Williams v. Tomer (In Re Tomer)

128 B.R. 746, 25 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 22, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 839, 1991 WL 109816
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Illinois
DecidedJune 19, 1991
Docket19-40102
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 128 B.R. 746 (Williams v. Tomer (In Re Tomer)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Tomer (In Re Tomer), 128 B.R. 746, 25 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 22, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 839, 1991 WL 109816 (Ill. 1991).

Opinion

OPINION

KENNETH J. MEYERS, Bankruptcy Judge.

The trustee has filed three adversary proceedings, consolidated here for purposes of opinion, to recover insurance and securities commissions which she contends are property of the estate under the provisions of contracts existing between the debtor and the defendant companies at the time of the debtor’s bankruptcy filing. Debtor J. Lloyd Tomer was, and continues to be, an agent selling policies of insurance and securities on behalf of the defendant companies.

The debtor’s contracts entitled him to receive commissions from his own sales of insurance and securities as well as a percentage, known as “override commissions,” from sales of other agents recruited and supervised by him. Conversely, the debtor was liable for any deficiencies resulting to the companies from the actions of these “downline agents.”

The vast majority of the activity of the debtor and his sales hierarchy came from the sale of insurance products of defendant Massachusetts Indemnity and Life Insurance Company (“MILICO”). 1 The MILICO products were one-year term policies for life, health, and accident insurance, normally with monthly premium payments. Commissions from the sale of these insurance policies were paid to the debtor and his sales hierarchy pursuant to a system of advances and chargebacks. Under this system, MILICO would advance a 75% commission upon an agent’s submission of a policy, an amount equal to commissions on the policy’s first nine months premium payments. The payment of this advance commission constituted a “loan” under the terms of the agent’s contracts. Thereafter, as the insured paid premiums on the policy, the commissions earned by virtue of the premium payments were applied by the company to repay the loan. 2 However, if sufficient premiums were not paid on the policy to offset the loan — as in the case of a lapsed policy or a policy on which the application was not approved, the unpaid amount or “chargeback” was repaid by the application of commissions otherwise payable to the agent on the submission of other policies.

An agent’s liability for unpaid advances was shared by agents above him in the sales hierarchy. Thus, in the event of termination of an agent in the debtor’s down-line hierarchy, that agent’s outstanding debit balance would “roll up” to the next upline agent in the debtor’s hierarchy, and so forth, until it eventually rolled up to the debtor himself, who was liable as a guarantor to repay the shortfall. Under the debt- or’s contracts with MILICO, the company was entitled to offset the amount of this liability against commissions otherwise payable to the debtor. The company could satisfy the debtor’s obligation by reducing advances on policies submitted by the debt- or and his downline hierarchy or by applying the amount of this indebtedness against commissions earned on such policies. Included in the latter category were “first-year deferred commissions” — commissions payable on premiums for months ten through twelve of the term policies, as well as “renewal commissions” — commissions on policies renewed beyond the one year term period. In addition, the contracts provided that the debtor’s liability could be satisfied by offsetting any amounts owing to the debtor from related *750 entities entitled to indemnification under the agreements. 3

The debtor began selling insurance and securities products in 1981 as an agent for A.L. Williams and Associates, Inc. (“Associates”). 4 Associates was the general agent for MILICO with the right to sell MILICO products. Pursuant to agreements with both companies, the debtor sold MILICO insurance products as an independent contractor of Associates and MILICO. The debtor likewise sold securities or investment products pursuant to an agreement with First American National Securities, Inc. (“FANS”). FANS, unlike MILICO, did not pay advance commissions on the sale of securities. However, the debtor had “roll up” liability, as under the MILICO agreements, for amounts owed to FANS by the debtor’s downline agents. In addition, commissions payable to the debtor by FANS could be offset to satisfy the debt- or’s liability to other related entities, including MILICO.

In 1982, the debtor advanced to the status of Regional Vice-President (“RVP”) with Associates. As an RVP, the debtor became a full-time representative of the company, with the responsibility to recruit and train new agents. The debtor’s RVP agreement with Associates provided for the payment of override commissions from sales of his downline agents and set forth the debtor’s corresponding liability for losses caused by these agents. The debtor executed new and superseding RVP agreements in 1985 and 1986. In 1985, the debt- or attained the further status of Senior Vice-President (“SVP”). The debtor’s rights under the SVP agreement were cumulative to those under his RVP agreement, and certain provisions of the RVP agreement were incorporated by reference in the SVP agreement. 5

As RVP and SVP, the debtor developed a substantial sales hierarchy with downline agents ranging from regular agents to other RVP’s and SVP’s. 6 These latter agents had downline hierarchies of their own, which were included as part of the debtor’s larger sales hierarchy. One individual recruited by the debtor, Leroy Love, was an RVP with several agents in his sales hierarchy. In March 1989, policies written by Leroy Love and his agents lapsed, and both Love and the individuals in his downline hierarchy were terminated as agents for Associates, MILICO, and FANS. 7 The lapse of the policies written by Love and his agents resulted in a substantial roll-up liability for the debtor, which precipitated the debtor’s bankruptcy filing in July 1989.

In his Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition filed July 7, 1989, the debtor stated that he had an approximate roll-up liability of $422,000 owing to Associates. The debtor further indicated that $121,784.63 had been set off by Associates prepetition from commissions otherwise payable to the debtor. The *751 debtor did not list Associates, MILICO, nor any of the other defendant companies entitled to indemnification as creditors on his bankruptcy schedules, and none of these parties has filed a claim against the debt- or’s bankruptcy estate. 8

On March 1, 1990, the trustee filed the three adversary proceedings here at issue. In No. 90-0043, the trustee seeks the turnover of commissions that were withheld by the company defendants 9 postpetition but that were attributable to insurance policies written prior to the debtor’s bankruptcy filing. The trustee asserts that these commissions, which became “earned” upon the payment of premiums by the insureds post-petition, were wrongfully set off by the defendants to satisfy prepetition obligations of the debtor.

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Bluebook (online)
128 B.R. 746, 25 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 22, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 839, 1991 WL 109816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-tomer-in-re-tomer-ilsb-1991.