Michael D. Barrett and G. Lamar Crittenden, Jr. v. Continental Illinois National Bank and Trust Company

882 F.2d 1, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 11887, 1989 WL 88947
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedAugust 10, 1989
Docket89-1151
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 882 F.2d 1 (Michael D. Barrett and G. Lamar Crittenden, Jr. v. Continental Illinois National Bank and Trust Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michael D. Barrett and G. Lamar Crittenden, Jr. v. Continental Illinois National Bank and Trust Company, 882 F.2d 1, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 11887, 1989 WL 88947 (1st Cir. 1989).

Opinion

*2 REINHARDT, Circuit Judge:

Appellants Michael Barrett and G. Lamar Crittenden appeal from an order of the district court dismissing their action against Continental Illinois Bank & Trust Co. of Chicago (“Continental”). While the situation which gave rise to Barrett and Crittenden’s suit is an intricate one, we can limit our discussion substantially inasmuch as the basis for our decision is relatively uncomplicated. We affirm the district court.

I.

Barrett and Crittenden were two of the owners of a commodity trading house known as Eastern Capital Corporation (“Eastern”). Eastern appears to have been perennially short of cash and to have had repeated difficulty meeting federally-imposed minimum capital requirements. In December 1982, with the government threatening to shut the trading house down, Eastern turned to a Chicago-based financier, Michael Maduff, who agreed to purchase all of Eastern’s stock for $1000 and to infuse the necessary capital into Eastern. In return, Eastern’s principals, including Barrett and Crittenden, received an option to repurchase the stock several months later for $51,000 plus the amount of any unrepaid capital contributions made by Maduff.

What happened next is not precisely clear, although it is uncontroverted that, on February 14, 1983, Maduff and Eastern’s former owners entered into a new arrangement. Barrett and Crittenden, no doubt still smarting from old wounds, assert in the strongest terms that they made the new deal only because Maduff had taken “a variety of actions designed to make [their original] repurchase option worthless.” This may well be true, but it is of little relevance to the instant action. In any event, relations between Maduff and the former owners continued to worsen. At the same time, the financial health of Eastern began to deteriorate again. Ultimately, a group of disgruntled ex-principals of Eastern, including Barrett and Crit-tenden, sued Maduff on a variety of federal securities, as well as state contract and fraud, claims. The parties eventually settled this action. In September 1986, Judge Keeton of the District Court of Massachusetts dismissed the suit, via an order which, after a series of extensions, became final in April 1987.

The following month, Barrett and Crit-tenden went to court again, this time filing the present suit, initially in Massachusetts state court, against Continental. The present action focuses exclusively on a transaction in which Eastern, apparently at Maduff’s behest, transferred approximately $2 million to Continental in May 1984. Barrett and Crittenden claim that this transaction left Eastern with an “unreasonably small capital” and was therefore a fraudulent conveyance under section 5 of the Uniform Fraudulent Conveyance Act (“UFCA”), M.G.L. 109A § 5. 1 Specifically, the pair contends that the transfer left Eastern without assets sufficient to cover various claims they held against the corporation.

Continental removed the suit to federal district court under 28 U.S.C. § 1441 and moved for summary judgment. Judge Caf-frey at first granted Continental’s motion, but, upon a motion for reconsideration, vacated his prior order and allowed Barrett and Crittenden to go to trial on their “unreasonably small capital” theory. Barrett v. Continental Ill. Nat. Bank & Trust Co., 695 F.Supp. 66 (D.Mass.1988). Trial began, without a jury. At the close of the plaintiffs’ case, Continental moved for dismissal, alleging that Barrett and Crittenden had failed to prove that Eastern was left with an unreasonably small capital by the challenged transfer. Alternatively, Continental contended that the current suit was barred by res judicata on the theory that the dis *3 missal of the suit against Maduff, in which Barrett allegedly had attempted to recover the value of certain claims he held against Eastern, barred a later suit on the same claims. Judge Caffrey granted the motion for dismissal on both grounds, ruling:

First of all, the plaintiff has failed to prove that the company had an unreasonably small amount of capital at a crucial time. Secondly, on res judicata, this has been litigated once. You can’t relitigate it.

Barrett and Crittenden appealed.

II.

We turn first to the district court’s conclusion with respect to the fraudulent conveyance question.

A.

In order to assess Judge Caffrey’s finding that Eastern’s capital was not unreasonably small at the time of the transfer, we must sketch with greater detail the state of Maduff and Eastern’s finances during the spring of 1984. For Maduff, who appears from the record to have been somewhat free-wheeling in his financial affairs, it was not a pleasant spring. His various enterprises were seriously in debt; Continental, one of his major creditors, was demanding payment on outstanding loans. The $2 million at issue in this case existed initially in the form of certificates of deposit issued by Continental. Maduff transferred these certificates to Eastern to cover its capital requirements upon his purchase of the commodities brokerage. The certificates matured in May 1984, and, upon their maturation and Continental’s demand for repayment, Maduff transferred the $2 million back to Continental. 2

Eastern’s situation in the months prior to May was similarly grave. The record is uncontroverted that, by May 1984, Eastern was a company winding up its affairs. Negotiations were underway to sell Eastern’s only profitable enterprise, a discount brokerage service. A deal to sell this portion of Eastern was consummated on May 17, 1984, one day after the transfer at issue here. Finally, although the record is not completely clear on the point, it does appear that Eastern was insolvent for a short period immediately after the $2 million was transferred. (For reasons that should become clear below, Eastern’s solvency on May 16,1984 does not dispose of the fraudulent conveyance question.) While, as a practical matter, the final May 17 agreement to sell the discount brokerage business held out the promise of new funds sufficient to cover Barrett and Crittenden’s claims against Eastern, the proceeds of the sale did not show up on Eastern’s balance sheets until the transaction was actually completed, on June 4. Eastern thus appears to have been in violation of federal net capital requirements as of May 31, 1984. Within one business day of discovering the capital shortfall, Maduff and the purchaser of the discount brokerage took several actions which brought Eastern well within the capital requirements. Three days later, the sale of the discount brokerage further enhanced Eastern’s financial position, and the record shows that (at least on paper) Eastern’s assets, as of June 30, exceeded $1 million.

B.

As a threshold matter, we must decide how to treat Judge Caffrey’s conclusion that Barrett and Crittenden failed to prove that Eastern’s capital was “unreasonably small.” Continental urges that, *4

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Bluebook (online)
882 F.2d 1, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 11887, 1989 WL 88947, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-d-barrett-and-g-lamar-crittenden-jr-v-continental-illinois-ca1-1989.