Whitaker v. J R Produce Corp. (In Re Gulf Northern Transport, Inc.)

340 B.R. 111, 2006 WL 786963
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedMarch 16, 2006
DocketBankruptcy No. 04-000175-3F7. Adversary No. 04-79
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 340 B.R. 111 (Whitaker v. J R Produce Corp. (In Re Gulf Northern Transport, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitaker v. J R Produce Corp. (In Re Gulf Northern Transport, Inc.), 340 B.R. 111, 2006 WL 786963 (Fla. 2006).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

JERRY A. FUNK, Bankruptcy Judge.

This adversary proceeding came before the Court upon the Complaint filed by Plaintiff, Lloyd T. Whitaker, as Chapter 7 Trustee, on behalf of the bankruptcy estate of UST Logistics, Inc., d/b/a Checkmate Truck Brokerage, Inc. (“Checkmate”), seeking to collect on an alleged outstanding debt owed to Checkmate by Defendant, J.R. Produce Corp. (“J. R. Produce”). The trial of this adversary proceeding was held on October 6, 2005. In lieu of oral argument, the Court directed the parties to submit memoranda in support of their respective positions. Upon the evidence presented and the arguments of the parties, the Court makes the following Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Debtor UST Logistics, Inc. formerly did business as Checkmate, a Florida corporation. (Compl. at 1.) Checkmate was a truck brokerage (Tr. at 40), which was licensed as a broker pursuant to 49 U.S.C. § 13102. (Compl. at 2.) J.R. Produce is a Florida corporation with a place of business in Hialeah, Florida (id.), of which Santiago Pereda (“Pereda”) is the general manager (Tr. at 5.) and Raul Mendez (“Mendez”) is the owner. (Tr. at 6.) Thunder Express was an agent or independent contractor hired by Checkmate to provide transportation services for which Checkmate was licensed. 1 (Tr. at 40-41.) Over the course of several months spanning from August to October of 2000, Thunder Express hauled inventory from J.R. Produce to various locations around the country (the “Transportation Services”). (Checkmate’s Ex. 8.)

Checkmate filed its voluntary petition for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code on November 30, 2000 (“Petition Date”). (Compl. at 2.) Lloyd Whitaker was appointed trustee (“Trustee”). (Checkmate’s Ex. 7.) Beginning approximately one month prior to the Petition Date, on or about October 31, 2000, and continuing through the beginning of December, on or about December 5, 2000, Mendez, on behalf of J.R. Produce, paid Thunder Express for the Transportation Services by written checks. (Checkmate’s Exs. 3-6, 8.) Mendez, on behalf of J.R. Produce, made the following four payments to Thunder Express totaling $20,143.00 between October, 2000 and December, 2000:

Load Dates Date of Check Checkmate Check No. Invoice Nos. Amount Payee Paid

ll-Aug-00 31-Oet-OO 7130 81377A Thunder Express $2,900.00

l-SepU00, 7-Nov-OO 7180 81724A, Thunder Express 5,800.00

22-Sept-00 82016A

*116 21-Aug-OO, 21-Nov-OO 7267 81501A, Thunder Express 6,163.00

29-Aug-00, 81648B,

I-Sept-00, 81732B,

5-Sept>00, 81737C,

8-SepN00, 81822B,

8-Sept-00, 81839D,

II-SepNOO 81842D

6-Oct-OO, 5-Dec-00 7326 82395A, Thunder Express 5,280.00

12-Oct-OO, 82482A,

23-Oct-OO, 82686D,

23-Oct-OO 82688B

14-Aug-00 N/A N/A 81389G N/A N/A 2

(Checkmate’s Ex. 3-6, 8, Tr. at 33-35.)

On November 7, 2000, Checkmate and its affiliated companies 3 sent a form letter (“November 7 Letter”) to “[a]ll Creditors of Checkmate ...” disclosing their financial difficulties which had forced them to “completely stop doing business.” (Checkmate’s Ex. 7.) J.R. Produce received one of these form letters. 4 (Tr. at 32-33, 35-37.) The letter disclosed specifically that Checkmate was “in the process of collecting [its] Accounts Receivable”, and that certain former employees of Checkmate were no longer with the company and thus were “no way aligned with [it] to do business under any other name or method to avoid [its] financial responsibility to [the creditors].” (Checkmate’s Ex. 7.)

On December 22, 2000, Checkmate, through the Trustee, 5 sent a letter (“December 22 Letter”) to J.R. Produce which notified J.R. Produce that Checkmate had filed for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code on November 30, 2000.(Id.) In this letter, Checkmate informed J.R. Produce that it had an outstanding account balance, for which payment needed to be sent to “Checkmate Truck Brokerage, Inc.” (Id.) The December 22 Letter provided in pertinent part:

Payment on this account to any other address will prevent proper application of your funds .... YOU SHOULD ALSO BE ADVISED THAT THE PAYMENT OF YOUR OBLIGATION(S) *117 TO ANY PARTY OTHER THAN TO CHECKMATE TRUCK BROKERAGE, INC.... WILL SUBJECT YOUR COMPANY TO HAYING TO PAY THE OBLIGATION A SECOND TIME.

(Checkmate’s Ex. 7)(emphasis in original). The December 22 Letter did not disclose the exact amount of the alleged outstanding debt that J.R. Produce owed to Checkmate. (Id.) After this letter, Checkmate sent five additional correspondence (“Additional Correspondence”) to J.R. Produce requesting and demanding payment of this alleged outstanding debt. 6

Albert Tickerhoof (“Tickerhoof’) works for “the company hired by the trustee to do the accounts receivable” for Checkmate. (Tr. at 40.) Tickerhoof testified that the November 7 Letter put J.R. Produce on notice that it was to make all future payments to Checkmate, not any other party. (Tr. at 32, 35-36.) Upon cross-examination, however, Tickerhoof admitted that the November 7 Letter was addressed to Checkmate’s creditors, and agreed that it “in no way instruet[ed] J.R. Produce to make checks payable to Checkmate.” (Tr. at 37.) Furthermore, Tickerhoof agreed during testimony that it appeared that the December 22 Letter “gave the first instruction to J.R. Produce that the checks should have been made payable to Checkmate.” (Id.) Tickerhoof also testified that according to his knowledge, there were no earlier communications in Checkmate’s records that advised J.R. Produce to make checks payable to Checkmate only and no other party. (Id.)

Pereda testified that he was unaware of any involvement of J.R. Produce with Checkmate. Specifically, Pereda testified that he had not even heard of the name “Checkmate”, as evidenced through the following testimony:

Q Mr. Pereda, you indicated that J.R. Produce had always done business with Thunder Express. Did J.R. Produce ever do business with Checkmate truck Brokerage?
A No.
Q Are you familiar with that name, Checkmate Truck Brokerage?
A After the claim, I got to know them.
Q So before the lawsuit was filed, is it your testimony that J.R. Produce was not familiar with the name Checkmate Truck Brokerage?
A That’s how it is.

(Tr. at 7.) Yet Pereda also testified that, as evidenced in Checkmate’s Exhibits 3-6, J.R.

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340 B.R. 111, 2006 WL 786963, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitaker-v-j-r-produce-corp-in-re-gulf-northern-transport-inc-flmb-2006.