Matter of United Markets Intern., Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 22, 1994
Docket93-2613
StatusUnpublished

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Matter of United Markets Intern., Inc., (5th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS For the Fifth Circuit

No. 93-2613 Summary Calendar

In the Matter of UNITED MARKETS INTERNATIONAL, INC.,

Debtor.

W. STEVE SMITH, TRUSTEE, Appellee,

versus

R. DAVID LEGG,

Appellant.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas (CA H 92 2141) (April 28, 1994)

Before GARWOOD, SMITH and DeMOSS, Circuit Judges. PER CURIAM:*

This is an appeal of a "death penalty" sanction imposed by the

district court on appellant R. David Legg. The district court

* Local Rule 47.5 provides: "The publication of opinions that have no precedential value and merely decide particular cases on the basis of well-settled principles of law imposes needless expense on the public and burdens on the legal profession." Pursuant to that Rule, the Court has determined that this opinion should not be published. struck Legg's pleadings and stayed him from filing further

pleadings in the action until he pays the more than $60,000 in

sanctions previously entered against him. We AFFIRM.

Facts and Procedural History

This consolidated case arose from the 1985 bankruptcy of

United Markets International, Inc. ("UMI") -- of which Legg is the

former president and sole shareholder -- and from numerous related

lawsuits and adversary proceedings involving Legg.1 The appellee in

this case is W. Steve Smith, Trustee for the UMI bankruptcy

estate.2

After several orders to consolidate and withdraw the

reference3, three bankruptcy adversary proceedings in the UMI

bankruptcy were combined into one district court case, H-92-2141 in

1 For clarity, this opinion will refer to the relevant cases by docket number. Legg is an attorney who has represented himself in most of these proceedings, although he has counsel for this appeal. 2 We note that effective December 1, 1993, the bankruptcy court granted trustee Smith's "Motion to Substitute Counsel." Because Smith left the law firm of Woodward, Hall & Primm, P.C. in late 1993, he had requested authorization to substitute the "Law Offices of W. Steve Smith" as "counsel for the trustee" in place of Woodward, Hall & Primm, P.C. This authorization was granted, and contrary to allegations raised by Legg in his Supplemental Brief, the substitution of counsel does not "moot" anything or deprive Smith of his status as trustee. 3 In the Southern District of Texas, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(a), all cases related to a bankruptcy proceeding are automatically referred to the local bankruptcy court. However, regardless of the standing automatic reference of such matters to bankruptcy court, "the district court may withdraw ... any case or proceeding referred under this section, on its own motion or on timely motion of any party, for cause shown." 28 U.S.C. § 157(d). Thus the term "withdrawal of the reference," as used in this opinion, means that a district court entered an order effectively transferring a bankruptcy adversary proceeding from the bankruptcy court to the district court.

2 the Southern District of Texas, from which Legg now appeals. Case

H-92-2141 includes adversary proceedings 85-0375, 85-0932 and 87-

0866, as well as a district court sanction in CA-88-1958.4 Because

an understanding of these and other underlying lawsuits is

necessary to a disposition of this appeal, the relevant cases are

summarized below:

(1) Adversary Proceeding 85-0375, Smith v. Legg: In this

proceeding, Smith, the bankruptcy trustee, sued Legg on behalf of

the UMI estate to recover $300,000 that Legg had transferred from

UMI to himself and used to purchase a high-rise condominium. The

bankruptcy court:

(a) found that Legg had breached his fiduciary duty by

converting UMI's assets when UMI was insolvent with the

actual intent to hinder, delay and defraud UMI's

creditors;

(b) imposed a constructive trust on the condo in favor of the

UMI estate;

(c) rendered judgment against Legg in favor of the UMI estate

4 The lawsuit docketed as H-88-1958 was filed by Legg against trustee Smith and several other parties, alleging racketeering, tortious interference with contract and intentional infliction of emotional distress, all in connection with a purported conspiracy of all the defendants in a scheme to destroy UMI. The district court dismissed Legg's complaint, entering judgment to that effect on January 31, 1989. One year later, Legg filed a Rule 60(b) motion to vacate the final judgment. The district court denied the motion. Legg appealed to the Fifth Circuit, and on March 25, 1991, we dismissed the appeal as "frivolous," ordering Legg to pay to each appellee their reasonable costs and attorneys' fees as damages. Upon our order, the trial court fixed such damages at $5,009.00 and ordered Legg to pay such amount to Smith as trustee. The $5,009.00 sanction order has not been paid and was one of the sanctions enforced in the order now being appealed.

3 for more than $300,000;

(d) ordered Legg to turn over the condo and contents to

trustee;

(e) ordered Legg to provide an accounting to the trustee for

all UMI funds used by him; and

(f) found that Legg's homestead claim on the condo was

subject to the estate's constructive trust.

Legg appealed, but the bankruptcy court's decision in 85-0375 was

affirmed by the district court on January 31, 1992 and affirmed by

this court on April 19, 1993. The reference was withdrawn in 1992

and what remained of 85-0375 -- basically the conclusion of the

appeals and the enforcement of the judgment and order to account --

was consolidated into H-92-2141 (the district court case now on

appeal)5.

(2) Adversary Proceeding 85-0932, Legg v. Obaid, et. al (This

case was originally filed by Legg in district court but was removed

to bankruptcy court as an adversary proceeding): In this

proceeding, Legg sued seven creditors of UMI, attempting to

challenge the validity of the creditors' $2 million in claims

against the UMI estate, and thus attempted to challenge the

validity of the March 28, 1985 Order of Relief granted in the main

5 The judgment of $300,000 plus interest has not been paid. Smith stated in the June 25, 1993 hearing before the trial court that, with accrued interest, "the total is in excess of $400,000 at this time." In addition, as of the June 25, 1993 hearing, Legg had not yet complied with the order to account for any money he took from UMI.

4 bankruptcy case.6 The bankruptcy court in 85-0932 dismissed Legg's

suit against the creditors and (a) held that Legg was without

standing to bring such claims because they belong to the UMI

estate; (b) found that Legg knew full well when he filed the claims

that they were improper and unauthorized; (c) noted that all Legg's

claims "appear to be wholly without merit based on evidence

previously presented to this court"; and (d) sanctioned Legg more

than $63,000 under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11 for the

creditors' incurred costs and fees because the lawsuit was

"interposed for the unlawful purpose of harassing [the UMI

creditors], causing delay and unnecessarily increasing the costs of

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