Bankruptcy Judge Schmetterer's Opinion (20)
United States Bankruptcy Court
Northern District of Illinois
Eastern Division
Transmittal Sheet for Opinions for Posting
Will this opinion be published? Yes
Bankruptcy Caption: In re Joy Recovery Technology Corporation
Bankruptcy No. 97 B 36491
Adversary Caption: Noel Daley as Trustee for Joy Recovery v. Mark J.F. Chang, et al.
Adversary No. 98 A 02044
Date of Issuance: March 17, 2003
Judge: Jack B. Schmetterer
Appearance of Counsel:
Attorney for Movant or Plaintiff: Christopher J. Horvay (Gould & Ratner)
Attorney for Respondent or Defendant: Scott N. Schreiber (Much Shelist Freed, et al.)
Trustee or Other Attorneys: U.S. Trustee
`IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION
IN RE: ) ) Chapter 11 JOY RECOVERY TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION, ) ) Case No. 97 B 36491 Debtor. ) ) NOEL DALEY, not individually, but solely as Trustee )
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Adversary No. 98 A 02044 |
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Hon. Jack B. Schmetterer |
MARK J.F. CHANG AND CATHY C.H. CHANG, ) ) Defendants. )
MEMORANDUM OPINION ON TRUSTEE’S
MOTION FOR AWARD OF PREJUDGMENT INTEREST
This Adversary proceeding relates to the confirmed Chapter 11 Plan of Debtor Joy Recovery
Technology Corporation (“Joy”) under which Plaintiff herein who is liquidating trustee under that Plan,
brought suit against Mark and his wife Cathy Chang (“Mark” and “Cathy” or “the Changs”).
This action alleged thattheChangslootedtheirformercompanyJoybysellingMark’s 50% stock
in trust for $2.1 million, leaving the company insolvent and defrauding Joy’s inventory. This suit sought
recovery in five counts: Counts I and II averred fraudulent transfers under § 544 of the Bankruptcy Code
and 740 ILCS §§ 160/5(a)(2) and 160/6(a) respectively; Counts III and V alleged that the Changs owed
a fiduciary dutytoJoy’screditorsas officersand sole shareholders,and breached that duty by causing the
subject transaction; Count IV charged misappropriation of corporate assets under 805 ILCS § 5/8.60.
The Plaintiff also objected to the Changs’ claim against Joy, seeking to subordinate it under 11 U.S.C. § 510 because of the conduct ultimately proven.
Following trial on the Amended Complaint, pursuant to Findings of Fact (“Findings”) and Conclusions of Law made and entered, it was ordered that separate judgments will issue as follows:
- Judgment for Defendants Mark and Cathy Chang on Count I.
- Judgment for Trustee on Count II against Mark and Cathy Chang.
- Judgment for Trustee on Counts III, IV, and V against Mark Chang.
4. Judgment sustaining Trustee’s objection to Mark Chang’s claim against the estate and equitably subordinating that claim to the claims of Joy creditors. See In re Joy Recovery Technology Corp., 286 B.R. 54 (Bankr. N.D. Ill. 2002).
Thosejudgmentshave notyetbeen enteredbecause Plaintiffhasmovedforawardofprejudgment interesttobeincludedinthejudgments. He seeks interest from the date of the transaction imposing liability which occurred on December 22, 1995, to the date of judgment.
Followingbriefingofthe legalissuesand forreasonssetforthbelow, the judgment enteredthis date will include prejudgment interest, but only from the date this Adversary was filed on December 2, 1998, to the date of judgment, and only against Mark Chang, not Cathy.
BREACHES OF FIDUCIARY DUTY -- COUNTS III AND V
Chang was an employee, director, and president of one of Joy’s divisions as well as Chair of the Board of Directors. The Findings and Conclusions determined that Joy was a closely held corporation and that Chang owed a fiduciary duty to the corporation and its shareholders but breached that duty by misappropriation of corporate assets. Specifically, it was held that “the conduct of Chang in effectuating the transaction involved here, stripping the corporation of assets without benefit to it and rendering it
insolvent, is found to have violated his fiduciary duty.”
The judgments to be entered in Counts III and V against Mark Chang lie under Illinois law, and
there is ample authority in Illinois supporting award of prejudgment interest in cases where breach of
fiduciary duty is found. In In re Wernick, 535 N.E.2d 876 (Ill. 1989), the Illinois Supreme Court
approved prejudgment interestuponfindingthatthe defendant therebreachedfiduciarydutiesowed to his
business associate relating to the sale of real estate. The plaintiff was awarded one-half of the sale
proceedsplusprejudgment interest thereon. In examiningtheproprietyofawardingprejudgmentinterest,
it was held:
The rationale underlying an equitable award of prejudgment interest in a case involving a breach of fiduciary duty is to make the injured party complete by forcing the fiduciary to account for profits and interest he gained by the use of the injured party’s money. The injured party is thus compensatedforanyeconomic lossoccasionedbythe inabilityto use his money. Prejudgment interest in this context acts as a concept of fairness and equity and not as a sanction against the defendant.
Id. at 888. The court also observed: “[F]undamental principles of damages and compensation dictate that
when money has been wrongfully withheld the victim receive interest for the wrongdoer’s retention of his
money.” Id.
Similarly, in NC Illinois Trust Co. v. First Illini Bancorp, Inc., 752 N.E.2d 1167 (Ill. App. Ct.
2001), the court awarded prejudgment interestinfavorofa trustee against the bank used by the trust, for
breach of fiduciary duty. The opinion foundthatthebankbreachedfiduciarydutiesby using estate assets
to settle a federal lawsuit brought by a purchaser of trust stock who alleged improprieties by the bank in
connection with the stock sale, and to pay the bank’s counsel in that litigation. Finding that “there is no doubtthatBankbenefittedfromth[e]transactions[,]”the courtawardedprejudgment interesttothetrustee, referring to the reasoning inWernick; See also NC Illinois Trust Co.,752N.E.2dat1178; and Neumann
v. Neumann, 777 N.E.2d 981 (Ill. App. Ct. 2002) (“In cases involving a breach of fiduciary duty, the purpose of awarding prejudgment interest at the prime rate is to make the plaintiff whole by placing him in the position he would have been had he had the opportunity to use the funds wrongly retained by the defendant.”).
MISAPPROPRIATION -- COUNT IV
Under the Findings and Conclusions, judgment will enter against Mark Chang on Count IV for misappropriation under 805 ILCS 5/8.60. “The goal of damages under this statute is not compensatory; rather, the purpose is to deprive the fiduciary of the benefit ofhis breach, and thereby to deter fiduciaries from breaching their duty to the corporation.” Levy v. Marakal Sales Corp., 643 N.E.2d 1206, 1220 (Ill. App. Ct. 1994)). Under Illinois law, prejudgment interest is appropriate, based on the same equitable considerations discussedabove incases ofmisappropriation. See Forkin v. Cole, 548 N.E.2d 795, 811 (Ill. App. Ct. 1989) (“[T]his court has decided the trial court properly determined defendants misappropriated corporate assets and in some cases conspired to achieve those results. Accordingly, equity warrants the assessment of prejudgment interest as part of the judgment.”); LaBarbera v. LaBarbera, 452 N.E.2d 684 (Ill. App. Ct. 1983) (overruling trial court’s denial of prejudgment interest and directing that it be assessed against defendant based upon misappropriation of funds).
FRAUDULENT TRANSFER -- COUNT II
Ithasalsobeendeterminedthatjudgment istobe enteredinTrustee’sfavorand againstbothMark
and Cathy Chang on Count II, for fraudulent conveyance under 740 ILCS 160/6(a) of the Illinois Uniform
Fraudulent Transfer Act (“UFTA”) and Section 544 of Title 11 of the United States Code. All of the
elements of a fraudulent transfer were proven at trial. Further, it was held that Mark was not protected by
the safe-harbor provision of § 550(b)(1) as he did not qualify as a good faith transferee. To be so
protected, he would have hadto taken the funds for value and without knowledge of the voidabilityofthe
transfer. To the contrary, it was held that:
. . . Chang did not give any value for the transfer. Secondly, as an officer of Joy, Chang had inquiry notice that the transactioncould be avoided. . . . A reasonable person acting in good faith would have been on notice that Joy was a borrower and the possible source of the funds. . . . Chang’s claim that he and his counsel were misled by Young and had no idea that Joy was the source of the money to buy his stock is simply not credible.
In In re Roti, 271 B.R. 281 (Bankr. N.D. Ill. 2002), Judge Squires imposed prejudgment interest
from the date an adversary proceeding was filed on the trustee’s fraudulent transfer claim, under §
160(6)(a) of the UFTA:
The purposeof allowing prejudgment interest is compensatory, not punitive;suchinterest is granted to make the prevailing party whole. Not only must the award of prejudgment interestbe compensatory,itisalsowithinthe Court’sdiscretionto determine ifsuchaward is equitable. . . . In other words, prejudgment interest is “simply an ingredient of full compensation,” and should not be considered a windfall. Prejudgment interest has been awarded pursuant to the rate set forth in 28 U.S.C. § 1961 from the date the adversary proceeding was filed.
Id. at 292-93. As prejudgment interest was appropriately awarded by Judge Squires under § 160(6)(a)
in Roti, so too is prejudgment interest warranted against Mark Chang on Count II. Since Cathy played
a lesser role compared to that of her husband, prejudgment interest against her will be denied.
TRUSTEE MAY BE AWARDED PREJUDGMENT
INTEREST ALTHOUGH NOT EXPRESSLY PLEADED
Changs argue thatitwould be prejudicialto Defendantsto awardthe Trusteeprejudgment interest
in this case on any of the claims because the Trustee never expressly asked for such relief in his Amended
Complaint. While federal rules of procedure provide for liberal amendment of pleadings, it has been found
inappropriate to permit amendment ofthe pleading when a party would be prejudiced. See Feldman v.
Allegheny International, Inc., 850 F.2d 1217, 1225 (7th Cir.1988), citing Textor v. Board of Regents,
711 F.2d 1387 (7th Cir.1983). However, the primary consideration as to whether to permit amendment
of pleadings is whether such amendment will delay a pending trial. Viewing the instant motion as one in
effectto request a Complaint amendment toseek a prejudgment interestaward, itcomesafterthe trialwas
completed.
The Changs alsoargue that an award of prejudgment interest is based upon factualmatterswhich
could have been litigated by the parties, including knowledge of the parties concerning potential
consequences of their conduct, and that it is prejudicial to assert such a request against the Changs after
completion of all discovery, motion practice, and trial. Further, as no specific demand was ever made in
the Complaint for such interest, they say it was impossible for them to have fairly addressed the issue,
including their potential scope of liability, before filing of this Adversary and during more than four years
that this proceeding has been pending. They seek mercy because the interest amount now being sought
is close to one-third the amount of actual damages prayed for and to be awarded.
However, the Trustee may be awarded prejudgment interest even though his Complaint did not
expressly request it. Rule 54(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, made applicable to adversary
proceedingspursuantto Rule 7054(a)ofthe FederalRulesofBankruptcyProcedure, specificallyprovides that “entry of a final judgment shall grant the relief to which a party has not demanded such relief in his pleadings.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(c)1; Williamsonv.HandyButton MachineCo., 817 F.2d 1290, 1298 (7th Cir. 1987) (holding that plaintiff’s failure to ask for prejudgment interest until after the verdict had been returned is not dispositive of the issue as to whether plaintiff is entitled to it). In addition, prejudgment interest is encompassed in Trustee’s Amended Complaint’s request for “such other relief as the Court deems just and proper.” See In re Trans Union Corp. Privacy Litig., No. 00 C 4729, 2002 WL 31028234, *11 (N.D. Ill. September 10, 2002) (holding that a court may construe a request for such further legalandequitablerelieftoincludeaclaimforactualdamages). The Trustee also requested interest in the Trustee’s Proposed Post-Trial Findings of Fact and Conclusions of law filed on March 15, 2002.
DISCUSSION OF ARGUMENTS ASSERTED
Whether to grant prejudgment interest is within a court’s discretion. See In re FBN Food Svcs., Inc., 175 B.R. 671, 690 (Bankr. N.D. Ill. 1994). However, some courts have held that the relative equities may make prejudgment interest inappropriate when the defendant acted innocently and had no reason to know of the wrongfulness of his actions, see Board of County Comm'rs of the County of Jackson v. United States, 308 U.S. 343, 352-3, 60 S.Ct. 285, 289, 84 L.Ed. 313 (1939); or whenthere is a good faith dispute between the parties as to the existence of any liability. See St. Louis & O'Fallon Ry. Co. v. United States, 279 U.S. 461, 478, 483, 49 S.Ct. 384, 385, 387, 73 L.Ed. 798 (1929) (suit under Interstate Commerce Act to recover excess income allegedly earned); Armstrong v. Greenville
1 Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(c) is applicable to this adversary proceeding pursuant to Fed.R.Bankr.P. 7054(a).
Casino Partners, 217B.R. 569 (Bankr.E.D. Ark. 1998) (prejudgment interestnotallowedonfraudulent transfer avoidance claims where in light of defendant's "good faith" defense and nature of transactions, defendant could not determine, without judicial intervention, what its liability, if any, might be).
In the Findings of Facts and Conclusions of Law (hereafter the "FFCL"), rulings were entered in favorofthe Changs onCount I of the AmendedComplaint whichallegedafraudulent transferunder§ 544 of the Code and 740 ILCS §160/5(a)(2) and against the Changs on Count II which alleged a fraudulent transfer under § 544 of the Code and 740 ILCS §160/6(a). Thus, it was found in Count I that the disputed transaction did not result in Joy Recovery Technology Corporation ("Joy") having “inadequate capital”becausethetransactionsleftJoy withcapitalenoughtooperateforatime. But, it was nevertheless held that Joy became insolvent as a result of the same transaction.
The Changs argue that an award of prejudgment interest would be unfair and inequitable, since Defendants were found to have some basis to dispute the Trustee's claims on Count I, and also because on the eve of trial the Plaintiff dismissed all but its fraudulent conveyance counts against Cathy Chang. Thus, Plaintiff ultimately prevailed only on part of his claims.
Moreover, theyargue thatthey could not reasonably have determined with any certainty whether the transaction at issue was potentially subject to avoidance, since that transaction was structured as a cross-purchase between shareholders and was only reclassified many months later by the other party. Moreover, Joy continued to pay its trade creditors for some time, and so it is argued that there was no reason for the Changs to have even asked the question whether the transaction should be analyzed for solvency purposes or whether the purchase price may have been wrongfully obtained.
Defendantsargue furtherthattheyactedinsubjective good faith and that they neveractuallyknew that Young's cross-purchase would result in Joy becoming insolvent or creditors not being paid. In the context of a fraudulent conveyance claim, a mediate transferee may retain the funds transferred if it can prove that the transfer was made (1) for value and (2) in good faith. 11 U.S.C. § 550. Here, a determination under §550 could not be made without a judicial determination, and ultimately without the use of expert witnesses, and that until the ruling here, the Changs “honestly and reasonably believed that the stock was worth the purchase price.” An award of prejudgment interest, they say, would serve no other purpose than to penalize the Changs for exercising their right to test the disputed issue in court.
Changs suggest that this case is factually analogous to the court's decision in Armstrong v. GreenvilleCasino Partners, 217 B.R. 569 (Bankr. E.D. Ark. 1998). In Armstrong, the defendant casino soughttoavoidliabilityforafraudulenttransferreceivedfromthedebtorbased uponitslackofknowledge oftheinsolvencyofthedebtorand based uponhavingprovidedreasonablyequivalentvalue. Although the bankruptcy court ultimately found the casino liable, it denied prejudgment interest, reasoning that neither the fact nor the amount of liability could be known until trial. Armstrong, 217 B.R. at 580. Changs concludethat“. .. any award of prejudgment interest against Mark Changwould onlyserve topunishhim for acting in good faith with respect to the disputed transaction and could serve no remedial purpose. It was impossible for Chang, or any other participant in the disputed transaction, to have anticipated this Court's findings, years later, concerning the structure of the transaction, value or solvency.”
The Changs have argued that a specific pleaded request for prejudgment interest should have been made in this case because they did not anticipate that they would have to demonstrate that they acted in “good faith” and, therefore, are now prejudiced by the Trustee’s request for prejudgment interest.
However,the Changs’memorandumoflawinsupportoftheir motionforsummary judgment filed on May
1, 2000, contended that Mark Chang took the Debtor’spropertyingoodfaith without knowledge of the
voidability of the transfer. They certainly were well aware, as they should have been, that their good faith
or lack thereof - was at issue at trial. This was at the heart of their defenses predicated on § 550(b) of the
BankruptcyCode. The contention that the Changs would have somehow defended the case differently had
they known that Plaintiff intended to request prejudgment interest is baseless.
The foregoingobjections to awardofinteresthave no merit,nordo the contentions that an award,
ofprejudgment interestisinappropriatebecauseitissomesortofsanction. Award of interest is an attempt
to be fair and equitable to those harmed and make them whole, not a sanction against the wrong doer.
Prejudgment interest in this case is to compensate the Debtor’s creditors for the money that Mark Chang
wrongfully received.
Defendants’ contention that Mark Chang acted “innocently and had no reason to know of the
wrongfulness” of his actions is not supported by the record. Indeed, it was found that,
. . . , Chang obviously misused his position as a fiduciary to the detriment of Joy’s creditors. Beginning in early 1995, Chang contributed to the deadlock of Joy’s board, and ultimately he orchestrated the dismantling of the board by intimidating its members with threats of litigation, which eventually led those members to resign. Thus, creditors of Joy were left without the protection afforded by the corporate form. Once the board was dispatched, Chang and Young used Joy as a mere instrumentality to effect the buyout of Chang’s stock. There was no board resolution approving the LBO, and Joy was not even represented by Counsel when it mortgaged its future to finance the LBO. Joy’s creditors were left holding the bag after Chang cashed-out his equity in the corporation. The distribution to Chang came at expense of the company’s unsecured creditors.
Itwasfurtherfoundthatthe conductofChangineffectuatingthe transactioninvolvedhere,stripping
the corporation of assets without benefit to it and rendering it insolvent, is found to have violated his
fiduciary duty. Moreover --
Chang did not give any value for the transfer. Secondly, as an officer of Joy, Chang had inquiry notice that the transaction could be avoided. . . . A reasonable person acting in goodfaithwould have beenonnoticethatJoywas a borrower and the possible source of the funds. . . . Chang’s claim that he and his counsel were misled by Young and had no idea that Joy was the source of the money to buy his stock is simply not credible.
The Changs’ argument now that they were innocent and did not know that the Debtor and its
creditors would be hurt by the proposed transaction is contrary to the evidence and the Findings made.
Their argument thattheywereunwitting bystanderswasnotcredible attrialand isnotcredible as adefense
to Plaintiff’s request for prejudgment interest.
Changs contend that their case is analogous to the decision in Meeks v. Greenville Casino
Partners, L.P. (In re Armstrong), 217 B.R. 569 (Bankr. E.D. Ark. 1998).2
2 In Meeks, an individual involved in a Ponzi scheme used his ill-gotten gains to gamble in a casino in Greenville, Mississippi. In the course of dealing with the casino, he cashed a number of checks and made other payments to the casino. These payments were numerous, substantial and occurred over a period of several years. The trustee filed a complaint against the casino seeking to recover these transfers as fraudulent.
Armstrong concluded that the trustee made a prima facie case for fraudulent transfers, but while the casino’s defenses had merit, those defenses were not effective as to all of the payments. While the casino gave value - i.e. cashed the checks - not all payments were made in good faith, and the casino had inquiry notice of the debtor’s insolvency with respect to some of the transfers. In Meeks, judgment was entered against the casino for $160,000 of the $819,500 in fraudulent transfers, the trustee’s request for prejudgment interest was denied.
footnote cont’d from p. 11
In so doing, the court concluded in light of the casino’s defense that it lacked knowledge of the debtor’s insolvency, and prejudgment interest was inappropriate because the casino could not determine its liability until the court made findings of fact.
Armstrong was a much different case. The opinion determined that the casino had a worthy defenseinpartandthereforeitwouldbeinequitabletoawardprejudgmentinterest. In contrast, here it was determined that the Changs did not have a defense to most counts because they were initial transferees of the $2.1 million in issue. The “good faith” defense is unavailable if the recipient of the transfer is the initial transferee. Bonded Fin. Serv., Inc. v. European Am. Bank, 838 F.2d 890 (7th Cir. 1988).
Moreover, the debtor-creditor relationship between the parties involved in Armstrong was substantially different than the close fiduciary relationship between a company controlled by an individual who is a director, stockholder and officer (in the case of Mark Chang, and a shareholder in the case of Cathy Chang). Unlike the defendant’s duty in Armstrong to inquire about the solvency of its customer which arose slowly over time, the Changs’ duty to examine the Debtor’s solvency arose prior to the December,1995 transaction as a result of the fiduciaryobligations and dutiesimposedunderlawbecause their positions with the Debtor.
PREJUDGMENT INTEREST RATE AND ACCRUAL PERIOD
When no interest rate is set by statute, prejudgment interest should be awarded at the market rate -- the average of the prime rate for the yearsinquestion. National Gypsum Co. v. City of Milwaukee, 144 F.3d 1111(7thCir.1998); Stanton v. Republic Bank of S. Chicago, 581 NE2d 678, 682(Ill. S.Ct. 1991) see also Platinum Tech., Inc. v. Federal Ins. Co., 282 F.3d 927 (7th Cir. 2002) (stating that in an action in equity, prejudgment interest may be awarded at a rate determined by the court). Therefore the Court may award prejudgment interest at the rate equal to the average “prime rates” for the period.
The Trustee argues that discretion should be exercised to award prejudgment interest at the rate equal to the average prime rates for the period beginning either on the day of the fraudulent transfer, December 22, 2995, or the date the Adversary Complaint was filed, December 2, 1998.
As to fraudulent transfers, courts have awarded prejudgment interest beginning from the time that demand or an adversary proceeding is initiated. Some other courts have awarded prejudgment interest from the date of the transfer. See Mogia v. Universal Automotive, Inc. (In re First National Parts Exchange, Inc.),No.98C5915,2000WL988177, *14 (N.D. Ill. July 12, 2000). Whenthedamages arise from a breach of the defendant’s fiduciary duty, the appropriate date has been found to be the date of the breach or the conduct giving rise to the damages. See Stanton 144 Ill.2d at 481, 581 NE2d at 682. ,and grant such other and further relief in the Trustee’s favor as the Court deems appropriate.
The Changs do not dispute that if interest is awarded the proper interest rate is the average ofthe prime ratesforthe yearsinquestion. National Gypsum Co. v. City of Milwaukee, 144 F.3d 1111 (7th Cir. 1998); Stanton v. Republic Bank of S. Chicago, 581 N.E.2d 678, 682 (Ill. 1991); see also Platinum Tech., Inc. v. Federal Ins. Co.,282F.3d927(7thCir.2002) (statingthatinanactioninequity, prejudgment interest may be awarded at a rate determined by the court). Their counsel who opposed any prejudgment interestdid agreethatthe average ofprime ratesforthe yearsinquestioncomputesat7.34%.
In some cases, an award of prejudgment interest from the date of the transaction complained of has been found appropriate. See Moglia v. Universal Automotive, Inc. (In re First Nat. Parts Exchange, Inc.), No. 98 C 5915, 2000 WL 988177, at *14 (N.D. Ill. July 12, 2000). When the damagesarisefroma breachofthe defendant’sfiduciaryduty, the appropriate date could well be the date of the breach or the conduct giving rise to the damages. See Stanton, 581 N.E.2d at 682. Therefore, prejudgment interest could be consideredforaward hereatthe rateequalto the average “prime rates” for the period from December 22, 1995 until the date of the judgment.
Had an action asserting the wrongs proved by the trustee been brought by some interested party during the years following the transaction in issue, prejudgment interest running from the transaction date would certainly have been considered. But under circumstances here where the action was brought by the Trusteeseveralyearslater,the Changs should notbe requiredto payinterestbeforethe date thattheywere presented with a suit contesting their conduct. However, as of thelatterdate,theywereabletoknowthe issues and could have decided to resolve the case at that point instead of putting Plaintiff to his proofs. Therefore, discretion will be exercised to award prejudgment interest running from the date this suit was filed to the date of the judgments entered.
CONCLUSION
Prejudgment interest is appropriately awarded on each of the counts on which money judgments will now issue in favor of the Plaintiff asanelement ofcompensationto correctforthe time value ofmoney and to make the bankruptcy estate whole.
Final judgment orders are being entered this date pursuant to post-trial Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law made and entered and the order entered November 20, 2002, and also pursuant to this Opinion. Prejudgment interest will be allowed therein against Mark Chang in all Counts wherein judgments are entered against him at the rate of 7.34% per annum from December 2, 1998 through the
date of each judgment. But, for reasons stated, the request for interest to run from an earlier date, and
request for interest award against Mrs. Cathy Chang, are hereby denied.
ENTER:
Jack B. Schmetterer United States Bankruptcy Judge
Entered this17th day of March 2003
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