Ng v. Adler (In re Adler)

494 B.R. 43, 2013 Bankr. LEXIS 2785
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJuly 11, 2013
DocketCase No. 8-04-84807-reg; Adv. Pro. No. 05-8559-reg
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 494 B.R. 43 (Ng v. Adler (In re Adler)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ng v. Adler (In re Adler), 494 B.R. 43, 2013 Bankr. LEXIS 2785 (N.Y. 2013).

Opinion

DECISION AFTER TRIAL

The Honorable Robert E. Grossman, United States Bankruptcy Judge

Before the Court is the issue of whether the Plaintiffs, Ms. Lisa Ng (“Ms. Ng”) and a Hong Kong corporation of which she was the principal, Charming Trading Company (“Charming Trading”), have proven by a preponderance of the evidence four objections to discharge against Defendant Stewart Adler (the “Debtor” or “Defendant”), the principal and alter ego of five Corporations: J.U.N.K. Jeanswear Corporation (“J.U.N.K.”), Just Jeanswear Corporation (“Just I”), Just Jeanswear Corporation II (“Just II”), Just Jeanswear Corporation III (“Just III”) and Seruchi Jeanswear Corporation (“Seruchi”) (individually, referred to as a “Corporation,” and collectively as the “Corporations”). This Court previously issued a ruling (the “Piercing Ruling”) piercing the Corporations’ veils. In accordance with New York’s veilpierc-ing doctrine, the Piercing Ruling found the Corporations to be the Debtor’s alter egos [53]*53and the Debtor liable for their debts. This Decision after Trial (the “Instant Decision”) concerns the application of §§ 727(a)(2)(A), (a)(3), (a)(4)(A), and (a)(5)1 of the Bankruptcy Code (the “Code”)2 and the consequences of the Court’s earlier determination that the Corporations are, and in fact always were, the Debtor’s alter egos.

The first consequence of the Piercing Ruling arises under § 362(a)(1). As the Debtor and the alter ego Corporations were at all relevant times one and the same entity, the automatic stay in § 362(a)(1) foreclosed any judicial action against the Debtor and the Corporations alike upon the Debtor’s filing of his individual bankruptcy petition on July 28, 2004. Consequently, to the extent any prepetition judicial action against the Corporations continued into the post-petition period, that proceeding violated § 362(a)(1) and was void as a matter of law. Here, since the decision of the New York Supreme Court (the “State Court Decision”) finding the Corporations’ liable to the Plaintiffs for $2,025,849.97 was issued post-petition, it is such a nullity. Its findings regarding the Corporations liability therefore lack any legal effect.

Second, the Corporations’ status as the Debtor’s alter egos is part of this Court’s § 727 analysis because, as a result of the alter ego finding, the Debtor’s failure to disclose information regarding the assets and transactions of the Corporations was simultaneously a failure to disclose the assets and transactions of the Debtor. By definition, an alter ego corporation possesses no independent volition. Consequently, since the Debtor’s Corporations were found to have been such prepetition alter egos, the Debtor always remained inseparable from those five corporate fictions. The actions and property of the Corporations were thus the actions and property of the Debtor, and it was incumbent upon the Debtor to disclose details regarding the Corporations’ conduct, assets, and records in his individual bankruptcy case. When he failed to do this and instead concealed the Corporations’ assets, the Debtor improperly “concealed” his own assets, in violation of § 727(a)(2)(A). When the Debtor failed to justify the Corporations’ failure to preserve any “recorded information,” the Debtor contravened § 727(a)(3) by making it impossible to ascertain his own business transactions. When the Debtor could not explain how the Corporations’ $2.2 million in factor financing had been dissipated, the Debtor failed to explain the loss of assets sufficient to meet his liabilities under § 727(a)(5). Finally, when he omitted his income and the Corporations’ assets and liabilities from the petitions and schedules filed with this Court, the Debtor gave false oaths regarding “property of the debtor,” running afoul of § 727(a)(4)(A).

Along with these Corporation-related transgressions, the Debtor also misrepresented his personal income and mischarac-terized his personal assets and liabilities throughout this proceeding. Even in the absence of the Piercing Ruling, these personal misdeeds violated his statutory obligations as an individual to accurately describe his business transactions and true financial condition. Were he not his Corporations’ alter ego, the Debtor’s action in this bankruptcy would have still violated [54]*54§ 727(a) and rendered hi m ineligible for a discharge.3

In sum, as a result of two distinct failures by this Debtor — the first, to account for the property and actions of each alter ego Corporation, and the second, to fully disclose his individual assets and material business activities — this Court will deny him a discharge pursuant to §§ 727(a)(2)(A), (a)(3), (a)(4)(A), and (a)(5). FACTS

Prior to filing, the Debtor “was the sole officer, director, and shareholder” of the five Corporations, all of which “were engaged in the business of importing and selling wholesale jeans and other garments into the United States.” Ng v. Adler (In re Adler), 467 B.R. 279, 282 (Bankr.E.D.N.Y.2012); Tr. 9/20/10 at 59:13-25, 1, ECF No. 59, Adv. Pro. No. 05-8559; Tr. 9/22/10 at 82:5-9, ECF No. 63, Adv. Pro. No. 05-8559. Through the Corporations, the Debtor worked with the Plaintiffs, as the Corporations’ agent, to import garments from Hong Kong to the United States. In re Adler, 467 B.R. at 282-83; Tr. 9/20/10 at 51:22-24, 169:7-8, 172:17-19; Pls.’ Ex. 6. Eventually this relationship changed, and the Plaintiffs “used their own credit to purchase merchandise and pay shipping costs” on behalf of a Corporation. In re Adler, 467 B.R. at 283; Pls.’ Ex. 7; Tr. 9/20/10 at 174:25-175:1; Tr. 9/21/10 at 178:11-16, ECF No. 61, Adv. Pro. No. 05-8559; Tr. 11/17/10 at 69:21-25, 70:9-10, 101:12-16, ECF No. 63, Case No. 8-04-84807; Tr. 12/14/10 at 15:17-18, 30:16-17, 21-24, ECF No. 68, Adv. Pro. No. 05-8559.

The Debtor financed the Corporations’ operations by means of factor financing, such that the Corporations’ manufacturers were to be paid directly by a Corporation or by the factor to which a Corporation had sold its accounts receivable. Tr. 9/20/10 at 50:10-13, 21-23, 164:6-16, 186:22-24; Tr. 9/22/10 at 36:19-25, 51:22-24; Tr. 11/16/10 at 51:22-25, ECF No. 61, Case No. 8-04-84807. Over time, from the sales of accounts receivable, the Corporations were paid approximately $3.3 million by the factors. Tr. 11/16/10 at 20:5-7; Pis.’ Exs. 43-50; Tr. 9/21/10 at 137:22-25; Tr. 9/22/10 at 48:2-6. After the Plaintiffs were paid $1.1 million, $2.2 million remained; this sum was sufficient to satisfy the Plaintiffs outstanding invoices. Tr. 9/21/10 at 77:12-17, 138:14-19. The Corporations, however, did not pay the Plaintiffs in full for the merchandise purchased on their behalf. In re Adler, 467 B.R. at 283; Tr. 9/20/10 at 178:13-16; Tr. 9/21/10 at 6:2, 26:22-24, 30:24-25, 32:16; Tr. 11/17/10 at 35:4-14. As a result, the Plaintiffs defaulted on their obligations to the Hong Kong manufacturers and were sued in Hong Kong’s courts. In re Adler, 467 B.R. at 283; Pls.’ Ex. 27; Tr. 12/14/10 at 66:22-24; Tr. 2/3/11 at 96:21-24, 116:13-15, ECF No. 71, Adv. Pro. No. 05-08559. Sometime afterward, Ms. Ng fled to the United States.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

I. Proceedings in United States Bankruptcy Court

On July 28, 2004, the Debtor filed a voluntary Chapter 7 petition (the “Petition”), identifying his debts as business in nature. Dr.’s ch. 7 Pet., July 28, 2004, ECF No. 1, Case No. 8-04-84807. A notice of discovery of assets was filed by the chapter 7 trustee, and a claims bar date was set for January 16, 2009.

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Bluebook (online)
494 B.R. 43, 2013 Bankr. LEXIS 2785, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ng-v-adler-in-re-adler-nyeb-2013.