Foster v. Holder (In re Foster)

Decision Date30 October 2020
Docket NumberCase No. 12-43804-ELM,Adversary No. 19-04131
PartiesIn re: REGINA NACHAEL HOWELL FOSTER, Debtor. REGINA NACHAEL HOWELL FOSTER, Plaintiff, v. AREYA HOLDER, et al., Defendants.
CourtU.S. Bankruptcy Court — Northern District of Texas

The following constitutes the ruling of the court and has the force and effect therein described.

Chapter 7

MEMORANDUM OPINION

(Re: Docket No. 27)

Before the Court in the above-captioned removed adversary proceeding is the Motion to Dismiss Complaint, Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings or, Alternatively, Motion for Summary Judgment (the "Combined Motion") filed by Defendants Areya Holder n/k/a Areya Holder Aurzada (the "Trustee"), Singer & Levick, P.C. ("SLPC"), Todd A. Hoodenpyle ("Hoodenpyle") and Michelle E. Shriro ("Shriro" and together with the Trustee, SLPC and Hoodenpyle, the "Moving Defendants"). In relation to the Moving Defendants' primary request within the Combined Motion for dismissal of the Current Complaint (as defined below), the Combined Motion has been docketed at Docket No. 27 (referred to herein as the "Motion to Dismiss").1 The sole focus of this Memorandum Opinion is on the Motion to Dismiss.

Pursuant to the Motion to Dismiss, the Moving Defendants request dismissal of all claims asserted against them by Plaintiff Regina Nachael Howell Foster (the "Debtor"), the chapter 7 debtor in Case No. 12-43804 (the "Bankruptcy Case"), based upon application of the Barton doctrine, the protections afforded by various doctrines of immunity, and the res judicata effect of prior orders of the Court. The Debtor has timely filed an objection in opposition to the Motion to Dismiss (the "Objection")2 disputing each of the dismissal grounds advanced by the Moving Defendants.

At a January 15, 2020 hearing in the adversary proceeding, the Debtor, without opposition from the Moving Defendants, requested that all pretrial dispositive motions involving the parties be considered on the parties' submissions alone without oral argument. The Court granted the unopposed request and, hence, the parties have waived their right to have oral argument on the Motion to Dismiss.

Having now reviewed the Debtor's Current Complaint and reviewed and considered the Motion to Dismiss and Objection thereto, the Court will grant the Motion to Dismiss for the reasons set forth below.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

This removed action presents but the latest chapter in a nearly decade-long saga of challenges lodged by the Debtor, an attorney,3 to the Trustee's administration of the Bankruptcy Case and the Debtor's bankruptcy estate. To put the current litigation and Motion to Dismiss in proper context, it is helpful to provide a recap of the events leading up to the current litigation.4

A. The Debtor's Initiation of the Bankruptcy Case and a Separate Divorce Proceeding

On July 2, 2012, the Debtor filed her voluntary petition for relief under chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code, thereby initiating the Bankruptcy Case. The Trustee was appointed as trustee of the Debtor's chapter 7 bankruptcy estate.

Four days after filing for bankruptcy protection, the Debtor initiated a divorce proceeding (the "Divorce Action") against her husband Carlos Foster ("Foster") under Cause No. 322-518571-12 in Texas state court (the "Family Court").5 In the Divorce Action, the Debtor "claimed an interest in three parcels of real property ... recognized as important assets in her bankruptcy."6 In follow-up to that assertion, on October 12, 2012, the Debtor filed amended schedules in her Bankruptcy Case to identify her claimed community property interest in these three parcels of real property, described as: (1) commercial real property located at 4716 E. Lancaster Avenue, Fort Worth, Texas 76103 (the "Lancaster Property"); (2) commercial real property located at 421 S.Edgewood Terrace, Fort Worth, Texas 76103 (the "Edgewood Property" and together with the Lancaster Property, the "Commercial Properties"); and (3) rental real property located at 936 E. Powell Avenue, Fort Worth, Texas 76103 (the "Powell Property" and together with the Commercial Properties, the "Properties").7

At the same time that the Debtor amended her schedule of assets to reflect her asserted community property interest in the Properties, the Debtor also amended her schedule of claimed exemptions.8 Of significance, nowhere within the amended exemptions schedule did she list any of the Properties as exempt property, and at no time thereafter did she ever assert that any of the Properties constituted exempt property. Thus, because the amended schedules facially evidenced that the Properties, or at least the Debtor's asserted interest in the Properties, constituted non-exempt property of the bankruptcy estate subject to administration by the Trustee, the Trustee began to investigate the background of the Properties.

Ultimately, the Trustee learned that the Debtor's husband, Foster, was claiming the Properties as his separate property based upon the fact that they had been acquired in the name of 1st Aid Accident Injury & Pain Center, Inc. ("First Aid"), a corporation that Foster had organized as his wholly-owned business prior to his marriage to the Debtor. With respect to the Debtor's claimed interest in the Properties, the Trustee learned that the Debtor was basing her claim of ownership on arguments of First Aid being the mere alter ego of Foster warranting a piercing of the corporate veil of First Aid to make the Properties part of the community property estate.9

B. The Trustee Retains SLPC as Special Counsel to Assist in Analyzing and Addressing Matters Involving the Properties

Given the complexities associated with the competing claims of ownership to the Properties, the Trustee, with Court approval, engaged SLPC as special counsel to assist the Trustee in further investigating and analyzing the competing claims of ownership and in otherwise addressing matters involving the Properties.10 Hoodenpyle and Shriro are attorneys with SLPC who worked on the engagement.

Following further investigation and analysis, the Trustee discovered, among other things, that First Aid had forfeited its corporate charter roughly eight years prior to the bankruptcy filing - in or about July 2004. Thus, concluding that the forfeiture resulted in the Debtor and Foster each owning and controlling an undivided one-half interest in the Properties because the Properties were acquired in the name of First Aid during the marriage, the Trustee concluded that she had the responsibility and authority to administer the Properties as property of the bankruptcy estate.11 Accordingly, with the assistance of counsel, she began to explore options with respect to monetizing the value of the estate's interest in the Properties.

Following the Trustee's receipt of an offer from an entity affiliated with Foster's mother to purchase the bankruptcy estate's interest in the Properties, the Trustee filed a motion to sell the Properties.12 The Debtor objected to the motion, asserting, among other things, that the disputed ownership rights to the Properties had not yet been determined, that a determination with respect to the division of the marital estate had not yet been made in the Divorce Action, and that approvalof the sale to an entity affiliated with Foster's mother was unwarranted given that the proposed sales price was allegedly significantly less than the previously listed valuation of the Properties.13

Following a hearing on the motion, the Court declined to approve the sale for two reasons. First, the Court was concerned that negotiations with respect to the terms of the sale had been predicated on the assumption that the estate held no more than a 50% interest in the Properties, whereas the division of the marital estate in the Divorce Action could conceivably lead to the estate obtaining a greater than 50% interest. Second, the Court was concerned that approval of the sale could have the unintended consequence of effecting a de facto division of the marital estate without the involvement of the Family Court.14

C. The Trustee Initiates Litigation Against Foster and First Aid to Determine Ownership and Intervenes in the Divorce Action

To resolve the ownership dispute with Foster, on May 22, 2014, the Trustee initiated litigation against Foster and First Aid under Adversary Proceeding No. 14-04054 to seek the Court's entry of judgment declaring the Properties to constitute property of the bankruptcy estate and ordering turnover of the Properties to the Trustee (the "Property Ownership Lawsuit").15Foster and First Aid filed a joint answer in opposition.16 Upon the commencement of the Property Ownership Lawsuit, notice of the action and of the Trustee's complaint was provided to, among others, the Debtor by and through her then-counsel of record.17

Separately, the Trustee also filed a plea in intervention in the Divorce Action to put the Family Court on notice of the proceedings in the Bankruptcy Case and to protect what the Trustee believed to be the bankruptcy estate's interest in the Properties, noting in the plea that the bankruptcy estate includes any community property of the Debtor and Foster under the Debtor's joint management and control as of the date of the bankruptcy filing pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(2)(A).18

Approximately five months into the litigation in the Property Ownership Lawsuit, the Trustee reached an agreement with Foster for resolution of the lawsuit - or so she thought. On October 24, 2014, the Trustee filed a motion in the Bankruptcy Case for approval of the settlement.19 Under the terms of the proposed compromise, Foster would transfer all of his alleged right, title and interest in the Commercial Properties to the bankruptcy estate in exchange for the Trustee's transfer and conveyance of all of the bankruptcy estate's alleged right, title and interest in the Powell Property to Foster, and the parties would exchange releases (excluding, for the...

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