Wonjoong Kim v. Hyungkeun Sun (In re Hyungkeun Sun)

515 B.R. 788
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Colorado
DecidedSeptember 12, 2014
DocketCase No. 12-25005 MER; Adversary No. 12-1660 MER
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 515 B.R. 788 (Wonjoong Kim v. Hyungkeun Sun (In re Hyungkeun Sun)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wonjoong Kim v. Hyungkeun Sun (In re Hyungkeun Sun), 515 B.R. 788 (Colo. 2014).

Opinion

Chapter 7

ORDER

Michael E. Romero, Chief Judge, United States Bankruptcy Court

This case offers an object lesson in the oft-cited dangers of doing business with friends. The Plaintiffs paid $900,000 to their friends, the Defendants, in exchange for a particular investment. What Plaintiffs received was far from what was promised. They now seek a finding their debt is nondischargeable under 11 U.S.C. §§ 523(a)(2)(A), (a)(4), and (a)(6).1

JURISDICTION

The Court has jurisdiction over this matter under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334(a) and (b) and 157(a) and (b). This is a core proceeding under 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(I) as it concerns a determination as to the dis-chargeability of a particular debt.

BACKGROUND

Plaintiff Wonjoong Earn (“W. Kim”) is a professor at the University of Seoul, Korea, where he resides most of the year, visiting his family in the United States two to three times per year for a month at a time. His wife, Co-Plaintiff Yoonee Kim [794]*794(“Y. Kim”), and their daughters reside in Colorado. Beginning in approximately 2001, the Kims became friends with Defendants Hyungkeun Sun (“H. Sun”) and Yeo-nam Kim Sun (“Y. Sun”), who attended their church. By 2006, the Kims and the Suns had become very close, a relationship both the Kims and the Suns described as “like family.”

H. Sun had an excellent reputation in the church and in the area’s Korean community as a successful real estate investor. When W. Kim found it difficult to transfer funds from Korea to fund family expenses, he asked H. Sun for advice in finding a commercial property for purchase which would generate a monthly income stream. The Kims told H. Sun they wished to limit their investment to $500,000, retaining $400,000 of their approximately $900,000 in savings to purchase a house in Colorado.

In March 2007, H. Sun contacted W. Kim with a proposal to purchase an interest in a commercial site on West Colfax in Denver (the “JCRS Property”) for $900,000. The JCRS Property was owed by the Suns’ wholly-owned corporation, Y & K Sun, Inc. (“YKSI”). H. Sun convinced the Kims to invest their entire $900,000 by making the following representations:

• The JCRS Property needed $1 million for renovations and improvements.
• The JCRS Property was encumbered by a current loan of $8 million.
• H. Sun had arranged a refinancing of $4 million for the JCRS Property, and that such financing was a “done deal.” He showed the Kims a copy of a mortgage application for the JCRS Property in support of the assertion.2
• The JCRS Property would be worth approximately $6 million when the renovations were completed and the expected lessees had moved in.3
• After the refinancing paid off the existing $8 million loan, the Suns and the Kims would split the remaining $1 million in refinancing proceeds fifty-fifty.4 This would provide an almost immediate return of $500,000 of the Kims’ investment to enable the Kims to purchase a house, while the improved JCRS Property would provide the Kims $3,000 per month in income beginning three months after the investment.
• There were already new leases signed for a clothing store and a restaurant on the JCRS Property.
• H. Sun would guarantee the value of the investment.5

None of the above representations was true. Instead of using the investment to purchase a real estate interest in the JCRS Property, as originally proposed, H. Sun constructed the $900,000 investment as a purchase by the Kims of 50% of the shares of YKSI. Allegedly, this resulted from a concern expressed by the Suns’ attorney, Carl Reem, that a sale of a partial interest in the JCRS Property could trigger the existing mortgage’s “due on sale” clause. As part of this investment change, a stock purchase agreement (the “First SPA”)6 was drafted. H. Sun represented the value of the stock was equal to [795]*795or greater than the value of the $900,000 investment. The Kims signed the First SPA on April 17, 2007.

However, W. Kim’s Korean bank refused to release the funds for the purchase absent evidence of a real property sale and a deed of trust in accordance with the original proposal. After the bank balked, W. Kim contacted H. Sun and told him he was no longer interested in the deal. But H. Sun convinced the Kims to complete the transaction and supplied a contract for purchase and sale of real property7 to be sent to the Korean bank. Upon receipt of the contract, the bank released the $900,000.8 Immediately upon the Kims’ receipt of the $900,000, H. Sun again transformed the deal into a stock purchase transaction. A new stock purchase agreement (the “Second SPA”) was thereafter drafted and signed by the wives, Y. Sun and Y. Kim, on May 17, 2007.9

At Y. Sun’s direction, Y. Kim made the $900,000 check payable to “Y + K Sun.”10 Y. Kim believed she was giving a check to YKSI for the purchase of 50% of the company.11 Although the Kims had become 50% shareholders, Y. Sun had, without the Kims’ knowledge, opened a new personal bank account into which she, “Y. K. Sun,” deposited the $900,000 check.12

YKSI’s 2007 and 2008 amended tax returns indicate the Kims “contributed $900,000 to Y & K Sun, Inc.” and show the $900,000 investment as a “loan” to the Suns as shareholders of YKSI.13 No such loan was ever authorized by YKSI’s board of directors.

In April 2008, YKSI sold a commercial property on East Mississippi Avenue in Aurora, Colorado (the “Mississippi Property”) to an entity known as S & B Nova, which was controlled by a Mr. and Mrs. Lee (the “Lees”). The sale was financed by Hanmi Bank, which held a first priority lien against the Mississippi Property in the approximate amount of $1,726,000.14 YKSI received from S & B Nova a promissory note (the “S & B Nova Note”), secured by a junior lien, in the approximate amount of $1,035,000, and $347,000 in cash. Although the Kims owned 50% of YKSI’s stock, the Kims were not informed of the Mississippi Property sale, and received no distribution from the proceeds of the sale.

Three months later, H. Sun told the Kims he was going to put YKSI into bankruptcy, and the Kims would lose their $900,000 investment unless they exchanged their 50% interest in YKSI for YKSI’s interest in the $1,035,000 S & B Nova note.15 H. Sun explained the note paid monthly income of $6,200, but the Kims would only receive half of that amount. H. Sun represented the remaining half interest would be retained by the Suns as they [796]*796and YKSI were in financial distress. H. Sun did not inform the Efims the S & B Nova Note was in a subordinate position to Hanmi Bank’s note. H.

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Bluebook (online)
515 B.R. 788, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wonjoong-kim-v-hyungkeun-sun-in-re-hyungkeun-sun-cob-2014.