Linder v. Barry

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedAugust 9, 2002
DocketKNOcv-01-062
StatusUnpublished

This text of Linder v. Barry (Linder v. Barry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Linder v. Barry, (Me. Super. Ct. 2002).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE AS g tes SUPERIOR COURT

KNOX, ss. Me aes CIVIL ACTION NO. _CV-01-062 ROBYN LINDNER, ) Plaintiff ) ) Vv. ) ) DECISION AND ORDER JEFFREY A. BARRY, ) . GRESHAM GROUP, INC., a Maine ) . corporation; GLOVILL ) L. GARDRECH ENTERPRISES, INC., a ) DON LIBRARY Panamanian corporation; C.A. )

BAUMAN, a/k/a TONY BAUMAN; ) ‘Aue 14 2002 DESTRA RISK MANAGEMENT _ ) LIMITED, a Nevada corporation, _) Defendants ) The matter is before the court on the Motion for Default, Motion for Ex Parte Attachment, and Motion for Relief of the plaintiff, Robyn Lindner (“Lindner’), and the Motion to Dismiss and Motion to Dissolve Attachment of Defendants Jeffrey Barry (“Barry”) and Gresham Group, Inc. (“Gresham”). For the following reasons, the Motion

for Default, Motion for Attachment, Motion to Dissolve Attachment, and Motion to

Dismiss are denied, and the Motion for Relief is allowed |as set forth below. BACKGROUND Lindner resides in Nevada, Barry’s last known residence was in California, and

Gresham is a Maine corporation, with a place of business in Rockport. Defendant Glovill Enterprises (“Glovill’”’) is a Panamanian corporation, Defendant C.A. Baumann (“Baumann”) is a resident of Geneva, Switzerland, and Defendant Destra Risk Management Limited (“Destra”) is a Nevada Corporation, of which Barry is sole shareholder and owner.

Lindner and Barry were married for eight years when they separated in April 2000. The Second Judicial District Court of Nevada conducted a divorce trial on March 29 and 30, 2001 (Docket No. DV00-00491) (the “Divorce Action”). Subsequently, on April 23,

2001, the court (Schumacher, J.) issued its Decision After Trial in the Divorce Action. On May 4, 2001, the court (Schumacher, J.) then allowed Barry’s Motion to Reduce

Spousal Support in the Divorce Action.

On May 7, 2001, Lindner filed her First Amended Complaint’ (Docket No. 01- 01039)? in the Second Judicial District Court of Nevada (the “Nevada Civil Action’), and alleges fraudulent conveyance. On June 5, 2001, the court (Schumacher, J.) issued the Divorce Decree in the Divorce Action. Barry appealed that decree on July 9, 2001.7 On July 10, 2001, Barry filed a Financial Declaration in the Divorce Action stating that he had no income. Shortly thereafter, the court awarded Lindner a Judgment for Arrears in the Divorce Action against Barry dated July 16, 2001, which awarded Lindner a total of $36,830.84, for spousal support, attorney fees, and other costs associated with the litigation of the divorce action. On August 8, 2001, the court (Steinheimer, J.) in the Nevada Civil Action issued a decision denying Barry’s Motion to Dismiss on res judicata

grounds.’

‘itis entirely unclear as to when Lindner filed her original complaint, but the record suggests that it was filed in March 2001. In any event, Lindner filed the Nevada Complaint before she filed the Maine Complaint.

* Lindner’s Nevada complaint is against Jeffrey Barry, Gresham Group, Inc., Glovill Enterprises, Inc., C.A. Bauman a/k/a Tony Bauman, and Destra Risk Management Limited, the same defendants as in this case.

> On September 5, 2001, the appeal was assigned to Carolyn Worrell, Settlement Judge. Apparently, the case was set for hearing in March 2002. There is nothing in the record revealing what occurred at that hearing (if it did, indeed, take place), and the court has been unable to find anything indicating that this case has yet been heard by the Nevada Supreme Court.

* The decision states, in pertinent part:

The subject of the current action is the alleged fraudulent assignment of a debt. Lindner and Barry were involved in prior divorce litigation. ... In the divorce action, the existence and validity of this assignment was an issue relevant to the amount of spousal and child support to be granted and the division of marital property.

The assignment at issue concerns the payment of some consulting fees and residuals that were to be made to Defendant Destra . .. which is a, now defunct, company wholly owned and operated by Defendant Barry. The income is being paid by Defendant Gresham .... Barry, through Destra, assigned the income to Defendant Glovill ....

In the divorce proceeding, Plaintiff challenged the validity of the underlying debt to Glovill by the parties. Defendant testified that he borrowed $375,000 from Glovill between 1995 and 1997, and that the funds were subsequently invested in a Brazilian business venture in which the entire amount was eventually lost. As proof of the debt, Defendant offered three promissory notes signed only by himself, and a debt restructuring agreement executed in 1999, also only signed by Defendant. Defendant offered no documentary evidence confirming receipt of the monies comprising the alleged debt. Defendant, likewise, offered no evidence that the assigned income ever reached Glovill. No proof, other than Defendant’s statements was introduced showing that Glovill is even a legal entity. Defendant did not know an addressor [sic] location for Glovill, the name of a principal or contact person for Glovill, nor did Defendant provide any other proof of Glovill’s existence. Lindner then brought this action in Maine on September 10, 2001, in which she asserts that the Judgment for Arrears, together with the Decision After Trial, represents a final judgment rendered by the Nevada court which is entitled to full faith and credit in the State of Maine, and should accordingly be recognized as a Maine judgment on the issues contained therein. Lindner further asserts that Barry has made fraudulent transfers of income and other funds to various defunct businesses, and in particular to Glovill, and has otherwise assigned income in a fraudulent manner, without receiving value for the assignment, in an effort to hide his assets and other income from his child and spousal support arrearages and continuing support obligations. Specifically, Lindner alleges that Barry is currently receiving monies from Gresham, which are being fraudulently conveyed and/or concealed by the Defendants by the assignment of these funds for no

consideration to Glovill.

Judge Schumacher held that Defendant did not establish a valid community debt. Decision After Trial filed April 23, 2001, in case DV00-00491 at page 5. Judge Schumacher further found that the underlying Glovill debt was of questionable validity. Id, at 10.

Defendant is asserting that the present action is barred by the doctrine of res judicata. The doctrine of res judicata differs slightly from that of collateral estoppel. As the Nevada Supreme Court has explained:

Generally, the doctrine of res judicata precludes parties . . . from relitigating a cause of action or an issue which has been finally determined by a court... .We have recognized that there are two different species of res judicata ... issue preclusion and claim preclusion. Although often used to describe both ‘species,’ in its strictest sense, the term ‘res judicata’ refers only to claim preclusion. Pursuant to the rule of claim preclusion, a valid and final judgment on a claim precludes a second action on that claim or any part of it. Claim preclusion applies when a second suit is brought against the same party on the same claim.

Executive Mgmt. v. Ticor Title Ins. Co., 114 Nev. 823, 834-35 (1998) (citations and quotations omitted).

Res judicata or claim preclusion obviously does not apply. The existence of the debt to Glovill was an issue, relevant to the amount of spousal and child support that would be awarded, but it was not a separate claim in and of itself. The Court now considers issue preclusion.

eo

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