Lawrence Paperboard Corp. v. Arlington Trust Co. (In Re Lawrence Paperboard Corp.)

76 B.R. 866
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedAugust 14, 1987
Docket14-10546
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 76 B.R. 866 (Lawrence Paperboard Corp. v. Arlington Trust Co. (In Re Lawrence Paperboard Corp.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawrence Paperboard Corp. v. Arlington Trust Co. (In Re Lawrence Paperboard Corp.), 76 B.R. 866 (Mass. 1987).

Opinion

*867 MEMORANDUM

JAMES N. GABRIEL, Chief Judge.

The Debtors, Lawrence Paperboard Corp. (“Lawrence”), Lawrence Packaging Corp. (“Packaging”), and Harriman Paperboard Corp. (“Harriman”) (collectively the “Debtors”) filed bankruptcy petitions under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code on March 15, 1984. The Court approved joint administration one week later on March 22, 1984. The Official Unsecured Creditors’ Committee (the “Committee”) commenced this adversary proceeding on July 13, 1984 against the Arlington Trust Company (“Arlington”), seeking a determination of Arlington’s secured status and the recovery of alleged fraudulent conveyances, preferential transfers and improper charges. The Committee amended its eight count complaint on August 22, 1984. Arlington now seeks partial summary judgment with respect to Counts One, Two and Five of the Committee’s Amended Complaint.

Through Count One, the Committee alleges that the guaranties, security interests and mortgages executed by the Debtors and delivered to Arlington to secure the performance of their various obligations were ultra vires and unauthorized. Through Count Two, the Committee alleges that the guaranties, security interests and mortgages which Lawrence, Packaging and Harriman each granted to secure performance of the obligations of the other Debtors to Arlington were void and unenforceable for want or failure of consideration. Finally, through Count Five, the Committee alleges that the various guaranties, security interests and mortgages granted, the obligations incurred and the payments of money or transfers of property pursuant to the guaranties, security interests and mortgages lacked fair consideration and constituted fraudulent transfers pursuant to Mass. Gen.Laws Ann. ch. 109A, § 4 (West 1958 & Supp.1987), which section is made applicable to this proceeding by 11 U.S.C. § 544(b) (West 1987).

FACTS

The facts presented are gleaned from materials submitted by Arlington in support of its Motion for Summary Judgment and from portions of deposition testimony given by Robert J. DeLuca (“DeLuca”) and Joseph D. Caimi (“Caimi”) that are attached to the affidavit of Thomas P. Billings. The Billings’ affidavit was submitted with the Committee’s opposition to Arlington’s motion. The materials submitted by Arlington in conjunction with its motion consist of the following:

1) Affidavit of Joseph D. Caimi;
2) Unaudited Financial Statements for the year ending September 30, 1984 prepared by Coopers & Lybrand
3) Affidavit of Philip McGlone, Assistant Treasurer of Arlington;
4) Affidavit of Mary Caimi, Clerk of Lawrence Paperboard Corp.;
5) Affidavit of Robert J. DeLuca, Senior Vice-President of Arlington (with exhibits E-l through E-16);
6) First Amended Disclosure Statement to First Amended Consolidated Joint Plan of Reorganization;
7) Plaintiff’s Answers and Objections to Defendant’s First Set of Interrogatories;
8) Articles of Organization (for all three Debtors); and
9) Report of Examiner.

The Court, where appropriate, has supplemented these materials with information available from the dockets for these cases. The facts presented in Arlington’s Motion for Summary Judgment essentially are undisputed. However, the inferences to be drawn from the facts, as well as the need for additional facts, have generated considerable controversy.

Lawrence, Packaging and Harriman are Massachusetts corporations that formerly were engaged in the manufacture of paperboard and the production of printed folding boxboard. Lawrence and Packaging were located at 242 Canal Street in Lawrence, Massachusetts. The companies occupied, according to the Examiner appointed pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 1104 and Joseph D. Caimi, typical, former textile mill structures that were erected around the turn of the century on approximately 7.5 acres of land along the banks of the Merrimack *868 River. The production processes of Lawrence and Packaging were integrated since the companies occupied connecting buildings and shared office space. Lawrence sold approximately 35 per cent of its output of paperboard to Packaging, and Packaging obtained nearly all of the paperboard it used to manufacture boxes from Lawrence. The paperboard sheets manufactured by Lawrence simply were passed through an open door to the space occupied by Packaging where they were processed into box-board.

Unlike the Lawrence and Packaging plants, the Harriman plant is not located in Massachusetts. Rather, that company’s plant is located on the banks of the Emory River on a 30 acre site in Harriman, Tennessee. Harriman produced paperboard from hardwoods for use as the inner layer of corrugated board. It was acquired by Lawrence from the Meade Corporation in 1975.

None of the Debtors are operating. All the assets of Lawrence and Packaging were sold at various private sales and at a public auction. A sale of Harriman’s assets was noticed out to creditors, but this Court declined to approve the sale. Just recently, a second notice of intended private sale of the Harriman assets was filed with the Court.

Caimi owns all the stock of Lawrence. Lawrence, in turn, owns all the stock of Packaging and Harriman. The officers and directors of all three companies are virtually identical. Caimi, as the president and a director of each of the Debtors, controlled the three companies. Caimi, like his sister Mary Caimi, who served as the clerk of Lawrence and was responsible for the books and records of Lawrence and its two wholly-owned subsidiaries, considered the three companies as a single unit.

According to the Debtors’ First Amended Disclosure Statement, the Debtors historically and consistently lost money on a consolidated basis and continued to operate at a loss on a consolidated basis during the Chapter 11 proceeding until they ceased doing business. Additionally, according to the Disclosure Statement,

The Debtors have historically borrowed [sic] a large amount of interest bearing debt. Prior to filing the Chapter 11 petition, the Debtors owed Chase [Manhattan Bank] $9,000,000 in the aggregate and Arlington was owed approximately $3,000,000. The interest expense was a substantial drain on the Debtors’ financial condition. The combination of a disproportionately large interest expense, combined with substantial expenditures for capital improvements to increase the efficiency of the Harriman mill and depressed market conditions for corrugating medium resulted in the Debtors not having sufficient funds to pay their debts as they came due, necessitating the filing of the Chapter 11 petitions.

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Bluebook (online)
76 B.R. 866, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-paperboard-corp-v-arlington-trust-co-in-re-lawrence-paperboard-mab-1987.