Priddy v. Eley (In re Rossmiller)

181 B.R. 988, 12 Colo. Bankr. Ct. Rep. 130, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6925
CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedMay 18, 1995
DocketNo. 93-K-2574
StatusPublished

This text of 181 B.R. 988 (Priddy v. Eley (In re Rossmiller)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Priddy v. Eley (In re Rossmiller), 181 B.R. 988, 12 Colo. Bankr. Ct. Rep. 130, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6925 (D. Colo. 1995).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

KANE, Senior District Judge.

This matter is before me for the second time on appeal. The bankruptcy court originally imposed sanctions against Gerald Priddy pursuant to Fed.R.Bankr.P. 9011 in May 1992. Priddy appealed. I upheld the bankruptcy court’s finding of Priddy’s bad faith and liability. Nevertheless, I reversed and remanded because the bankruptcy court did not expressly consider all the factors enumerated in White v. General Motors Corp., 908 F.2d 675 (10th Cir.1990) (“White I”), Priddy v. First National Bank of Arvada (In re Rossmiller), 148 B.R. 326 (D.Colo.1992).

To comply with the mandate, the bankruptcy court held another hearing regarding the appropriateness of sanctions and then a hearing focusing on possible sanctions against his attorney, Richard Gleason. Thereafter, the bankruptcy court exonerated Gleason and went through the White I factors step by step finding Priddy’s bad faith in severe violation of Rule 9011. Here, Priddy appeals the bankruptcy court’s seven-page decision with three separate briefs spanning fifty pages.

I affirm the bankruptcy court. Priddy makes numerous legal arguments for reversal. These arguments hang together by a slender thread: Priddy’s testimony. The bankruptcy judge, however, found Priddy equivocated or demonstrated bad faith in his testimony. In my first decision I affirmed this finding. Upon remand, the bankruptcy judge effectively followed the first decision mandating consideration of all the White I factors. Accordingly, I affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

In summary, Priddy was sanctioned for charging an undisclosed buyer’s premium at the auction he ran selling the debtor, Ross-miller’s, property. The parties previously agreed to compensate Priddy with 20% of the gross proceeds. At the sale he charged a 10% premium on each sale, pocketed the premium and then applied to the court for his 20% commission of the remaining proceeds. The bankruptcy judge sanctioned Priddy for signing his affidavit and the court-approved stipulation specifying he would receive a 20% commission as compensation and mentioning nothing about an additional buyer’s premium.

This dispute originates in Richard Ross-miller’s 1989 Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition. A number of parties, including the First National Bank of Arvada (“Bank”) and Priddy, claimed an interest in the considerable quantity of personal property Rossmiller possessed at the time he filed his petition. The trustee filed an adversary action to resolve the disputed claims and the parties agreed to settle by stipulation in May 1991. The stipulation signed by the parties and approved by the court compensated Priddy with 20% of the “gross proceeds” of the sale and for reasonable costs in collecting the property and bringing it from San Diego to Denver. (R. Appeal, Yol. 1, Doc. 144.) The Bank claimed the agreed 20% commission was higher than customary rates for auctioneers in consideration for Priddy releasing his disputed claims. (R. Appeal, Vol. 1, Doc. 180 at 4.) The court order noted, “all such fees and expenses are subject to prior court approval.” (Id.) Priddy also filed a signed affidavit [990]*990allotting him 20% of the “total amount” of the sale of the property and payment of necessary costs. (R. Appeal, Vol. 1, Doe. 141.)

In its first decision, the bankruptcy court established the following facts regarding the auction. Priddy held the auction in September where signs advised buyers they would be charged a 10% buyer’s premium. (R. Appeal, Vol. 1, Doc. 180 at 3-6.) In December Priddy applied to the court for fees and expenses asking for 20%, or $24,584.80 of the $122,924.00 in proceeds. (Id.) Priddy acknowledged a dispute over the buyer’s premium but claimed it was paid directly to him and amounted to money that “would not otherwise have been received by any party or person interested in the Debtor’s estate.” (Id.)

The court concluded Priddy was not authorized to take the premium and but took it before he disclosed it to the court or filed his fee application. (Id.) Further, it found neither the other creditors nor the court were aware of the premium before the auction. (Id. at 10-11.) Ultimately the court found the creditors’ alleged awareness of the premium inconsequential because Priddy’s duty to disclose his total compensation was owed to the court. (Id.) Thus, Priddy “misrepresented in a direct and unequivocal way the compensation he actually intended to receive.” (Id.)

The bankruptcy court concluded Priddy was not credible, a determination I found specifically entrusted to the bankruptcy judge which was supported by sufficient evidence. Priddy, 148 B.R. at 329-30. I found Priddy first testified in writing he conducted approximately thirty sales on behalf of the bankruptcy court in the 1987-1992 time period. Id. He later minimized his involvement claiming to have been involved in only four bankruptcy sales with the other twenty-six conducted under the auspices of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Id. Priddy’s second version only came out after he vehemently objected to the court ordering him to produce records substantiating his claimed involvement. Id. I found Priddy suggested his buyer’s premium was a “tried and true practice” so well-known to the bankruptcy court that he should be allowed to keep the premium this time as he allegedly had in the past. Id. This argument, I concluded, “cut both ways” supporting the court’s conclusion that Priddy was familiar with the bankruptcy court’s practice and procedure and “thus supports the finding of bad faith.” Id. I determined Priddy’s later equivocation trying to minimize his bankruptcy involvement “only buttresses the conclusion.” Id.

I upheld the bankruptcy court’s finding of Priddy’s bad faith violation of the Rule 9011 objective standard. Priddy, 148 B.R. at 329. I noted the bankruptcy judge canvassed case law covering 11 U.S.C. § 327 governing the employment of professionals and concluded it was appropriate to sanction a professional who did not fully disclose conflicts of interest. Id. I also noted since Priddy was not hired pursuant to § 327 and thus § 327 was not strictly applicable, Rule 9011 applied. Id. I upheld both the bankruptcy court’s legal reasoning and its finding of Priddy’s bad faith. Id. at 330.

On remand the bankruptcy court made the foEowing additional findings: Priddy’s counsel did not know untE November 1991 of Priddy’s intention to charge the buyer’s premium in addition to the 20 percent commission. (R. Appeal, Vol. 1, Doc. 226 at 4.) Gleason sent Priddy a letter in August advising him that his 20% commission was subject to court approval. (Id.) Despite his fiduciary duty to the estate, Priddy kept the proceeds of the auction in a non-interest bearing account untE at least July 29,1993. (Id. at 4 and 6.) To the court, Priddy Ested his net worth at $1.5 milEon.

Priddy’s first “secret” trip to retrieve Rossmiller’s property was unauthorized because he knew Rossmiller was in bankruptcy but did not seek authorization from the court. (Id.

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181 B.R. 988, 12 Colo. Bankr. Ct. Rep. 130, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6925, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/priddy-v-eley-in-re-rossmiller-cod-1995.