Redmond v. Hassan (In Re Hassan)

376 B.R. 1, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 139, 2007 WL 2705752
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas
DecidedJanuary 23, 2007
Docket19-10237
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 376 B.R. 1 (Redmond v. Hassan (In Re Hassan)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Redmond v. Hassan (In Re Hassan), 376 B.R. 1, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 139, 2007 WL 2705752 (Kan. 2007).

Opinion

RECOMMENDATION TO THE DISTRICT COURT TO GRANT THE MOSERS’ MOTION TO WITHDRAW THE REFERENCE OF THIS ADVERSARY PROCEEDING FOR PURPOSES OF TRIAL, BUT TO DENY IT FOR PRETRIAL MATTERS

DALE L. SOMERS, Bankruptcy Judge.

This proceeding is before the Court on a motion by four of the defendants to withdraw the reference of the proceeding and immediately transfer it to the District Court, based on their asserted right to a jury trial on claims made against them, as a well as on claims they are making. The motion was filed by defendants A1 Moser, Diane Moser, Final Touch, Inc., and Kansas City Limousine, Inc. and Budget Limousine (collectively, “the Mosers”), all of whom appear by counsel Laurence M. Frazen and Tammee E. McVey. The Plaintiff-Trustee 1 initially appeared by counsel *7 Kasey A. Rogg, Kevin M. Bright, and Eric J. Howe of Huseh & Eppenberger, LLC, but Trustee Christopher J. Redmond of the same firm later entered his appearance as an attorney for the Trustee as well, and Mr. Rogg and Mr. Howe withdrew. Another member of that firm, Lisa A. Brun-ner, is also listed on the Trustee’s objection to this effort to withdraw reference. None of the other defendants or the third-party defendants has filed a response to the motion. The Court has previously recommended that the District Court grant a motion to withdraw reference that was filed by two of the other defendants. The Court has reviewed the relevant materials and is now ready to rule on the Mosers’ motion.

FACTS

1. Historical facts alleged by the Trustee and by the Mosers.

The Court’s resolution of this dispute is governed by the allegations of the Trustee’s complaint, and the Mosers’ counterclaims, cross-claims, and third-party claims. For purposes of determining the jury trial rights asserted in the motion, it does not matter whether the allegations are true or not.

When the Debtors filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition in February 2004, they owned all the stock of Kansas Express International, Inc. (“Kansas Express”), which became property of their bankruptcy estate. In their bankruptcy schedules, they reported the corporation was worthless. According to the Mosers, Debtor Ashraf Hassan (“Debtor”) had listed the corporation for sale with a broker in 2003, but it did not sell. The Debtor then became involved in an entity known as International Football Club (“IFC”), along with co-defendant Bilal Said. They allegedly hired Steven Lord and one or both of his companies, Broadmoor Capital, Inc., and Broadmoor Capital Consulting, LLC, to raise capital for IFC. The Debtor told Lord he could sell Kansas Express to raise money, and Lord agreed to help him do that as part of the larger IFC project.

The Trustee and the Mosers allege that after the Debtor filed for bankruptcy, he agreed in May 2004 to sell the stock of Kansas Express to A1 Moser for $550,000 (“the First Sale”). The Mosers contend the Debtor, along with Lord and his companies, provided a variety of false information about Kansas Express in order to induce Moser to buy the corporation. They claim the Debtor continued to add to the false information as the transaction progressed. The Debtor allegedly also faded to disclose that he had filed for bankruptcy and had reported the corporation to be worthless. The Mosers claim Lord referred Moser and the Debtor to attorney Mark Murphy and his firm, the Murphy Law Firm, P.A., who agreed to prepare the documents necessary to complete the sale. Murphy had Moser, his wife, and the Debtor (personally and as president of Kansas Express) sign an engagement letter. By that time, Murphy had allegedly been contacted about working for the Debtor and IFC, knew Lord was trying to raise money for IFC, and knew the Debtor wanted to sell Kansas Express to raise capital for IFC, but Murphy failed to disclose these facts to the Mosers.

During June 2004, Murphy allegedly prepared four drafts of a stockholder *8 agreement for IFC that were given to the Debtor and to Said. By the end of June, after the Mosers had paid some of the First Sale price, Said estimated he and the Debtor had each contributed about $125,000 to IFC.

On July 1 or 2, a few days before the First Sale was scheduled to close, Moser learned of the Debtor’s bankruptcy case and contacted the Debtor about it. The Debtor told him the bankruptcy was a personal matter and did not concern the business. Moser then contacted Murphy about the bankruptcy. Both the Trustee and the Mosers contend Murphy accessed the Court’s electronic records and obtained information about the Debtor’s case. The Mosers allege Murphy told them their “only option” was to go ahead and buy Kansas Express. The agreement for the First Sale was then allegedly substantially modified so it appeared to be a sale of the Debtor’s postpetition services, rather than the corporation’s stock. The Trustee refers to the modified agreement as “the False Agreement,” while the Mosers call it “the Revised Agreement.” The Court will refer to it as “the Revised First Sale Agreement” and, for ease of reference, will also use that phrase to cover all the earlier stages of the First Sale transaction. The parties signed the Revised First Sale Agreement and the Mosers paid more of the sale price.

The Mosers allege Murphy has testified he would advise an “independent client” not to buy a business like the one the Debtor was selling, and claim he never gave them such advice. Murphy has testified, they add, that he did not believe the Kansas Express assets being sold were as valuable as the Debtor was claiming, but they allege he never told them that. After the First Sale began to fall apart, the Mosers add, Murphy had private conversations with the Debtor about the deal, even though he was still representing them.

The Trustee alleges that Murphy knew the Revised First Sale Agreement would be provided to the Trustee, and intended for him to rely on it to conclude the First Sale did not involve property of the Debt- or’s bankruptcy estate. Without disclosing the existence of the original agreement for the sale of the Kansas Express stock, the Debtor allegedly provided his bankruptcy attorney with a copy of the Revised First Sale Agreement and asked him to give it to the Trustee, which the attorney did. The Trustee claims the Debtor did this in an effort to mislead the Trustee about the true nature of the transaction.

Within a few weeks of the First Sale, the Mosers contend they discovered the Debtor had given them much false and misleading information about Kansas Express, its financial situation, and the profitability of its business. They tried to rescind the Revised First Sale Agreement and demanded their money (around $300,000) back. At first, they contend, the Debtor refused to rescind the sale, but he soon resumed operating the Kansas Express business and otherwise acted as if the sale had been rescinded. He never returned any of their money, though.

In February 2005, the Debtor allegedly received $86,000 from another buyer in a second sale of Kansas Express or its assets (“the Second Sale”). The Trustee and the Mosers claim Murphy participated in or facilitated the Second Sale. They do not know what became of the proceeds of this sale.

The Debtor allegedly invested a significant portion of the proceeds of the First Sale in IFC, and helped IFC buy some land in Johnson County, Kansas.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
376 B.R. 1, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 139, 2007 WL 2705752, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redmond-v-hassan-in-re-hassan-ksb-2007.