Trehan v. Von Tarkanyi

85 B.R. 920, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3677, 1988 WL 41388
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 2, 1988
DocketBankruptcy Nos. 81 B10161 (BRL), 81-5656-A (BRL), No. M-47 (MP)
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 85 B.R. 920 (Trehan v. Von Tarkanyi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trehan v. Von Tarkanyi, 85 B.R. 920, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3677, 1988 WL 41388 (S.D.N.Y. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION AND FINAL ORDER

MILTON POLLACK, Senior District Judge.

This matter was remanded to the Bankruptcy Judge on August 28, 1986, to reconsider whether the default judgment entered in favor of the Trehans against Von Tarka-nyi by the Bankruptcy Court on September 10, 1982, in the amount of $450,000 plus interest is void and whether there was a fraud on the Bankruptcy Court requiring that the judgment be set aside. The sad details of this affair are discussed at length in this Court’s earlier opinion, 63 B.R. 1001. This Court stated in the remand:

In light of the procedural improprieties which pervaded these [bankruptcy] proceedings, and the omissions and misrepresentations made by the plaintiffs and their counsel in the complaint, and renewed by them in the hearings and subsequent affidavits addressed to both the Bankruptcy Court and this Court, a gross injustice may have resulted.

Responsive to the remand, an evidentiary hearing was scheduled by the Bankruptcy Judge to commence on July 13, 1987. The Judge explains the delay between the date of the remand, August 28, 1986, and the scheduled hearing, July 13,1987, in part, to the entry on April 10, 1987, of an order by him relieving the lawyers to the plaintiffs-judgment creditors as their counsel. Ultimately the plaintiffs failed to appear before that Court and the Court conducted the remand hearing in the absence of plaintiffs, a hearing which spanned the period *921 from July 13 to November 5, 1987, to hear two witnesses on direct and cross-examination, namely, the former lawyer for plaintiffs, Mr. Spizz, and the former lawyer for defendant, Mr. Harris.

As a result the Bankruptcy Judge reported on March 21, 1988, in Proposed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law (to which no one excepted within the time presented therefor) that

The now uncontroverted District Court record demonstrates that at least Mr. Trehan perpetrated a fraud on the court by submitting a “phony” power of attorney purporting to authorize Bailey to sign the contract of sale and by filing a forged amended contract purporting to delete the disabling mortgage contingency clause. The record demonstrates that the Trehans knew both documents were forgeries, [p. 8]

In its conclusions, the Bankruptcy Court states:

14. In light of the fraud perpetrated upon the Court by the Trehans in connection with the adversary proceeding, I find that the Trehans’ bad faith conduct in perpetrating the original fraud by resisting the motion to vacate the default before the Bankruptcy Court violates New Rule 11. [p. 26]

Further, the Judge wrote in conclusion number 25, in part:

Rule 60(b) specifically reserves the court’s inherent right to set aside a judgment obtained through fraud upon the court, [p. 30]

and finally as a Conclusion on Reconsideration:

26.As a result of the fraud perpetrated by the Trehans the default judgment is void and must be set aside as a nullity, [p. 30]

Also remanded to the Bankruptcy Court was the following direction by the District Court:

The Court should also consider whether Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure is applicable and should be invoked against the Trehans and their attorneys, given the irregularities which occurred and the renewal of these improprieties by plaintiffs and their counsel as late as February 1986.

Responsive thereto, the Bankruptcy Judge has found and reported that

27. For the willful violation of Rule 11 established in the record before the District Court, the appropriate sanction is to strike the Complaint filed by the Trehans commencing the within adversary proceeding and to order the Tre-hans’ [sic] to pay Yon Tarkanyi $5,000 for attorney’s fees.
28. Neither Nachamie, Kirschner, Levine & Spizz, P.C. nor Alex Spizz violated Fed.R.Civ.P. 11. The imposition of sanctions is not warranted, [pp. 30-31]

Suffice to say that the Court agrees with the factual and legal finding that the Trehan adversary proceeding instituted in the Bankruptcy Court and the procurement and entry of a default judgment against Von Tarkanyi therein were a fraud on the Court and that the judgment entered September 10, 1982, is void and should be vacated and set aside on the Bankruptcy Court docket and declared null and void and the said adversary complaint should be dismissed with prejudice. The Trehans should be ordered to pay Von Tarkanyi $5,000 for attorney’s fees and costs of these proceedings and Von Tarkanyi should have execution therefor forthwith.

The Bankruptcy Judge also considered the question of sanctions against the Trehans’ attorney for conduct during the proceedings in the Bankruptcy Court and has made two findings with respect to the coordinating conduct of the Trehans’ attorney. The learned Judge opined that “this [Bankruptcy] Court had the benefit of a more developed record not available to the District Court.” [p. 3] Consequently, the Judge added that “the record developed before me clearly establishes that Mr. Spizz and his firm were unaware of the Trehans’ fraudulent conduct and were not guilty of conduct mandating the award of sanctions.” [p. 3]

Having said that, the Judge later finds in his report that

9. In determining whether Rule 11 sanctions should be imposed upon [the *922 Spizz law firm], this Court’s inquiry is limited to: (a) an analysis under the Old Rule 11 standard of the circumstances surrounding Mr. Spizz’s signing the complaint ...; and (b) an analysis under the New Rule 11 standard of the circumstances surrounding Mr. Spizz’s signing the January 17,1986 affidavit and memorandum in opposition to the motion made in the Bankruptcy Court to vacate the default.... This court will leave to the District Court the determination as to whether sanctions should be imposed based upon the circumstances surrounding the submission of the affidavit and memorandum to the District Court, [pp. 24-25 (emphasis added)]

The Bankruptcy Judge found “Mr. Spizz [in the Bankruptcy Court adversary proceeding] did not violate Old Rule 11 and was in full compliance therewith.” [Conclusion 11, p. 25] Consequently that finding relating to the 1981-1982 events will not be reviewed again as not clearly erroneous albeit it is doubtful that this Court would have reached the same conclusion on the uncontrovertible facts.

Similarly, with respect to the 1986 events which occurred in the Bankruptcy Court, the Judge submitted proposed conclusions that “Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 B.R. 920, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3677, 1988 WL 41388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trehan-v-von-tarkanyi-nysd-1988.