Sterling Consulting Corp. v. Internal Revenue Service (In Re Indian Motocycle Manufacturing Co.)

288 B.R. 617, 2003 WL 231251
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJanuary 29, 2003
DocketCIV.A.02-40027-REK, 94-42288-HJB
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 288 B.R. 617 (Sterling Consulting Corp. v. Internal Revenue Service (In Re Indian Motocycle Manufacturing Co.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sterling Consulting Corp. v. Internal Revenue Service (In Re Indian Motocycle Manufacturing Co.), 288 B.R. 617, 2003 WL 231251 (D. Mass. 2003).

Opinion

Opinion

KEETON, District Judge.

I. Pending for Decision in These Appellate Proceedings

Pending for decision are the following matters now before this United States district court, associated with appeals from orders of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Massachusetts-Worcester:

(1) Sterling Consulting’s Motion to Dismiss (Docket No. 14, filed December 2, 2002);

(2) Response by Stephen M. Rodolakis in Opposition (Docket No. 18, filed December 30, 2002);

*619 (3) Response by United States in Opposition (Docket No. 20, filed December 31, 2002); and

(4) Disposition of the appeals.

II. Background

Before either of the orders from which this court is now hearing appeals was made by the Bankruptcy Court for the District of Massaehusetts-Worcester, other bankruptcy proceedings had occurred.

A submission filed on January 17, 2003, by attorneys for Sterling Consulting Corporation, as Receiver, states:

After the IRS formally appeared in the Bankruptcy Cases, it moved the Bankruptcy Court to reconsider three of its Orders which were issued prior to the IRS’ appearance: The Orders of January 13, 1999, September 21, 1999, and December 30, 1999. This motion was denied, and the IRS appealed in the matter styled United States of America v. Sterling Consulting Corp., as receiver, and Stephen M. Rodolakis, Chapter 7 Trustee, BAP No. MB 00-094 (United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the First Circuit) (“BAP II”).
On January 8, 2003, the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel issued its opinion in BAP II. BAP II affirmed the Bankruptcy Court denial of the IRS’s Motions to Reconsider. The following series of quotations from that opinion summarizes the holding:
Although neither a party to the settlement, nor a party in interest in the bankruptcy cases at the time of the settlement ... the IRS, as a subsequent administrative expense claimant, was bound by the Trustee’s agreement with the Receiver.... The IRS was an administrative tax claimant, not a prefiling creditor, but this Panel sees no reason to distinguish between administrative claimants and prefiling creditors in this regard....
The IRS’s motion was timely, but no exceptional circumstances justifying relief were given; moreover, had the Bankruptcy Court granted relief, the Trustee and Receiver would have been unfairly prejudiced....
This Panel has already agreed that the IRS did not have a meaningful opportunity to be heard at the hearing on September 21,1999, but that deprivation was cured with the filing of the request for relief under Rule 60(b). The IRS’s concern with the failure of notice and hearing in the District Court is misplaced. Such a concern should have been addressed to the District Court. Finally, the focus on the superpriority lien claim is also misplaced. The fixing of the amount of the lien claim was only one aspect of an integrated settlement agreement. The 9/21/99 Settlement Order approved the settlement agreement in its entirety. As a result, the Bankruptcy Court was justified in denying reconsideration of one part of the agreement.

BAP II, slip op. pp. 18-20 (internal citations and footnotes omitted).

The significance of BAP II, in addition to the plain ruling, is that the IRS is bound by the prior Orders of the Massachusetts Bankruptcy Court and Colorado District Court, unless it seeks to have those Orders set aside, whether under Rule 60(b) (for final Bankruptcy Orders) or Rule 54(b) for interlocutory Orders of either the Massachusetts Bankruptcy Court or the Colorado District Court.

Docket No. 25 at 3.

Another event occurring before the orders now on appeal were made was that the United States District Court for the District of Colorado, in which the Receiv *620 ership was pending, issued an order regarding tax liabilities of entities acquired by the Receiver, imposed a deadline on the IRS for tax determinations, and enjoined the IRS from assessing and collecting taxes for failure to evaluate tax returns by the court-imposed deadline. On interlocutory appeal, the Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit reversed, holding that the district court lacked jurisdiction to grant declaratory judgment regarding tax liabilities and lacked jurisdiction to enjoin the IRS from assessing and collecting taxes. Sterling Consulting Corporation, Appellee v. U.S., Intervener-Appellant, 245 F.3d 1161 (10th Cir.2001). That decision was made on April 10, 2001.

On August 3 and November 21, 2001, the Bankruptcy Court for the District of Massachusetts-Worcester made orders from which the Receiver appealed to this district court. The following are the orders from which the Receiver appealed here:

In Civil Action No. 01-40180-REK in the District Court, the Bankruptcy Court order of August 3, 2001. In re Indian Motocycle Company, Inc., 266 B.R. 243 (Bankr.Mass.2001).
In Civil Action No. 02-40027-REK in the District Court, the Bankruptcy Court’s injunction and associated rulings of November 21, 2001. In re Indian Motocycle, Inc., 2001 WL 1673643 (Bankr.Mass.2001).

The provisions of the Bankruptcy Court’s opinion and order of August 3, 2001, are summarized in the headnotes of the published opinion in the following way:

Following agreement between receiver and Chapter 7 trustee settling dispute over disposition of $3.5 million in proceeds from court-approved sale of debtors’ trademarks, bankruptcy court entered order which approved trustee’s final accounts, directed that assets of estate be distributed in accordance therewith, and, estimating the bankruptcy estates’ federal tax obligation to be $1.2 million for purposes of distribution, but abstaining from determining debtors’ postpetition tax liabilities, granted trustee leave to transfer $1.2 million to receiver to be held in escrow for payment of government’s tax claim as determined by Colorado district court. Federal government appealed. The Bankruptcy Appellate Panel (BAP), Vaughn, J., reversed and remanded. Seeking to recover the escrowed funds from receiver and to halt receiver’s efforts to elicit discovery from the United States in the Colorado receivership proceeding, federal government filed ex parte emergency motion to enforce the BAP’s judgment and the automatic stay. Receiver filed motion to change venue to the United States District Court for the District of Colorado. After denying the government ex parte relief, the Bankruptcy Court, Henry J.

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Bluebook (online)
288 B.R. 617, 2003 WL 231251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sterling-consulting-corp-v-internal-revenue-service-in-re-indian-mad-2003.