Ramil v. Keller

726 P.2d 254, 68 Haw. 608, 1986 Haw. LEXIS 110
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 26, 1986
DocketNO. 10790; CIVIL NO. 84-1117
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 726 P.2d 254 (Ramil v. Keller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ramil v. Keller, 726 P.2d 254, 68 Haw. 608, 1986 Haw. LEXIS 110 (haw 1986).

Opinion

[610]*610OPINION OF THE COURT BY

NAKAMURA, J.

The ultimate question in this appeal is whether the Circuit Court of the First Circuit abused its discretionary powers when it imposed litigation-ending sanctions for noncompliance with an order to render an accounting and to deposit funds and assets. Defendants-appellants argue the entry of judgments against them breached due process as well as their privilege against self-incrimination; they further maintain the circuit court’s findings of fact are unsupported by evidence and the court erred in ordering an accounting when no showing of irreparable injury had been made. Concluding from a careful review of the voluminous record that these contentions lack merit and there was no abuse of discretion, we affirm the award of judgments to the plaintiff-appellee, the Insurance Commissioner of the State of Hawaii.

I.

The defendants-appellants are Robert J. Keller (Keller), two other [611]*611members of his family. United Independent Insurance Agencies (UII A), South Park Land and Livestock Company, Inc. (SPLL), and Computer Systems Group, Inc. (CSG), corporations controlled by Keller. Until the Insurance Commissioner was appointed to act as its receiver by the Circuit Court of the First Circuit in related proceedings, Keller also controlled Financial Security Insurance Company, Ltd. (FSIC), a Hawaii corporation.

During the summer of 1984, the Insurance Commissioner’s office was deluged with complaints from policyholders and others that FSIC was not paying claims and committing other questionable practices. The commissioner therefore engaged a certified examiner of insurance companies to conduct an investigation. The examiner uncovered evidence that FSIC was not paying claims in timely fashion, Keller and several corporations under Keller’s control had not complied with earlier agreements with the commissioner to transfer assets to FSIC, and Keller, members of his family, and other associates had misappropriated and misapplied funds belonging to FSIC.

Invoking a power granted by Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) § 431-653, the Insurance Commissioner instituted proceedings in the Circuit Court of the First Circuit to have himself named as the company’s receiver. The circuit court initially appointed him temporary receiver and directed him to proceed with efforts to rehabilitate the insurance company. However, the commissioner soon learned FSIC was in deeper financial trouble than first thought and sought court permission to liquidate rather than rehabilitate the ailing insurance company.1 Orders [612]*612appointing him receiver and declaring that the company was insolvent at the inception of proceedings were entered by the circuit court during the first week of October.

The Insurance Commissioner instituted the instant suit against Keller, two other members of his family, and several corporate entities controlled by him on October 12, 1984, averring, inter alia, that the defendants had misappropriated and misapplied FSIC’s funds and assets “in fraud of (and, in the case of the defendants Keller, in breach of their fiduciary duties, as officers, directors, or control persons, to) FSIC, its policyholders, and its creditors.” The commissioner sought: (1) the payment of a promissory note in the principal sum of $8,000,000 that Keller had executed in favor of FSIC, (2) the payment of other debts totalling more than $5,000,000 allegedly owed FSIC by Keller and the corporate defendants, (3) the assignment to FSIC of trust deeds having a value of $3,245,876, (4) damages in excess of $8,000,000 allegedly resulting from the misappropriation and misapplication of FSIC’s funds and assets, (5) the imposition of constructive trusts upon the assets of the defendants and the transfer of said assets to FSIC, and (6) damages resulting from the unfair and deceptive trade practices carried on by the defendants.2

Concomitantly, the receiver sought a temporary restraining order and a preliminary injunction to prevent a dissipation of the misappropriated funds and assets. Since affidavits submitted by the receiver indicated that substantial sums belonging to FSIC had been expended to purchase automobiles and other expensive items for the use of the defendants, a restraining order was issued ex parte by the circuit court. The court, however, conducted an extended hearing on the motion for preliminary injunction. Satisfied from the proof presented by the receiver “that the defendants misappropriated substantial sums of [613]*613money and other assets from FSIC for their own personal purposes in violation of their fiduciary duties to FSIC,”3 the court granted the motion. A preliminary injunction was entered on November 26, 1984; the defendants “and any person in active concert or participation with any of them, [were] enjoined . . . from conveying, transferring or encumbering any assets held in the . . . names of the defendants” that were traceable to the misappropriated sums and assets. But the injunction did not cover expenditures to meet the ordinary and necessary living expenses of the non-corporate defendants from funds not flowing from such source.

Soon thereafter, the receiver learned that Keller and others acting in concert with him were attempting to ship several automobiles purchased with misappropriated money to the mainland. The receiver moved fora supplemental injunction expressly prohibiting the transfer or removal from Hawaii of any property standing in the names of the defendants. Defendants’ counsel, who has since been replaced, acknowledged their conduct was less than prudent, and a supplemental injunction issued.

But the court orders did not bring a halt to attempts by the defendants to put assets beyond the reach of the receiver or the court. A few weeks later, Keller, through new counsel, directed the First Hawaiian Bank to transmit $20,000 from his accounts to California. The receiver further learned that SPLL had breached the terms of the preliminary injunction, as well as the order of a bankruptcy court in California, with respect to the collection and disposition of moneys. Armed with this information, the receiver moved the circuit court on February 14, 1985 for an order directing the defendants “to account for the custody, disposition, identity, and location of all funds and other assets held in their names” from October 12, 1984, the date of the restraining order, and to deposit all of their funds and assets in Hawaii with the clerk of the court. The requested relief was granted on March 4, 1985 after briefing [614]*614and argument.

But no accounting in the form ordered by the court was provided by the corporate defendants, and no funds were deposited with the clerk of the court. The non-corporate defendants also disclosed nothing; they relied on the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination in refusing to submit an accounting as directed.

The receiver responded in turn with a motion for the entry of judgment in his favor. After hearing the motion, the circuit court ordered the defendants to

show cause, if any they have, why the Court should not, pursuant to Hawaii Rev. Stat.

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Bluebook (online)
726 P.2d 254, 68 Haw. 608, 1986 Haw. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramil-v-keller-haw-1986.