Instead, as a matter of law, for reasons explained in this opinion, that relationship, under undisputed facts, existed along with many other factual circumstances relevant both to the nature of the fiduciary capacity and to the nature of the defalcation.

*265 One of the corporate entities involved in events that were part of the background for the controversy now before this court was P & M Associates, Inc., a corporation in the business of lending money secured by mortgages. At a time before a change of ownership in 1987, the four stockholders of P & M were attorney Robert Pierce, Herman Jacobs (a certified public accountant and a client of Attorney Pierce), Matthew Fisher, and Harvey Madoff.

In a proceeding that preceded by several years the commencement of the present case in which Attorney Pierce is the debtor, P & M filed for bankruptcy in 1989. Bankruptcy Case No. 89-12612-HAL. Until that time Pierce had continued to be the treasurer and one of the directors of P & M.

Before Herman Jacobs died in 1988, Pierce steered Herman Jacobs through decades of corporate, trust, and other transactions designed to serve the client’s wishes while also keeping a weather eye to estate planning and avoidance of potentially severe tax consequences for the ehent, the Ghent’s estate, and intended beneficiaries.

After Herman Jacobs died on February 23, 1988, attorney Pierce represented the estate of the deceased chent. In part at least because of concerns about tax consequences of a provision in one of the many documents Attorney Pierce had drafted, he sought and obtained the execution of a document prepared by him, under the terms of which the creditor-claimants in this proceeding gave up their rights to a cash payment (of not less than $400,000) into a trust. Because of their status as beneficiaries under that trust, the creditor-claimants in this adversary proceeding would have been entitled to the benefit of that entire sum (in equal shares by their stipulation in this case, though shared differently between them under a possible interpretation of all relevant documents other than this stipulation).

Later still, Attorney Pierce himself became the debtor in a bankruptcy proceeding — the case in which the Adversary Proceeding now on appeal in this court was filed. The appeal now before this court is an appeal from an order favorable to the attorney-debtor (Pierce) in the Adversary Proceeding. The claimants in the Adversary Proceeding are Lewis and Stuart Jacobs, sons of Attorney Pierce’s valued client, Herman Jacobs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
208 B.R. 261, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7014, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacobs-v-pierce-in-re-pierce-mad-1997.