United Pacific Insurance v. McClelland

993 F.2d 1211
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 29, 1993
DocketNo. 92-4173
StatusPublished

This text of 993 F.2d 1211 (United Pacific Insurance v. McClelland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Pacific Insurance v. McClelland, 993 F.2d 1211 (5th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

It is remarkable that in a case with so much money at stake, the lien creditors, trustee and administrative priority creditors created a record full of ambiguities and unc-larity at all stages. Nevertheless, this court must play the hand it was dealt and has conscientiously tried to sort out the parties’ claims in light of what was rational and ethical at the time of their assertion.

This is a dispute over the proceeds of a settlement of claims made by the former Chapter 11 debtor Troy Dodson Construction Co., Inc. and the City of Beaumont. The lawsuit, filed in state court before Dodson entered bankruptcy, sought to recover monies owed on the Phelan Boulevard Construction Project and damages for alleged torts including libel and slander, breach of good faith and fair dealing, negligent performance, and misfeasance. After Dodson’s case had been converted to a Chapter 7 liquidation, the trustee negotiated a $750,000 settlement with the City, which the bankruptcy court approved.

All of the parties to this litigation took part in the state court suit in some form or fash[1213]*1213ion, a fact the bankruptcy court later found dispositive against the appellants. During the course of litigation, Dodson’s sureties United Pacific Insurance Company and Reliance Insurance (collectively “UPIC”) had been impleaded by the City on its claims against their bonds, and MBank had attempted to intervene as the lienholder on Dodson’s accounts receivable. The sureties’ presence as third-party defendants became moot when the case settled, and their attorney approved the final judgment as to form and substance. Dodson opposed MBank’s motion to intervene, asserting inter alia that the bank had no standing; the state court struck the motion to intervene without opinion. MBank did not appeal.

Dodson’s trustee obtained bankruptcy court approval to enter into the settlement and receive $350,000 cash from the City and $400,000 as a receiver’s claim against a failed insurer of the City. At least $150,000 of the settlement proceeds were paid by the City from a municipal bond fund for street construction projects.

After MBank filed a motion in bankruptcy court asserting its claim as a secured accounts receivable creditor on the settlement proceeds, the sureties pled their competing claims, and the appellees (debtor’s original Chapter 11 attorney and accountant) undertook to defend the trustee’s settlement as a source of unsecured revenue for the debtor. Appellees’ intervention was not philanthropic: at the time of settlement, they both had administrative priority claims dating from the failed reorganization, and this lawsuit provided their only hope for a fund of unencumbered assets from which to seek reimbursement.

The bankruptcy court heard testimony on November 17, 1988 concerning the parties’ claims, and in April 1990, he entered findings of fact and conclusions of law holding against the lien creditors. There were alternative bases for this ruling. On one hand, the bankruptcy court held that the sureties and MBank failed, by inaction in the state court proceeding, to preserve their respective claims to the proceeds from the settlement. On the other hand, the bankruptcy court held that the judgment and settlement agreement concerning the state court suit were ambiguous, and the evidence before it did not show that the settlement was paid on account of Dodson’s contract claims against the City. Rather, the settlement was found to be directed solely at the tort claims made against the City — claims that the court held were not subject either to the sureties’ bonding contracts or to MBank’s accounts receivable lien. The district court affirmed for essentially the same reasons, 135 B.R. 504, spawning this appeal.

DISCUSSION

The issues raised before us are numerous and may best be listed in the order in which we will address them:

(1) Does res judicata or collateral estoppel arise from the state court’s order denying MBank’s motion to intervene and preclude its assertion of a lien claim in bankruptcy court?
(2) Did the sureties, by agreeing to the state court judgment “in form and substance”, waive the right to assert their surety claims in bankruptcy court?
(3) Did the district court err in finding the agreed judgment and settlement in the state court action ambiguous?
(4) Did the bankruptcy and district courts clearly err in finding that the parties to the state court suit intended the City’s settlement to be allocated solely to recovery on Dodson’s tort claims?
(5) If some portion of the settlement proceeds are allocable to recovery of Dodson’s contract with the City, how much?
(6) Do the sureties’ rights cover proceeds of the settlement whether or not characterized as tort recovery, because they “grew out of’ Dodson’s construction contract with the City?
(7) Does MBank or do the sureties have a prior secured claim to some or all of the proceeds based on their respective contract rights?

We do not reach the last two of these issues, because our answer to the first five questions requires a reversal and remand to the bankruptcy court.

(1) Does res judicata or collateral estoppel arise from the state court’s order denying MBank’s motion to intervene and [1214]*1214preclude its assertion of a lien claim in bankruptcy court?
Answer: No.

Appellees contend that we must infer that because one line of Dodson’s pleading opposing MBank’s motion to intervene in state court alleged vaguely that MBank had no right to do so, the state trial court therefore definitively decided MBank’s lien rights. This contention is patently incorrect. We apply the same standard of collateral estoppel that would be used in state court to determine the preclusive effect of one of its judgments.1 Texas law holds that issues of fact actually litigated and determined in one lawsuit are binding on the same parties to a later suit. Barr v. Resolution Trust Corp., 837 S.W.2d 627 (Tex.1992).

There is simply no evidence in the state court pleadings that the court made any such decision. It issued no opinion. Significantly, the balance of Dodson’s pleading in opposition to intervention seems to assert that MBank had no rights beyond those of Dodson itself, a contention that says nothing about the extent of MBank’s lien rights. Accordingly, whether or not MBank should have chosen to appeal this ruling is irrelevant. The state court’s order neither expressly nor by necessary implication adjudicated the extent of MBank’s lien rights. That order did not preclude MBank’s filing a motion to determine lien rights in the bankruptcy court.

Almost as an aside, appellees also assert that the bank’s pleading that vaguely objected to the specific language of the settlement, a pleading filed but not pursued when the trustee’s motion for approval to compromise was pending before the bankruptcy court, waived its rights to challenge the characterization of the proceeds later. We disagree.

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Bluebook (online)
993 F.2d 1211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-pacific-insurance-v-mcclelland-ca5-1993.