Smith v. Nicholas/Earth Printing, L.L.C. (In Re Bob Nicholas Enterprise, Inc.)

358 B.R. 693, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 120, 2007 WL 92496
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedJanuary 10, 2007
Docket19-31123
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 358 B.R. 693 (Smith v. Nicholas/Earth Printing, L.L.C. (In Re Bob Nicholas Enterprise, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Nicholas/Earth Printing, L.L.C. (In Re Bob Nicholas Enterprise, Inc.), 358 B.R. 693, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 120, 2007 WL 92496 (Tex. 2007).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

KAREN K. BROWN, Chief Judge.

Before the Court is the Third Amended Complaint filed by Steve Smith, Trustee, seeking damages and avoidance of transfers under 11 U.S.C. §§ 544, 548, 549 and 550. After trial on the merits, the Court concludes that the trustee has failed to prove any cause of action and consequently is not entitled to any relief.

I. Facts

Bob Nicholas Enterprise, Inc. dba BNE Fine Printing was formed in 1999, began business in 2000, and was located at 3558 East T.C. Jester Blvd. Houston, TX 77018-6023. Marvin E. (“Bob”) Nicholas was chairman and 45% shareholder, his wife, Arita C. Nicholas was President and 55% shareholder.

BNE was a printing company capable of printing sheet-fed short-run to medium-run commercial print work on its three presses, a Man Roland 706LV, fully automated, computerized 6 color, 40-inch wide sheet fed press, with coating capabilities, valued at $2.3 million, a Heidelberg 72ZP, 2 color press with a maximum sheet capacity of 20 X 28, and a Ryobi 3302, 2-color press with a maximum sheet capacity of 13 X 19, suitable for stationary and business cards. Another company, Sharp Imaging, Inc., operated its high technology prepress equipment valued at about $2 million at the same location and performed all of BNE’s pre-press work of converting photographs, artwork, and typed copy into digital images, separating digital color images into process colors, and assembling films and burning film images onto printing plates using photochemical processes.

In connection with BNE’s acquisition of the Man Roland printing press, Bob Nicholas executed a non-competition agreement dated June 3,1999, in which he agrees that he will not, “in Harris County or Fort Bend County, Texas, during the term of this agreement ... (a) engage in any aspect of the printing business as engaged in by the Company or the sole proprietorship heretofore doing business as Innerfaith Printing Company ... (e) request or advise any present or future customer or supplier of the Company to withdraw, curtail or cancel its business with the Company; ... The term of this Agreement commences on the date hereof and shall end 24 months after Covenantor’s termination as an officer or employee of the Company.”

As BNE did not have any web presses, its capability to take on big jobs was severely limited. Jobs requiring web printing were sent to R.R. Donnelley. Although BNE hoped to receive sheet-fed print referrals from R.R. Donnelley in exchange, it never did. In addition to outsourcing its pre-press work and web-print jobs, BNE outsourced its bindery work. Because its prices were too high on outsourced work and it did not have the struc *698 ture, capacity or finances to handle a large account, BNE lost bids repeatedly with at least one potential client. There is no evidence that BNE ever made a profit from outsourced work. In fact, there is no evidence that BNE ever turned a profit on any of its work. While a single 6-color sheet fed printer can produce $10-12 million in sales annually, BNE’s earnings were only $l/& million in 2001, $1 million in 2002, and less than $300,000 in 2003. BNE went from a startup company in 2000, garnering industry acclaim for the quality of its print work, to a defunct corporation with no employees, no presses, and no office, by April 2003. 1

Arita and Bob Nicholas started BNE because they had learned that major corporations devote a percentage of their budgets to minority-owned vendors and that minority-owned businesses are under-represented in the printing industry. Bob Nicholas was a news anchor on television for 35 years, with 23 of those years in Houston for the NBC Houston affiliate, and was well recognized in the Houston broadcast area. Bob Nicholas retired from broadcasting so that the Nicholases could access his retirement fund to invest in BNE. Arita and Bob Nicholas are African American and obtained certification for BNE as a minority-owned business enterprise with the Houston Minority Business Council. Verifying the legitimacy of minority ownership is a matter of careful scrutiny by certifying entities and the application process requires accurate documentation and on-site visits.

By early May 2003, BNE’s lack of ability to perform print work prevented it from submitting quotes for print jobs to Shell Oil, BNE’s major client. Despite the company’s lack of printing presses, its financial inability to buy ink or paper, or to pay other companies, including Sharp Imaging, Inc., for work it might outsource, Arita and Bob Nicholas continued unflaggingly to promote the business, marketing and networking on BNE’s behalf in attempts to resuscitate it, including an effort as late as June 10, 2003, when Arita submitted an application for minority supplier status listing the Nicholases’ home address for that of the company.

Attempting to remedy their dire financial position, Bob Nicholas contacted several companies about starting a business of which the Nicholases would own 51% so that the business could apply for certification as a minority owned business. One company with which Bob Nicholas spoke was Packaging Impressions which operates in Dallas. BNE had done business with Packaging Impressions and Bob Nicholas had begun talking with Jim Guelker at Packaging Impressions about a joint venture in March 2003. As of the beginning of May 2003, the Nicholases thought they would pursue a joint venture with Packaging Impressions and would move to Dallas.

During this time, Bob Nicholas received an inquiry from Weyerhauser about a print job. He referred the inquiry to James Litteken, one of BNE’s former salesmen, whom he knew had found a job at Earth Color Houston (“ECH”). Litteken had left BNE in April 2003, because he and the other employees were not getting paid on time, the company was not producing work internally, and Bob and Arita Nicholas had held a conference with all of *699 the employees and told them that the business was closing. Litteken got the job at ECH through some of his friends who had been hired by ECH after another local printing company, Haywood Graphics, had closed down. ECH performed that print job and five others in May and June 2008. ECH lost money on two of the jobs because Litteken agreed to Weyerhauser’s request to perform the jobs for the price BNE used to charge.

After he was hired, Litteken told his sales manager at ECH about his former employers, Bob and Arita Nicholas. The Nicholases met with the sales manager at ECH. Earth Color then flew Arita and Bob Nicholas from Houston to Newark on May 7, 2003.

On May 19, 2003, Earth Color and the Nicholases held a conference call to discuss formation of a certified minority-owned business in which the Nicholases would be full time employees and Earth Color would provide the necessary start up funds which would be repaid at a low interest rate.

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Bluebook (online)
358 B.R. 693, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 120, 2007 WL 92496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-nicholasearth-printing-llc-in-re-bob-nicholas-enterprise-txsb-2007.