IN RE: MICHAEL V. FRIERDICH, SR., Debtor, v. STEVEN V. MOTTAZ, Trustee of the Estate of Michael V. Frierdich, Sr., Plaintiff-Appellee, v. BEVERLY OSWALD, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 01-4058
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
Argued May 20, 2002—Decided June 21, 2002
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Illinois. No. 01-CV-302-DRH—David R. Herndon, Judge.
EVANS, Circuit Judge. Michael Frierdich is a Chapter 7 debtor, which means, in simplest terms, that he does not have enough assets to pay off a staggering amount of debt. This case, between the bankruptcy trustee (Mottaz) and Frierdich‘s wife (Oswald), turns on when Frierdich trans
Because this case arose on summary judgment, we state the facts in the light most favorable to Oswald. We turn first to the events of early 1998. At that time, Frierdich was a director and the treasurer of Columbia Centre, Inc., a closely held company, and owned 360 of its outstanding 1,000 shares. Paul Frierdich (his brother) and Joe Koppeis held the remaining shares. (Paul and Michael Frierdich both submitted affidavits saying that Columbia Centre never issued stock certificates to its shareholders. A certificate—“Certificate #6“—evidencing Frierdich‘s shares turned up but had never been signed.) The stock record book was also lost.
Meanwhile Frierdich and Oswald were pondering the business of marriage. In anticipation of their engagement, they decided to take stock of their respective financial situations. Based on information that Frierdich provided to Oswald, they determined that the value of Frierdich‘s estate exceeded that of Oswald‘s. So they assented to an arrangement under which Frierdich would transfer his Columbia Centre stock to Oswald and she would waive any interest in Frierdich‘s estate. On January 7, 1998, Frierdich and Oswald were engaged.
The next day Frierdich executed a “Stock Transfer/Stock Power.” It assigned to Oswald his interest in the stock and gave the officers of Columbia Centre power of attorney to transfer the stock on the company books. On January 16 Frierdich sent the transfer document, along with transfer instructions, to Paul Frierdich. The transmittal letter
Mike and Bev-
I received your stock transfer of all Mike‘s stock in Columbia Centre Inc. Shopping Center Corporation, and accordingly the transfer to Bev Oswald of his 36%. We do not need anything else for the transfer.
Oswald never received a stock certificate and no notation on the (missing) stock record book was ever made.
Frierdich and Oswald each signed a prenuptial “waiver” to any interest in the other‘s estate on March 4. Paragraph six of Oswald‘s waiver read:
It is the intent of the undersigned that her present and future interest in any assets of Michael V. Frierdich is specifically limited to those assets which Michael V. Frierdich shall have voluntarily transferred an interest to the undersigned and only then in circumstances wherein he has affirmatively taken action transferring an ownership interest to the undersigned. Reference herein includes interest Michael V. Frierdich has previously and voluntarily, by execution of a stock transfer, assigned all his rights, title, and interest in and to his stock ownership in a Columbia, Illinois shopping center to Beverly K. Oswald.
Frierdich and Oswald were married 3 days later.
In August or September of 1998, Koppeis and Paul Frierdich approached Frierdich about having the corporation repurchase his shares in Columbia Centre. They offered him $250,000, a price that increased, based on financial appraisals, to $400,000. Koppeis, who was Columbia Centre‘s president and managing officer, was not aware of any transfer to Oswald.
In a letter dated September 23, 1998, to Union Planters Bank, with which Oswald and Frierdich‘s son were trying to arrange a loan for a real estate purchase, Frierdich stated:
I transferred some $400,000.00 to Beverly K. Oswald as a gift to a spouse, there are no gift tax consequences. There is an unlimited marital deduction for gifts to a spouse, and as such, this is the net amount for her to utilize. I sold my stock in a shopping center for a sum in excess of that amount and was only required to pay capital gains tax on some 20%. My interest in the shopping center was sold in 1998.
Involuntary bankruptcy proceedings commenced on February 17, 1999. Frierdich‘s schedules indicate that, as of the filing, he had debts of $8,530,395 and assets of $1,200. Twelve lawsuits were pending against Frierdich, five of which had been pending prior to September 10, 1998. The claims on file in the bankruptcy proceeding reflect debts in
Mottaz, the trustee, filed this adversary proceeding against Oswald seeking to avoid Frierdich‘s transfer to her of the stock proceeds from the September 10, 1998 sale. The bankruptcy judge (Fines, J.), finding no dispute that the relevant transfer occurred in September, and not January, entered summary judgment for Mottaz in the amount of $400,000. He held, in the alternative, that even if the transfer occurred in January, it was voidable. Oswald appealed and the district judge affirmed.
In a second appeal from a bankruptcy court‘s decision, we apply the same standard of review as did the district court. In re Marrs-Winn Co., 103 F.3d 584, 589 (7th Cir. 1996). Because this case was decided on summary judgment, see
This case implicates two avoidance provisions of the federal bankruptcy code.
So to the key issue we turn: whether Frierdich transferred his Columbia Centre stock to Oswald in January of 1998. Under the bankruptcy code,
a transfer is made when such transfer is so perfected that a bona fide purchaser from the debtor against whom applicable law permits such transfer to be perfected cannot acquire an interest in the property transferred that is superior to the interest in such property of the transferee.
Columbia Centre is an Illinois corporation and the parties and courts below have applied Illinois law, so we apply it as well. In re Marrs-Winn, 103 F.3d at 591.
Oswald argues that she acquired the stock pursuant to a prenuptial agreement under which she waived her interest in Frierdich‘s estate in exchange for the stock transfer. This qualifies her, she argues, for “protected purchaser” status under section 303 of Article 8 of the Illinois Commercial Code. (Certain provisions of Article 8 were revised in 2000 and the revisions became effective July 1, 2001. See 2000 Ill. Legis. Serv. 91-893, § 99. Because the events in this case occurred in 1998, we will be applying the relevant provisions of Article 8 as they stood at that earlier time.) Section 8-303(a) defines a “protected purchaser” as “a purchaser of a certificated or uncertificated security” who gives value, does not have notice of an adverse claim to the security and obtains “control” of the security.
She has put the cart before the horse. To be a “protected purchaser” she must first show that she is a “purchaser” of the security, which, unfortunately for her, is the key issue in this case. A “purchaser” (to no one‘s surprise) is “a person who takes by purchase.”
Oswald claims to have taken by prenuptial agreement. That argument confronts two problems. First, even assum
Delivery of an uncertificated security occurs when “the issuer registers the purchaser as the registered owner,”
If this seems an overly technical interpretation of section 8-301(b)(2) based on the facts of January and February 1998 alone, later events make clear that Frierdich continued to be the stock‘s real owner. Six months after the purported transfer, Paul Frierdich and Koppeis (who, as we said, was unaware of any January transfer) approached Frierdich to buy the shares. Although Oswald stated that she was involved in discussions concerning the stock sale, she did not negotiate the price for her purported property. Rather, “they just came up with the amount.” Moreover, although Frierdich attempted to have Oswald‘s name put on the sale agreement, he didn‘t try very hard. Frierdich went ahead and signed the (unrevised) final agreement, which listed him as the seller. He warranted that he held title to the shares; he also received the $400,000 purchase price. And even though he deposited the check in Oswald‘s account, Frierdich wrote to Union Planters Bank, in what appears to have been the hope that Oswald and his son would obtain funding for a real estate purchase, that the transfer was a marital “gift” (which
The second problem with Oswald‘s “prenuptial” theory is that, even apart from a failure of delivery, she never obtained an enforceable interest in the stock. Illinois law requires that a premarital agreement be in writing,
Accordingly, Oswald did not take an interest in the stock until Frierdich deposited the proceeds from its sale into her account in September of 1998. That transfer was 5 months before the February 1999 bankruptcy filing and, therefore, well within the one-year provision of
The transfer is therefore voidable if it was done with actual intent to defraud under
The trustee presented evidence that Frierdich transferred a substantial sum of money, $400,000, to a close relative, his wife, and received nothing in return. In Frierdich‘s own words to Union Planters Bank, the transfer was a “gift.” He made this gift in the midst of his own financial demise. The bankruptcy judge did not err by taking judicial notice of the schedules filed in the underlying bankruptcy proceeding. See In re Steffens, 148 B.R. 914, 916 (W.D. Mo. 1993); Mitchell v. Western Data Processing Servs., Corp., 75 B.R. 825, 828 (D.P.R. 1987). Those schedules indicate that as of February 17, 1999, Frierdich‘s balance sheet was a sorry $8,529,195 in the red. They also reveal that five lawsuits against Frierdich were pending prior to September 10, 1998.3 Although a debtor‘s schedules, often filed months after the time of transfer, may not be probative of the
Because we find that the bankruptcy judge did not err by concluding that Frierdich‘s September transfer was voidable, we need not address his alternative holding that had the transfer occurred in January, it would have run afoul of the Illinois Fraudulent Transfer Act and, therefore, been avoidable under
AFFIRMED.
A true Copy:
Teste:
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Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
