Sherman v. Proyect (In re Proyect)

503 B.R. 765
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedDecember 11, 2013
DocketBankruptcy No. 12-81457-JRS; Adversary No. 13-05121-JRS
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 503 B.R. 765 (Sherman v. Proyect (In re Proyect)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sherman v. Proyect (In re Proyect), 503 B.R. 765 (Ga. 2013).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

JAMES R. SACCA, Bankruptcy Judge.

Divorce, business failure, bankruptcy: all involve chapters drawing to a close, with fresh starts to follow. Many of us are fortunate enough to avoid these bittersweet — and sometimes just bitter — new beginnings. But the unfortunate ex-spouses who are the Plaintiff and Defendant in this adversary proceeding experienced all three in short order. And now they find themselves embroiled in bitter litigation that hampers their ability to move on with their lives. The crux of the dispute in this adversary proceeding revolves around the ex-wife’s disposition of business assets, her liability on business debts, and the ex-husband’s decision to withhold child support to cover certain of those liabilities. The primary questions before the Court [768]*768are whether certain of the ex-husband’s claims against the ex-wife are nondis-chargeable pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2) or § 523(a)(15), whether she breached a fiduciary duty to him, and whether the ex-husband violated the automatic stay by withholding a portion of his child support payments. The Court conducted a trial regarding these disputes on November 18, 2013, and now enters these findings of fact and conclusions of law.

Factual Background

Mr. Sherman and Ms. Proyect were married in 1999 and had two children. They also went into business together, purchasing a day spa in 2010 that would operate under the name LaBella Spa and Salon (the “Spa”). The Spa offered services such as facials, massages, hair, nails, makeup, and microderm abrasion. Officially, the Spa was owned by Wonderful Tonight, Inc. (the “Company”). The evidence at trial did not clarify the ownership structure of the Company. In fact, Ms. Proyect was unsure whether she even had an ownership interest in the Company at all because Mr. Sherman “handled all that stuff,” and she claimed that he would not produce the corporate records to her so she could determine her interest, nor were they produced at trial. Both parties guaranteed certain obligations on behalf of the Company to finance the Spa, including a lease agreement (the “Lease”) with a company owned by Billy Schultz (the “Landlord”) for the commercial space in which the Spa operated and an SBA-guaranteed loan from Barrego Springs Bank (the “SBA Loan”) in order to finance operations.

Originally, Mr. Sherman operated the Spa. He managed the Spa for about a year — from September 2010 until September 2011. During that period, he paid himself a salary of about $2,000 monthly, and Ms. Proyect worked nights and weekends at the Spa (while working a fulltime day job) but received no salary for these services. In September 2011, Mr. Sherman secured full-time employment, and Ms. Proyect left her full-time job and took over managing the Spa’s operations. According to her, he “walked away from” the Spa, and his involvement in its operations ended at that point.

A few months later, their tenuous marriage reached the breaking point. After thirteen years of marriage, they separated on January 16, 2012. Shortly thereafter, Mr. Sherman used money from an inheritance to pay off $42,500 off debt on their joint Bank of America MasterCard (the “MasterCard”) and told her that she “wasn’t going to go anywhere.” Mr. Sherman did not want to move out of their marital home, so Ms. Proyect moved into an apartment.

Ms. Proyect filed for divorce in early February 2012. Shortly thereafter, Mr. Sherman canceled all of the credit cards and closed their bank accounts, which she claims left her with only $12.28 in cash, no credit cards, and no income, since she had quit her full-time job and had not been drawing a salary from the Spa. Consequently, she then began paying herself a $700 weekly salary in February 2012 for managing the Spa, often drawing only a partial payment and then collecting the remainder when cash flow permitted. According to Ms. Proyect, Mr. Sherman continued to draw a salary from the Spa, even though he no longer participated in its operations, but he omitted his salary and car allowance from the financial statements he prepared and offered at trial. She also testified that both of them commonly paid personal expenses out of business accounts and that these expenses were omitted from the financial statements as well.

[769]*769At the time of the divorce filing, the Spa was teetering on insolvency. In early February 2012, Ms. Proyect ran a charge at the Spa for $2,000 on the MasterCard (the “Charge”), to inject cash into the Company. Ms. Proyect testified that she believed it was a company card at the time of the Charge, but later realized she was wrong. She says that the money went toward paying business expenses because the Company was out of cash at that time. Mr. Sherman later took out a criminal warrant against her based on the Charge, but it is unclear what came of this warrant, if anything.

In May 2012, the couple went to mediation in their divorce proceeding, at which time the Spa was still operating. At the mediation, Mr. Sherman accepted liability for the debt on the MasterCard, including the amount owed due to the Charge. They reached an agreement in principle that would form the basis for many of the issues in their final divorce settlement. The couple stipulated at that time that Mr. Sherman was earning about $80,000 annually, whereas Ms. Proyect was entitled to earn about $35,000 annually from the Spa, although the cash flow was not necessarily there to pay her.

By early June 2012, the Spa was out of money and could not continue to operate. Ms. Proyect informed Mr. Sherman that the Company’s bank accounts were in the red and that she had decided to close the Spa, to which he did not object. Unable to pay the workers, she instead gave them spa equipment and products in lieu of cash. She arranged for some of the assets to be sold on consignment. She did not provide a list of assets sold, but she testified that all of the proceeds went toward business expenses. She did produce receipts from the workers generally showing that inventory and equipment was transferred in lieu of payment. Mr. Sherman also took some of the Spa’s assets. He sold some of these assets and provided her a list, and he indicated that he had reimbursed himself for business expenses incurred relating to shutting down the Spa.1 He still had some of these assets at the time of trial, which remained unsold.

Ms. Proyect also took home one of two computers from the reception area of the Spa and testified that she chose to take “the one that looked prettier,” and Mr. Sherman took the other one. She later reformatted the hard drive of this computer, having been informed that it was infected with spyware. Mr. Sherman has accused her of destroying the business records on that computer. She testified that she believed the other computer contained a “mirror image” of those records. Mr. Sherman contends that the computer she took was the server and the other — which he took for himself — was the client and contained no business data.

On November 7, 2012, the couple’s divorce was finalized. The Superior Court of Paulding County, Georgia entered a Final Judgment and Decree of Divorce (the “Divorce Decree”), which incorporated a Settlement Agreement, also dated November 7, 2012 (the “Settlement Agreement”). Pursuant to the Settlement Agreement, Mr. Sherman retained their marital home, along with the liability on its mortgage, and was required to sell the home and pay Ms.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Payne v. Payne
N.D. Texas, 2022
Nonte v. Burstein
E.D. Virginia, 2022
Norberg v. Knorr Norberg
D. North Dakota, 2019
In re: Douglas E. Peery
Ninth Circuit, 2019
Thomas v. Thomas, IV
E.D. North Carolina, 2019
Marriage of Vaughn
California Court of Appeal, 2018
Vaughn v. Vaughn (In re Vaughn)
240 Cal. Rptr. 3d 227 (California Court of Appeals, 5th District, 2018)
Al-Hamdani v. Al-Akwaa (In re Al-Akwaa)
585 B.R. 82 (S.D. New York, 2018)
In re Arias Nussa
565 B.R. 209 (D. Puerto Rico, 2017)
Gebhardt v. Thompson (In re Thompson)
561 B.R. 581 (N.D. Georgia, 2016)
Olson v. Olson (In re Olson)
557 B.R. 851 (W.D. Pennsylvania, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
503 B.R. 765, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherman-v-proyect-in-re-proyect-ganb-2013.