William E. Baker, Jr.

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. Illinois
DecidedMarch 7, 2022
Docket18-71139
StatusUnknown

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Bluebook
William E. Baker, Jr., (Ill. 2022).

Opinion

SIGNED THIS: March 7, 2022

Mary P. Gorman United States Bankruptcy Judge

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT CENTRAL DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS In Re ) ) Case No. 18-71139 WILLIAM E. BAKER, Ur., ) ) Chapter 7 Debtor. )

Before the Court are claims filed by 3rd Sister Investment, LLC and Blackwater Energy, LLC. The Debtor objected to both claims asserting that the obligations described in the claims are debts of Belken Oil, LLC and that he has no personal liability for the claimed amounts. Because the claimants failed to prove that the Debtor has personal liability to them, the Debtor’s objections will be sustained and the claims will be disallowed.

I. Factual and Procedural Background William E. Baker, Jr., (“Debtor”) filed his voluntary petition under Chapter 7 on August 3, 2018. Relevant to the issues here, the Debtor scheduled both 3rd Sister Investment, LLC (“3rd Sister”) and Blackwater

Energy, LLC (“Blackwater”) as unsecured creditors. He listed the amounts owed to each as “$0” and identified their claims as contingent, unliquidated, and disputed. He disclosed the basis of each potential claim as “Lawsuit.” 3rd Sister and Blackwater, along with several other individuals and entities, filed an adversary complaint seeking to except a debt they claim is owed to them from the Debtor’s discharge. In their complaint, they alleged that they entered into a contract with Belken Oil, LLC (“Belken”), a company managed by the Debtor, for the construction and operation of oil wells.1 They

further asserted that the contract was breached and that a judgment was entered in pending state court litigation in their favor and against Belken for $214,981.74. They said that the only remaining issue in the state court was a determination of the Debtor’s personal liability but also claimed that the state court’s judgment against Belken was res judicata as to the Debtor’s personal liability. They argued that, because the debt was incurred through fraud, false pretenses, or defalcation as a fiduciary, the debt should be excepted from the Debtor’s discharge.

1 Although never discussed or explained at the trial, the complaint says that the plaintiffs other than Blackwater obtained their interests in the oil well contract with Belken through the assignment by Blackwater of portions of its 50% interest in the contract. The complaint is confusing in that regard because Blackwater is described as still having a 50% interest in the well and the percentage operating interests allegedly held by all the plaintiffs, including Blackwater, add up to a total of a little over 118%. Andrew Erickson was appointed as the case trustee (“Trustee”) and obtained a deadline for creditors to file claims. Prior to the expiration of that deadline, 3rd Sister and Blackwater each filed documents purporting to be claims. Neither used an Official Proof of Claim Form. An attorney for the

claimants simply filed a copy of the adversary complaint with another copy of the same complaint attached as an exhibit in the claims register portion of the case docket on behalf of each claimant. The other plaintiffs identified in the adversary complaint did not file claims. The Debtor filed objections and, later, amended objections to the claims of 3rd Sister and Blackwater asserting that he has no personal liability for the amounts claimed. It is the Debtor’s amended objections that are now before the Court. While the adversary proceeding commenced by 3rd Sister and

Blackwater was pending, the United States Trustee (“UST”) filed an objection to the Debtor’s discharge. The UST alleged that the Debtor had not scheduled all his assets and had made false oaths at his initial creditors meeting and at a court-ordered examination under Bankruptcy Rule 2004. After a contested trial, the Debtor’s discharge was denied. See Gargula v. Baker (In re Baker), 2020 WL 7767853, at *12 (Bankr. C.D. Ill. Dec. 29, 2020). After the Debtor’s discharge was denied, the adversary proceeding filed by 3rd Sister, Blackwater, and others was dismissed as moot. 3rd Sister and

Blackwater then filed a motion for stay relief seeking to have the stay modified so they could try their claims in state court. After hearing, the motion was continued generally with the stay remaining in full force and effect as to claims against estate property. This Court concluded that it should not abstain from the issues raised by the claims and claim objections and that granting stay relief as requested would effectively result in the state court deciding the substantive legal issue of whether the claims should be allowed in this case as

personal liabilities of the Debtor. In the meantime, the Trustee reported that he had collected enough funds to pay all claims, other than those of 3rd Sister and Blackwater, in full. Thus, a decision on the Debtor’s personal liability to 3rd Sister and Blackwater was necessary to determine whether the Trustee should continue pursuing the collection of other assets.2 Although delayed by the retirement of the Debtor’s original attorney and several substitutions of other attorneys for the Debtor, the claim objections were finally tried on September 2, 2021.

The trial of the claim objections began with a discussion of several procedural issues. The attorney for 3rd Sister and Blackwater had filed a motion several days before the trial asking for leave to file an amended exhibit list adding an exhibit that had not been timely disclosed pursuant to the requirements of the Court’s trial order. The Court’s standard trial order, which had been entered about six weeks before the trial, required parties to disclose and docket all proposed exhibits not later than one week before trial. Although

2 The Trustee reported a potential surplus several times in open court but also included the representation in a motion to compromise a preference claim (Doc. 165) wherein he agreed that the settlement funds would be returned to the other party to the settlement if the claims of 3rd Sister and Blackwater were disallowed. The representation of a potential surplus was also made by the Trustee in his UST’s Interim Report (Doc. 202) filed April 29, 2021. Additionally, the Trustee has put on hold an adversary complaint against the Debtor’s son related to the alleged fraudulent conveyance of an interest in the Debtor’s home, representing in a motion to extend time that pursuit of the complaint will not be necessary if the claims of 3rd Sister and Blackwater are disallowed. That cause of action was assigned adversary proceeding #20-07037. 3rd Sister and Blackwater’s attorney had generally complied with the order by timely docketing a number of exhibits, his motion sought to tardily add an additional exhibit—a settlement demand letter sent by him to the state court attorney for Belken and the Debtor in 2014. Because no compelling reason for

the failure to comply with the deadline was presented and the settlement demand letter was likely inadmissible in any event, the motion for leave was denied. The Court also questioned the attorney for 3rd Sister and Blackwater about the amount of the claims. Although two separate claims for $214,981.74 were filed, the attorney acknowledged that there was one debt totaling $214,981.74 and that the debt was owed to “all of the claimants”—apparently referring to all the plaintiffs in the state court litigation and the adversary

proceeding, not just 3rd Sister and Blackwater.3 The attorney was also questioned about an objection that he had previously raised as to the Debtor’s standing to bring the claim objections. He acknowledged that he was no longer questioning the Debtor’s standing.

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