Reliance Insurance Co. v. Brown

40 B.R. 214, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20735
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedJanuary 5, 1984
Docket83-4101-CV-C-5
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 40 B.R. 214 (Reliance Insurance Co. v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reliance Insurance Co. v. Brown, 40 B.R. 214, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20735 (W.D. Mo. 1984).

Opinion

ORDER

SCOTT O. WRIGHT, District Judge.

This matter comes before the Court on the appeal of the defendant United States from a Memorandum Opinion and Order of the Bankruptcy Court, filed on February 15, 1983, in which it was held that certain assets now in the possession of the Trustee were received by him subject to a constructive trust. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) argues on appeal that plaintiff Reliance Insurance Company has no standing to bring this action, that the Bankruptcy Court erred in imposing the constructive trust, and that federal tax liens attached to the funds and are not defeated by the constructive trust. For the following reasons, the decision of the Bankruptcy Court will be affirmed.

The Bankruptcy Court made the following findings of fact. This litigation arose out of a fraudulent insurance scheme involving the debtor, Donald Kubovchick, who joined Associated Underwriters (later known as A/U Agency, Inc.) as a “producer” in charge of placing special risk or excess coverage with foreign and domestic insurance companies. In 1975, Kubovchick began to issue A/U Agency “cover notes” to insureds, even when his efforts to place the requested insurance coverage with legitimate insurance companies had proved unsuccessful. Kubovchick used two fictional names, E & S Agency and John Keiser, to “accept” the insurance coverages which had not been placed with legitimate companies. E & S and Keiser acted as repositories for the net premiums (after deduction for commissions) which were paid for those coverages not legitimately placed.

Kubovchick’s scheme was discovered in May, 1978, by the A/U Agency. The gross premiums paid by those seeking insurance for coverages which were not placed with legitimate companies were between $1,200,-000 and $1,500,000. From this amount, a deduction was made of approximately 10% *216 as commission for local agents, and another deduction was made as a commission for the risk broker, A/U Agency. This commission was split between Kubovchick as producer and A/U Agency, with 60% going to Kubovchick and 40% to A/U. The remainder of the premiums, $1,066,897.63, was paid to the fictional E & S Agency.

Kubovchick, in order to avoid discovery of his scheme, used some of the funds deposited with E & S Agency to hire and pay claims of adjusters and other necessary personnel. Kubovchick failed, however, to pay federal income taxes on the money. He did arrange to have all insurance claims, adjusted and paid, and also used some of the funds to purchase stocks for himself and his wife and to pay his personal expenses.

In May, 1978, the scheme was discovered and $309,541.34 remained in the E & S account. Kubovchick turned over a cashier’s check in that amount to A/U for administration of the fund. Later, he also turned over to A/U corporate stock, some titled in his own name and some held in his wife’s name, which had been purchased with funds from the E & S Agency account or with the proceeds of those funds. These stocks were liquidated for $155,585.27 and, together with the proceeds of the checking account, were turned over by A/U to Daniel P. Reardon, an attorney who served as “trustee” of the funds. Reardon held the funds for a period of time during which he made disbursements for various purposes, including the return of unearned premiums of cancelled insurance and the payment of claims after adjustment. Kubovchick apparently made some suggestions as to how the funds should be handled, but did not suggest that the funds belonged to him..

In 1978, Reardon delivered the remainder of the funds to Jerry B. Buxton, Director of the Missouri Division of Insurance. At that time, the funds totalled $242,813.66. State court proceedings were filed by various parties asserting claims to those funds, and those proceedings concluded when an interpleader action was filed by Buxton in the United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri.

On February 11, 1980, Gary Public Transportation, Dan-O-Way Charter Lines and Downen Enterprises filed an involuntary petition in bankruptcy against Ku-bovchick, and an order for relief was entered on March 17, 1980. On March 25, 1980, the District Court ordered that the funds involved in the federal interpleader action be paid over to Jack Brown as Interim Trustee of the bankruptcy estate of Kubovchick. Funds of approximately $278,000 were transferred on April 19, 1980.

On December 1, 1981, an involuntary petition in bankruptcy was filed against A/U Agency, and the order for relief was entered on December 22, 1981. On June 18, 1982, the Court ordered the consolidation of the bankruptcy cases of A/U Agency and Donald Kubovchick.

Reliance Insurance Company (Reliance), which acted as a reinsurer of A/U Agency against fraudulent acts committed by A/U’s employees, brought this suit on March 19, 1982 to impose a trust on the funds for the benefit of those parties who paid premiums to Kubovchick for insurance coverage which was never placed with legitimate companies. Those parties form the vast majority of the creditors of the Kubovchick and A/U Agency estates. The only parties opposing the action brought by Reliance are the IRS and Kubovchick. The IRS has filed a claim in the amount of $52,058.81 for unpaid taxes due from Ku-bovchick, and has requested that its claim be paid from these funds. Kubovchick opposed Reliance’s action, arguing that his unpaid taxes should be paid from those funds.

Trial was held before the Bankruptcy Court on September 21 and 29, 1982, and the Court found that the funds held by the Trustee were received by him subject to a constructive trust for the benefit of those insurance claimants able to establish their right to share pro rata in a distribution of these assets. In reaching its decision to recognize the existence of a constructive *217 trust, the Bankruptcy Court noted that although it was impossible for each individual claimant to trace the funds deposited with the Trustee, the Court nonetheless was satisfied that all of the funds in question were those fraudulently procured by Kubovchick or the proceeds of those funds. The Court specifically found that the funds held by the Trustee are composed exclusively of all the remains of the insurance premiums paid to Kubovchick by the insurance claimants and the proceeds thereof.

The Bankruptcy Court also found that Kubovchick would be unjustly enriched as a result of his wrongdoing if a constructive trust were not imposed because Kubovch-ick’s debt to the IRS for unpaid taxes is non-dischargeable in bankruptcy. The Bankruptcy Court noted that if these funds remained part of the general estate, the priority granted to the claims of the IRS would result in the tax claims being satisfied in full before any of the claims of the general creditors were satisfied, thereby relieving Kubovchick of a non-dischargea-ble debt. The Court concluded that the evidence in support of the constructive trust was clear, cogent and convincing, and that the Bankruptcy Trustee thus received the funds subject to a constructive trust on behalf of the insurance claimants.

In addition, the Bankruptcy Court found that Reliance had standing to bring the action to impose a constructive trust, as Reliance stands to benefit from the imposition of the trust to the extent that payments from the trust to the insurance claimants would reduce any contingent liability Reliance may have to the claimants.

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Bluebook (online)
40 B.R. 214, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reliance-insurance-co-v-brown-mowd-1984.