Nickless v. Golub (In Re Worcester Quality Foods, Inc.)

152 B.R. 394
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedMarch 29, 1993
Docket19-10745
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 152 B.R. 394 (Nickless v. Golub (In Re Worcester Quality Foods, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nickless v. Golub (In Re Worcester Quality Foods, Inc.), 152 B.R. 394 (Mass. 1993).

Opinion

OPINION

JAMES F. QUEENAN, Jr., Chief Judge.

This is a complaint brought by the chapter 7 trustee, David M. Nickless (the “Trustee”), against controlling shareholders, directors and officers of Worcester Quality Foods, Inc. (the “Debtor”). Relatives and affiliates are also joined as defendants. The Trustee charges the defendants with various forms of corporate looting. The charges are well founded. Trial has revealed a sorry saga of greed and incompetence. The result is destruction of a company, loss of many jobs and nonpayment of much debt.

I. GENERAL BACKGROUND

Sheldon Golub and Howard Golub (the “Golubs”) are brothers who operated a wholesale plumbing supply business in New York City for a number of years. After selling the business in 1982, they invested in real estate and engaged in the export and import of plumbing supplies. In the spring of 1988, the Golubs learned that the Debtor was for sale through M.R. Eason & Company, Ltd., a business broker. The Debtor was a distributor to a number of fast food chains located throughout New *397 England. Among its many customers were numerous franchised locations of Wendy’s, Burger King, and Kentucky Fried Chicken. The Golubs had no experience whatsoever in this type of business. They nevertheless pursued the purchase.

The Debtor’s outstanding voting shares then consisted of 100 shares of voting common stock. F.H. Food Service Corporation (“Farm House”) owned eighty of these shares. Alan Fox and Bruce Fox owned ten voting shares each. In late 1988, the Debtor issued 803,625 shares of nonvoting common stock to Bernard Stone (“Stone”), the Debtor’s founder and former president. These shares had their origin in a deferred compensation obligation incurred by the Debtor several years before in connection with purchase of the Debtor by Farm House. The Debtor had defaulted under Stone’s deferred compensation agreement. The 803,625 shares issued to Stone were in consideration of discharge of the Debtor’s deferred compensation obligation to him.

Negotiations led to the execution on November 4, 1988 of a stock purchase agreement among Golub Enterprises, Inc. (“Enterprises”), Farm House, Alan Fox and Richard Fox. The Fox family had been involved with Stone in the ownership and management of the Debtor for many years. The Golubs owned all the stock of Enterprises. They organized it for the express and sole purpose of taking title to the Debt- or’s stock. The purchase price under the November 4th agreement was $500,000 in cash, with $400,000 to be paid to Farm House and $100,000 to the two Foxes. The agreement closed on January 12,1989. Enterprises paid the cash price to the sellers then or shortly thereafter.

The Golubs needed Stone’s help in the venture. At the January 12th closing they caused two agreements to be entered into with Stone. Under one, Enterprises purchased Stone’s 803,625 nonvoting shares for $8,036.25. Under the other, the Debtor obtained the right to Stone’s services through December 31, 1990 at an annual “salary” of $150,000. Stone was engaged as a “management consultant” to “participate in giving advice to and for the general and active management of the business.” In the same agreement the Debtor committed itself to pay Stone $795,589 in consideration of Stone’s agreement not to compete with the Debtor for a period of three years. This amount, when added to the $8,036.25 stock price, represented the amount which the Debtor had previously owed Stone under the ownership of Farm House. The $795,589 was payable in twenty monthly installments of $10,000 each commencing April 30, 1989 and a lump sum payment of $595,589 due on December 31, 1990. The stock which Stone sold under the other agreement was to be held in escrow until all these payments were made.

In late 1990, the Debtor, Enterprises and Stone entered into an agreement dated “as of” January 12,1989. Under it the consulting portion of their original agreement remained an agreement between the Debtor and Stone, but the noncompetition portion became an agreement between Enterprises and Stone. By then Enterprises had paid Stone $234,000. At some time it became the intention of the parties that Enterprises be the obligor and beneficiary of Stone’s noncompetition agreement. The 1990 amendment memorialized that intention. One can only speculate on the purpose of these machinations.

Immediately after the purchase, the officers and directors of the Debtor were as follows:

President Michael Donovan
Vice President William Ballou
Treasurer Sheldon Golub
Clerk Howard Golub
Directors Michael Donovan
William Ballou
Sheldon Golub
Howard Golub
Mitchell Golub

Mitchell Golub is the son of Sheldon Go-lub. He worked for the Debtor in a minor capacity. In June of 1989, Stone took Donovan’s place as president and Mitchell Go-lub’s place as director.

The Debtor had been losing money prior to the sale. Its losses continued thereafter. It lost $527,351 in its fiscal year ending April 1, 1989 and $886,621 in its fiscal year ending March 31, 1990. The Golubs’ *398 lack of knowledge of the business deprived them of any ability to turn the Debtor’s losses into profits. And they had no business plan, only an unrealistic hope of reducing expenses while at the same time enriching themselves.

The Debtor is incorporated under the laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. It operated from two leased locations in Worcester. Its main warehouse and refrigeration plant were on Millbury Street. It had offices and additional warehousing space on Southbridge Street. Operating from two warehouse locations involved inefficiencies. The Golubs had the vague idea of solving this problem by building or purchasing a new plant in which all operations would be consolidated. After the purchase they looked unsuccessfully for locations in Rhode Island and Connecticut. Their relocation plan was more than vague. It did not take into account the likely costs of such a move in disruption to operations and loss of personnel. Nor did they realize that the Debtor’s continuing losses left no time for such a grandiose scheme.

The Golubs also had faint hopes of reducing labor expenses through negotiating new work practices and other concessions with the Debtor’s union, a local of the Teamsters. That of course is easier planned than accomplished. The company’s collective bargaining was renewed in the summer of 1989 with no concession by the union. Indeed, it carried over wage increases from the previous contract. The Golubs claim to have achieved some savings thereafter from new work practices. They did not.

As set forth above, the Debtor’s fortunes declined rather rapidly under the Golubs’ ownership. Neither the 1989 nor 1990 loss takes into account a number of questionable receivables, including one for $1.3 million whose collectability is doubtful as the result of the customer’s bankruptcy. The Debtor’s decline continued during 1990 to a point where it was unable to pay its debts as they matured.

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Bluebook (online)
152 B.R. 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nickless-v-golub-in-re-worcester-quality-foods-inc-mab-1993.