Timothy Kelly v. Carl Mace

573 F. App'x 490
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 22, 2014
Docket13-4068
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 573 F. App'x 490 (Timothy Kelly v. Carl Mace) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Timothy Kelly v. Carl Mace, 573 F. App'x 490 (6th Cir. 2014).

Opinions

OPINION

STRANCH, Circuit Judge.

Timothy and Sharon Kelly, residents of Pennsylvania, appeal from the decision of [492]*492the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel (BAP) that reversed a favorable decision the Kel-lys obtained in the Ohio Chapter 18 bankruptcy case of the debtors, Carl and Cindy Mace. The Kellys filed timely proof of an unsecured claim, to which the Maces objected. After an evidentiary hearing, the bankruptcy court found that Timothy Kelly was a more credible witness than Carl Mace. The court found that Carl Mace made and breached an enforceable oral agreement with Timothy Kelly to relieve the Kellys of their personal guaranty on a 2002 bank loan. As a result, the bankruptcy court allowed in full the Kellys’ claim for $313,781.36. Because the bankruptcy court’s findings are not clearly erroneous and the court did not err in allowing the Kellys’ claim, we REVERSE the decision of the BAP, AFFIRM the decision of the bankruptcy court, and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. FACTS

In 1995, Timothy Kelly and Carl Mace formed K & M Feeds, Inc., a corporation doing business as Olde Country Store, a feed and hardware retail establishment in New Wilmington, Pennsylvania. Each man owned fifty percent of K & M’s stock. Mace served as the corporation’s President and Kelly held the position of Secretary-Treasurer. Kelly operated the feed store and received an annual salary.

In 1998, K & M borrowed money from the First National Bank of Slippery Rock (FNB). The Maces personally guaranteed the loan and pledged their Ohio residence and farm as collateral. The Kellys personally guaranteed the loan, but they did not have any collateral to pledge as security for the loan. A third party, Dan Travolini, also personally guaranteed the loan.

By 2002, Kelly and Mace discussed selling K & M because Mace wanted out of the business. A “One-Year Agreement” was drafted, apparently designed to anticipate different buy-out scenarios that might occur. For instance, the agreement provided that all of the K & M stock would be transferred to Mace, presumably to facilitate a sale of the business, and in return K & M would execute a promissory note to the Kellys in the amount of $40,000, to be paid upon the sale of the business. The Kellys reserved the right to approve any sale. The agreement also provided that the Kellys could purchase Mace’s stock for $40,000, but if the Kellys took over the business, the $40,000 would be paid when the Maces’ collateral pledged for the 1998 loan was released.

The parties vigorously dispute when the “One-Year Agreement” was signed. Kelly and Mace agreed that they did not execute it on January 1, 2002, the date shown on the agreement. The bankruptcy court found that Kelly’s testimony on this point was more credible than Mace’s. Although Mace said the agreement was signed a few days after January 1, 2002, Kelly testified that the agreement was signed in November or December 2002. Kelly’s testimony was corroborated by an October 23, 2002 letter written by K & M’s attorney, Robert Clark, to the Kellys and the Maces. In that letter, Clark wrote that he was enclosing “a new draft of the Agreement and Promissory Judgment Note,” and suggested that “[i]f they are satisfactory, we need to move forward by making arrangements to have them signed and have the stock transferred to Carl and Cindy.” Kelly Ex. A. The bankruptcy court found that Clark would not have written this letter if Kelly had already transferred his stock to Mace on January 1, 2002, as Mace claimed. According to Kelly, the agreement was backdated to benefit Mace in his separate dealings with Sky Bank.

[493]*493During the same time period, Thomas Skelton became involved in K & M. Skel-ton operated a livestock auction business next door to K & M’s feed store. Kelly and Skelton both testified that Mace, Kelly, and Skelton reached an agreement to restructure K & M so that all of them would be co-owners of K & M. Mace denied that any such arrangement was discussed.

In May 2002, Kelly and Skelton refinanced K & M’s 1998 loan with FNB. This new loan was in the amount of $347,000, to be paid in monthly installments, with a balloon payment due on May 25, 2007. Kelly signed the bank note as K & M’s President and Skelton as its Secretary-Treasurer. Although neither of them actually held the corporate positions listed on the bank note, Mace agreed to allow the representations. As a result of the 2002 loan transaction: (1) FNB relinquished the Maces’ personal guaranty as well as FNB’s interest in the Maces’ real property that had been pledged as collateral for the 1998 loan; (2) FNB relinquished the personal guaranty of Travolini on the 1998 loan; (3) Skelton pledged his farm as collateral for the new loan; and (4) the Kellys and the Skeltons personally guaranteed the new loan.

Mace claimed that this transaction occurred because he wanted out of the business and his stipulations were clear: in exchange for his half of K & M’s stock, he demanded (1) freedom from any obligation on the 1998 loan; (2) freedom from outstanding liabilities to K & M vendors; and (3) payment of $40,000 in cash. The bankruptcy court found that Mace alone benefited from the 2002 loan transaction because FNB relinquished the Maces’ pledged collateral and personal guaranty on the 1998 loan, yet Mace still retained ownership of fifty percent of K & M’s stock. The court found that no stock was ever transferred to Skelton and no change in ownership of K & M occurred even though the only parties legally obligated on K & M’s 2002 loan were the Kellys and the Skeltons.

By 2004, Mace wished to be the sole owner of K & M. He submitted a loan application to FNB to refinance the 2002 loan. Mace proposed to FNB that he would substitute his farm for the Skeltons’ farm as collateral for a new loan and the bank would relinquish the personal guarantees of the Kellys and the Skeltons. FNB denied Mace’s application on April 30, 2004. Having received a copy of the denial letter, Kelly knew that Mace could not refinance the 2002 loan through FNB.

Despite this development, Kelly and Mace met in attorney Clark’s office in New Wilmington, Pennsylvania in May 2004 to sign documents transferring sole control of K & M to Mace. The bankruptcy court found that, during this meeting, K & M, acting through Mace, gave Kelly a promissory note for $40,000 bearing a maturity date of May 1, 2008. This note was backdated to January 1, 2002. The court also determined that Kelly signed the back of his stock certificate and handed it to Mace, and that signature, too, was backdated to January 1, 2002. Kelly testified these documents were backdated at Mace’s request because he had represented to a bank in or before 2002 that he was the sole owner of K & M Feeds.

The bankruptcy court further found that a third document, entitled “Agreement,” was presented for Mace’s signature during the May 2004 meeting at attorney Clark’s office, but Mace refused to sign it.1 The “Agreement” provided in paragraph 1 that K & M would execute a promissory note to [494]*494Kelly in the amount of $40,000 with no interest, to be paid in three installments on December 1, 2004, September 30, 2005, and May 1, 2008. The Agreement further provided in paragraph 2 that “Mace and K &

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573 F. App'x 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/timothy-kelly-v-carl-mace-ca6-2014.