Pu v. Grubin

484 B.R. 574, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 181225
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 19, 2012
DocketNo. 10-CV-4815 (KMK)
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 484 B.R. 574 (Pu v. Grubin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District 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
Pu v. Grubin, 484 B.R. 574, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 181225 (S.D.N.Y. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

KENNETH M. KARAS, District Judge.

In the instant notice of appeal (“the Notice”), Appellant challenges an order of the bankruptcy court, which reduced his asserted secured claim for $489,448.81 against the debtors’ joint estate to an unsecured claim for $84,454.77. The Court is impressed by Appellant’s gumption, but not by his arguments and, for the reasons stated herein, affirms the order of the bankruptcy court.

I. Background

The bankruptcy court provided a detailed summary of the factual and procedural history of this dispute in the challenged order below. See Food Mgmt. Grp. v. Pu (In re Food Mgmt. Grp., LLC), Nos. 04-22880, 04-22890, 04-22891, 04-22892, 04-20312, 06-08470A, 2008 WL 2788738 (Bankr.S.D.N.Y. July 16, 2008). As will be discussed at greater length, this Court must accept the bankruptcy court’s factual findings, unless they are clearly erroneous. The Court will therefore presume familiarity with the underlying circumstances and provide merely a cursory review of the facts relevant for deciding this appeal.

Over the course of several years, Anas-tasio Gianopoulos (“Tom”) and Constantine Gianopoulos (“Gus”) owned multiple companies in the Westchester area. See id. at *1. Among Tom’s and Gus’s many companies were several shops and at least one bakery that were used to sell donuts pursuant to franchise agreements with Dun-kin’ Donuts and its corporate partners (“Dunkin’ Donuts”).1 See id. Following an unrelated dispute, Dunkin’ Donuts, Tom, Gus, and Tom’s and Gus’s companies entered into a settlement agreement in 2002, according to which the Dunkin’ Donuts franchise agreements held by Tom’s and Gus’ companies were to be transferred to new corporate entities—KMA I, II, III, and the Bronx Donut Bakery, all but one of the debtors herein—to be owned and controlled by Tom and or Gus. See id. Apparently, however, only some Dunkin’ Donuts franchise agreements were transferred to the new entities, and Tom’s and Gus’s various companies retained assets, including several Dunkin’ Donuts franchises.

In 2003, Questech Financial (“Ques-tech”) brought actions in New York state court against Tom, Gus, several other individuals, and several of Tom’s and Gus’s companies, seeking to foreclose “upon substantially all of the assets of those companies based on a default under seventeen notes and security agreements that encumbered” those assets. Id. Appellant, an attorney, represented the defendants in that action (“the state Questech litigation”). Through Appellant, the defendants represented to Questech that they no longer possessed the collateral, and Tom separately represented that he had “found” the [579]*579“abandoned” collateral and was using it to operate donut shops. See id. Appellant subsequently informed Questeeh that Tom operated the shops through a company called Food Management Group. 'See id.

Questeeh then brought suit against FMG in federal district court (“the federal Questeeh litigation”). In that proceeding, Appellant and Tom again claimed that Tom had found the abandoned assets, and that FMG held the franchise agreements from Dunkin’ Donuts. See id. at *2. “This assertion was patently false.... [I]t was the KMA entities and the Bronx Donut Bakery that held the franchise agreements and other collateral and were operating the donut shops using the” encumbered collateral that Questeeh sought to recover. Id. Magistrate Judge Mark D. Fox, who was overseeing the federal Questeeh litigation, sanctioned Tom and Appellant for affirmatively misleading Questeeh and the court in a bad-faith attempt to delay Ques-tech’s recovery. The district judge in the federal Questeeh litigation was the Honorable Colleen M. McMahon. She affirmed Magistrate Judge Fox’s finding of Appellant’s misconduct but vacated and remanded the amount of sanctions. See id. at *12 n. 18. In a subsequent disciplinary hearing in federal court, Appellant entered into a stipulation with the Grievance Committee of this district, in which stipulation he admitted to violating the Disciplinary Rules. See id. at *12. “Pursuant to the stipulation [Appellant] was suspended from the practice of law in the Southern District of New York for a period of six months. [He] was also suspended from the practice of law in the New York State courts for one year as a result of his misconduct.” Id. at *12.

To prevent further abuse and manipulation, Judge McMahon appointed a receiver over the encumbered collateral. See id. at *2. Almost immediately thereafter, on June 1 and 2, 2004, the KMA companies and FMG filed voluntary petitions for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. See id. Judge Hardin, to whom the bankruptcy case was originally assigned, ordered the bankruptcy petitions “procedurally consolidated for the purposes of joint administration.” Id. In bankruptcy, the debtors initially sought to settle the controversy with Questeeh, but during the negotiations it became clear that the subset of Tom’s and Gus’s companies that had possessed Dunkin’ Donuts franchise agreements had not transferred all of their assets and liabilities to the KMA companies. See id. To facilitate settlement, Questeeh and that subset of companies “entered into a stipulation whereby all of the latter’s assets and liabilities ... were transferred to the debtors’ estate.” Id. at *8. An examiner was appointed in 2004, and Appellee, the bankruptcy trustee, was appointed in 2005, “following revelations of a continuing series of misconduct by Tom as owner and principal of the debtors.” Id. at *2.

Appellant filed a proof of claim with each of the debtors’ estates, seeking to recover $489,448.81 in legal fees. See id. at *1. He subsequently filed an amended proof of claim, asserting that the majority of his claim was secured pursuant to an agreement he had entered into with FMG through Tom and Gus. See id. at *3. In her capacity as trustee, Appellee filed a separate adversarial proceeding against Appellant to recover what she believed to be fraudulent transfers and/or impermissible preferences. See id. at *1. She later filed objections to Appellant’s proof of claim in the bankruptcy case proper, denying his claim entirely and asserting that his claim, to the extent it was allowable, was only unsecured. See id. at *1 n. 1, *3. The bankruptcy court consolidated Appellee’s attacks on Appellant’s claim into a single adversarial proceeding, received multiple rounds of briefing, and heard arguments [580]*580on the various issues. See id. at *1 n. I.2 By an order dated July 16, 2008, the bankruptcy court “reduced” Appellant’s claim to an unsecured claim for $84,454.77. See id. at *18.

Appellant filed a motion for reargument in the main bankruptcy case, challenging Judge Hardin’s order. See Pu v. Grubin {In re Food Mgmt. Grp., LLC), 428 B.R. 576, 577 (S.D.N.Y.2009). Appellant simultaneously sought review of Judge Hardin’s order before this Court by filing his first notice of appeal. See id. This Court held that it lacked jurisdiction, pending the resolution of Appellant’s motion for reargument. See id. Judge Robert D. Drain, who assumed responsibility for the case, denied the reconsideration motion, and Appellant filed the instant Notice, seeking this Court’s review of Judge Hardin’s order.

II. Discussion

A. Jurisdiction

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Bluebook (online)
484 B.R. 574, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 181225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pu-v-grubin-nysd-2012.