596 A.2d 27 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1991
This fraudulent transfer case presents an important question concerning the scope of the automatic stay provision of the federal Bankruptcy Code,
On January 10, 1991, Brian Tynan filed a motion for a stay of proceedings. In his motion he asserts that on December 14, 1990, an involuntary petition in bankruptcy under chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Act was filed against Mary Tynan. The plaintiff does not dispute this. Apparently, no trustee has yet been appointed. Brian Tynan seeks an automatic stay of the proceedings against him pursuant to
Under
The automatic stay provision "is a key component of federal bankruptcy law." Matter of S.I. Acquisition,Inc.,
The automatic stay provision of § 362 is not ordinarily available for the benefit of nonbankrupt codefendants because such an extension of the stay does not ordinarily promote its underlying purpose, i.e., the protection of debtors and creditors. See Matter of S.I. Acquisition,Inc., supra, 1147, and authorities cited therein. In certain limited situations, however, courts have recognized that a § 362 stay "may apply to actions against nonbankrupt defendants." Id. One of these situations is an action alleging a fraudulent conveyance of property in an effort to put that property out of the reach of creditors.
The theory of a fraudulent conveyance action is that "[p]roperty fraudulently conveyed may, as to the creditors of the grantor, be treated as if no conveyance of it had been made . . . . True, the fraudulent grantor could not invoke the power of the courts to secure a reconveyance to him because his own fraud has shut the door of the courts against him . . . . Nevertheless, *584
he still has an interest in the property which can be reached by his creditors." (Citations omitted.) Murphy
v. Dantowitz,
The Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Florida has recently arrived at the same result by a somewhat different approach in In re Saunders,
The cases discussed above, notably MortgageAmerica
and Saunders, have involved stays sought by bankruptcy trustees. The stay here is sought by a defendant. This difference should not, however, be dispositive. A bankruptcy trustee has standing to bring a number of bankruptcy related claims that may not be brought by the universe of debtors and creditors. See the particularly thorough discussion in St. Paul Fire MarineIns. Co. v. Pepsico, Inc.,
The plaintiff contends in its memorandum in opposition to Brian Tynan's motion that, "[i]f and when the plaintiff here succeeds, the property which is the subject of this action will be returned to the debtor's estate for the benefit of all creditors." That is not, however, necessarily the case. Mary Tynan, the debtor here, is *586 not even a party to the action, and, under these circumstances, it is most unlikely that the plaintiff would, in the event that it prevailed on the merits, seek the precise remedy just described. A literal return of the property to the debtor's estate would put that property beyond the reach of the plaintiff for purposes of this action. It is much more likely that a creditor in this situation would seek to attach or to levy execution on the property as if no conveyance had been made. Murphy v. Dantowitz, supra, 328; see Olin Corporation v.Castells, supra, 52. The plaintiff, it will be recalled, seeks money damages against each of the defendants in addition to an order setting aside the conveyance.
This is, of course, necessarily speculative since no liability has been found in the first place, but an automatic stay will serve to prevent any possibility of this occurrence. It must be emphasized, moreover, that a stay is compelled by the theory and language of the statute. A stay of the action upon a filing of the bankruptcy petition is mandatory and automatic. If a stay is mandated, as the cases hold, when requested by a bankruptcy trustee, it is equally mandated when requested by a defendant or, for that matter, no one at all. The statute simply does not differentiate between those situations.
In the aftermath of the filing of a bankruptcy petition, any action to set aside a fraudulent transfer "must be brought in the name of the bankruptcy estate as the real party in interest." In re Curry Sorensen, Inc.,
For the reasons discussed above, the action is stayed as to Brian Tynan. The automatic stay provision similarly mandates that the action be stayed as to Richard and William Tynan. It is not stayed with respect to any other defendant.