McKnight v. Paul D. Osborne Desk Co.

14 Mass. L. Rptr. 18
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedOctober 9, 2001
DocketNo. 001191BLS
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Mass. L. Rptr. 18 (McKnight v. Paul D. Osborne Desk Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKnight v. Paul D. Osborne Desk Co., 14 Mass. L. Rptr. 18 (Mass. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Van Gestel, J.

This matter is before the Court on the motion for summary judgment of the defendant Jeffrey S. Troderman (“Troderman”).1 In the motion, Troderman seeks summary judgment as to all claims against him by the plaintiff,2 Jane Osborne McKnight (“McKnight”), Trustee of the Trust of Harry J. Osborne (the “Trust”), and seeks summary judgment on his cross claims against defendants Paul D. Osborne (“Osborne”),3 Paul J. Tesorero (“Tesorero”), and Paul D. Osborne Desk Co., Inc. (the “Company”).

BACKGROUND

The underlying action, for the most part, involves a struggle between McKnight, in her capacity as Trustee of the Harry J. Osborne Trust, against her brother Osborne, and Tesorero over certain actions regarding the corporation known as Paul D. Osborne Desk Company, Inc. The Trust, of which McKnight is trustee, owns 50% of the common stock of the Company. Tesorero owns the other 50% of the Company’s stock. Tesorero is president of the Company and Osborne, who owns no stock therein, is its treasurer. Osborne and McKnight are brother and sister, each being among the children of Harry J. Osborne.

The Company was founded by Paul D. Osborne, and operated for many years by his son Hariy J. Osborne and Ted Tesorero, Tesorero’s father. As too often happens, the generations that follow the founders and [19]*19those who built up a closely held corporation are fighting over the corporate remains. There is a history of prior litigation concerning control of the Company.4

Troderman is a certified public accountant with an extensive history and experience in working with distressed businesses. For reasons not of Troderman’s making — indeed, he never even heard of the Company before January of2000 — the Company was in strained financial condition when he was asked, on January 4, 2000, to serve as the Trust Mortgagee for a Trust Indenture and Security Agreement (hereafter referred to as the “Trust Mortgage”) contemplated by the Company for the purposes of winding down its affairs in an orderly manner. On January 5, 2000, Troderman agreed to accept the position and signed the Trust Mortgage.

The.Trust Mortgage was executed for the Company by Tesorero, as president, Osborne, as treasurer, and by Troderman as Trust Mortgagee. At the time of the execution of the Trust Mortgage, Osborne and Tesorero appear to have been the Company’s only officers and its only directors.5

Among many other things, the Trust Mortgage provides:

1-3 DEBTOR. As used herein, the word “DEBTOR” shall refer to PAUL D. OSBORNE DESK CO., INC. a Massachusetts corporation with its principal place of business at Summer Street, Boston, Massachusetts.
3-1 To secure the obligations of the DEBTOR hereunder, including without limitation, the DEBTOR’S obligation to consummate the arrangement established herein, and to secure the DEBTOR’S payment of the abovementioned Obligation, the DEBTOR grants to the TRUST MORTGAGEE a continuing security interest and/or lien in and to all described property of the DEBTOR and in any and all proceeds thereof of any type or nature (which property is collectively referred to as the “Collateral”) as may be more fully described without limitation as follows: [thereafter the assets are listed, including accounts receivable, contract rights, chattel paper, general intangibles, actions and causes of action, choses in action, inventory, furniture and equipment, etc.].
4-10 . . . The DEBTOR agrees to indemnify and defend the TRUST MORTGAGEE and hold the TRUST MORTGAGEE harmless in respect to any claim or proceeding arising out of any matter referred to in this Section.
5-1 The TRUST MORTGAGEE shall distribute to each CREDITOR such CREDITOR’S proportional share of the sums paid to the TRUST MORTGAGEE by the DEBTOR in satisfaction of its Obligations ...

By Section 6-5 the Trust Mortgagee is directed to “distribute the proceeds of any liquidation of the Collateral effected [t]hereunder in the following order of priority”: (1) all claims secured by valid and perfected security interests; (2) all costs and charges in connection with the administration of the Trust: (3) all wage claims; (4) taxes, debts and other claims; (5) pro rata and consenting creditors; (6) pro rata among non-consenting claimants; and (7) to the Debtor.

Article 9 states the purpose of the Trust Mortgage. It reads in its entirety:

This instrument in all its parts and provisions is executed for the benefit and protection of the DEBTOR’S CREDITORS whose interests shall be paramount at all times. All acts and deeds done hereunder shall be done with a view to the primary and paramount protection of the interest of such CREDITORS and all terms and provisions hereof shall be interpreted and construed so as to effectuate such primary and paramount interests of the CREDITORS.

Troderman was told by Osborne at the initial meeting in January that he, Osborne, would notify the rest of the Osborne family about the execution of the Trust Mortgage. Osborne failed to do so. Consequently, in a January 29, 2000 letter, Troderman’s attorney wrote and reported to McKnight. McKnight is a practicing attorney in Burlington, Vermont. Her response was immediate and evidenced her “shock! ] at the contents of [Troderman’s counsel’s] letter and the accompanying Trust Indenture.”

McKnight claims that no one had mentioned this transaction to her, formally or informally. She declined to assent to the Trust Mortgage on behalf of the 50% stockholder interest represented by the Trust and expressed her “formal and strenuous objection to the same.” From that point forward, McKnight and her counsel demanded that Troderman cease and desist from taking any action as Trust Mortgagee until the matter could be resolved and otherwise threatened litigation.

Troderman, to some extent, continued his activities in a limited way for a short time thereafter. Basically he was attempting to identify and gather assets of the Company, collect assent forms from creditors, endeavor to dislodge the Company from unfavorable leases that were months in arrears and generally take steps towards winding down the operation consistent with the directives of the Trust Mortgage.

On March 7, 2000, Troderman’s counsel confirmed that Troderman was continuing his activities under the assumption that McKnight had given permission to do so. On March 8, 2000, McKnight wrote to Tesorero as president of the Company and requested that Troderman continue to collect the accounts receivable and place them in an escrow account, with details to be worked out with her counsel. Apparently the escrow account was established and still exists.

There was no overall resolution with McKnight, however, and therefore Troderman, by letter dated [20]*20March 15, 2000, announced that he had resigned as Trust Mortgagee “effective on the close of business on Monday, March 13, 2000.” By Section 8-4 of the Trust Mortgage, Troderman had the right to so resign “by a written resignation delivered to the DEBTOR and all CREDITORS.”

It is in this context, the foregoing facts at least not being in dispute, that the Court addresses Troderman’s motion.

DISCUSSION

The Court begins, where it must, with an analysis of the Trust Mortgage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 Mass. L. Rptr. 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcknight-v-paul-d-osborne-desk-co-masssuperct-2001.