Jeremiah v. Richardson

CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJuly 22, 1998
Docket98-1081
StatusPublished

This text of Jeremiah v. Richardson (Jeremiah v. Richardson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jeremiah v. Richardson, (1st Cir. 1998).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals For the First Circuit

No. 98-1081

BRUCE JEREMIAH, ANDREW JEREMIAH, AS GENERAL PARTNERS OF SILVER SPRING CENTER, Plaintiffs, Appellants,

v.

ANDREW RICHARDSON, R.S.S. REALTY TRUST, INC., ETC., ET AL., Defendants, Appellees.

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND

[Hon. Ronald R. Lagueux, U.S. District Judge]

Before

Torruella, Chief Judge,

Rosenn, Senior Circuit Judge,

and Stahl, Circuit Judge.

Edward G. Lawson for appellants. Andrew S. Richardson, with whom Boyajian, Harrington & Richardson was on brief, for appellee Trustee, Andrew Richardson.

July 2, 1998 ROSENN, Circuit Judge. This appeal, arising out of a unique set of facts, raises an important question pertaining to a bankruptcy court's discretion in authorizing a trustee in a Chapter 11 reorganization to sell the primary asset of the debtor without first resolving allegations of fraud committed by the prospective purchaser and its principals. The fraud is alleged to have been committed by the purchaser and the debtor's former counsel in the acquisition of a mortgage against the asset. The debtor's asset comprised a group of old mill buildings which the debtor leased to retail, commercial, and light industrial tenants. Because the principals of the debtor, a partnership that filed the petition for Chapter 11 reorganization, were in prison, the bankruptcy court appointed a trustee for the estate. The Trustee, who had brought an adversary proceeding with the approval of the debtor, to set aside the mortgage on the property acquired by assignment from the original mortgagee allegedly by prepetition fraud, concluded that it would be in the best interests of the bankrupt estate to accept an offer to purchase the property from the mortgagee and settle the adversary proceeding to set aside the mortgage on it. The bankruptcy court, over the vigorous objection of the debtor, approved the sale and settlement. The debtor timely appealed to the district court which affirmed. The debtor thereupon appealed to this court. We also affirm. I. Bruce and Andrew Jeremiah are the partners of the debtor, the Silver Spring Center, a Rhode Island general partnership. The Silver Spring Center (the "Center"), owned a 500,000-square-foot former textile factory complex consisting of approximately 18 buildings located in Providence, Rhode Island. Its business essentially was to lease space in this complex to retail, commercial, and light industrial tenants. The Jeremiahs previously had been tenants in the Center for 30 years and had owned it for approximately the past 14 years. In 1988, the Jeremiahs engaged attorney Z. Hershel Smith to represent them in a dispute they were having with the Center's prior mortgagee, the New Bedford Institution for Savings ("The Bank"). Upon Smith's recommendation, the Center filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition. While Smith was representing the Center in the bankruptcy proceedings, it developed that he also was representing some of its creditors. Due to this conflict of interests, his mismanagement of the Center's funds, and a request of the then- Chapter 11 trustee, the Jeremiahs discharged Smith. With the assistance of new counsel, they negotiated the dismissal of the reorganization petition in June 1991. Smith has since been disbarred, convicted of fraud and embezzlement of clients' funds, and sentenced to 10 years imprisonment. In early 1993, the Jeremiahs began to renegotiate the $2.1 million mortgage on the Center with the mortgagee. At the same time, Smith, without the consent or knowledge of the Jeremiahs, allegedly also entered into negotiations with their mortgagee on behalf of himself and the R.S.S. Realty Trust ("RSS"), a Rhode Island Corporation, to purchase the mortgage, using confidential information gained during his three-year prior representation of the Center. As a result, The Bank ceased negotiations with the Jeremiahs and instead sold the $2.1 million mortgage to RSS for $200,000. RSS's principals are William Ricci and the Smith Family Trust, of which attorney Smith's children are the beneficiaries. Ricci, like Smith, also is a convicted felon, having been convicted of various fraud and other charges. Shortly thereafter, RSS filed an ex parte petition in a Rhode Island state court alleging waste on the part of the Center, seeking to have the Center placed in receivership, and seeking to foreclose its recently acquired mortgage. Because of RSS's actions, in December 1994, the Center once again sought Chapter 11 protection in the bankruptcy court. Because the Jeremiahs, at the time, were in jail for allegedly dealing drugs out of the Center, the court appointed the appellee, Andrew S. Richardson, Trustee to operate the Center. The Jeremiahs vehemently contested the validity, extent, and priority of the mortgage RSS had acquired from the New Bedford Bank. Therefore, the Trustee commenced an adversary proceeding against RSS and Smith in the bankruptcy court. Specifically, the Trustee sought to have the mortgage declared null and void, or alternatively, conveyed to the Chapter 11 Trustee, or, as a further alternative, held in constructive trust for the Jeremiahs. The Trustee based his complaint primarily upon Smith's prior representation of the Jeremiahs and the alleged breach of his fiduciary duties to his former clients. In addition to the disputed $2.1 million dollar RSS mortgage, the Center was subject to (1) liens for $850,000 in unpaid real estate taxes in favor of the City of Providence for the period 1989 to 1996; (2) a $30,000 lien held by the Providence Water Supply Board; and (3) a $16,000 lien held by the Narragansett Bay Commission. The property also has significant environmental problems which would cost anywhere from $850,000 to at least $1.5 million to remedy. Furthermore, the Center is in deteriorating condition, particularly the roofs, which need at least a half million to $1 million of repairs. Finally, pre-petition, unsecured creditors hold claims for approximately another $75,000, including $16,000 owed to the United States Coast Guard. The Jeremiahs, on the other hand, contend that the Center's financial picture is not quite so grim. For instance, they allege that the real estate taxes can be cut by as much as one-half because the property is significantly overvalued. They also believe that the $30,000 Providence Water Supply Board and $16,000 Narragansett Bay Commission liens can be reduced due to errors in the meter readings and billings. As is common in a Chapter 11 proceeding, the Jeremiahs have no real financial equity in the Center. During the period the Trustee operated the Center, he earned approximately $5,000 per month "profit." He achieved this "profit," however, only by not paying any debt service (i.e., the mortgage), any real estate taxes, or any payments on the Center's prepetition outstanding obligations. The Jeremiahs dispute the Trustee's characterization of the poor financial health of the Center, and raise questions about the Trustee's rent collection and accounts receivable figures, which they contend would show that the Center was in better condition than that painted by the Trustee. While the adversary proceeding against RSS and Smith was pending, Ricci submitted a proposal to the Trustee in December 1996, offering to resolve the adversary proceeding and to purchase the Center. Ricci's offer consisted of a lump-sum cash payment of $150,000 to the Trustee in exchange for conveyance of the title to the property and dismissal of the adversary proceeding. This $150,000 would cover all claims held by unsecured creditors and all administrative costs of the bankruptcy estate.

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