Unsecured Creditors Committee v. United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of New Mexico

CourtBankruptcy Appellate Panel of the Tenth Circuit
DecidedDecember 4, 2019
Docket19-10
StatusPublished

This text of Unsecured Creditors Committee v. United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of New Mexico (Unsecured Creditors Committee v. United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of New Mexico) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Bankruptcy Appellate Panel of the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Unsecured Creditors Committee v. United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of New Mexico, (bap10 2019).

Opinion

FILED U.S. Bankruptcy Appellate Panel of the Tenth Circuit NOT FOR PUBLICATION * December 4, 2019 UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY APPELLATE PANEL Blaine F. Bates OF THE TENTH CIRCUIT Clerk _________________________________

IN RE VICTOR P. KEARNEY, BAP No. NM-19-010

Debtor. ___________________________________

VICTOR P. KEARNEY, Bankr. No. 17-12274 Chapter 11 Appellant,

v. OPINION KEVIN YEAROUT, UNSECURED CREDITORS COMMITTEE, UNITED STATES TRUSTEE, and LOUIS ABRUZZO and BENJAMIN ABRUZZO, Trustees of the Mary Pat Abruzzo Kearney Testamentary Trusts B and C,

Appellees. _________________________________

Appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of New Mexico _________________________________

Before CORNISH, ROMERO, and LOYD, ** Bankruptcy Judges. _________________________________

LOYD, Bankruptcy Judge.

* This unpublished opinion may be cited for its persuasive value, but is not precedential, except under the doctrines of law of the case, claim preclusion, and issue preclusion. 10th Cir. BAP L.R. 8026-6. ** Honorable, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge, United States Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Oklahoma, sitting by designation. _________________________________

Chapter 11 debtor Victor Kearney appeals the New Mexico Bankruptcy Court’s

order confirming the chapter 11 plan of reorganization proposed by the unsecured

creditors’ committee in his case. Determining the Bankruptcy Court did not err in

confirming the plan of reorganization we AFFIRM.

I. Factual Background

Victor Kearney (the “Debtor”) married Mary Pat Abruzzo in 1988. Mary Pat’s

parents developed and ran a ski resort and tramway near Albuquerque, New Mexico. The

Abruzzo’s operated the ski resort and tramway under a company called Alvarado Realty

Company. Mary Pat and her three brothers, Louis, Benny, and Richard Abruzzo managed

Alvarado Realty Company since their parents’ deaths in 1985.

Mary Pat owned approximately 18.5 percent of Alvarado Realty Company’s stock.

Mary Pat died in 1997 at the age of 31. Her will set up two testamentary trusts for the

benefit of her brothers and the Debtor during his lifetime (the “Trusts”). The Trusts

contained a spendthrift provision preventing the Debtor from assigning his interest in the

Trusts’ assets to creditors. Upon the Debtor’s death, the remainder in the Trusts was to be

divided between Louis, Benny, and Richard Abruzzo, or their surviving children. Richard

died in 2010. Mary Pat’s will appointed Louis, Benny (the “Brothers”), and the Debtor as

co-trustees of the Trusts.

Over the years, the Trusts distributed approximately $800,000 per year or

$16,000,000 total to the Debtor. However, the Debtor and the Brothers did not have a

good relationship. Eventually in 2013, the Debtor sued the Brothers for breach of

2 fiduciary duty as co-trustees of the Trusts in New Mexico state court. The Debtor alleged

the Brothers suppressed Alvarado Realty Company’s dividend payments to the Trusts to

his detriment as a beneficiary. The Brothers counterclaimed, alleging the Debtor

breached his fiduciary duty as a co-trustee and asked the state court to modify the Trusts

to appoint a successor trustee to replace the Debtor.

At the conclusion of a trial on the Debtor’s claims, the state court denied all of the

Debtor’s allegations and ordered him to pay the Brothers $510,000 in attorneys’ fees and

$155,915.60 in costs. The state court also sanctioned the Debtor $100,000, finding he lied

under oath, failed to comply with discovery orders, and otherwise acted in a manner

amounting to an affront to the entire judicial process.

The state court conducted a separate trial on the Brothers’ counterclaims at which

it determined the Debtor breached fiduciary duties owed to them as co-trustees and

ordered that the Debtor be replaced as a co-trustee of the Trusts. The Debtor filed his

chapter 11 bankruptcy petition on September 1, 2017, the day before the state court

hearing on the appointment of a trustee to replace the Debtor.

The U.S. Trustee’s office appointed an unsecured creditors’ committee (the

“Committee”) on November 22, 2017. The Committee is made up of Brenda Johnson,1

Nick Tarlson, 2 and Betty and Clayton White. 3 The Bankruptcy Court extended the

1 Ms. Johnson is the Debtor’s former assistant and is a creditor in the amount of $310,869 by way of two unsecured promissory notes. 2 Mr. Tarlson is an accountant asserting a claim of $84,829 for professional fees. 3 The Whites assert a claim of $123,476 by way of two promissory notes secured by a 10% interest in a now defunct limited liability company. 3 Debtor’s exclusivity period until June 12, 2018. The Debtor filed his third amended plan

of reorganization on July 13, 2018. The Debtor then amended his plan of reorganization

on August 13, 2018, August 29, 2018, November 16, 2018, and January 22, 2019.

When the Debtor filed his fifth amended plan of reorganization, he sought a

further extension of the exclusivity period. The Bankruptcy Court denied the extension of

the exclusivity period, opening the door for the Committee to file a competing plan of

reorganization. The Committee filed a plan on July 12, 2018 and amended its plan on

November 7, 2018. The Debtor proposed his seventh and final plan just nine days before

the scheduled hearing on the Debtor’s sixth amended plan and the Committee’s amended

plan.

The Committee’s amended plan provided funding from the Trusts’ assets pursuant

to the state court’s modification of the Trusts. The Committee’s plan authorized Alvarado

Realty Company 4 to purchase back shares of the company held by the Trusts for

$12,571,799; paid a $3,000,000 distribution of the Trusts’ assets to the Debtor, to be

turned over to the bankruptcy estate in settlement of all claims held by the estate against

4 Alvarado Realty Company is a creditor in the bankruptcy case, asserting a claim of $184,503 for sanctions or compensatory losses for the Debtor’s violation of a protective order in the state court matter. 4 the Brothers and Alvarado Realty Company; and paid the priority tax claim of the IRS

over five years from net income otherwise distributable to the Debtor. 5

The Bankruptcy Court granted relief from the automatic stay to pursue state court

approval of the modification of the Trusts. One day before the state court was to hear the

matter, the Debtor removed the action to federal district court for the District of New

Mexico, alleging diversity of citizenship. The District of New Mexico transferred the

matter back to the Bankruptcy Court, concluding the attempt to remove the matter was a

sham litigation tactic. The Bankruptcy Court determined it must abstain from issuing a

ruling on modification of the Trusts and remanded the matter back to the state court. The

state court approved the modification of the Trusts to allow for the sale of the Trusts’

assets to Alvarado Realty Company and the $3,000,000 payment to the bankruptcy estate

(the “Trust Modifications”).

Upon the sale of the Trusts’ assets to Alvarado Realty Company, the Committee’s

plan provided for the creation of a new trust, the trustee of which would hold and

distribute payments to creditors. The Committee’s plan provided that priority claims

would be paid in full, all collateral encumbered by secured claims would be surrendered,

and the unsecured claims would receive a pro rata distribution out of the $3,000,000

payment.

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Unsecured Creditors Committee v. United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of New Mexico, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/unsecured-creditors-committee-v-united-states-bankruptcy-court-for-the-bap10-2019.