Raymond Professional Group, Inc. v. William A. Pope Co. (In Re Raymond Professional Group, Inc.)

438 B.R. 130, 2010 WL 3891182
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedSeptember 29, 2010
Docket19-02381
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 438 B.R. 130 (Raymond Professional Group, Inc. v. William A. Pope Co. (In Re Raymond Professional Group, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raymond Professional Group, Inc. v. William A. Pope Co. (In Re Raymond Professional Group, Inc.), 438 B.R. 130, 2010 WL 3891182 (Ill. 2010).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION DENYING DEBTORS’ MOTION FOR STAY PENDING APPEAL

JACK B. SCHMETTERER, Bankruptcy Judge.

INTRODUCTION

Defendant William A. Pope Company (“Pope”) and Plaintiff-Debtor Raymond Management Services, Inc., n/k/a Raymond Professional Group-Design/Build, Inc., (“RMS”) contracted to construct a project for the owner of a power facility. 1 Plaintiff-Debtor Raymond Professional Group, Inc., (“RPG”) was not part of that contract. Pope and RMS set up an account (the “Account”) on which they had joint signatory powers subject to contractual claims against each other to be resolved after construction was completed. To resolve those claims, Pope and RMS litigated their contractual rights in an arbitration proceeding prebankruptcy. In that proceeding, the arbitration panel made an award (the “Award”) in Pope’s favor, details of which are set forth below. Rather than accept the panel’s decision, on December 18, 2006, RPG, RMS, and several related entities filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy cases, which are now jointly administered. Several Adversary proceedings followed. The Account funds over which the parties have disputed now total over $3.5 million.

Count I of the Adversary proceeding, in which RPG asserted its claim to the Account, was dismissed with prejudice because it was brought and presented by conflicted counsel who were not replaced. In a related proceeding, the motion of Debtors to consolidate the subject Jointly Administered bankruptcy cases was denied. These rulings were not appealed.

Earlier, on September 24, 2009, it was adjudged in Adversary proceeding number 07-A-137 that the Award was entirely confirmed by Judgment. It was thereby determined that RMS owed $3,634,714 to *134 Pope, that Pope is contractually entitled to collect that amount out of the Account, and that RMS is not contractually due any payment from Pope or from the Account. No appeal was taken from that Judgment. The amount now in the Account, including interest, is about $3.5 million, so the Judgment amount due Pope, with accrued post-judgment interest, far exceeds the funds available to pay that debt.

The Motion for Stay Pending Appeal does not even discuss any of those unap-pealed rulings, but asserts rights based on contentions inconsistent with and barred by them.

Pursuant to those unappealed final rulings, neither RMS nor RPG have any rights in or to the Account moneys. Their dream of future consolidation of cases so as to get control of the disputed Account cannot be asserted by conflicted counsel and their Motion to Consolidate has already been denied by unappealed ruling.

For reasons discussed below in more detail, the Plaintiffs’ motion will be denied and the Defendant’s motion to receive the funds that were adjudged to belong to it will be granted.

HISTORY OF PROCEEDINGS

Final Judgments now on appeal were entered in Counts II through VI in favor of Pope. RPG and RMS have filed a notice of appeal from those Judgments and now move for a stay pending appeal. Pope moves to have the funds in the Account, which were frozen by Court order pending final decisions herein, entirely released to it.

A. Rulings Not Appealed

The Motion for Stay Pending Appeal disregards critical rulings made during the progress of this and other contested matters, rulings that determined the rights of the parties as to contractual rights in the Account involved here and that were not appealed. The first was in an Adversary proceeding, number 07-A-137, filed by RMS against Pope. There, RMS sought to vacate the Arbitration Award and Pope sought to have the Award confirmed. The Award made three rulings: (1) Pope is entitled to get payment of the debt due it out of the Account; (2) RMS at that time owed Pope $3,634,714, which was more money than the Account contained; and (3) RMS is not contractually owed anything. Upon Pope’s Motion for Summary Judgment, Judgment in that Adversary proceeding was entered in Pope’s favor confirming the foregoing Award in its entirety. (Order Granting Mot. for Summary Judgment [Docket No. 59]; Amended Final Order Granting Mot. for Summary Judgment [Docket No. 63].) RMS did not appeal that Judgment, which therefore finally established the amount of debt RMS owes to Pope, determined that the entire Account was to be the source of payment to Pope through their contractual agreement, and determined that RMS is owed nothing. See generally In re Raymond Prof'l Group, Inc., 397 B.R. 414 (Bankr. N.D.Ill.2008), supplemented by 400 B.R. 621 (Bankr.N.D.Ill.2008).

When the bankruptcy cases were filed, despite the requirement of joint signatures on the Account, RPG somehow persuaded the bank holding that Account to shift the Account funds without Pope’s consent or Court approval into a debtor-in-possession account owned only by RPG. RPG had no claim to that money, contractually or otherwise, but it thereby attempted to usurp control of the money so as to block creditors of RMS (who included Pope) from collecting claims against RMS, which was thereby deprived of the Account as a bankruptcy asset. So after the Count VI final adjudication that Pope owned the Account *135 under the Illinois Mechanics Lien Act as well as contractually, the funds were ordered to be transferred into a new account in the name of Pope located in another bank, but that new account cannot be drawn on without further order of Court. This ensured that neither RMS or RPG could mishandle the funds again while the post-judgment matters were resolved, and froze the funds until all Counts of the Adversary proceeding were decided.

The second ruling that was not appealed was the dismissal with prejudice of Count I, in which RPG sought to claim the Account as its own. Its counsel also represents RMS. Therefore, it was found and held that pursuit of that claim put the Debtors’ counsel in actual and direct conflict with RMS and the creditors of RMS, including Pope. See In re Raymond Prof'l Group, Inc., 421 B.R. 891 (Bankr.N.D.Ill. 2009). Since RMS had contracted with Pope but RPG was not part of the contract, the RPG claim of ownership over the Account was an attempt to render futile the contractual claims against RMS by Pope and other creditors. RPG and RMS were given an opportunity to secure separate counsel [Adversary Docket Nos. 557, 566], but they did not. Therefore, Count I was dismissed with prejudice [Adversary Docket No. 593] because it was brought by conflicted counsel who were not replaced.

The third decision that was not appealed was the order denying the Debtors’ Motion for Substantive Consolidation. It was found and held that pursuit of that Motion also put the Debtors’ counsel in conflict, Raymond Prof'l Group, 421 B.R. at 905, 912-13, and the Motion was denied for being brought by conflicted counsel [Adversary Docket No. 555], That ruling was not appealed, yet a contention now argued by the same conflicted counsel is that the Debtors may yet control the Account in event of reversal should substantive consolidation ultimately be permitted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
438 B.R. 130, 2010 WL 3891182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raymond-professional-group-inc-v-william-a-pope-co-in-re-raymond-ilnb-2010.