Michener v. Brady (In Re Brady)

234 B.R. 652, 42 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 469, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 699, 1999 WL 398752
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 14, 1999
Docket19-10212
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 234 B.R. 652 (Michener v. Brady (In Re Brady)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michener v. Brady (In Re Brady), 234 B.R. 652, 42 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 469, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 699, 1999 WL 398752 (Pa. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Chief Judge.

A INTRODUCTION

Presently before us in this adversary proceeding (“the Proceeding”) asserting the nondischargeability of debts arising out of the voluntary joint Chapter 7 bankruptcy case of GEORGE CHARLES BRADY, III (“the Husband”) and JOAN KILKENNY BRADY (“the Wife,” with the Husband, “the Debtors”) is not only the merits of the claims but also a motion of the original party plaintiff to amend the Complaint (“the Motion”), mostly in order to correctly identify the parties plaintiff. The Motion seeks to meet a challenge to the standing of WILLIAM H. MICHENER, JR. (“Michener”), a former client of the Husband, to prosecute the Proceeding in light of Michener’s according subrogation rights to the Pennsylvania Lawyers Fund for Client Security (“the Fund”) in consideration for payment of $15,000 admittedly misappropriated by the Husband, then an attorney, from Michener’s estate account.

We grant the Motion because the amendment merely redefines the parties prosecuting the Proceeding and recites facts and claims identical to those stated in *656 the original timely Complaint. We hold that the claims for all sums at issue are nondischargeable pursuant to § 523(a)(4), that the Fund is entitled to a claim for the $15,000 that it advanced, and that the Plaintiff is entitled to assert claims for any other misappropriated sums. Further, we hold that, under applicable Pennsylvania law, the Wife is presumed liable for the $15,000 portion of entireties realty acquired with funds obtained through the Husband’s misdeeds, and that she failed to rebut that presumption. Finally, we reject all of the Debtors’ other arguments, including invocation of the Eleventh Amendment and contentions that misappropriations other than the $15,000 were not proven, holding that all claims of misappropriations are nondischargeable as to the Husband, but reminding the parties that it is not our duty to liquidate all of these claims.

B. PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL HISTORY

The Debtors’ main bankruptcy case was filed on October 21, 1998. The Husband formerly practiced as an attorney in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. In the course of his practice, he undertook the representation of Michener in his capacity as executor of the decedent estate of Margaret Quinn, Michener’s aunt (“the Estate”). When the Husband found himself in need of $35,000 to make a December 14, 1989, settlement on the purchase of the Debtors’ present residence at 1417 Ux-bridge Way, North Wales, PA 19454 (“the Home”), by the entireties with the Wife, he admittedly improperly drew $15,000 of this sum from the Estate’s account without Mi-chener’s knowledge or permission. The Estate was admittedly one of two estates invaded for this purpose, although unlike the other estate, this Estate’s funds were never restored.

In addition, Michener claimed a right to recover $6,000 which the Husband earlier withdrew from the Estate account in a self-addressed check of March 10, 1989, which was pre-signed by Michener and the face of which included the notation “Repayment of loan.” Finally, Michener claimed a right to recover $465.32 transferred by the Husband to an account of his own in closing the Estate’s account on March 24,1993.

The Debtors’ defense of dischargeability of the $15,000 arose from the fact that, upon discovering that funds were missing from the Estate’s account, Michener sought reimbursement for his losses from the Fund. The Fund was established pursuant to Subchapter E, Pennsylvania Rules of Disciplinary Enforcement 501 through 531 as a resource for victims of dishonest attorneys in Pennsylvania, and endeavors to respond to meritorious claims by reimbursing clients for losses sustained by reason of attorney misconduct. See generally 1 STANDARD PA.PRAC.2d 627-33 (1995).

In connection with the claims in the Proceeding against the Debtors on account of the $15,000 in funds misappropriated for the Home purchase, the defense focuses on the terms of a written Subrogation Agreement and Assignment (“the Agreement”) executed by Michener in favor of the Fund a prerequisite for recovery of that sum. The Agreement, as quoted at page 661 infra, assigned “all” of the Estate’s claims against the Husband, to the Fund. It further stated that the Fund became a subro-gee to any outstanding claims that the Estate may have retained against the Husband. The Debtors argued that only the Fund, as opposed to Michener, retained any claims for the $15,000 or any other sums arising out of misappropriations from the Estate against the Husband, and hence Michener lacked standing to assert either the claim for $15,000 or any other claims against the Debtors. The Wife testified that she had no knowledge of the details of the Husband’s law practice nor any reason to believe that part of the funds used to purchase the Home were misappropriated until the charges against the Husband surfaced in 1993.

*657 The Husband testified that his subsequent criminal conviction and a disbarment, the latter of which was to continue until he paid certain unspecified restitution which apparently included the $15,000 misappropriation, had primarily resulted from subsequent and larger misappropriations. While he had no explanation for the $465.32 misappropriation, he testified, though admittedly with no written documentation or clear recollection of details to support him, that the $6,000 check represented a repayment of his personal advance for Michener to make a purchase for his baseball trading card business. The Debtors also pleaded, in a Counterclaim, that the $6,465.32 total was payable to the Husband for various services for the Estate, which he recited in some detail.

On his part, Michener denied that he ever made any personal loan from the Husband or made any agreement to pay him any compensation. Also admitted into evidence by him were four checks other than the $6,000 check written by the Husband, dated between 1986 and 1988, whereby the Husband had received a total of $6,600, which included notations indicating that they were included as payments for legal fees. He also produced eight checks totaling $37,000, dated between March and May 1989, which were designated as “partial distributions” from the Estate. Michener claimed that these funds, as opposed to any loans from the Husband, were used to finance his baseball trading card business.

On March 12, 1999, the Debtors filed a Motion to Dismiss the Proceeding, which we denied on April 13, 1999 in a decision reported as In re Brady, 1999 WL 219766 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.) (“Brady I ”). Therein, we considered their arguments that (1) Mi-chener rather than the Fund must be considered as the sole complainant; (2) Mi-chener had already received compensation for the $15,000 misappropriation from the Fund, foreclosing that claim; and (3) the merger aspect of res judicata or collateral estoppel barred any additional claims of misappropriation. Id. at *l-*3. We held that the status of the Fund as the claimant of the $15,000 could be cured by amendment of the Complaint. Id., at *2.- The merger argument was rejected because the nature of the Fund’s proceedings and its alleged prior “decision” were unclear. Id. at *2-*3.

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Bluebook (online)
234 B.R. 652, 42 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 469, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 699, 1999 WL 398752, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michener-v-brady-in-re-brady-paeb-1999.