UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT
EASTERN
DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY
LEXINGTON
IN RE:
COMPUTREX,
INC. CASE
NO. 01-53755
DEBTOR
LOCKHEED MARTIN CORPORATION
GREAT DANE
TRAILERS LIMITED PARTNERSHIP PLAINTIFFS
VS. ADV. NO. 02-5024
COMPUTREX,
INC. DEFENDANT
MEMORANDUM
OPINION
This adversary
proceeding is submitted for ruling pursuant to order entered April 10, 2002
(Document # 21). The issues under
consideration are whether this is a core or non-core proceeding, what the law
of the case is, and whether a constructive trust in favor of the plaintiffs
exists. In accordance with the order,
the plaintiffs, Lockheed Martin Corporation (ALockheed@) and Great Dane Trailers Limited Partnership
(AGreat Dane@), and the trustee for the bankruptcy estate of Computrex, Inc. (AComputrex@) have briefed the issues (Lockheed - Documents # 25, 27, and 28; Great
Dane - Document # 31; the trustee - Document # 23) and have filed Proposed
Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law (Documents # 26, 32, & 22,
respectively).[1]
FINDINGS OF FACT:
Lockheed Martin is a Maryland corporation
with its principal place of business in Bethesda, Maryland. Great Dane is a Delaware limited partnership
with its principal place of business in Savannah, Georgia. Computrex is a Delaware corporation doing
business in Nicholasville, Kentucky.
Computrex was in the business of providing
freight bill auditing and payment services to companies with which it
contracted. In June of 2001 Lockheed
Martin entered into an agreement with Computrex entitled Freight Payment
Services Contract under which Computrex agreed to provide freight bill
processing and payment services for Lockheed Martin. In 1987 Computrex and Great Dane entered into a similar
agreement, and in 1993 the agreement was renewed.
Under the terms of those agreements,
Computrex received bills from freight carriers for Lockheed Martin and Great Dane,
reviewed the invoices and bills of lading, and reported to the plaintiffs the
amounts owed their freight carriers. In
response to the report/ invoice from Computrex, the plaintiffs then wired
sufficient funds to a Computrex account at Bank One so that the freight bills
could be paid by Computrex. Both
plaintiffs had the ability to access Computrex=s database in order to determine what bills had been paid.
Lockheed Martin states that between October
and December of 2001, Computrex and Lockheed Martin processed approximately
$2.2 million in this manner. In
December of 2001 Lockheed Martin became aware that $435,029.07 of the $2.2
million had been held by Computrex and not disbursed to Lockheed Martin freight
carriers. Great Dane states that during
October and November of 2001 it wire transferred Computrex a total of
$780,395.65 to pay Great Dane freight carriers.
On November 28, 2001 Computrex notified its
customers, which included the plaintiffs, that effective November 28, 2001
Computrex would no longer make carrier payments on their behalf and further
that it would cease operations at the end of the year in anticipation of
liquidating its business assets.
Lockheed Martin states that on November 30,
2001 it demanded that Computrex either disburse to Lockheed Martin freight
carriers at least $435,029.07 in funds to satisfy outstanding freight bills or
that return the funds immediately so that Lockheed Martin could pay the freight
carriers directly.
Great Dane states that upon receiving word
Computrex would no longer make carrier payments on its behalf, Great Dane
reviewed the Computrex database, which indicated Great Dane invoices for
October and November had been paid.
Evidently to confirm this information, Great Dane then contacted Computrex
and was advised October and November checks were being held. Communication between these parties over the
next several days resulted in Great Dane=s demand that Computrex return the funds wired for payment of the
October and November invoices.
On December 4, 2001 Lockheed Martin filed in
the U. S. District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky its Verified
Complaint for Breach of Contract, Conversion, Unjust Enrichment, Replevin and
Preliminary and Permanent Injunctive Relief against Computrex, Case No. 01-489
(Document # 1, D.C. case).
Contemporaneously with the filing of the complaint, a motion for
temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction and for a writ of
possession or attachment was filed.
On December 7, 2001 a hearing was held at
which time the parties indicated they would be tendering an agreed order. On December 12, 2001 Agreed Order was
entered (Document # 8, D.C. case) which provides in part:
(1) No later than December 13,
2001, Computrex shall segregate and pay into a new interest-bearing escrow
account(s) the sum of $435,029.07 for payment of claims asserted herein as of
December 4, 2001 but not yet adjudicated.
Said account(s) shall be denominated and identified as AFunds Escrowed Pursuant to Agreed Order
Entered in Lockheed Martin Corporation v. Computrex, Inc., Case No.
2001-CV-KSF489, E.D.KY.@ By virtue of this segregation,
[Lockheed Martin] does not concede or agree that Computrex has any right, title
or interest in the escrowed funds, or that [Lockheed Martin=s] claims are limited to this amount. Computrex does not concede or agree to the
validity or amount of [Lockheed Martin=s] claims, and by virtue of this segregation, does not concede or agree
that [Lockheed Martin] has any right, title or interest in the escrowed
funds. Neither the principal amount nor
the interest thereon may be assessed, dissipated, transferred, assigned or
otherwise depleted, or released by any third party holding the escrowed funds,
except by agreement of both parties or by express order of the Court or the
U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky (the ABankruptcy Court@) upon notice and hearing, resolving the
claims asserted by [Lockheed Martin];
* * *
(4) The Court hereby assumes and exercises exclusive jurisdiction over
all assets of the defendant, Computrex, pending the filing of the bankruptcy
proceeding before the Bankruptcy Court[.]
Pursuant to the terms of the agreed order, on December 18, 2001
Computrex filed Defendant=s Accounting of Current Assets which reflected escrow of a certificate
of deposit in the amount of $20,000 and a separate escrow of $415,029.07.
On December 14, 2001 Great Dane filed
Verified Intervening Complaint for Injunctive and Other Relief in the U. S.
District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky, Case No. 01-500. In the complaint Great Dane alleged that
Computrex had wrongfully acquired and converted approximately $780,000 which
Great Dane had deposited in order for Computrex to pay certain freight
carriers. Great Dane also filed
Verified Motion and Affidavit for a Temporary Restraining Order, Imposition of
a Constructive Trust, and Writ of Possession.[2]
A hearing was conducted on December 18, 2001,
and on December 19, 2001 the court entered Temporary Restraining Order
(Document # 12, D.C. case) which provides in part:
Great Dane has demonstrated the probable need for the imposition of a
constructive trust with respect to the funds paid by Great Dane and entrusted
to the defendant, which funds are now on deposit in Account Number 260181658 at
Bank One in Lexington, Kentucky, in the amount of $593,252.15; however, the
Court does not, by this Order, impose a constructive trust at this time;
* * *
(1) the defendant shall segregate and pay into the interest-bearing
money market checking account identified as Account Number 667838 at Stock
Yards Bank & Trust Company, 1040 East Main Street, Louisville, Kentucky
established pursuant to the Agreed Order entered by the Court on December 12,
2001 (the AAgreed Order@), additional funds in the amount of $158,223.08 that will bring the
principal balance of that account to a total of $573,252.15, which deposit
shall be made no later than December 20, 2001, and that defendant has already
deposited $20,000.00 into a Certificate of Deposit identified as Account Number
88005042644 at Bank One in Lexington, Kentucky, for a total amount in these two
accounts of $593,252.15;
* * *
(4) the court continues to exercise exclusive jurisdiction over all the
assets of the defendant until such time as the defendant files for bankruptcy
protection before the United States Bankruptcy Court[.]
By separate order the court consolidated the Lockheed Martin and Great
Dane actions. (Document # 10, D.C.
case).
On December 20, 2001 an involuntary petition
under chapter 7 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code was filed in this court against
Computrex by other interested parties.
(Document # 1, Case No. 01-53755).
James D. Lyon was duly appointed and qualified as trustee of the
bankruptcy estate. (Document # 8, Case
No. 01-53755). In its answer to the involuntary
petition, Computrex consented to entry of an order for relief. (Document # 34, Case No. 01-53755). That same day, January 22, 2002, the order
for relief was entered. (Document # 36,
Case No. 01-53755).
On February 19, 2002 the trustee filed Notice
of Removal or in the Alternative Referral Under Local Rule 83.12 in the
consolidated District Court action (Document # 19, D.C. case), and on February
28, 2002 the action was transferred to this court, where it became this
adversary proceeding.
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW:
I. Core/ Non-core
The initial issue is whether this is a core
or a non-core proceeding. The court
concludes it is a core proceeding for the following reasons. 28 U.S.C. ' 157(b)(2) provides a list of subjects/ issues/ proceedings
which are considered core, that is which may be heard and finally determined by
a bankruptcy court. The list is not
exhaustive-- core proceedings include Abut are not limited to@ those listed. Among the listed
are (A) Amatters concerning the administration of the
estate,@ (I) Adeterminations as to the dischargeability of particular debts,@ and (O) Aother proceedings affecting the liquidation of the assets of the estate
or the adjustment of the debtor-creditor . . . relationship.@ Also
listed are (B) Aallowance or disallowance of claims against
the estate,@(G) Amotions to terminate, annul, or modify the automatic stay,@ and (K) Adeterminations of the validity, extent, or priority of liens.@
The central issue of course is whether the
funds in question are indeed property of the bankruptcy estate or are held in
trust exclusively for these plaintiffs.[3] Thus, this proceeding is one Aconcerning the administration of the estate@ and Aaffecting the liquidation@ of estate assets and Aadjustment@ of
the parties= relationship. Certainly issues of the automatic stay are impacted since
absent the automatic stay, creditors would be able to pursue their own
remedies against the property, thus thwarting the bankruptcy purpose of ratable
distribution.[4] As noted previously, the plaintiffs
allege conversion in their complaints.
Although the debtor is a corporation and therefore its debts are
non-dischargeable, 11 U.S.C. ' 727, this court is intimately familiar with conversion issues. (See 11 U.S.C. ' 523(a)(6).)
Furthermore, the outcome of this adversary proceeding clearly concerns Aallowance or disallowance of claims against
the estate@ as well as determination of the Avalidity, extent, or priority of liens.@
Therefore, given the involvement of multiple issues, and looking to the
form and substance of the proceeding[5],
it is apparent that this is a core proceeding and that uniformity in the
administration of bankruptcy law would best be served by this court.
Plaintiffs= Adressed up@ pleading style does not escape the court=s attention. Language of the
complaints, including the requests for relief, is crafted carefully so as to
nominally provide Plaintiffs with the ability to argue Astate law claim@and other non-core type of issues[6],
thus playing for creation in District Court of a remedy that would elevate the
claims to a status superior to that of other creditors, a result totally
contrary to the intent of the Bankruptcy Code.
The plaintiffs should not achieve preferred positions for their claims
due primarily to the cleverness of their counsel, as well as the inaction of
the debtor=s counsel to initiate bankruptcy proceedings
for the time period beginning with the institution of litigation in District
Court (12/4/01) through the date the order for relief was entered in this court
(1/22/02). This court is bound neither
by the plaintiffs=
characterization of their claims nor by their chosen titles for Causes of
Action. Rather, the court is obligated
to determine independently whether matters are core or non-core. 28 U.S.C. ' 157(b)(3).
II. Law of the Case
Lockheed Martin would have Maryland law as
the law of the case. (Document #
28). Great Dane would have Georgia
law. (Document # 31). The trustee asserts Kentucky law is the
choice of law. (Document # 23). The parties have cited the Kentucky case of Rutherford
v. Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company, 943 F.Supp. 789 (W.D.Ky. 1996), as
support for their varied positions. Rutherford
begins with the proposition that a federal court in determining which state=s substantive law applies to a diversity
action must apply the law of the state in which the court sits. Thus, this court, as the court in Rutherford,
must look first to Kentucky law in order to determine what should be the law of
the case. In Rutherford the
court, after summarizing the line of Kentucky cases on choice of law, states:
Considering these cases together, no doubt Kentucky prefers the
application of its own laws over those of another forum. But the inquiry does not end there. This Court should apply an interest analysis
to determine whether it can justify use of Kentucky=s laws.
If their use can be justified, it should not matter than another state
has a greater interest, though perhaps Kentucky=s law could be displaced by the overwhelming interest of another state.
Rutherford, Id.
at 792.
An Ainterest analysis@ necessarily must be fact-intensive; the
court must consider the facts of each case when analyzing the interests
impacted.
Applying the Ainterest analysis@ to the facts of this case, the court concludes that Kentucky law
should be the law of the case. The
plaintiffs filed their complaints in the U. S. District Court for the Eastern
District of Kentucky. Computrex filed
its bankruptcy petition in the U. S. Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District
of Kentucky. Computrex=s business was located in Nicholasville,
Kentucky. The money at issue was wired
to a Computrex bank account in Kentucky and presently is being held in escrow
by the bankruptcy trustee. In
accordance with Rutherford, Ause@ of Kentucky=s laws is Ajustified.@
III. Constructive Trust
Having decided that
Kentucky law is applicable here, the court turns to the issue of whether a
constructive trust exists. Counsel has
cited four Kentucky cases concerning constructive trusts. In chronological order they areB XL/Datacomp, Inc. V. Wilson (In re Omegas
Group, Inc.), 16 F.3d 1443 (6th Cir. 1994), McCafferty v.
McCafferty (In re McCafferty), 96 F.3d 192 (6th Cir.
1996), Kitchen v. Boyd (In re Newpower), 233 F.3d 922 (6th
Cir. 2000), and Poss v. Morris (In re Morris), 260 F.3d 654 (6th
Cir. 2001). Of the four cases
cited Omegas is the closest factually to this adversary proceeding. Indeed it is similar factually. Stated another way, this court is not
presented with an Ohio divorce decree, as was the court in McCafferty;
or with a Michigan guilty plea of embezzlement, as was the court in Newpower;
or with Ohio law regarding real property and a Acognovit note@
between Alongtime@ friends, as was the court in Morris. The facts presented here, as in Omegas, concern business
dealings under Kentucky law.
Imposition of a constructive trust
necessarily begins with acknowledgment of the inherent conflict between
Bankruptcy Code Section 544(a), which provides the bankruptcy trustee with Astrong arm@ powers, and Section 541(d), which allows for recognition of a
constructive trust in the context of a bankruptcy. Thus, to exclude property from a debtor=s estate as being subject to a constructive
trust is to recognize the Aequitable interest@ as superior to that of the trustee.
ACongress did not mean to authorize a
bankruptcy estate to benefit from property the debtor did not own.@ Omegas,
16 F.3d at 1449, quoting from In re Quality Holstein Leasing, 752 F.2d
1009, 1013 (5th Cir. 1985). This Acommon-law remedy in equity,@ this Alegal fiction@ was created as a remedy for Aunjust enrichment.@ Certainly a court of equity, a
bankruptcy court, is the appropriate forum for a constructive trust to be
recognized.
As so adequately stated by the court in Omegas:
The distribution of assets in a bankruptcy case is based on an
identification of what assets and liabilities the debtor has Aas of commencement of the case,@ this being the exact moment the debtor
files. Shirkey v. Leake, 715
F.2d 859, 863 (4th Cir. 1983).
A debtor that served prior to bankruptcy as trustee of an express trust
generally has no right to the assets kept in trust, and the trustee in
bankruptcy must fork them over to the beneficiary. However, a claim filed in bankruptcy court asserting rights to
certain assets Aheld@ in Aconstructive trust@ for the claimant is nothing more than that:
a claim. Unless a court has already
impressed a constructive trust upon certain assets or a legislature has created
a specific statutory right to have particular kinds of funds held as if in
trust, [FN6] the claimant cannot properly represent to the bankruptcy court
that he was, at the time of the commencement of the case, a beneficiary of a
constructive trust held by the debtor.
FN6. The legislatures of a number
of states have created such a right with regard to construction funds paid to
contractors. See discussion infra
p. 1451.
Omegas, 16 F.3d at 1449.
This Sixth Circuit
rule for excluding property from the debtor=s bankruptcy estate as a constructive trust has not changed in
the seven years from Omegas to Morris, the court=s most recent look at the issue.[7]
With regard to a constructive trust, we have been clear that this
section does not authorize bankruptcy courts to recognize a constructive trust
based on a creditor=s
claim of entitlement to one; rather, section 541(d) only operates to the extent
that state law has impressed property with a constructive trust prior to its
entry into bankruptcy.
Morris, 260 F.3d at
666.
Writing for the court in Morris, Judge Batchelder acknowledged
that although McCafferty recognized a constructive trust, it was in a
different context within the bankruptcy setting, a divorce context, or Awhen property in bankruptcy [is] not subject
to distribution to creditors and so [does] not implicate the rationale of
ratable distribution.@ Morris, 260 F.3d at 666. Judge Batchelder went on to discuss the next
case in this line of Sixth Circuit pronouncements on constructive trust, Newpower,
as a case addressing the circumstances in which lifting the automatic stay is
appropriate. In summary, the law is
clear in this circuit as to when a constructive trust may be recognized within
the bankruptcy settingB as
stated by the court in Morris, citing from Omegas, Ain certain very limited circumstances@ in which a court or the state legislature Ahas already impressed@ a constructive trust upon certain assets.
Such is not the case here. The District Court specifically declined to
impose a constructive trust on the funds at issue here. In its Temporary Restraining Order of
December 19, 2001, the District Court states that although Great Dane
demonstrated Aprobable need@ for imposition of a constructive trust, Athe Court does not, by this Order, impose a constructive trust at this
time.@ The
order goes on to state that the court=s exclusive jurisdiction continues Auntil such time as the defendant files for bankruptcy protection before
the United States Bankruptcy
Court.@
The court and the parties recognized that
bankruptcy was imminent. On November
28, 2001 Computrex announced the likelihood of a bankruptcy filing in
communication to its customers. In
Agreed Order of December 12, 2001, neither Lockheed Martin nor Computrex
conceded either had Aright,
title, or interest@ to
the escrowed funds, in fact the order states that the funds-- principal and
interest-- are not to be accessed Aexcept by agreement of both parties or by express order of the Court or
the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky.@
The case before this court presents a classic
example of creditor rush to the courthouse, and a classic example of how the
Bankruptcy Code works to provide Aratable distribution@ to all creditors.[8] The court in Omegas stated:
As we have endeavored to explain, ' 523 of the Code specifically provides the remedy of declaring
nondischargeable debts arising from various types of fraud and deceit committed
by the debtor. The Code endows the
trustee with generous powers to bring property of the imperfect title or
disputed ownership into the debtor=s estate for distribution according to each creditor=s ability to prove its entitlement and
priority in accordance with the dictates of the Code. To permit a creditor, no matter how badly he was Ahad@ by the debtor, to lop off a piece of the estate under a constructive
trust theory is to permit that creditor to circumvent completely the Code=s equitable system of distribution.
Omegas, 16 F.3d at
1453.
In sum, the picture presented by this adversary proceeding is that of Acreditors pushing to a place at the head of
the line.@ Morris,
260 F.3d at 667.
In conclusion, the court finds that this
adversary proceeding is a core proceeding, that the law of the case is Kentucky
law, and that a constructive trust on the funds at issue does not exist.
Dated:
By the court B
___________________________
JOSEPH M. SCOTT, JR.
U. S. BANKRUPTCY JUDGE
Copies to:
Patrick W. Michael, Esq.
Raymond J. Pikna, Jr., Esq.
John O. Morgan, Jr., Esq.
Gregory R. Schaaf, Esq.
U. S. Trustee
[1] The trustee
has filed a motion to be substituted as defendant to this adversary
proceeding. (Document # 34).
[2] None of these
D.C. pleadings have been made a part of the record of this adversary
proceeding, but copies have been provided by Great Dane as exhibits to Document
# 31.
[3] For
discussion of constructive trust litigation as a core proceeding, see Lieber
Enterprises, Inc. v. Morris (In re Morris), 55 B.R. 615, 616 (Bankr.
N.D.Texas 1985).
[4] For
discussion of Congressional intent that the automatic stay protect both the
debtor and his creditors, see Benedor Corporation v. Conejo Enterprises (In
re Conejo Enterprises, Inc.), 96 F.3d 346, 351-52 (9th Cir.
1996).
[5] BN1 Telecommunications v. Lomaz (In re BN1
Telecommunications, Inc.), 246 B.R.
845, 849 (6th Cir. BAP 2000), quoting from In re Wood, 825
F.2d 90, 97 (5th Cir. 1987) (Court must look to both form and
substance of proceeding to determine whether core status exists).
[6] AA determination that a proceeding is not a core
proceeding shall not be made solely on the basis that its resolution may be
affected by State law.@ 28 U.S.C. '
157(b)(3).
[7] It is worth noting that Judge Batchelder wrote the
opinions in both Morris and Omegas and therefore was acutely
aware of the facts and issues in both cases.
[8] For
discussion of these goals in the context of a Ponzi scheme and preference
action, see Danning v. Bozek (In re Bullion Reserve of North America),
836 F.2d 1214, 1217 (9th Cir. 1988).