Ravis v. Day (In Re Investors Security Corp.)

6 B.R. 420, 1980 Bankr. LEXIS 4713
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 1, 1980
Docket19-10068
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 6 B.R. 420 (Ravis v. Day (In Re Investors Security Corp.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ravis v. Day (In Re Investors Security Corp.), 6 B.R. 420, 1980 Bankr. LEXIS 4713 (Pa. 1980).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

GERALD K. GIBSON, Bankruptcy Judge.

Presently pending before the Court is the objection of Benjamin J. Day to the trustee’s disallowance of his claim brought pursuant to the provisions of the Securities Investor Protection Act of 1970, 15 U.S.C. § 78aaa et seq. (SIPA) (reference throughout this opinion is to the text of the Act prior to the SIPA Amendments of 1978, Pub.L.No.95-283, 92 Stat. 249). The trustee determined that Day was not a “customer” of Investor Security Corporation (the Debtor), as defined in SIPA § 6(c)(2)(A)(ii), 15 U.S.C. § 78fff(c)(2)(A)(ii).

I. Introduction

Upon application of the Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC), United States District Judge Daniel J. Snyder, Jr. found that the customers of the Debtor were in need of the protection afforded under the SIPA and, pursuant to 15 U.S.C. § 78eee(b)(3), appointed Thomas P. Ravis, Esq. as trustee for the liquidation of the Debtor. On September 26, 1975, by order of Judge Snyder, the liquidation proceeding of the Debtor was referred to this Court.

In addition to Day’s customer claim form dated December 10, 1975, Trustee Ravis received one such form signed by Wade Moore, claiming a $30,000 cash balance. He also received a general creditor claim form signed by Moore, claiming a $30,000 cash balance funded by a personal check of William H. Brown, who was president and principal stockholder of the Debtor. At trial the parties agreed, however, that Day and Moore were both claiming the same security or its cash value, and that their claims would be resolved in this proceeding. The discussion that follows will not address the rights of Day and Moore inter se except to the extent that it is relevant to the determination of the proper application of SIPA.

Having heard the evidence at trial and considered the contentions of counsel, the Court is now prepared to adjudicate the matter and enters the following:

II. Findings of Fact

On December 16, 1975, Trustee Ravis received the customer claim form of Benjamin J. Day, which claimed alternatively $40,000 plus interest or unidentified securi *422 ties of a value of $40,000. In a notice of his disallowance of Day’s claim, mailed January 14, 1976, Ravis stated that the denial was based upon his determination that the claim was substantiated solely by documents showing a transaction with Wade Moore, individually, and/or Wade Moore Investment Corporation. Ravis further stated that Day’s claim was not substantiated by the Debtor’s books and records which contained no reference to cash being held for Day’s benefit.

Benjamin Day is a resident of Murrys-ville, Pennsylvania. His personal background suggests that he is unsophisticated and inexperienced in securities transactions. Day has a high school education and lives with his wife and three of his seven children in a small trailer park which he acquired some time ago for $5,000. Day’s possessions before he became involved with the Debtor consisted of the trailer park, a small cottage in the mountains, and personal savings in the form of a bank certificate in the amount of $10,000. Day’s annual net income from the trailer park ranges from $4,000 to $8,000.

During the latter part of 1973, as the result of seeing a newspaper advertisement for an offering of Duquesne Light stock, Day became interested in investing his $10,-000 savings in the stock. Richard Tracy, a friend of Day’s who was a bartender and part-time security salesman, introduced Day to Wade Moore at Moore’s office in Penn Hills Township. The meeting took place just prior to Moore’s moving into the Debtor’s offices in Monroeville, Pennsylvania, but after Moore had transferred his license to sell securities to the Debtor. Although Day went to Moore for the purpose of buying Duquesne Light stock, Moore convinced him to invest his $10,000 savings in a proposed corporation, Playmor Courts. At that meeting, Day was shown a brochure on the tennis court proposal and was told that he would receive approximately a 23% return on his investment. Day agreed to purchase a 10% interest, but the transaction was neither formalized nor completed at that time. He later asked for and was permitted to buy a 20% interest in the project for $40,000.

Beginning in October, 1973, and at all times material to this case, Wade Moore was not registered with any other broker-dealer. Prior to his registering with the Debtor, Moore had formed two separate corporations: (1) Wade Moore Investment Corporation, a now bankrupt corporation which is not connected by any acts of its agents to the transactions involved in this case; and (2) Moore Investment Corporation, from which Moore resigned as president in order to transfer his license to sell securities to the Debtor.

The testimony adduced at trial establishes the creation of a business relationship between Day and Moore in which Day reasonably supposed, using due diligence and discretion, that Moore was acting at all times as the agent of the Debtor. During the course of their business transactions, Moore never held himself out as being in business for himself. Except for the first meeting between Day and Moore, all of the meetings and transactions involved in this case occurred on the premises of Investors Security Corporation at the Monroeville Mall, Monroeville, Pennsylvania. Wade Moore used the facilities of the Debtor and led Day to believe that he was authorized to engage in all types of securities transactions as an agent of the Debtor.

The Debtor represented to Day that Moore was acting for it. It employed Moore to conduct the business of a stockbroker from its offices and licensed him. There were no signs indicating that Moore was in any way acting independently of the Debtor.

Moore did not have the Debtor’s express authority to sell Day an interest in Playmor Courts. The debtor had knowledge, however, of Moore’s involvement with the Play-mor project. For example, it returned to John R. Mellett and Associates, Inc., a firm of consulting engineers, a bill for services rendered in regard to tennis courts explaining that it “had no past interest in tennis courts.” These services had been performed at Moore’s instigation. Yet the *423 Debtor did not attempt to learn the identity of others Moore was presenting himself to as its agent.

After several meetings at the office of the Debtor, Day gave $10,000 to Moore on March 12, 1974, as a first installment toward his purchase of a 20% interest in Play-mor Courts. On March 15, 1974, Day signed a demand note for $30,000, payable to Wade Moore or Louis J. Dell’Aquila. Moore and Day entered into a written agreement on March 29,1974, that provided for Day’s purchase of 20% of the stock of Playmor Courts. The agreement also provided for the deposit of Day’s $40,000 into an escrow account in the names of Moore and Dell’Aquila. Delivery of the $40,000 to Playmor Courts was conditioned upon the occurrence of all of the following events:

a.

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6 B.R. 420, 1980 Bankr. LEXIS 4713, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ravis-v-day-in-re-investors-security-corp-pawb-1980.