William Glenn Johns

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedMarch 26, 2024
Docket21-60010
StatusUnknown

This text of William Glenn Johns (William Glenn Johns) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy 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
William Glenn Johns, (Tex. 2024).

Opinion

{Ry CLERK, U.S. BANKRUPTCY COURT A. S55) SC NORTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS A) eg 4 ENTERED + YY Ape 4 ix □□□ AM THE DATE OF ENTRY IS ON a AME af ‘i THE COURT’S DOCKET a a The following constitutes the ruling of the court and has the force and effect therein described.

Signed March 26, 2024 __ feet A So United States Bankruptcy Judge

IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS SAN ANGELO DIVISION IN RE: § § WILLIAM GLENN JOHNS, § CASE NO. 21-60010-rlj7 § Debtor. § MEMORANDUM OPINION William Glenn Johns filed his chapter 7 bankruptcy petition and, in doing so, claimed his self-directed Roth IRA as exempt from the bankruptcy estate.'! ECF No. 1, Sched. C.? He listed one creditor, a collection company purportedly collecting a debt of over $2 million owed to David Rutan. /d., Sched. E/F. Despite this, several other creditors filed claims in Johns’s bankruptcy. For the matter at hand, the relevant creditors are David and Michelle Rutan and Integral 4RMT, LLC? (collectively, the “Rutans”). The Rutans and the chapter 7 trustee, Roddrick Newhouse (“Trustee”), objected to Johns’s exemption claim to his self-directed Roth TRA.

' “TRA” refers to an individual retirement account. 2 “ECF No.” refers to the numbered docket entry in the Court’s electronic case file for Case No. 21-60010. 3 Integral 4RMT, LLC is an entity related to the Rutans.

For the reasons set forth below, the Court sustains the Trustee’s and Rutans’ objection and disallows Johns’s exemption claim to the IRA. BACKGROUND I. The Bankruptcy Johns filed his chapter 7 petition on February 3, 2021. ECF No. 1. His bankruptcy

schedules reveal an individual with few assets and limited income. Johns exempted his only asset of substantial value—a self-directed Roth IRA, which he values in his schedules at $250,000.4 Id. Johns makes his exemption under 11 U.S.C. § 522(d)(12).5 Together the Trustee and Rutans objected to Johns’s exemption of the IRA. They contend that the IRA is not tax exempt because of “prohibited transactions” and “excessive contributions” that thereby disqualify the IRA as an exempt retirement fund under § 522(d)(12). The Trustee and Rutans filed their original objection to Johns’s exemptions on January 6, 2022. ECF No. 73. They then “supplemented” their objection on October 3, 2022.6 The Court heard six days of testimony and evidence7 and permitted the parties to submit post-trial briefs in lieu of closing arguments.8

4 Johns amended his schedules and Statement of Financial Affairs on October 30, 2023—over two years after filing his original schedules, and after the trial concluded. ECF Nos. 373 & 374. In his amended schedules, he maintains that his IRA is valued at $250,000, but the amendment includes a “breakdown” of how that value was derived. See ECF No. 373 at 4.

5 Hereinafter, “section” or “§” refers to 11 U.S.C., the Bankruptcy Code, unless otherwise stated.

6 Due to a failure to redact sensitive information, the supplemental objection was refiled with redactions on May 22, 2023 [ECF No. 306]; the supplement was permitted by the Court [ECF No. 209].

7 The trial occurred on May 31, 2023, June 1, 2023, June 13, 2023, June 14, 2023, July 25, 2023, and August 2, 2023.

8 The Court issued a briefing schedule [ECF No. 349], and the parties timely filed their briefs. The Trustee and Rutans filed their brief on August 29, 2023 [ECF No. 355], Johns filed his response on September 18, 2023 [ECF No. 360], and the Trustee and Rutans replied on September 25, 2023 [ECF No. 363]. Not every transaction involving the IRA is described below; instead, the Court focuses on the facts of the IRA’s structure, history, and transactions that impact Johns’s exemption claim. Pertinent to the discussion on excess contributions, Johns was born in 1963; his age determines the amount he is eligible to contribute toward his IRA. II. NuView IRA

Johns established his self-directed IRA with an application he signed and submitted to NuView IRA, Inc. on December 27, 2016. Debtor Ex. 1. In the application, Johns specified the account would be a Roth IRA, and he acknowledged NuView as the Administrator of the account. Over three years, Johns made three separate contributions to his IRA totaling $19,000: he contributed $6,500 in 2016, $6,500 in 2017, and $6,000 in 2018. Debtor Ex. 2. Johns’s Roth IRA is self-directed, meaning Johns “take[s] complete responsibility for any investments [he] choose[s]” for the IRA. Debtor Ex. 1 at 4. Johns’s self-directed Roth IRA made two investments at his direction. Debtor Ex. 3. His IRA first invested $13,000 in a land trust named Carswell Cherokee Trust. Id. at 1–2. The IRA’s second investment placed $5,900 in another

land trust called Southeast Financial Trust. Id. at 3–4. The IRA has multiple levels; as Johns said, “it runs together sometimes.”9 Johns’s tax returns for the three years he funded his IRA showed total income of $2,673 for 2016, $2,446 for 2017, and $2,738 for 2018. Debtor Ex. 4. Nearly two years after filing his bankruptcy petition, Johns filed amended tax returns on November 28, 2022. Debtor Ex. 5. By his amended tax returns, Johns reported total income in the amounts of $9,173 for 2016, $8,946 for 2017, and $8,738 for 2018. Id.

9 Johns made this statement in his May 31, 2023 testimony at 3:05:39 P.M. From at least 2016 to the present, Johns worked for and with an individual named Terrell Sheen. Sheen is a real estate investor who uses trusts and other entities as a way to manage and control his investment properties. Johns and Sheen met at a real estate convention in Florida many years ago, became friends, and developed a mutually beneficial business relationship. For the past several years, Johns has served as a “trustee” for many of Sheen’s trusts and manages

properties for various entities controlled by Sheen. For the tax years that Johns contributed to his IRA, he was paid for various services by two entities, TSU Control, LLC and A Trust Services Trust—both are Sheen’s creations.10 Despite managing properties for Sheen, Johns claims, and so testified, that he “was just a name and a signature” for Sheen. But such description is overly simplistic and meant to distract from the convoluted and complex transactions effected as a result of their relationship. In late 2016, Sheen advised Johns that he should prepare for his retirement and recommended that Johns establish a self-directed Roth IRA; to facilitate this, Sheen—through one of his entities—paid Johns the funds that he used for opening his IRA.11 This is where

Johns’s IRA converges with the creation of Carswell Cherokee Trust. A. Carswell Cherokee Trust Generally, Carswell Cherokee Trust is a trust that manages real estate and mobile homes and sells improvements for mobile homes. Carswell began thanks to Johns’s talent for, as was described, “bird dogging” for deals. Johns found a deal to buy real estate and a collection of mobile homes and associated notes (notes payable from buyers of the mobile homes). Beginning

10 In his tax returns for 2016, 2017, and 2018, Johns specifies that his principal business or service is “work for TSU Control LLC.” Debtor Exs. 4 & 5.

11 Johns failed to report all of the payments he received from Sheen’s entities in his original tax returns; he submits that his amended returns fix his inadvertently unreported income. in October 2016, Johns and Sheen began negotiations to purchase the assets from the seller, Denny L. Taylor and Taylor Repo, Inc. In late 2016, Johns created his IRA. The plan was that Johns, Sheen, and Sheen’s wife, Cathy Sheen, would use their separate IRAs to create a trust that would then purchase the Taylor Repo assets. Johns set-up his IRA through NuView as discussed above. Johns along with

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William Glenn Johns, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-glenn-johns-txnb-2024.