Pearson v. First NH Mortgage Corp.

200 F.3d 30, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 34111, 1999 WL 1252883
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedDecember 29, 1999
Docket98-2207
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 200 F.3d 30 (Pearson v. First NH Mortgage Corp.) 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
Pearson v. First NH Mortgage Corp., 200 F.3d 30, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 34111, 1999 WL 1252883 (1st Cir. 1999).

Opinion

CYR, Senior Circuit Judge.

Chapter 7 debtor John E. Pearson seeks to set aside a bankruptcy court order which dismissed his motion for relief from a compromise settlement of all chapter 7 estate claims against First N.H. Bank (“First Bank”) following its affirmance by the district court on intermediate appeal. See Fed. R. Bankr.P. 9024. Pearson contends that the compromise settlement was the product of a fraud perpetrated upon the bankruptcy court by his former chapter 7 counsel, the chapter 7 trustee, and First Bank.

We vacate the district court judgment and remand to the bankruptcy court for further proceedings.

I

BACKGROUND

In January 1985, Pearson and the Tam-posi family (“the Tamposis”) formed Bradford Woods, Inc. (“BWI”), to develop and market condominiums in Merrimack, New Hampshire. Pearson and the Tamposis owned one-half interests in BWI, which obtained its construction financing from First N.H. Mortgage Corp. and First Bank. First Bank’s counsel, Wadleigh, Starr, Peters, Dunn & Chiesa (“Wadleigh Firm”), prepared the BWI loan documentation, including the personal guaranties provided to First Bank by Pearson and the Tamposis.

When the New Hampshire real estate market soured in 1989, First Bank declined to accommodate BWI’s requests to restructure the loan. After the Tamposis rejected Pearson’s proposal that each contribute more capital to keep BWI afloat, or that BWI file a chapter 11 petition, Pearson retained William Gannon, Esquire, a Wadleigh Firm partner, to commence a civil proceeding in New Hampshire Superi- or Court (No. 89-E-1231) for a declaratory judgment directing the Tamposis to submit the Pearson proposal to arbitration under the terms of their joint venture agreement.

First Bank called the BWI loan in November 1989. Although First Bank notified BWI, Pearson, and the Tamposis of the foreclosure sale in April 1990, the Tamposis, who were represented by the Wadleigh Firm, interposed no opposition. Instead, through the Wadleigh Firm and with First Bank’s cooperation, the Tampo-sis incorporated Spring Pond Development Corp. (“Spring Pond”), which proceeded to acquire the BWI condominium units at the foreclosure sale. First Bank provided the mortgage financing for the customers to whom Spring Pond resold the BWI condominium units. First Bank also assigned to the Tamposis the $498,595.81 liability Pearson had incurred with First Bank pursuant to his personal guaranty of the BWI construction loan made by First Bank.

The BWI condominium foreclosure sale was followed by a succession of lawsuits. First, in October 1990 Pearson brought a pro se action against First Bank, the Tam-posis, and Spring Pond in New Hampshire Superior Court (No. 90-E-1082), alleging that First Bank and the Tamposis had *33 utilized the BWI foreclosure action part of a conspiracy to deprive him of his 50% interest in BWI, in violation of the fiduciary duties the Tamposis owed BWI. In addition to demanding compensatory and punitive damages, Pearson sought to set aside both the BWI foreclosure sale and his personal guaranty of the First Bank loan to BWI.

Next, in December 1990 the Tamposis brought suit against Pearson in New Hampshire Superior Court (Nos. 90-E-1263 & 1264) to recover the $498,595.81 due under the personal loan guaranty given by Pearson to First Bank and later assigned to the Tamposis by First Bank. Following the objections interposed by the Tamposis to the Wadleigh Firm’s appearance as Pearson’s counsel, the Wadleigh Firm withdrew from these actions, citing “the involvement of [First Bank] in the Bradford Woods foreclosure” as posing “potential conflicts of interest.”

In April 1992, Pearson, represented by Attorney Gannon, filed for chapter 7 relief. Gannon submitted an application for appointment as chapter 7 counsel for Pearson, together with the required verified statement that Gannon had “no connections with the Debtor’s [ie., Pearson’s] creditors or any party in interest, their respective attorneys, and accountants.” See Fed. R. Bankr.P.2014(a). Although the chapter 7 schedules Gannon prepared for Pearson listed both First Bank and the Tamposis as creditors, no mention was made of any conflict-of-interest claim Pearson may have held against the Wadleigh Firm.

In September 1994, the chapter 7 trustee submitted an application for authorization to employ Attorney Gannon as special counsel for the Pearson chapter 7 estate, to litigate all estate claims other than those involving First Bank itself. In another verified statement submitted pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 2014(a) shortly thereafter, Gannon represented to the bankruptcy court: “In [my] opinion, there is no conflict of interest which prevents [me] from acting as Special Counsel to the Trustee ... since the Special Counsel is not being retained to represent the Trustee in connection with the claims asserted against Bedford (sic) Woods and First N.H. Banks, Inc. where [the Wadleigh Firm’s] representation of Spring Pond Development would create a conflict of interest.” Once the application had been approved by the bankruptcy court, Gannon proceeded to settle all chapter 7 estate claims against the Tamposis.

On October 12, 1995, after experiencing difficulty in retaining counsel to litigate the chapter 7 estate claims against First Bank, the chapter 7 trustee submitted an application to appoint Gannon as special counsel to the chapter 7 estate for that purpose as well. Although Gannon acknowledged that the Wadleigh Firm had incorporated Spring Pond, he represented to the bankruptcy court that the recent settlement with the Tamposis had “eliminate[d] any conflict of interest as between Pearson and the Tamposi Defendants.” Gannon further explained: “Since the Pearson-Tamposi conflict has been resolved and the Wadleigh Law Firm never represented [First Bank] in connection with any of the events referred to in the Damage Complaint or acquired any insight or knowledge from its representation of [First Bank] in other matters which would prejudice its former client in the State Court Suit, it believes that it can properly represent the Trustee in this Case.”

The application to appoint Gannon special counsel to the chapter 7 estate was approved by the bankruptcy court on the following day in an ex parte order. Shortly thereafter, First Bank objected to the Gannon appointment on conflict-of-interest grounds and Gannon in turn moved to vacate the ex parte order of appointment pending hearing.

Three days before the scheduled hearing on the chapter 7 trustee’s motion to appoint Gannon as special counsel, First Bank and the chapter 7 trustee arrived at *34 an agreement to compromise all chapter 7 estate claims against First Bank. At that point, Gannon and the chapter 7 trustee withdrew, as moot, the motion to appoint Gannon special counsel to prosecute all chapter 7 estate claims against First Bank.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
200 F.3d 30, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 34111, 1999 WL 1252883, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearson-v-first-nh-mortgage-corp-ca1-1999.