Myerson & Kuhn v. Brunswick Associates Ltd. Partnership (In Re Myerson & Kuhn)

121 B.R. 145
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 28, 1990
Docket17-12583
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 121 B.R. 145 (Myerson & Kuhn v. Brunswick Associates Ltd. Partnership (In Re Myerson & Kuhn)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Myerson & Kuhn v. Brunswick Associates Ltd. Partnership (In Re Myerson & Kuhn), 121 B.R. 145 (N.Y. 1990).

Opinion

RESTATED FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

PRUDENCE B. ABRAM, Bankruptcy Judge.

Pursuant to the evidence adduced at the 16 hearings held before this Court on the motion of plaintiff Myerson & Kuhn (“M & K”) for a temporary restraining order and a preliminary injunction, 1 and on the evidence adduced at the two hearings on the January 3, 1990 motion of Bowie K. Kuhn (“Kuhn”) to intervene as a party plaintiff in this adversary proceeding, 2 and on the evidence adduced in the related adversary proceeding, No. 90-6039A (the “Partner Adversary Proceeding”), 3 and the findings of fact and conclusions of law set forth by this Court in its temporary restraining order, as it has been extended and modified (the “TRO”) 4 and on all of the pleadings and proceedings had herein, the Court makes the following Restated Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, to clarify the reasons for the Court’s entry of the TRO, and, as requested by Judge Leval in his remand Order of July 24, 1990, the reasons for the subsequent extensions and modifications of the TRO on and after February 13, 1990, which excluded Kuhn, among other Partners.

The Court finds that:

*148 Findings of Fact

1. M & K is the debtor and debtor-in-possession (“Debtor”) in this Chapter 11 case which was filed on December 27, 1989 (the “Petition Date”). Prior to the Petition Date the Debtor had been engaged in business as a law firm with offices in, among other places, New York, New York; Washington, D.C.; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Dallas, Texas; and Los Angeles, California. At one time Debtor had in excess of fifty equity and non-equity (“Contract”) partners, including professional corporations (collectively, the “Partners”). By the time of the Petition Date, all but one of the Partners had withdrawn from M & K. Frank Ciaccio was the sole remaining partner and he had been designated the responsibility of winding-up M & K’s affairs. Among the Partner resignations of major significance was the withdrawal in June 1989 of Leon Marcus (“Marcus”). Marcus, whose area of specialty is bankruptcy, received an indemnity agreement with respect to M & K obligations at the time of his withdrawal. Shortly after he left M & K and in July and August several members of the M & K bankruptcy group left to join Marcus at a new firm.

2. A dispute exists between Marcus and M & K about the effect of the agreement by which the firm of Booth Marcus & Pierce became part of M & K and about the effect of the indemnity agreement given at the time of his withdrawal from M & K. These disputes affect the ultimate exposure that Marcus and other Partners associated with him would have for the claims of M & K creditors.

3. The Contract Partners have asserted that they should have no liability for M & K debts.

4. In the Spring of 1989 Shearson Lehman Hutton Inc. (“Shearson”), a major client of M & K, alleged that M & K had deliberately overbilled it in a significant dollar amount through falsified time records. The partner in charge of the Shearson account was Harvey D. Meyerson (“Meyerson”), one of two name partners of M & K. In order to resolve this situation, a settlement was reached under which M & K executed a note in favor of Shearson in the amount of $837,500. Shearson received the personal guarantees of 17 M & K partners, including Kuhn, with respect to the note. By December 6, 1989, when M & K defaulted on the Shearson note, the principal due had been reduced to approximately $490,000. (A.P.Document 22A) The Shear-son incident, along with large withdrawals from M & K made by Meyerson, fostered an atmosphere of distrust among the Partners of M & K before the collapse of the firm; these matters are now one of the subjects of the intra-Partner claims which the TROs seek to avoid having litigated at this time as inimicable to the atmosphere of cooperation among the Partners necessary for a consensual plan under which Partner contributions would be made available to pay M & K creditor claims.

5. Subsequent to the initial hearings on the TRO, an additional creditor, the United Food & Commercial Workers International Union, AFL-CIO & CLC (“UFCW”), appeared asserting a claim of false billing. This creditor first became aware of the false billing through contacts made by the United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York who was investigating M & K and/or one or more of its Partners. The UFCW claim has been allowed for $550,000 for the purposes of voting on the pending plan.

6. There are at least 250 creditors of the Debtor. The dollar amount of the claims against the Debtor has been of concern from the outset of the TRO hearings in order to make some assessment of the amount of the total deficiency of firm assets to meet firm liabilities. The size of the shortfall is relevant to the amount of the contributions required from Partners. 5 At the January 22, 1990 hearing counsel for the Debtor stated that the then estimate was $3.4 million, including a claim of $750,000 for the deductible with respect to *149 the Brunswick malpractice claim. 6 By the March 22 hearing that estimate had been revised upwards to $5.5 million. There still is not a final claims number. In bankruptcy cases, actual claims typically exceed early estimates for a number of reasons, including the fact that the case results in breach of contract claims not previously recorded in the debtor’s books and records.

7. Although Kuhn has repeatedly asserted that this court has not conducted adequate factual hearings prior to issuing the TROs, Kuhn’s only attempt at presenting evidence other than through cross-examination consisted of seeking to call as a witness the attorney for Marine Midland Bank, which this court rejected as improper. In the final analysis, Kuhn’s complaints about the factual record go to the weight this court should give to the evidence and not to the actual absence of an adequate factual record. This court did decline to spend time going through transfers Kuhn’s counsel asserted were made by Marcus because all of the transfers at issue were made a year or more before the Petition Date; Marcus did not deny that transfers had been made although he challenged Kuhn’s characterization of them; and the transfers were not relevant in this court’s view to the issuance of the TRO except insofar as they underscore the complexities that will confront creditors in attempting to recover from Partners if a plan predicated on Partner contributions is not successful.

8. The Debtor commenced this adversary proceeding on the Petition Date against certain of its creditors, as set forth in the caption, who had commenced or threatened to commence litigation against, or to seize or attach assets of, the Partners. On December 28, 1989 the Court issued an Order which, among other things, restrained and enjoined the named creditors from commencing, maintaining or prosecuting litigation against the Partners. The TRO has been modified and continued thereafter.

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121 B.R. 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myerson-kuhn-v-brunswick-associates-ltd-partnership-in-re-myerson-nysb-1990.