R&R Ready Mix, Inc. v. Todd Dewaine Freier

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 20, 2009
Docket08-6032
StatusPublished

This text of R&R Ready Mix, Inc. v. Todd Dewaine Freier (R&R Ready Mix, Inc. v. Todd Dewaine Freier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
R&R Ready Mix, Inc. v. Todd Dewaine Freier, (bap8 2009).

Opinion

United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT

No. 08-6032

In re: * * Todd Dewaine Freier, * * Debtor. * * * Appeal from the United States R & R Ready Mix, Inc., * Bankruptcy Court for the * District of Minnesota Plaintiff-Appellee, * * v. * * Todd Dewaine Freier, * * Defendant-Appellant. * *

Submitted: February 6, 2009 Filed: March 20, 2009

Before FEDERMAN, MAHONEY, and VENTERS, Bankruptcy Judges

MAHONEY, Bankruptcy Judge. I. BACKGROUND

R & R Ready Mix, Inc. ("R & R") brought this action against Todd Dewaine Freier ("Freier") to obtain a determination that Freier had personal liability on a state court money judgment rendered in favor of R & R and against T. F. Concrete, Inc. ("T. F."), a corporation wholly owned by Freier. R & R requested the bankruptcy court pierce the corporate veil of T. F. and find that the liability of Freier to R & R is a non-dischargeable debt under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2)(A), 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2)(B) and 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(4). The bankruptcy court entered an order piercing the corporate veil, finding the debtor personally liable for the T. F. judgment, and finding the debt non-dischargeable under all three subsections of 11 U.S.C. § 523(a). We reverse.

II. FACTS

Freier, the debtor, is the sole owner, shareholder, officer and employee of T. F., a company that performed concrete construction work. Freier operated T. F. seasonally from April through November, weather permitting. His participation in the construction activity was on a part-time basis because he was employed full-time as a machine operator with a company in Alexandria, Minnesota.

R & R is a supplier of concrete and was T. F.'s main supplier from 2003 through August 2005. R & R provided concrete and related services to T. F. on unsecured credit terms. Freier did not provide R & R with a guarantee or other written agreement that he would be personally liable for the debt of T. F.

In 2003 and 2004, T. F. did not timely pay all of the invoices from R & R, and in the fall of 2004, it owed R & R approximately $160,000.00.

2 At the end of the construction season in 2004, the president and collection manager of R & R met with Freier in an attempt to work out a payment schedule. The representatives of R & R were aware that T. F. was a corporation and that Freier had no personal liability for the debt.

During the meeting, Freier made it clear to the representatives of R & R that he believed T. F. could pay off the debt over time, but if the terms of repayment were too harsh, T. F. would be forced into bankruptcy.

At that time, Freier, on behalf of T. F., and the representatives of R & R came to an oral agreement with regard to the monthly installment payments T. F. should make, beginning in early 2005. However, T. F. defaulted immediately on the oral agreement. Freier refused R & R’s request for a personal guarantee. R & R had not sought any security for the debt and, as the debt was accruing, did not place mechanic's liens on the jobs T. F. performed. R & R chose not to do so because it was a small business operating in a small town and the exercise of such collection methods would cause problems for T. F. and for R & R.

After the default, R & R sued T. F. in February of 2005. Freier was served as a representative of T. F., and he once again engaged in settlement discussions with the president of R & R. According to R & R’s president, Freier claimed that he was not taking any money out of the corporation and intended to make certain that R & R got paid. In addition, as part of the settlement discussions, R & R asked for a corporate financial statement. Freier obtained a document entitled "Personal Financial Statement" and altered it to use as the corporate financial statement. The financial statement listed three secured creditors owed approximately $85,800.00, and listed no other liabilities, debts, or unpaid invoices to any other entity. It did not list the $160,000.00 debt to R & R. It showed total assets of approximately $96,000.00 and total liabilities of $85,800.00, leaving a theoretical net worth of approximately $10,000.00. It also listed no vehicles, equipment, or other hard assets. Instead, the

3 $96,000.00 was shown under the section of the financial statement entitled "Securities."

R & R’s president and collection manager were immediately aware that the financial statement was not accurate. It did not include the debt to R & R, which would have indicated that T. F. was insolvent by approximately $150,000.00. The financial statement showed no profit or loss or cash flow projections, nor did it show historical information such as sources and uses of cash. The representatives of R & R did not inquire as to the obvious discrepancy and, thereafter, employed the services of their attorney to prepare a Settlement Agreement dated March 31, 2005, in which both parties acknowledged that T. F. owed $159,961.07 with interest and finance charges accruing from and after January 31, 2005. T. F. agreed to make various monthly and lump-sum payments, commencing with a $1,000.00 payment upon execution of the agreement.

The agreement provided that if T. F. did not make the required payments, R & R was entitled to a default judgment. In addition, the agreement provided that R & R would continue to supply concrete products to T. F. if T. F. was not in default and if T. F. kept the account for new purchases current.

The agreement was silent with regard to any restrictions placed upon officer draws and compensation or capital purchases, and the agreement did not require a personal guarantee from Freier.

T. F., from March 2005 through July 2005, paid $25,500.00 on the debt and paid for new materials through June. T. F. defaulted by August 2005 and on August 25, 2005, R & R sent T. F. a notice of default for failure to make the $7,000.00 payment due August 10, 2005, failure to make payment for materials supplied in July of $11,283.63, and failure to make payment for materials provided in August of $18,851.64.

4 On September 8, 2005, pursuant to the terms of the settlement agreement, judgment was entered against T. F. in the amount of $150,882.97. Freier was not a named defendant and no judgment was entered against him.

The bankruptcy court, accepting the version of events testified to by the president of R & R, found as a fact that during the discussions in February 2005, Freier represented to R & R’s president that he was not taking any funds from T. F. for himself personally, thereby reassuring the plaintiff that he was doing everything he could to pay the outstanding debt. The court found that representation to be false. As support for such finding, the court referred to testimony that Freier, despite earlier agreeing to pay down the debt to R & R, nevertheless used corporate funds for personal purchases. Specifically,

after promising in December, 2004, to make payments toward the outstanding debt, the defendant purchased a Yamaha snowmobile from RB Specialties in Alexandria, MN on January 5, 2005, by charging $3,774.94, for the snowmobile to T. F. Concrete's credit card accounts. During this time, Freier also completed the construction of a large detached garage/building at his residential property and paid for a portion of the costs of the construction with money and assets belonging to T. F. Concrete, Inc.

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