No. 85-1328.United States Court of Appeals, First Circuit.Argued September 11, 1985.
Decided February 11, 1986.
Benjamin Goldman, pro se.
Mark N. Berman, Boston, Mass., with whom Guy B. Moss, Mary K. DeNevi, Widett, Slater Goldman, P.C., Boston, Mass., were on brief, for defendant, appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts.
Before COFFIN, Circuit Judge, WISDOM[*] and ALDRICH, Senior Circuit Judges.
COFFIN, Circuit Judge.
[1] This case is a sequel to and arises out of the events described in Robinson v. Watts Detective Agency, 685 F.2d 729 (1st Cir. 1982). That opinion upheld a verdict of $750,000[1] for the trustee in bankruptcy of D.C. Sullivan Company (Sullivan) against, among others, a vice-president of Sullivan, one Otte, and Watts Detective Agency, Inc. (Watts), a company to which Otte and others caused Sullivan’s assets to be transferred in fraud of creditors, in violation of former 11 U.S.C. § 107(d)(2)(a) (repealed 1978). [2] The present question is whether appellant Goldman is entitled to a five percent broker’s commission in the amount of $50,000, by virtue of a letter agreement which stated in relevant part: “[Y]ou [Sullivan]Page 16
. . . have agreed to pay me a broker’s commission of five percent of whatever consideration you . . . receive . . . in the event that a deal is consummated with my customer Consolidated Service Corp. [the parent of Watts]. [* * *] It goes without saying that you are at liberty to negotiate with anybody else at all times and that I will not be entitled to any broker’s commission if you sell to someone else.” The parties stipulated that the broker was engaged “to introduce the owner to a prospective buyer and then to let the owner and the prospective buyer continue on by themselves to negotiate a `deal’ involving the transfer of the property and the price of the same.”
[3] The district court agreed with the bankruptcy court that no “deal was consummated”. It addressed the broker’s argument that our opinion in Robinson v. Watts repeatedly characterized the surreptitious absorption by Watts of Sullivan’s customer accounts and personnel as a “transfer” of property, i.e., as appellant would have it, a “deal”. The district court, however, deemed such terms “as used in the context of the claim of fraudulent conveyance [as] . . . a traditional metaphor . . . used to explain the remedy the law provides for the wrong committed to the creditors.” [4] We agree with the district court, for two reasons. In the first place, the precondition envisaged by the letter agreement was a “deal”. In the context of this agreement, “deal” carries its ordinary meanings of[5] Specifically, the agreement contemplated negotiations between seller and buyer resulting in not only a transfer of property but a transfer for a price, i.e., a sale. The letter agreement itself noted that the broker would have no claim to a commission if Sullivan were to “sell to someone else”. And it was stipulated that the “deal” to be negotiated between owner and prospective buyer involved price. It is straining syntax to equate the “consummation of a deal” with a desperate, disingenuous, shifting of customer accounts for no present consideration to Watts,[2]“An act of dealing, or buying and selling; a business transaction.” (Oxford English Dictionary)
“Any agreement or business transaction . . . A bargain or favorable sale.” (American Heritage Dictionary)
“An act of buying or selling . . . a reciprocal arrangement or agreement.” (Webster’s Third New International Dictionary)
followed by a ten year lag before a jury finally set the value of the fraudulent diminution of assets, such amount being burdened by substantial obligations to litigation counsel. [6] A second ground for our decision lies in the rationale of the Bankruptcy Act. It seems to us a paradox that appellant’s claimed commission of $50,000 is based on the trustee’s recovery, after trial, verdict, and compromise, plus interest (5% X $900,000 = $45,000 plus subsequent interest). In other words, appellant would have us view the “deal” as completed when the jury, in 1982, established the value of the assets transferred to Watts in April of 1970. But this amount was not a “price” paid for property transferred; it was not the completion of a transaction. Rather, it followed the jury’s finding, under 11 U.S.C. § 107(d)(6), that the transaction was “null and void against the trustee”. 685 F.2d at 737. And the money judgment was in satisfaction of the trustee’s right, in lieu of recovering property fraudulently transferred, to “collect its value from and avoid such transfer . . .”, under 11 U.S.C. § 110(e)(2). Id. at 738. We accepted in Robinson v. Watts the characterization o Elliott v. Glushon, 390 F.2d 514 (9th Cir. 1967), that “The legislative theory is cancellation . . . .” Id. at 738. [7] Accordingly, undoing a wrongful transfer of property is the very antithesis of “consummating a deal”. The case is similar t McCarthy v. Reid, 237 Mass. 371, 129 N.E. 675 (1921), in which, though a
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broker in good faith produced a customer who agreed to exchange land with his principal, the latter refused to carry out the agreement because of the customer’s false representations of rents received. The Supreme Judicial Court reversed a judgment for the broker, reasoning that “the situation of the parties was the same as if it [the agreement] never had been made. Although the plaintiff acted in good faith and was not as party to the fraud, he is not entitled to a commission as he failed to accomplish what he was employed to do.” Id. at 372-73, 129 N.E. 675. This is the reasoning we apply to the case at bar.
[8] Affirmed.(1934), where a commission was to be paid “if he produced the purchaser to whom the defendant, acting in his own behalf should sell his business.” [12] After plaintiff produced Consolidated — Watts — Watts negotiated with one Otte, and another principal company officer. Watts, however, did not offer enough to pay off the company’s indebtedness to the IRS, which was showing an active interest in the sale because of the company’s apparent insolvency. As a result of a threatened levy by the IRS, a hasty transfer of assets was made to Watts, the consideration being Otte’s obtaining a job with Watts (bringing many seasoned guards and customers), plus the payment of $39,000 in back wages to the company’s employees. This transaction resulted in the company’s going out of business, leaving a number of unsatisfied creditors. Bankruptcy followed. The trustee, Robinson, sued Watts, alleging the conveyance to it was in fraud of creditors, viz., was “without fair consideration.”[1] He won, and this court affirmed a judgment of $750,000, plus interest. Robinson v. Watts Detective Agency, Inc., 685 F.2d 729 (1st Cir. 1982) cert. denied, 459 U.S. 1105, 103 S.Ct. 728, 74 L.Ed.2d 953
(1983).
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We noted that the statutory requisites for this recovery were present — that there was property, and that it had been transferred. The property was “the operating portion of the company’s business, i.e., its customer accounts, employees and goodwill,” (685 F.2d at 732), “precisely that for which [Watts] had been bargaining.” (Id. at 734). We further accepted that a “transfer was made by the `debtor.’ . . . Of course, had these men been mere supervisory employees not empowered to act on behalf of the company, a different situation would have been presented.” (Id. at 733 n. 5). This judgment awarding the fair value of the property has been satisfied. Nonetheless my court allows plaintiff no commission on any monies received from his customer, not even on the original $39,000.
[13] In the travel of this case various justifications for this have been offered. The bankruptcy court put it briefly. “Watts . . . gained control of the Company’s accounts for no consideration going back to the Company . . . . The Court concludes that no `deal’ was consummated.” The district court said,[14] These conclusions seem erroneous in every respect. It is not correct that payment to its employees was not payment to the company. Paying their back wages discharged what would have been priority claims against the estate. 11 U.S.C. § 104(a)(2) (superseded). The fact that this direct benefit to the estate may be thought to have pleased Watts, who had taken over some of the employees, is res inter alia. Watts owed them nothing. How was it not part of a deal arranged between plaintiff’s customer and the company? [15] By selecting three out of a dozen dictionary definitions of “deal,” from which it concludes that a “price” must be paid, (in other words, there would have been a “deal” if the transaction had closed for more money — see 685 F.2d, at 732, second column) the court says there was no deal here because there was “no present consideration to Watts, followed by ten year lag before a jury finally set the value of the fraudulent diminution of assets, such amount being burdened by substantial obligations to litigation counsel.” (footnote omitted). [16] The first part of this quotation is a repetition of the error below. Four judges have now passed on this matter. Three have said “no consideration [went] back to the Company,” or “no present consideration to Watts.” The fourth, the district court, hedged by saying it was not “received because a `deal,’ was `consummated,'” which is whipping the devil around the stump if the test of a deal is whether there was a price paid. [17] I am at a loss to see how it can be said that no price was paid. The only flaw in the case is that too little was paid; a deficiency thereafter remedied. [18] The district court supported its conclusion by adopting “the trustee’s words, `Goldman brought a thief to the party and the thief was ordered to make restitution. And because the thief made restitution and put us back where we should have been before any sale, he [Goldman] wants a commission.'” While my court, presumably, recognizes the failure of this analogy, since thievery is a unilateral act transferring not even a defeasible title, it endorses the district court’s condemnation of ou Robinson holding of a transfer, see, ante, as being a “traditional metaphor.” Having in mind that one of the statutory requirements is the actuality of a transfer, this seems too easy a killing.[2] It then recognizes a transfer,The money was not paid to D.C. Sullivan Co., Inc.; it was paid to the former employees who joined the Watts Detective Agency, Inc. It was not money either paid or received because a “deal” was “consummated” between D.C. Sullivan Co., Inc. and Goldman’s customer. . . . No such deal was ever consummated. The payment made for the benefit of the Watts Detective Agency, Inc. is clearly not the kind of “consideration” that was contemplated by the brokerage agreement.
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and with a passing reference to then 11 U.S.C. § 110(e)(2) says that the legislative theory is “cancellation,” inferentially adopting the district court’s “restitution and put us back where we should have been before any sale.” “Accordingly, undoing a wrongful transfer of property is the very antithesis of `consummating a deal.’ ”
[19] With respect, the court is wrong both ways. Not only was there a real, not a metaphorical, transfer, but it was not undone. Had the trustee sought, and recovered, the property, it would have been undone, and the single Massachusetts case the court cites in its opinion would have been applicable. On a justifiably revoked transaction I would readily admit that no commission would be earned. McCarthy v. Reid, 237 Mass. 371, 129 N.E. 675 (1921). The trustee’s lawsuit, however, “cancelled” nothing but the limited consideration, recovering the fair one. The transfer to plaintiff’s customer was confirmed, not “put us back;” the estate had the cash, not the property. But, somehow, the original agreement, very literally covering “receive or will receive,” is out the window. [20] Seemingly, by its reference to ten years of expensive litigation, the court feels that plaintiff should suffer because of the malfeasance of his customer. While there appear to be very few cases, as a matter of general law the fact that a seller has to sue the purchaser does not deprive the seller’s procuring broker of his compensation. Rouda Co. v. Springtime Co., 49 Ohio App.2d 49, 359 N.E.2d 450 (1975). See also Bechtel Properties, Inc. v. Blanken, 194 F. Supp. 638 (D.D.C. 1961) aff’d, 299 F.2d 928, 929, cited with approval in Massengale v. Transitron Electric Corp., 385 F.2d 83, 87 (1st Cir. 1967). The court refers to that part of the contract which provided that no commission would be earned if the property was sold to “someone else.” It was not. It was sold to Watts initially, although defeasibly vis-a-vis the seller’s creditors, and the condition was removed by plaintiff’s customer’s further payment. Seemingly, the lawsuit was the efficient or predominating cause? [21] Except to lament the lawsuit’s cost, the court suggests no answer to Julian Tofias Co. v. John B. Stetson Co., ante, to the effect that an introduction brokerage agreement does not require predominating cause. True, the customer and the company officers misbehaved, but the inescapable fact is that plaintiff introduced a customer, the company transferred the property to it, and the company received its fair value from it. Although the court denies a “deal,” surely the parties did negotiate. The fact that they intended the price to be only $39,000, plus a job for Otte, and failed to realize, or closed their eyes to, the pertinent statutory requirement that the customer was obligated to pay the full value, does not mean that plaintiff was not responsible for its receipt. If one were to look with legal niceness, it could be said that the statute was a part of the deal. If one were to look more broadly, the statutory payment was a proximate consequence of it. Either way, plaintiff has been short changed. I dissent.[3]Page 20