Raslavich v. Elkins (In Re Old World Cone Co.)

119 B.R. 473, 24 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 198, 1990 Bankr. LEXIS 2041, 1990 WL 140312
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 28, 1990
Docket19-11152
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 119 B.R. 473 (Raslavich v. Elkins (In Re Old World Cone Co.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raslavich v. Elkins (In Re Old World Cone Co.), 119 B.R. 473, 24 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 198, 1990 Bankr. LEXIS 2041, 1990 WL 140312 (Pa. 1990).

Opinion

ADJUDICATION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Bankruptcy Judge.

A. FINDINGS OF FACT

1. The Plaintiff, STEPHEN RASLA-VICH, (“the Trustee”), is the Trustee of the Debtor, OLD WORLD CONE COMPANY (“the Debtor”). The Debtor filed the voluntary Chapter 7 bankruptcy case underlying this proceeding on January 8, 1990.

2. The instant proceeding, seeking to avoid certain allegedly preferential transfers to the Debtor’s President, Defendant RAYMOND D. ELKINS (“Elkins”), and El-kins' wife, ANDREA ELKINS ("Andrea”) (Elkins and Andrea are collectively referenced as “the Defendants”), was filed on July 30, 1990, and tried on September 13, 1990.

3. The transfers in issue were the following:

a.Count I — A payment of July 31, 1989, of $12,300 to Andrea, recorded on the Debtor’s General Ledger as a payoff of a Note in her favor dated January 1, 1987.
b.Count II — Payments on the following dates and amounts to Elkins, recorded on the Debtor’s General Ledger as payoffs of a Note in his favor dated
January 1, 1987:
(1.) April 12, 1989 - $1,148.12
(2.) April 15, 1989 - 2,076.21
(3.) May 15, 1989 - 3,804.74
(4.) July 3, 1989 - 8,892.72
(5.) July 24, 1989 - 943.67
$16,865.46
c.Count III — A payment of July 3, 1989, of $30,000 to Elkins, recorded on the Debtor’s General Ledger as a payoff of a Note in his favor dated March 31, 1989.

4. The Defendants ultimately stipulated that all of the requirements of 11 U.S.C. § 547(b) were present except a mild contention that the payments in issue were actually compensation to Elkins for his services as President and therefore did not meet the requirements of 11 U.S.C. §§ 547(b)(1) and (b)(2); and a much more serious contention that the Debtor was not insolvent at the times of any of the transfers and that therefore the requirement of 11 U.S.C. § 547(b)(3) was not satisfied. The Defendants did not persist in asserting any defenses to this proceeding under 11 U.S.C. § 547(c).

5. The Trustee’s witnesses at trial were (1) Herbert Rosenberg (“Rosenberg”), an accountant who is Treasurer and part-owner of Koala Cone Company (“Koala”), previously a competitor of the Debtor in its sole business of preparing waffle mix for ice-cream cones. Koala purchased all of the stock of the Debtor from Elkins in 1987 for $240,000 and thereafter hired Elkins as the Debtor’s President under an employment contract for five years at an annual salary of $100,000; and (2) S. Stanton Or-low (“Orlow”), a certified public accountant who handled the Debtor’s financial matters, and who is also a partner of Rosenberg in an accounting firm. The Defendants’ sole witness was Elkins.

6. Rosenberg testified that the Debtor had an outstanding loan of about $150,000 *475 from Key Bank (“Key”) as of the date of Koala’s purchase of the Debtor. Thereafter, Key indicated that it wished to “rest” this loan, and Rosenberg accordingly made a loan from Continental Bank (“Continental”) to pay off Key. No documents referencing the Continental loan were produced, but the borrower was apparently Koala, and Rosenberg and another associate were apparently guarantors on this loan.

7. Rosenberg thereafter negotiated a further loan from Seafirst National Bank (“Seafirst”), apparently secured by the Debtor’s assets, the proceeds of which he intended to use to pay off the Continental loan. However, Elkins subsequently advised Rosenberg that he used the proceeds of the Seafirst loan for the Debtor’s operations, leaving Rosenberg to personally pay off the Continental guarantee.

8. Rosenberg suggested that Elkins misused the Debtor’s funds and improperly left him to bear the Continental obligation. He also testified that the combination of the Seafirst loan and the outstanding Continental loan upon the Debtor and Koala led to Rosenberg’s conclusion that it was necessary to file bankruptcy cases for both Koala and the Debtor. Furthermore, Rosenberg testified that he had filed a proof of claim in the amount of $162,000 in the Debtor’s case to compensate him for paying off the Continental loan, plus interest.

9. The Debtor’s Schedules, bearing El-kins’ signature, recited assets of $202,-392.48 and liabilities, including an alleged debt of $150,000 to Continental, totalling $444,367.82.

10. Elkins testified, however, that he signed the papers accompanying the bankruptcy Schedules in blank, in November, 1989, at the request of Rosenberg and counsel in the case, Astor, Weiss & Newman (“Astor”). He denied ever advising Astor that Continental was a creditor of the Debtor. This testimony was credible.

11. Orlow identified a Balance Sheet of the Debtor as of September 30, 1989, which showed a deficit of assets relative to liabilities of $10,576. However, on cross-examination, Orlow was confronted with another Balance Sheet of the same date showing a positive value of the Debtor of $27,198. Orlow testified that one of the two statements was a corrected version of the other and that “probably” the Balance Sheet showing the deficit was the corrected version. Elkins subsequently testified that the version showing the positive value was the corrected version of this Statement.

12. Orlow also identified, on cross-examination, a Balance Sheet of the Debtor dated June 30, 1989. This document showed a positive value of the Debtor of $30,028 as of June 30, 1989, and a $171 deficit as of March 31, 1989. However, Orlow maintained that the Debtor was clearly insolvent on all of the foregoing dates because the Continental obligation of $150,000 or more should have been appended as a liability to the balance sheets.

13. Elkins testified that, subsequent to the bankruptcy filing, he had personally redeemed most or all of the Debtor’s equipment from Seafirst, which had seized it upon default in its loan, and had paid off most of the Debtor’s creditors in the course of his operation of Elkins Distribution, his own newly-formed ice-cream waffle-cone manufacturing business. However, he had not paid off the loan to Continental, since he claimed that it was not the Debtor’s obligation. Elkins characterized the business as historically and presently profitable.

14. Elkins also conceded that, as the Debtor’s President, he had issued directives to reduce his compensation and to designate the payments to him and his wife on the Notes as repayments of loans. His testimony therefore failed to support his counsel’s hypothesis that the loan repayments in issue were in lieu of compensation.

15.

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119 B.R. 473, 24 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 198, 1990 Bankr. LEXIS 2041, 1990 WL 140312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raslavich-v-elkins-in-re-old-world-cone-co-paeb-1990.