Wakefield v. SWS Securities, Inc. (In Re Wakefield)

293 B.R. 372, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8861, 2003 WL 21250854
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedMay 27, 2003
Docket3:03-cv-00074
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 293 B.R. 372 (Wakefield v. SWS Securities, Inc. (In Re Wakefield)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wakefield v. SWS Securities, Inc. (In Re Wakefield), 293 B.R. 372, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8861, 2003 WL 21250854 (N.D. Tex. 2003).

Opinion

FITZWATER, District Judge.

The bankruptcy court awarded plaintiff-appellee Daniel Alan Wakefield (“Wake-field”) damages under 11 U.S.C. § 525(b) and Texas libel law after finding that defendant-appellant Southwest Securities, Inc. (“SWS”) had terminated his employment solely because he had filed for bankruptcy and had given false reasons in a Form U-5 for discharging him. The bankruptcy court rejected SWS’s reliance on the defense of judicial éstoppel to bar Wakefield’s § 525(b) cause of action. It applied a purely objective standard to find that, when Wakefield failed to amend the schedules in his chapter 7 case to reflect his § 525(b) claim, he had no motive to conceal the claim. Because the bankruptcy court abused its discretion in applying a purely objective standard, the court vacates and remands for further proceedings on the judicial estoppel issue and does not reach the question whether Wakefield can recover so-called additional damages for the § 525(b) violation. The court holds that if on remand the bankruptcy court finds that Wakefield is not judicially es-topped from recovering, its findings on § 525(b) liability and lost pay damages must be- affirmed. The court affirms the bankruptcy court’s decision that SWS committed libel and its award of damages for libel.

I

Wakefield was employed as a broker for SWS, a securities firm, from October 2000 until he was discharged in April 2001. Before working for SWS, he was employed in a similar capacity with two other securities brokers, Raymond James Financial, Inc. (“Raymond James”) and Josephthal & Co., Inc. (“Josephthal”). At SWS, Raymond James, and Josephthal, Wakefield obtained front-money loans, i.e., advances against commissions that are forgiven over a negotiated period of time. If a broker leaves the firm before the loan is forgiven, he becomes obligated to pay the balance. Wakefield owed some parts of the Raymond James and Josephthal loans while employed by SWS.

In December 1999 Raymond James initiated an arbitration proceeding against Wakefield with the National Association of Securities Dealers (“NASD”) seeking recovery of an unpaid front-money loan balance of $90,675.00. Raymond James obtained an award for that amount in approximately February 2001, while Wake-field was employed by SWS.

In March 2001 the NASD notified Wakefield that his broker’s' license would be suspended in 15 days unless he paid the award, arranged with Raymond James to pay or settle the claim, demonstrated that *376 the award had been or was being vacated or modified, or demonstrated that he had filed for bankruptcy or that the award had been discharged. Wakefield was unable to pay the award and instead filed for chapter 7 protection on April 3, 2001.

Kevin J. Marsh (“Marsh”), SWS’s Vice President and Branch Manager, also received the NASD notice. Wakefield advised Marsh that his arbitration attorneys were aware of the letter and were attempting to resolve the matter. Marsh made several telephone calls to Raymond James on Wakefield’s behalf in an unsuccessful attempt to assist him in resolving the matter by settlement or installment agreement.

On or about April 9, 2001 — a few days before the NASD deadline elapsed— Marsh and Wakefield discussed the possibility that Wakefield would file for bankruptcy. Wakefield incorrectly advised Marsh that he might have to file. Unbeknown to him, his bankruptcy counsel had already filed for chapter 7 protection on April 3. Marsh advised Wakefield that filing for bankruptcy would be grounds for termination. Wakefield told his bankruptcy attorney about Marsh’s comment, and the attorney contacted Marsh and informed him that discharging Wakefield solely because of his bankruptcy would violate § 525(b) of the Bankruptcy Code. Wakefield filed his bankruptcy schedules and statement of financial affairs on or about April 19, 2001.

SWS terminated Wakefield on April 27, 2001 for the stated reasons that he would require heightened supervision, SWS would have to hire additional personnel to supervise him, and SWS did not have the resources to accommodate such supervisory needs. When SWS discharged Wake-field, it was required to file a Form U-5 with the NASD. 1 In response to a question that requested the reason for termination, SWS stated:

TERMINATED WITH CAUSE — AS WE INTERPRET, MR. WAKEFIELD WOULD REQUIRE HEIGHTENED SUPERVISION UNDER RULES & REGULATIONS DUE TO HIS PERSONAL FINANCIAL DIFFICULTIES. THIS HEIGHTENED SUPERVISION WOULD REQUIRE MORE EXTENSIVE REVIEWS OF THE REGISTERED REPRESENTATIVE'S] ACTIVITIES, AND HENCEFORTH, WOULD REQUIRE THE ADDITION OF SUPERVISORY PERSONNEL. SWS CHOSE NOT TO EMPLOY ADDITIONAL PERSONNEL FOR THAT SPECIFIC REQUIREMENT.

R. 157.

Wakefield became aware on April 27, 2001 — the day he was discharged — that he had a potential § 525(b) 2 claim against SWS. SWS was a creditor in his chapter 7 *377 case because he owed the firm $98,300 for a front-money loan. Although Wakefield scheduled this debt in Schedule F (Schedule of Creditors Holding Unsecured Nonp-riority Claims), he scheduled nothing in Schedule B (Personal Property) for the category “Other contingent and unliquidat-ed claims of every nature, including tax refunds, counterclaims of the debtor, and rights to setoff claims.” R. 51.

The bankruptcy court granted Wake-field a no-asset discharge in July 2001. It discharged his indebtedness of $90,675.00 to Raymond James, $18,750'to Josephthal, and $98,300 to SWS. Wakefield later obtained employment with another securities firm, Milkie/Ferguson Investments, Inc. (“Milkie”), which imposed no form of heightened supervision.

On November 17, 2001, after he had obtained his discharge, Wakefield filed the instant adversary proceeding against SWS alleging claims for discrimination, in violation of § 525(b), libel per se, and negligence. 3 SWS relied on the defense of judicial estoppel to defeat Wakefield’s § 525(b) claim. It contended that he had failed to include this contingent cause of action in his bankruptcy schedules and then had filed the adversary proceeding against SWS after obtaining a discharge.

Following a bench trial, the bankruptcy court rejected SWS’s judicial estoppel defense and found that it had violated § 525(b) by terminating Wakefield’s employment solely because he had filed for bankruptcy protection. The court also found that SWS had libeled Wakefield by stating in the Form U-5 false reasons for terminating his employment. It awarded Wakefield $177,176.00 in damages under § 525(b) and for libel, finding that the measure of damages was the same under both theories, and post-judgment interest. The sum of $177,176.00 consisted of $121,951.00 for lost wages, special damages of $15,225.00, and $40,000 in additional damages. The bankruptcy court also directed SWS to amend or supplement Wakefield’s Form U-5.

II

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Bluebook (online)
293 B.R. 372, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8861, 2003 WL 21250854, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wakefield-v-sws-securities-inc-in-re-wakefield-txnd-2003.