Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of the Mid-Atlantic States v. Clary & Moore, P.C. Matthew A. Clary, III

123 F.3d 201, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 23721, 1997 WL 560072
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 10, 1997
Docket96-1818
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 123 F.3d 201 (Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of the Mid-Atlantic States v. Clary & Moore, P.C. Matthew A. Clary, III) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of the Mid-Atlantic States v. Clary & Moore, P.C. Matthew A. Clary, III, 123 F.3d 201, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 23721, 1997 WL 560072 (4th Cir. 1997).

Opinion

Reversed by published opinion. Judge ERVIN wrote the opinion, in which Judge HALL and Senior Judge BUTZNER joined.

OPINION

ERVIN, Circuit Judge:

Kaiser Foundation sued Clary & Moore, a law firm, and Matthew Clary, III, in an effort to obtain payment of a judgment which Kaiser had secured against Clary, Lawrence, Lickstein & Moore (“Clary, Lawrence”), Clary & Moore’s corporate predecessor. Kaiser raised three claims at the bench trial before the district court: (1) successor liability, (2) piercing the corporate veil, and (3) fraudulent conveyance. The court ruled in Clary & Moore’s favor on all counts. Kaiser now appeals with respect to the claims of successor liability and fraudulent conveyance. For the following reasons, we reverse.

I

Clary, Lawrence was a law firm founded in 1976 by Colonel Matthew Clary, Jr. (Clary Jr.) under a different name; it was named Clary, Lawrence in 1985. From 1976 forward, Clary Jr. was the majority stockholder of the firm, owning 57% of the stock, and Matthew Clary, III (“Clary III”), his son, was a minority shareholder with 42% of the stock; other partners owned a very small amount of the firm’s stock. Until 1990, Clary Jr. was president, Clary III was vice-president, and other partners were officers of the firm. Slight changes took place among the lower officers over the years. In October 1990, all the directors and officers resigned from Clary, Lawrence except Clary III, who became the sole director and president.

Clary, Lawrence began to suffer severe financial difficulties in 1990. The firm owed $110,000 in back taxes and owed a large amount to Sovran Bank, its primary creditor. Sovran’s claim against Clary, Lawrence exceeded $600,000 at one point in the 1990s, but in 1991 the outstanding debt was about $574,-000. Sovran’s debt was personally secured by Clary Jr., his wife, and Clary III.

By this time the firm also owed around $40,000 to Kaiser. Kaiser had prevailed against the firm in a 1990 lawsuit for unpaid rent on the firm’s former corporate office space, which it leased from Kaiser. Although as of 1990 Kaiser had not yet been awarded attorney’s fees for the lawsuit, it would obtain a judgment for more than $230,000 for those fees on March 7, 1991. Kaiser’s total judgment against Clary, Lawrence is $271,690.57.

In response to Clary, Lawrence’s dire financial straits, the partners began to plan to close the firm and open a new one. Clary & Moore was founded in October 1990, although it was called The Business Law Firm for the first couple of months. It officially became Clary & Moore, and opened its doors for business, on February 18, 1991. From the very beginning of Clary & Moore, Clary III was the sole shareholder, the president, and the sole director of the firm.

Five partners, three associates, and one attorney serving as of counsel from Clary, Lawrence ultimately joined Clary & Moore; three other attorneys left for other firms at some point prior to or during the transition. However, on February 18, all of the attorneys who would join Clary & Moore were still on the payroll of Clary, Lawrence; they were not officially hired at Clary & Moore until March 31, 1991. During the intervening six weeks, Clary & Moore “leased” the services of the Clary, Lawrence attorneys, paying Clary, Lawrence the same amount Clary, Lawrence actually paid the attorneys through salary and benefits. Clary & Moore *203 in turn billed its clients at a standard billing rate, a rate much greater than it paid Clary, Lawrence. Therefore, Clary & Moore made a profit on the services of these attorneys while Clary, Lawrence did not. Services of staff members were also leased to Clary & Moore by Clary, Lawrence, and some of those leases lasted until April 1991. In addition, Clary & Moore leased office furniture and equipment from Clary, Lawrence for $5,000 each month, an amount that expert testimony at trial showed to be quite generous. Clary & Moore could not pay its various leasing obligations to Clary, Lawrence in cash, so the old firm allowed the new firm to pay the debts with some cash and with promissory notes and the old firm loaned the new firm $1500 in cash at one point. Clary & Moore also used Clary, Lawrence’s law library during these months, although it did not specifically pay for that privilege. Clary & Moore also continued to operate in the same office space, with the same address and telephone numbers, as Clary, Lawrence had used.

In addition, it appears that almost all of Clary & Moore’s clients when it opened its doors had been the clients of Clary, Lawrence. Both firms communicated with the clients about the changes and asked if they would care to be represented by Clary & Moore. A number of clients of Clary, Lawrence did not accept the services of Clary & Moore, but instead employed the former Clary, Lawrence lawyers who had left for other firms. It appears, however, that Clary & Moore’s client list and the nature of its practice was substantially identical to that of Clary, Lawrence. Moreover, at firm meetings discussions would address the affairs of both the old and the new firms.

Clary, Lawrence was dying while Clary & Moore was setting up shop. In October 1990, all of Clary, Lawrence’s attorneys resigned as shareholders and directors in Clary, Lawrence, with the single exception of Clary III. Kaiser obtained an “execution and levy” on remaining Clary, Lawrence assets, which, according to Clary & Moore, made it difficult for Clary, Lawrence to make its payments to Sovran Bank. After several months of financial stagnation, Sovran Bank foreclosed on Clary, Lawrence in August 1991, with the consent and cooperation of the firm. Sovran had long held a security interest in Clary, Lawrence’s assets which explicitly covered almost everything, although it did not specifically list the “database information” on the firm’s computers.

A public foreclosure sale was held in an attempt to raise enough capital to cover Clary, Lawrence’s debt to Sovran bank. On its face the auction was by-the-book. It was widely advertised and attended by the public. The furniture, fixtures, equipment and law library were sold through the public auction for $265,200. It is not surprising that Clary & Moore was the purchaser for these goods, nor that Sovran Bank loaned the new firm the money for the purchase based on the personal guarantees of Clary Jr., Clary III and Clary Jr.’s wife.

Clary, Lawrence’s accounts receivable were also sold at the auction to The Finance Company for $286,000. Included in these accounts receivable were the newly created notes showing Clary & Moore’s leasing debts of more than $80,000 to Clary, Lawrence. Again, it is not surprising that The Finance Company had been one of Clary, Lawrence’s loyal clients, and that Clary Jr. personally guaranteed that The Finance Company would recoup through collections of the accounts what it bid for them at the auction. Ultimately, Clary Jr.’s wife, Mary, purchased Clary & Moore’s promissory note from The Finance Company, and there is no evidence in the record that that debt was ever repaid. Soon thereafter, Clary Jr.

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Bluebook (online)
123 F.3d 201, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 23721, 1997 WL 560072, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaiser-foundation-health-plan-of-the-mid-atlantic-states-v-clary-moore-ca4-1997.