McGowan v. Beausoleil (In Re Beausoleil)

142 B.R. 31, 1992 Bankr. LEXIS 932, 1992 WL 151583
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedJune 18, 1992
DocketBankruptcy No. 89-10829, Adv. No. 90-1033
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 142 B.R. 31 (McGowan v. Beausoleil (In Re Beausoleil)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGowan v. Beausoleil (In Re Beausoleil), 142 B.R. 31, 1992 Bankr. LEXIS 932, 1992 WL 151583 (R.I. 1992).

Opinion

DECISION AND ORDER

ARTHUR N. VOTOLATO, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

Before the Court is the Chapter 7 Trustee’s Complaint Objecting to Debtors’ Discharge Under Bankruptcy Code § 723(a). The issues presented for determination, based on 11 U.S.C. §§ 727(a)(4)(A), (a)(5), or (a)(7), are: (1) whether the Debtors have failed to satisfactorily explain the loss or transfer of a substantial portion of their personal property over the four months prior to the petition date; (2) whether by not listing their legal or equitable interests in at least seven business entities, the Debtors failed to fully and properly disclose all partnership or other business interests of Debtors for six years prior to the petition date; (3) whether the Debtors are guilty of a failure to disclose all their assets and sources of income; and (4) whether Debtor Dennis N. Beausoleil, as an insider of Pub Dennis International, Inc. («PDi”), a]so a Chapter 7 debtor, committed acts specified in one or more of paragraphs (2), (3), (4), (5), and (6) of 11 U.S.C. § 727(a) in connection with the PDI case, by selectively treating corporate assets as if they were personal assets, and vice ver-sa.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Until his financial problems surfaced publicly, Dennis Beausoleil appeared to be a highly successful restauranteur, with business interests located throughout Southern New England. His involvement with the hospitality industry began in the late 1970s, when he developed the concept of “warehouse” style discount liquor stores, which were operated in Rhode Island and Massachusetts. In the nineteen-eighties, he gave his name to the “Pub„ Dennis” chain of informal family restaurants. The original “Pub Dennis” was founded in 1985 by four partners: Dennis Beausoleil, his brother Craig Beausoleil, Richard Arpin, and Ray Bishop. In 1987, the partnership was dissolved, and each partner was ostensibly allocated an undivided interest in one or more restaurants. Dennis Beausoleil retained Pub Dennis International, Inc., which was the management company for the Pub Dennis franchises. According to Beausoleil, he did not realize until several years later that the stock transfers corresponding to the partnership dissolution were never completed by his lawyers, so his name remained as a shareholder and officer of record on the books of the other corporations.

Beausoleil expanded his business through the sale of so-called “turnkey operation” franchises, as follows: PDI would obtain a site, establish the new restaurant as a separate corporation, obtain permits and financing for the construction or remodeling of the physical plant, secure a liquor license, and transfer the stock and assets of the corporation to the franchisee for a set price, plus a 3% royalty. Approximately 26 restaurants were sold in this fashion. PDI’s corporate offices were at 239 Park East Drive, Woonsocket, Rhode Island, and at the height of his success Beausoleil employed 85 people, including in-house attorneys and accountants.

*33 PDI filed a petition for reorganization on September 7, 1989, and on January 7, 1990 the case was converted to one under Chapter 7. Mr. and Mrs. Beausoleil filed for personal bankruptcy in September 1989, using forms for debtors not engaged in business.

On Exhibit A to Debtors’ Statement of Financial Affairs, entitled “Partnership Involvements of Dennis N. Beausoleil,” he indicates the existence, but not the extent or value of interests in the following entities: Pub Dennis of Lowell, Inc.; Pub Dennis of North Attleboro, Inc.; Northeastern Recycling; and Pub Dennis of Warren, Inc. 1

On their Schedule B-2, the Debtors listed a 44% ownership interest in PDI (which they identified, correctly, as a corporation rather than a partnership) with no market value as of September 7, 1989. They failed, however, to disclose interests in seven other entities: Guardian Realty Trust, Metacom Associates, The Old Pike Pub, Inc., Ah-Roma Family Restaurant, Inc., DNB Food Service, Inc., Pub Dennis of Seekonk, Inc., and Beau Realty. Mr. Beau-soleil has provided assorted and not particularly consistent excuses for his failure to list ownership interests in these businesses. The pattern of his disclosures and omissions suggests that he only listed interests in business which existed and had value at the time the petition was filed. He (or his attorneys) simply disregarded the Code’s six-year “reach back.” His explanation as to these omissions is summarized as follows:

a.Guardian Realty. Dennis Beausoleil was the sole beneficiary of Guardian Realty Trust (“GRT”), a Massachusetts “pass-through” trust that had owned two pieces of real estate: the corporate headquarters in Woonsocket, Rhode Island, valued at $1.8 million, which was sold at foreclosure in August, 1989 by Eastland Bank, and the Pub Dennis of Lowell property, whose sale to the franchisees was delayed by a fire in 1986. As of the date the petition was filed, Guardian owned neither property. Litigation is pending in State court against an insurer regarding the Lowell fire.

According to Dennis Beausoleil, his Rhode Island bankruptcy attorney wanted to file a separate petition for GRT, and had prepared the initial paperwork, but Beauso-leil’s Massachusetts in-house counsel (who was the trustee of GRT) advised that this was not necessary, and so Beausoleil scheduled the trust’s liabilities as his personal obligation, without disclosing the beneficial interest.

b. Metacom Associates. This was a typical franchise plan that went awry. After Beausoleil had completed the set-up of the Warren Pub Dennis franchise, via Me-tacom Associates, Marquette Credit Union (the purchasers’ lender) discovered a hazardous waste problem on the premises and refused to close the loan unless Metacom Associates executed a $200,000 guaranty of the purchasers’ note. In 1987 Metacom Associates filed for reorganization. Its stock was purchased by one David Freedman, an outside investor, and Beausoleil asserts that he had no financial involvement in this entity by 1989.

c. DNB Food Service, Inc. This was the predecessor corporation to Pub Dennis Peabody. Beausoleil and Robert Sriberg incorporated the business in May 1987, and transferred it to the franchisees for $500,-000 in January 1988.

d. Ah-Roma Family Restaurant, Inc. Debtor denies ever having had an ownership interest; the original shareholders, who procured construction financing, were Karen Laferte (Beausoleil’s secretary) and Eugene Beausoleil (his father). Debtor was involved as general manager, as a director, and as recipient of franchise fees; he was listed as a director on the certificate of incorporation “because I started it” but “wasn’t on any of the loans.” It was transferred to a Mr. and Mrs. Lazarus, as franchisees, in January 1987. Debtor testified that he considered, but did not consummate a sale of the “Ah-Roma” name and *34 restaurant concept to Janeo, a large restaurant holding company. (Plaintiffs Exhibit 27 is an undated, handwritten letter from Leslie Rich, an officer of Janeo, Inc., to Nicholas Janikes, the principal of Janeo, that states “Janeo could purchase Ah-Roma free and clear tomorrow for $50,-000.”)

e. Beau Realty was a real estate holding company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
142 B.R. 31, 1992 Bankr. LEXIS 932, 1992 WL 151583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgowan-v-beausoleil-in-re-beausoleil-rib-1992.