Burtch v. Ganz (In Re Mushroom Transportation Co.) ( 2010 )


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  •                                                          NOT PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    No. 09-2321
    IN RE: MUSHROOM TRANSPORTATION COMPANY;
    PENN YORK REALTY COMPANY, INC.; ROBBEY REALTY, INC.;
    TRUX ENTERPRISES, INC.; LEAZIT, INC.,
    Debtors
    JEOFFREY L. BURTCH, TRUSTEE, Trustee in Bankruptcy of
    MUSHROOM TRANSPORTATION COMPANY, INC.,
    successor to ROBBEY REALTY, INC.,
    PENN YORK REALTY COMPANY, INC., and
    TRUX ENTERPRISES, INC. and successor to Michael Arnold, former trustee
    in bankruptcy for Mushroom Transportation Company, Inc., Robbey Realty, Inc.,
    Penn York Realty Company, Inc., and Trux Enterprises, Inc.,
    Appellant
    v.
    JONATHAN H. GANZ; PINCUS, VERLIN, HAHN & REICH, P.C.;
    PINCUS, REICH, HAHN, DUBROFF & GANZ, P.C.;
    MODELL, PINCUS, HAHN & REICH, P.C.;
    PINCUS, VERLIN, BLUESTEIN, HAHN & REICH, P.C.;
    ASTOR WEISS & NEWMAN;
    RAWLE & HENDERSONL; CONTINENTAL BANK;
    ERWIN L. PINCUS; RICHARD L. HAHN; PACE REICH;
    JEROME J. VERLIN; ANDREW F. NAPOLI; RONALD BLUESTEIN;
    HERMAN P. WEINBERG; DAVID N. BRESSLER; ALLEN B. DUBROFF
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
    (District Court No. 2-07-cv-02759)
    District Judge: Hon. Eduardo C. Robreno
    Submitted under Third Circuit LAR 34.1(a)
    on July 13, 2010
    Before: FUENTES, ALDISERT, and ROTH, Circuit Judges.
    (Opinion Filed: July 27, 2010)
    OPINION
    ROTH, Circuit Judge:
    Jeoffrey Burtch, Bankruptcy Trustee of the Mushroom Transportation
    Company, Inc. (MTC), and plaintiff in this adversarial proceeding, appeals the
    Bankruptcy Court’s judgment in favor of defendant Pincus, Verlin, Hahn & Reich
    (PVHR) and the District Court’s affirmance. Both courts found PVHR not liable
    for losses that occurred when its shareholder, Jonathan Ganz, embezzled from the
    bankruptcy estate while serving as MTC’s counsel. We will affirm.
    I. Background
    Our last opinion in this case contains a full recitation of the facts, In re
    Mushroom Transportation Co., Inc., 
    382 F.3d 325
     (3d Cir. 2004), so a brief
    recitation will suffice here.
    On June 24, 1985, MTC and related entities filed petitions for
    reorganization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. MTC initially retained
    its assets as debtor-in-possession, but within six months, MTC ceased operation
    and began liquidating assets. During the bankruptcy proceeding, MTC remained
    2
    under the leadership of Michael C. Arnold and Robert B. Cutaiar, both long-time
    MTC executives. The Bankruptcy Court appointed Arnold as “Special Liquidation
    Consultant” and approved Arnold’s compensation of $300 per day from the
    bankruptcy estate. Arnold retained Jonathan Ganz and Ganz’s firm, PVHR, as
    MTC’s counsel in the bankruptcy proceeding.1
    MTC deposited the liquidation proceeds at Continental Bank, one of MTC’s
    largest creditors. The Bankruptcy Court approved repayment of Continental
    Bank’s secured claim from funds on deposit, leaving a balance of approximately
    $1 million in MTC’s escrow account at Continental Bank. At Ganz’s request, in
    July and August 1987, Continental Bank conveyed the escrow balance to the
    bankruptcy estate by (1) issuing a $200,000 treasurer’s check payable to Ganz as
    debtor’s counsel and (2) depositing $766,624,49 into a new MTC escrow account
    opened by Ganz at Continental Bank. Although PVHR maintained its own escrow
    accounts for client funds, Ganz opened a separate account because he intended to
    1
    The Bankruptcy Court explained the association between Arnold and Ganz:
    Both Arnold and Ganz graduated from Villanova Law School. While at law
    school Arnold met Ganz and even took a bankruptcy class with him. It was
    Arnold who arranged for Mushroom to engage the Pincus law firm, and Pincus
    was chosen because of Arnold’s association with Ganz and because of the
    firm’s bankruptcy expertise. . . . . Arnold viewed his relationship with Ganz as
    more than simply attorney-client. However, he had no social relationship with
    Ganz, at least prior to engaging his firm to represent Mushroom in its
    bankruptcy case. After the engagement, Arnold and Ganz became friendlier,
    sharing season baseball tickets.
    
    366 B.R. 414
    , 418 (Bankr. E.D. Pa. 2007).
    3
    convert the estate’s funds for his personal use and wanted to evade discovery by
    PVHR. Ganz began embezzling from the estate in 1987.
    In 1990, the Bankruptcy Court – still unaware of Ganz’s embezzlement –
    converted the proceeding from Chapter 11 to Chapter 7 and appointed Arnold as
    Trustee of the bankruptcy estate. In February 1992, the United States Trustee
    advised Arnold that Ganz had embezzled from other bankruptcy estates. Arnold
    examined MTC’s accounts and discovered that, indeed, funds were missing from
    the estate. In 1992, Arnold brought this adversarial proceeding against PVHR to
    recover funds stolen by Ganz, who later pleaded guilty to embezzlement.
    In 1994, while this adversarial proceeding was pending, Arnold also began
    embezzling funds from the MTC bankruptcy estate. Arnold resigned as
    bankruptcy trustee in 1995 and pleaded guilty to a felony in 1996. Jeoffrey Burtch
    succeeded Arnold as Trustee and continued this multi-count action against PVHR.
    Count I asserts a claim for turnover of estate property under 
    11 U.S.C. §§ 542
     and
    543. Counts II through VII assert various common law claims.
    The principal issue in this case is whether PVHR, which ordinarily would
    be liable for embezzlement committed by its shareholder, should prevail on
    affirmative defenses.   PVHR contends the turnover claim is barred by laches and
    the common law claims are barred by statutes of limitations. This adversarial
    proceeding was filed October 5, 1992, more than four years after the
    embezzlement began. The applicable dates of accrual are not in dispute, so absent
    4
    tolling, the Trustee’s claims would be barred by laches or the statutes of
    limitations. The Trustee argues the limitations period should be tolled because
    Arnold and Cutaiar exercised reasonable diligence in ascertaining the existence of
    injury to the bankruptcy estate.
    The Bankruptcy Court, ruling on the affirmative defenses, granted summary
    judgment in favor of PVHR because MTC failed to exercise reasonable diligence
    in uncovering Ganz’s embezzlement. The District Court affirmed. On appeal, we
    partially reversed the grant of summary judgment. There was “no question that
    Mushroom, acting through its representatives Arnold and Cutaiar, had a fiduciary
    duty to protect and maximize the estate’s assets.” 
    382 F.3d at 339
    . But whether it
    was reasonable for Arnold and Cutaiar to relax their “vigilance in overseeing the
    execution of the duties [they] delegated to Ganz” was a question of fact. 
    Id. at 341
    . We explained that “where the wrongdoing underlying [a] cause[] of action
    has been perpetrated by a fiduciary to the detriment of its principal, this fact
    militates strongly against summary judgment on the issue of whether the principal
    (here Mushroom) exercised reasonable diligence in failing to discover the
    fiduciary’s malfeasance within the applicable statutes of limitations . . . . ‘To
    require a principal to engage in aggressive oversight of its fiduciary’s conduct is to
    deny the very essence of a fiduciary relationship.’” 
    Id. at 341-42
     (quoting Rubin
    Quinn Moss Heaney & Patterson, P.C. v. Kennel, 
    832 F. Supp. 922
    , 935 (E.D. Pa.
    1993). We remanded for determination of when the Trustee’s duty to investigate
    5
    arose and issued the following guidance: “We should stress that we do not hold
    here that the existence of a fiduciary, lawyer-client relationship between Ganz and
    Mushroom, and Ganz’s abuse of that relationship, alone preclude judgment as a
    matter of law in PVHR’s and its shareholders’ favor.” Id. at 342-43.
    On remand, the Bankruptcy Court held a five-day trial and issued more than
    100 pages of factual findings and legal conclusions. The Bankruptcy Court held
    that PVHR, as counsel to the bankruptcy estate, breached its fiduciary duties and
    contractual obligations owed to the Trustee. However, the Bankruptcy Court
    found PVHR was not liable for turnover because the “funds misappropriated by
    Ganz were never channeled through the law firm escrow account, but were
    transferred directly by Continental Bank to bank accounts titled in Ganz’s name
    alone.” 
    366 B.R. 414
    , 439 (Bankr. E.D. Pa. 2007). The Bankruptcy Court
    enforced the statute of limitations on the Trustee’s common law claims because
    Arnold and Cutaiar failed to exercise reasonable diligence as fiduciaries
    representing MTC’s interests. The Bankruptcy Court held that Arnold, in
    particular, acted unreasonably:
    Although Arnold testified that he communicated with Ganz
    “numerous times” about the Mushroom assets, beginning in 1987, 1
    N.T. at 57, such testimony to the extent it implies that Arnold was
    attentive to or interested in the protection of Mushroom assets for the
    benefit of its creditors is not credible. There is no written
    communication after February 1988. Arnold was working full-time
    for a New Jersey firm and later for a Pittsburgh company beginning
    in 1987. He never sought any bank account or interest statements, or
    other corroborative or relevant tax information. Although Ganz
    provided a written reply to Arnold’s accounting request in February
    6
    1987, he did not do so with a similar request in February 1988, and
    Arnold did not press him for information. Arnold expressed no
    concern about the assets after Ganz joined another firm. And even
    after he became trustee in February 1991, and was not represented by
    the Pincus firm, and after he received information from the United
    States trustee about his duty to obtain control of estate property, he
    never sought any information or attempted to collect the assets from
    Ganz or Pincus. He attempted no recovery after the substantive
    consolidation order was entered. And, as trustee, he also embezzled
    estate property.
    
    366 B.R. at 434
    . The District Court affirmed. The Trustee appeals both findings
    and requests reassignment to a different bankruptcy judge on remand.
    II. Discussion
    The District Court had jurisdiction pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 158
     over the
    appeal from the Bankruptcy Court, which had jurisdiction pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 157
    (b). We have jurisdiction over this appeal pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. §§ 1291
     and
    158(d). The District Court’s determinations are subject to plenary review. In re
    Prof’l Ins. Mgmt., 
    285 F.3d 268
    , 282-83 (3d Cir. 2002). The Bankruptcy Court’s
    factual determinations are reviewed for clear error and its legal determinations are
    reviewed de novo. 
    Id.
    The Trustee argues (1) the Trustee is entitled to turnover of assets
    embezzled by Ganz and (2) the statute of limitations should be tolled because
    Arnold and Cutaiar acted reasonably in relying on advice of counsel. Both
    arguments challenge factual findings without any demonstration of how those
    findings were clearly erroneous. We have reviewed the record and find no error of
    fact or law.
    7
    The turnover claim is without merit because the Bankruptcy Court found
    the funds embezzled by Ganz were not channeled through PVHR’s accounts.
    There was no property for PVHR to turnover because Ganz converted the funds
    from Continental Bank to a separate account under his control and not the firm’s.
    The evidence adduced at trial supports the Bankruptcy Court’s finding that
    Arnold completely abdicated his responsibility to preserve and protect the
    bankruptcy estate’s assets, partly because of his friendly relationship with Ganz.
    After learning that Ganz had embezzled from the bankruptcy estate, Arnold then
    proceeded to pilfer the bankruptcy estate as well. It is clear that Arnold did not act
    with reasonable diligence to ascertain the existence of an injury, so the Trustee is
    not entitled to tolling of the limitations period.
    III. Conclusion
    For the reasons stated above, we will affirm the judgments of the
    Bankruptcy Court and District Court. The request for reassignment is moot.
    8