Uecker v. Davidson (In Re Bair Island Marina & Office Center)

116 B.R. 180, 1990 Bankr. LEXIS 1388, 1990 WL 89468
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. California
DecidedJune 22, 1990
Docket14-42138
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 116 B.R. 180 (Uecker v. Davidson (In Re Bair Island Marina & Office Center)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Uecker v. Davidson (In Re Bair Island Marina & Office Center), 116 B.R. 180, 1990 Bankr. LEXIS 1388, 1990 WL 89468 (Cal. 1990).

Opinion

RANDALL J. NEWSOME, Bankruptcy Judge.

This Chapter 7 adversary proceeding is before the Court pursuant to a trial on the merits of trustee Susan Uecker’s Complaint for breach of contract, declaratory judgment, and sanctions for violation of the automatic stay. The Court has core jurisdiction over this matter pursuant to 28 *182 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(A), (N) and (0). This action involves a $100,000 earnest money-deposit which was placed into escrow by the defendant Thomas Davidson pursuant to a Court-approved sale of the debtor’s only asset, Bair Island Marina & Office Center located in Redwood City, California. Through a series of events, Davidson ended up with a check for $100,000, and the trustee ended up with nothing.

The issues to be decided are first, whether the earnest money deposited into the escrow account pursuant to this Court's order of sale constituted property of the estate pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 541; and second, the extent of the purchaser’s liability, if any, for exercising control over and depriving the estate of that earnest money.

After thorough consideration of the testimony offered at trial on the merits on March 19, 1990 and April 10, 1989, this Court holds that the $100,000 earnest money deposit is property of the estate, that the Defendant committed a willful violation of the automatic stay, and that he is liable for actual damages of $100,000, the attorney fees expended in recovering the money, and punitive damages of $50,000.

FINDINGS OF FACT

In August of 1986 Bair Island Marina and Office Center, a limited partnership (“Bair Island”) purchased a 12-acre parcel of oceanfront property in Redwood City, California, from C.J. Development Co., a limited partnership which was a debtor in bankruptcy. Gary Castro and Timothy Jensen were the general partners of C.J. Development, and eventually became general partners of Bair Island. Included among the assets of the sale (which was approved by this Court), was the land plus two important entitlements needed to develop the property into a 122-slip marina and office complex. The first was a development permit from the Army Corps of Engineers. The second involved a specific condition of that permit, that being the completion of performance under a “mitigation agreement” with the Peninsula Open Space Trust (“POST”). Under that agreement, C.J. Development was required to purchase privately-held acreage in environmentally-sensitive marshlands located in the southernmost portion of San Francisco Bay, and then transfer this property to POST in mitigation of the loss of open space resulting from the marina development. In accordance with this agreement, C.J. Development had deposited $188,500 in escrow to purchase the required land.

Centennial Mortgage Income Fund II (“Centennial”) loaned Bair Island $3,487,-200 to make the purchase from C.J. Development, and took back a deed of trust on the marina property as well as a security interest in the permits, amounts on deposit, and any other intangibles. (Exhibits A & B attached to document 3, RS 88-0432.)

After the sale, Castro on behalf of Bair Island began negotiations with POST regarding the acquisition of the marshlands called for by the mitigation agreement. Thereafter, Castro apparently expended some of the trust money for the purchase of marshland acreage.

In the meantime, on February 19, 1988 Bair Island defaulted on the Centennial note, and filed its own Chapter 11 petition. On March 11, 1988 Centenial filed a motion for relief from the automatic stay to allow it to proceed with a foreclosure on its deed of trust. (RS 88-432).

On April 5, 1988 Centennial also filed a motion to appoint a Chapter 11 trustee. Among other things, Centennial asserted in this motion that Castro was refusing to turn over to Bair Island the marshlands it had purchased on its behalf, and was claiming that C.J. Development Co. held title to that property. A hearing was held on this motion on June 14, 1988. At that hearing attorney John Chu appeared representing Thomas Davidson, who expressed an interest in purchasing the marina site for $5 million. The Court held that the stay would be lifted effective 30 days hence and a trustee would be appointed to investigate and pursue causes of action against Bair Island’s principals unless a binding sale agreement was executed in the interim. Castro, Jensen and Davidson reached such an agreement on July 22, 1988. That agreement, which was drafted by Davidson *183 but not presented to the Court, called for a $5 million purchase price, and a $100,000 earnest money deposit, which had already been paid into an escrow account opened at Stewart Title of California in San Jose. Davidson could withdraw this money from escrow at any time within 180 days if he was not satisfied that all of the appropriate permits and reports had been obtained. If notice of his dissatisfaction was not given within this 180 day period, then “the conditions shall be deemed satisfied and earnest money shall remain deposited with escrow holder and applied under this agreement ... ”, i.e. applied to the purchase price or paid to the seller as liquidated damages. .The sale was to close no later than May 1, 1989. Plaintiffs Exhibit 1.

A separate letter agreement drafted by Centennial’s counsel, which was ultimately signed by all parties and acknowledged in open court on July 22, was largely consistent with Davidson’s draft. Among other things, it called for Davidson to deposit $100,000 in earnest money with the Court, and included an acknowledgment by Castro, Jensen, C.J. Development Co. and Bair Island that the Army Corps of Engineers’ permit and the mitigation agreement were “property of the Debtor and are subject to the Security Agreement held by Centennial.” Certain other points were agreed to in principle but required “fine tuning.” For purposes of this dispute, the most important of these is as follows:

(e) Unless the escrow has been previously cancelled, on February 1, 1989 the $100,000 deposit will be automatically and irrevocably released to Centennial

Plaintiff’s Ex. 2.

After all of the parties had signed off on the agreement, the Court ordered the sale to be consummated according to its terms, and emphasized that the essential terms of the agreement were binding and immutable at that point regardless of any additional language which might be added. (Transcript of proceedings, July 22, 1988).

Shortly after the July 22, 1988 hearing, a set of escrow instructions and a purchase agreement were drawn up by Davidson which fleshed out the parties’ arrangement. Plaintiff’s Ex. 4. Those documents make it clear that the seller would receive $300,000 (Paras. 1.1 & 1.2); that buyer was to obtain the needed permits and reports by February 1, 1989; that escrow was to close on that date, but that extensions of the closing date could be purchased for $45,000 each, to extend that date to May 1, 1989 at the latest (Para. 6.4); and that up to February 1, 1989 Davidson could at his option withdraw from the sale and obtain a refund of his $100,000, but that after that date the money was to be applied to the purchase price if escrow closed, or be forfeited if it did not. (Paras. 2.0, 4.0, and 6.3).

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Bluebook (online)
116 B.R. 180, 1990 Bankr. LEXIS 1388, 1990 WL 89468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/uecker-v-davidson-in-re-bair-island-marina-office-center-canb-1990.