Raymond E. Fontaine Trust v. P & J Resources, Inc. (In re P & J Resources, Inc.)

475 B.R. 838
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Kentucky
DecidedMay 15, 2012
DocketBankruptcy No. 10-70470; Adversary Nos. 10-7079, 10-7080
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 475 B.R. 838 (Raymond E. Fontaine Trust v. P & J Resources, Inc. (In re P & J Resources, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raymond E. Fontaine Trust v. P & J Resources, Inc. (In re P & J Resources, Inc.), 475 B.R. 838 (Ky. 2012).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

TRACEY N. WISE, Bankruptcy Judge.

At issue is whether the Defendant Debtors, Richard and Pamela Williams (collectively the “Williams”) and P & J Resources, Inc. (“P & J”), conducted an elaborate scheme to induce Mr. Raymond Fontaine and his friends and family, in their own right or as successors-in-interest to Mr. Fontaine, to invest millions of dollars in non-existent or ultimately worthless gas wells, thereby committing [844]*844fraud in the inducement, conversion, and breach of contract for which the Plaintiffs are entitled to actual and/or punitive damages. If so, the second issue is whether the Williams should be held jointly and severally liable for these acts by virtue of their own tortious conduct and/or by piercing the corporate veil of P & J. Third, this Court must decide whether the assignments of well interests from P & J to the Plaintiffs fail to reflect the intent of the parties and should be reformed based on mutual mistake.

The Court conducted a three day trial on these issues which concluded on December 19, 2011. Upon consideration of the parties’ stipulation of facts, testimony and exhibits admitted into evidence, arguments of counsel, proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, post-trial briefs and the record, the Court finds that the Defendants fraudulently induced Mr. Fontaine and the Plaintiffs to invest in non-existent and worthless gas wells. As part of this scheme, the Plaintiffs have proven that the Defendants also converted thousands of dollars of the Plaintiffs’ investment money for their own use and breached the contracts between the Defendants and the Plaintiffs when P & J ultimately failed to perform as promised.

Furthermore, it is apparent from the evidence at trial that not only should the Williams be held personally liable for their own tortious conduct, namely fraud and conversion, but they cannot hide behind P & J for its breach of contract where P & J is merely an alter ego used to perpetuate this fraud.

Finally, the Court finds that the Plaintiffs have failed to meet their burden that the assignments should be reformed based on mutual mistake because the mistake alleged is apparent on the face of the Letter Agreements and Assignments upon which the Plaintiffs rely.

Procedural History

This matter arose out of a contract dispute over payments for interests in gas wells in eastern Kentucky. The litigation began with a complaint filed by the Plaintiffs on November 24, 2008, in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky (the “District Court Complaint”) alleging fraud and breach of contract claims against the Defendants P & J, a Kentucky oil and gas drilling company; Pamela Williams, the sole owner and president of P & J; and her husband, Richard Dow Williams, the vice-president of operations for P & J. The Plaintiffs’ action is based on a relationship between the now-deceased Raymond E. Fontaine, a wealthy entrepreneur from Massachusetts, and the Williams, through P & J, whereby Mr. Fontaine invested millions of dollars in gas wells located in eastern Kentucky and in turn assigned his interest in those wells to the Plaintiffs, many of whom also personally invested in the wells. The Plaintiffs include the following:

(1) the Raymond E. Fontaine Trust, dated 12/22/88, as amended, by and through Jean Webster, Patricia Fon-taine, Kathleen Fowler and Mary Fon-taine Carlson, Successor Co-Trustees (the “Fontaine Trust”);
(2) the MPJ Fontaine Trust, U.A. DTD, dated 10/26/98, by and through Jean Webster, Patricia Fontaine, and Mary Fontaine Carlson, Co-Trustees (the “MJP Trust”);
(3) Mr. Fontaine’s three daughters and their respective spouses: Mary Fontaine and Robert Carlson, Jean and Gary Webster, and Patricia Fontaine;
(4) Mr. Fontaine’s four grandchildren, or Nora Carlson (through the Nora Carlson Irrevocable Trust, by and through Robert Carlson, and Mary Fon-taine Carlson, Co-Trustees), Tyler Web[845]*845ster, Adam Webster, and Dylan Klemp-ner;
(5) Mr. Fontaine and/or his wife’s caregivers: Joan Casartello, Rosemary Hil-lery, and Arlene Everett;
(6) the R.E. and M.V. Fontaine Family Foundation, Inc. (the “Fontaine Foundation”); and
(7) Patricia Carlucci Schwartz, the Raymond Street, Group, LLC, Cherry Driveway, LLC, and the Piaker Family Irrevocable Trust, by and through Matthew Piaker, Alan Piaker, and Susan Piaker, Co-Trustees (the “Piaker Trust”), all of which are friends of Mr. Fontaine and his family members individually or as members of certain business entities.

Following Mr. Fontaine’s death, the Plaintiffs by and through Robert Carlson, began investigating Mr. Fontaine’s investments with P & J. During this investigation, the Plaintiffs started to suspect that the Williams and P & J duped Mr. Fon-taine and the Plaintiffs into investing in non-existent or worthless well interests. This suspicion ultimately led to the filing of the District Court Complaint seeking damages from P & J and the Williams directly for breach of contract, fraud, and conversion.

Approximately a year after filing the District Court Complaint, the Plaintiffs moved for summary judgment on their breach of contract claims. On April 15, 2010, the District Court granted the Plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment 1 on the Plaintiffs’ claims for breach of contract for (1) contracts with the so-called 30-Month and 100 Mcf Guarantees (explained more fully herein) and (2) a loan by Mr. Fontaine to P & J in 2004 to construct Section 8 Housing and Urban Development apartments. The District Court denied the Plaintiffs’ summary judgment motion seeking to pierce the corporate veil of P & J because there remained material issues of genuine fact related to the Plaintiffs’ fraud claim, which was not the subject of the motion, including the material issue of whether the Plaintiffs could link their contractual injury to the Williams’ misuse of the corporate form. A status conference was set for June 17, 2010.

The District Court action was stayed when, on June 11, 2010, P & J filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition [Case No. 10-70470]. On June 80, 2010, the Plaintiffs moved for modification of the automatic stay to seek authorization for the District Court action to proceed to trial. The motion was denied. On September 30, 2010, following a fire that destroyed P & J’s records (which had been previously ordered to be delivered to the Plaintiffs), P & J’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy was converted to a Chapter 7 bankruptcy pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 1112(b)(4)(C) for cause, including P & J’s failure to maintain adequate insurance.

Also on September 30, 2010, the Williams filed a second petition for Chapter 12 relief [Case No. 10-70767].2 In December, the Plaintiffs moved to convert the Williams’ case from a Chapter 12 to a Chapter 7, alleging that the Williams misrepresented and concealed assets from creditors. Following a lengthy evidentiary hearing, on June 1, 2011, this Court found that the Williams committed fraud in connection with their case and converted the Chapter 12 case to a Chapter 7 case pursu[846]*846ant to 11 U.S.C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
475 B.R. 838, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raymond-e-fontaine-trust-v-p-j-resources-inc-in-re-p-j-resources-kyeb-2012.