Spiers Graff Spiers v. Menako (In Re Spiers Graff Spiers)

190 B.R. 1001, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 11, 1996 WL 9544
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJanuary 2, 1996
Docket18-35688
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 190 B.R. 1001 (Spiers Graff Spiers v. Menako (In Re Spiers Graff Spiers)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spiers Graff Spiers v. Menako (In Re Spiers Graff Spiers), 190 B.R. 1001, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 11, 1996 WL 9544 (Ill. 1996).

Opinion

*1004 MEMORANDUM OPINION

JACK B. SCHMETTERER, Bankruptcy Judge.

The Debtor-Plaintiff Spiers Graff Spiers (“SGS” or “Debtor”), an Illinois partnership, filed for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code Title 11, § 101 et seq. Its liquidating Plan of reorganization was confirmed. The Debtor filed this Adversary Complaint seeking declaratory judgment in Count I that Plan confirmation had a res judicata effect barring a state suit by Phyllis Menako (“Me-nako”) asserting personal liability of Debtor’s general partners on her claims. Debtor asserts that those claims by Menako were adjudicated by entry of the confirmation order. In Count II, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 105 and Fed.R.Bankr.P. 7065 (Fed.R.Civ.P. 65), Debtor seeks a preliminary and then a permanent injunction enjoining Menako, one of its creditors, from continuing her collection efforts in state court against Debtor’s general partners based on promissory notes they signed as individuals.

Menako moved to dismiss both counts of the Complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and for failure to state a claim under Fed:R.Bankr.P. 7012 (Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6)). In the same Motion, Menako also asks this Court to abstain from hearing this matter.

For reasons stated below, Menako’s Motion to Dismiss is granted as to both counts and this Adversary proceeding is dismissed. For the same reasons, Debtor’s motion for an injunction is denied. With this case dismissed, the motion to abstain is moot.

Factual Background Alleged Case Historg

SGS is a partnership formed to engage in the business of holding various real estate properties while those properties were being rehabbed and sold. SGS has three general partners, Donald Spiers, Gregory Spiers and Mark Graff, Gregory Spiers being the managing partner. On May 6, 1993, SGS filed for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code.

On April 1, 1991, those same three men assertedly signed two promissory notes, one in the amount of $50,000 and one for $100,-000, each evidencing their personal debt owed to Phyllis Menako on her loans to them as individuals. (The Disclosure Statement filed in the SGS-related bankruptcy indicated that these loans were made before the Debt- or partnership was created.)

Before Debtor filed for bankruptcy protection, Menako obtained judgment in an Illinois state court on the $50,000 and $100,000 notes which each of the men had signed. Using that judgment, Menako proceeded to record various liens against assets of the Debtor partnership by reason of the judgment against persons who had by then become its general partners. Debtor promptly filed an Adversary Complaint in this Court against Menako, claiming that the lien recordings by Menako were voidable preferences under bankruptcy law. On September 24, 1993, an agreed order was entered to that effect in that Adversary proceeding. However, Me-nako was allowed by that order to file her claim against the Debtor as a general unsecured claim.

On November 12, 1993, Menako filed her proof of claim as a general unsecured creditor in the amount of $137,387, a claim that Debtor contested. However, on May 9,1994, the parties submitted a settlement agreement which was read into the record by counsel for SGS. The parties agreed that Menako would have an unsecured claim against Debtor in the amount of $119,840. The parties also agreed, by their counsel on the record, that the settlement made that day did not address the question of whether Menako could, at a later date, proceed *1005 against the partners individually. A written agreed order was submitted by the parties and was entered by the Court on May 11, 1994. That order did not address the issue of whether the partners continued to be personally liable on their promissory notes payable to Menako.

On December 30, 1993, Debtor’s Amended Plan was confirmed. The Amended Plan provided for sale of all properties owned by the Debtor. Since then, the Debtor, under management of Gregory Spiers, sold all of its properties and paid out the net proceeds of such sales to its creditors.

Under the confirmed Plan, Class III creditors are unsecured creditors, and collectively they hold over $426,000 in claims. Section 5.01 of Article Y of the confirmed Plan provided that, if the unsecured creditors who held allowed claims did not get paid from plan distributions at least 25% of their claims, then each of the three general partners would contribute $5,000 to fund Plan payments to unsecured creditors. This contingency never came into effect since the dividend exceeded 25%.

After the Amended Plan was confirmed, Menako sued Donald B. Spiers, Gregory Spi-ers, and Mark Graff in the Circuit Court of DuPage County, filing a new law suit for their asserted failure to pay the notes they had individually signed. 1 Mark Graff has since been voluntarily dismissed from the state court proceeding because he filed an individual bankruptcy petition. The Spiers responded by filing a Motion to Dismiss in that court, arguing there, as here, that they were absolved individually from their debts on the two notes by reason of the confirmation order in the SGS bankruptcy and 11 U.S.C. § 524(e). However, the state court judge denied Spiers’ Motion, allowing the action there to proceed. In denying the Motion to Dismiss, the state judge pointed out under § 524(e) that discharge of the debtor does not affect the liability of non-debtors. The opinion also held from precedent that “the payment which effects a discharge is not consideration for any promise by the creditors to release nonparty obli-gors.” Order in case number 94 L 1054, Complaint Exhibit D. He concluded that the confirmed SGS Plan did not release its partners from personal liability on their notes. Also, the agreed orders entered in the bankruptcy ease were found not to preclude Me-nako from suing the partners individually. However, the relief available to Menako was reduced from the $150,000 Menako was asking for to $119,840.00, the amount agreed to during the bankruptcy proceeding as being due. Id. The Spiers Defendants then requested by way of motion before the Circuit Court of DuPage County leave to take interlocutory appeal on issues raised in their motion to dismiss as denied by that court. That petition for permission to appeal remained pending before the state trial court when briefings were completed on the present motion here.

After the Spiers lost their motion to dismiss in state court, the Debtor filed the instant Adversary Complaint. Its thrust is an effort to obtain the protection for its partners here that the state court judge denied them there.

In Count I, the Debtor seeks a judgment declaring that the order here confirming Debtor’s Plan of reorganization had a res judicata

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Bluebook (online)
190 B.R. 1001, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 11, 1996 WL 9544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spiers-graff-spiers-v-menako-in-re-spiers-graff-spiers-ilnb-1996.