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Beane v. Beane

United States District Court, D. New Hampshire
Oct 18, 2007
Civil No. 06-cv-446-SM (D.N.H. Oct. 18, 2007)

Opinion

Civil No. 06-cv-446-SM.

October 18, 2007


ORDER


Defendants and third party plaintiffs Glenn Beane and Glenn Beane, LLC ("Glenn Beane") have petitioned the court to attach certain assets of plaintiff Alan F. Beane ("Alan Beane") and nominal plaintiff Mii Technologies, LLC ("Mii"), to secure payment of the anticipated, favorable judgment on Count IV of their counterclaims. That count asserts Glenn Beane's right to reimbursement of payments made and expenses incurred on behalf of plaintiffs. An evidentiary hearing on the petition to attach was held on September 26, 2007. For the reasons set forth below, Glenn Beane's petition to attach (document no. 33) is granted in part and denied in part.

Background

The background facts of this action are more involved than is necessary to consider to resolve the matter currently before the court. Accordingly, only those facts relevant to the analysis of the requested petition to attach are discussed.

Alan Beane and Glenn Beane are brothers who combined talents in an entrepreneurial endeavor to develop heat sinks and related applications of metal castings for manufacturing processes and powder press systems. Alan Beane contributed financially, both investing capital of several million dollars to fund the business and personally guaranteeing loans obtained to finance its operations. Glenn Beane contributed creatively, developing patented inventions and serving as the president and chief operating officer of the business. The pair initially formed a company called Materials Innovation, Inc. (referred to alternatively in the record as both "MII" and "Materials"), and subsequently formed a second company, Mii Technologies, LLC ("Mii"), to finance the technological innovations of Materials and provide Alan Beane tax benefits not available through Materials' corporate structure. According to the complaint, "Mii was formed . . . for the purpose of commercializing the technologies created by both Materials and Mii, including developing manufacturing systems and related software to produce metal components, and funding future research and development by Materials." See Am. Compl., ¶ 7 (document no. 14). The two companies operated in tandem, until Materials dissolved in November 2003.

The financing Alan Beane provided was from personal assets, some of which were jointly owned with his former wife, Sara Beane, and which, therefore, required her approval. The couple has since divorced and the assets have been divvied up in their divorce proceeding. For purposes of this order, reference to Alan Beane guaranteeing loans or receiving security interests for the financing provided may include money that Sara Beane also provided and for which she also holds a security interest, and the two individuals are referred to jointly hereinafter as Alan Beane.

At the beginning two other partners were involved to help develop the company's powdered materials products; neither of them is involved in the instant litigation.

Both brothers were members and managers of Mii, and together owned over 90% of the company; however, Alan Beane held a majority interest in many of the assets, as security for the financing he provided. The brothers dispute the enforceability of two documents that purportedly evidence some of the financing provided: the first, "the April Fool Note," was a promissory note dated April 1, 2001, allegedly executed and backdated on January 15, 2002, by which Mii purportedly agreed to repay $1,500,000 on a revolving line of credit extended by Alan Beane; the second, a "Commercial Security Agreement," ("Security Agreement") executed on January 15, 2002, purported to secure Alan Beane for that line of credit evidenced by the April 1, 2001 promissory note. Glenn Beane contends the Security Agreement was a sham, because Mii never drew down the line of credit; however, Alan Beane asserted his rights under the Security Agreement to take over the assets and operations of Mii.

The interrelationship between the companies was evidenced by the "Research Development Agreement and Related License" (the "R D Agreement"), see Def.'s Ex. D to Hrg on Pet. to Attach ("Def.'s Ex."), which provided for Materials to license to Mii certain of its technology and patents, in exchange for Mii's agreement to "pay for all expenses related to the exploitation of those technology and patents, including (i) research, experimentation and development activities carried on in Materials Innovation's name, (ii) the creating of a powder metallurgy press, and (iii) the cost of leasing and improving the facility which Materials Innovation was to lease for Mii to use." Def.'s Counterclaims, ¶ 20(b) (document no. 24). The two companies also shared a "Unified Pension Plan," which covered employees of both companies. Both Alan and Glenn Beane were trustees of the plan.

Glenn Beane managed the daily operations of both Materials and Mii. In that capacity, he developed manufacturing systems and related software known as the "press technology system," and generated the intellectual property that constituted the core assets of the business. The press technology system that Glenn Beane developed had "the ability to revolutionize the manufacture of precision pressed metal parts and this ability resulted in Time magazine recognizing Mii's powder pressing system as its industrial invention of the year in 2000." Am. Compl. ¶ 14.

Despite this technological success, Mii had great difficulty marketing its press technology system. By early 2002, Alan Beane had substantially exhausted his personal assets financing Materials and Mii, both of which also owed several creditors significant amounts of money. In January 2002, Alan Beane decided to assert his rights as "debtor-in-possession" under the challenged Security Agreement to assume more control over certain intellectual property assets of the company. The brothers also decided to stop Materials' operations and shift all resources to commercializing Mii's manufacturing systems. As part of the reallocation of resources, another brother, David Beane, came on board to manage the company to allow Glenn Beane to concentrate on further development of Mii's product.

Mii eventually secured a contract with Lovejoy, Inc. for a 1,000 ton, 8-level press system (the "Lovejoy contract"). As part of the contract, Lovejoy agreed to be used as a reference for how the system functioned in a commercial, production environment. The Beanes expected a successful Lovejoy contract to catapult the business as "the supplier of the next generation of press technology for the precision metal parts industry." Am. Compl. ¶ 29. The Lovejoy contract, however, became the death knell rather than the launching pad of Mii's business.

Mii was required to borrow more money to perform the Lovejoy contract, which debt was secured by Mii's accounts receivable and also subordinated the debt owed to Alan Beane. Alan Beane, however, guaranteed that loan. Mii was delayed in executing the contract, because, among other reasons, Lovejoy changed specifications for the press system ordered. In November 2003, Mii finally delivered the 1,000-ton press to Lovejoy, with the understanding that the requested upgrades would follow shortly. From November 2003 through January 2004, Mii worked to complete the designs for the Lovejoy upgrades and to obtain a bridge loan to finance those upgrades and keep the business afloat. The bridge loan was obtained on January 7, 2004, but required Alan Beane again to guarantee the debt and again to subordinate his other secured notes. In response, Alan Beane proposed conditions to preserve his right to repayment, which Glenn Beane rejected. This stalemate caused Alan Beane to take control of the company's assets and operations as provided in the Security Agreement, which triggered Glenn Beane's resignation on February 4, 2004.

At this juncture, Alan Beane's path turned for the worse, while Glenn Beane managed to capitalize on the efforts invested in the business. Despite Alan Beane's efforts to fulfill the Lovejoy upgrades, he was unable to successfully complete the contract and lost a $200,000 deferred payment from Lovejoy as a result. In May 2004, he decided to end Mii's active operations, and, since then, has let the company idle. Immediately upon his departure from Mii, however, Glenn Beane formed a new company, based on the intellectual property rights he owned. He successfully secured new business, including customers he initially contacted while at Mii. In particular, Lovejoy hired Glenn Beane to complete its upgrade requests.

With Mii no longer operating, Alan Beane began to liquidate certain security interests to recover some of his investment. On March 3, 2005, he sold Mii's remaining manufacturing system assets to Lovejoy, for $550,000. A promissory note for $150,000 was executed as part of that sale, made payable to Alan Beane personally. Glenn Beane was not given notice of the sale and, therefore, did not give his approval of it. In November 2006, Alan Beane invoked the security agreement provision that allowed him to assert any claim that Mii could assert, to bring this suit against Glenn Beane, alleging he still owed certain duties to Mii as one of its members, despite his February 2004 departure.

This note, together with the interest earned of $17,250, is the asset Glenn Beane seeks to attach here.

Discussion

1. Standard of Review

Pre-judgment attachments are available to secure satisfaction of judgments "under the circumstances and in the manner provided by the law of the state where the district court is held." Fed.R.Civ.P. 64. Under New Hampshire law, pre-judgment attachments generally may only be issued after notice and an opportunity to be heard have been given to the defendant. See N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. ("RSA") 511-A:1 and A:2. At the hearing:

the burden shall be upon the plaintiff to show that there is a reasonable likelihood that the plaintiff will recover judgment . . . on any amount equal to or greater than the amount of the attachment. Upon satisfying said burden, the plaintiff shall be entitled to the attachment unless the defendant establishes to the satisfaction of the court that his assets will be sufficient to satisfy such judgment. . . .

RSA 511-A:3. The plaintiff's burden of proof to justify an attachment is greater than the preponderance of evidence required to prevail in a civil action. See Diane Holly Corp. v. Bruno Stillman Yacht Co., 559 F. Supp. 559, 561 (D.N.H. 1983) (explaining how New Hampshire's special constitutional protection of property requires prejudgment attachments to be supported by a strong preliminary showing of probable success).

"[M]ore than a favorable chance of success must be shown. . . . [P]laintiff . . . must make a strong preliminary showing that he or she will ultimately prevail on the merits and obtain judgment in the requested amount and that this showing must be established by proof greater than proof by a mere preponderance of the evidence." Id. Only if plaintiff makes this higher showing does the burden shift to defendant to demonstrate it has the ability to satisfy the potential judgment against it.See id. (affirming order denying attachment without considering defendant's ability to pay because plaintiff had not made the requisite showing); see also RSA 511-A:3.

2. Plaintiff's Likelihood of Success

In Count IV of his counter claim, Glenn Beane seeks reimbursement for the following expenditures he has made allegedly on behalf of the company, either as a guarantor of Materials and Mii, or as a derivative obligor of the companies. These include:

1. $11,000 = to settle a suit with HOCO, LLC for unpaid rent of $54,088.31, plus interest, under a lease executed by Materials for premises where the operations of Materials, and later Mii, occurred; the lease was personally guaranteed by both Alan Beane and Glenn Beane; 2. $27,000 = to settle a disputed balance as of July 16, 2004, due on a Citizens Bank credit card, issued to Materials and guaranteed by Glenn Beane for the business expenses of Materials, and later Mii; the charges were allegedly made to pay Mii employees' salaries during the time Alan Beane controlled Mii; 3. $7,000 = to settle a suit brought by Terry Nason, a former employee of both Mii and Materials, to claim pension funds due under the unified Mii-Materials pension plan; 4. $550 = to vacate citations erroneously issued against Glenn Beane in two actions against Mii for wages, brought by former employees William Huebner and Christopher Hammer; 5. $2,000 = for legal expenses incurred in responding to inquiries about the Materials-Mii unified pension plan from the plan's administrator, Summit Financial Corporation ("Summit") and from the U.S. Department of Labor; Alan Beane controlled the documents and information needed to comply with ERISA laws and make payments to Summit, but to date he has refused to provide the necessary information. 6. $150,000 = Glenn Beane's estimated anticipated financial exposure as the trustee of the Materials-Mii unified pension plan, if not paid by the plan. The plan has sufficient assets. * $197,550 = TOTAL of liabilities for which Glenn Beane seeks reimbursement Specifically, Glenn Beane contends that he "is entitled to indemnification and other protection from claims which may possibly be asserted against him in the future which are derivative of Mii, Alan and/or Sara." Def.'s Countercl., ¶ 56. In his petition, however, Glenn Beane limited the attachment sought as "only against Mii Technologies, LLC, not against Alan Beane." Counterplntf.'s Mem. in Support of Attach. Pet., ¶ B at 3 (document no. 41). Accordingly, only the claims in Count IV against Mii will be considered to determine whether the requested attachment is appropriate.

Under New Hampshire law, a right to indemnification may arise either (1) as an express or implied duty under a contract, or (2) as a right derivative of or imputed by law. See Kantor v. Norwood Group, 127 N.H. 831, 835, 508 A.2d 1078, 1081 (1986) (discussing right to indemnification for joint tortfeasors). Indemnification agreements are interpreted following the same rules as any other contract. See Gulf Ins. Co. v. AMSCO, Inc., 153 N.H. 28, 34, 889 A.2d 1040 (2005) (citing precedent). The parties' intent is discerned from the express words of the contract, given their ordinary meaning. See id. Indemnity agreements will be construed narrowly and will rarely be implied.See Dunn v. CLD Paving, 140 N.H. 120, 122, 663 A.2d 104, 106 (1995) (citing precedent). If, however, the right to indemnification is derivative or imputed by law, the court looks at whether the indemnitor is in fact liable, and whether the indemnitee paid to cover the indemnitor's matured obligation, to justify shifting liability to the indemnitor. See Hooksett Sch. Dist. v. W.R. Grace Co. 617 F. Supp. 126, 134 (D.N.H. 1984) (citing New Hampshire rule that the indemnitee's liability may be transferred to another); see also Morrissette v. Sears, Roebuck Co., 114 N.H. 384, 387, 322 A.2d 7, 9 (1974) (explaining that a "right to `[i]ndemnity arises where one is legally required to pay an obligation for which another is primarily liable'" (internal quotation omitted)).

The petition to attach does not identify the source of Glenn Beane's asserted right to indemnification. He seems to argue that the R D Agreement, which provided for Mii to assume certain financial obligations of Materials, may be extended to require Mii to reimburse him for the company debts he has paid. He seems to further contend that Alan Beane, as the person in control of Mii, has assumed Mii's purported obligation to indemnify Glenn Beane for the company's debts he has covered.

The R D Agreement, however, does not give rise to either an explicit or implicit duty to indemnify Glenn Beane. The express language of the contract provides for Mii to assume certain identified, financial obligations of Materials, in exchange for Mii's use of Materials' intellectual property. See Ex. D, §§ 2, 3 4, ¶¶ 3.1, 4.1 4.2. The agreement is unambiguously between the two companies, clearly stating the consideration exchanged for the benefits received. There is nothing in the R D Agreement that can be understood to relieve Glenn Beane of any obligations he might have had to either Materials or Mii. Except for a provision regarding patent rights claims, see id., ¶ 7.2, the agreement does not address any individuals or affect the rights or liabilities of the members, officers and managers of either Materials or Mii. The agreement is strictly between Materials and Mii, and there is no justifiable reason to expand its scope to reach the financial obligations of either Glenn or Alan Beane.See Dunn, 140 N.H. at 122, 663 A.2d at 106 (requiring unambiguous contracts to be interpreted within the four corners of the document).

Glenn Beane, however, does have a right to reimbursement derived from New Hampshire statutory and common law. Limited liability companies may indemnify any "member or manager or other person made a party to a proceeding or threatened to be made a named defendant . . . because such member . . . acted on behalf of the limited liability company, against liability for judgment [or] settlement. . . ." N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. ("RSA") 304-C:9, I (2005). Although much of the debt Glenn Beane paid was in Materials', not Mii's, name, "the right to indemnity may arise where one is legally required to pay an obligation for which another is primarily liable. . . ." William H. Field Co. v. Nuroco Woodwork, 115 N.H. 632, 634, 348 A.2d 716, 718 (1975) (discussing when the right to indemnity arises in tort actions).

Similarly corporations also may indemnify individuals who cover expenses on the company's behalf. See RSA 293-A:8.52, 8.51-56 (1999). While Glenn Beane cannot invoke these statutory provisions because Materials dissolved in November 2003, the statute reflects the legislature's endorsement of the policy considerations and equitable principles underlying the concept of indemnification.

"Where a surety makes a payment to a creditor and a cosurety has a defense against the creditor, the surety making the payment . . . (b) is entitled to contribution if he has become surety with the consent of the cosurety and if he made the payment . . . (ii) without knowledge of a defense in the justifiable belief that such a duty existed. . . ."
Rice v. Snow, 116 N.H. 69, 71-72, 352 A.2d 729, 730 (1976) (quoting Restatement of Security § 152(b)(ii) (1941)). Glenn Beane alleges that he made the payments he did because he was responsible, either as a guarantor of, signator on, or otherwise derivatively responsible for, the outstanding indebtedness listed in Count IV.

The evidence produced in support of Glenn Beane's petition demonstrated the following:

a. The HOCO Lease

The HOCO lease was executed by Materials, Inc. as lessee, with both Alan Beane and Glenn Beane as guarantors. See Ex. N. Glenn Beane argues here that the R D Agreement provision that Mii "pay for . . . the cost of leasing and improving a facility which [Materials] intends to lease and improve to house its research, experimentation and development efforts" entitles him to be reimbursed by Mii for the costs he incurred to settle the lease dispute. The R D Agreement, however, was executed on December 29, 1997, three and a half years after the HOCO lease was entered into on June 23, 1994. The language refers to space which Materials "intends to lease and improve," not space that Materials had already leased at the time the agreement was executed. The parties may have intended the R D Agreement to cover the space described in the HOCO lease, but they also may have intended it to cover entirely different space; the language is neither specific nor definitive.

The evidence adduced at the hearing did not clarify whether Mii continued to operate out of the HOCO lease space and, therefore, assumed responsibility for the rent, or whether Mii worked from some other facility. Glenn Beane testified simply to the fact that Mii was to reimburse Materials for the HOCO rent, without substantiating that claim with any documentary support other than the R D Agreement, which does not clearly provide for HOCO lease payments. Glenn Beane could have been reimbursed by Materials for its primary liability to HOCO which he paid; however, he has not linked that liability to Mii sufficiently to reach its coffers for the indemnification he now seeks. While the facts may prove that Mii moved into the HOCO space, or otherwise became liable for the rent due on the HOCO lease, the record currently before the court does not so clearly establish that obligation to satisfy the heightened burden of proof a plaintiff must carry to justify a prejudgment attachment under RSA 511-A:3.See Diane Holly Corp., 559 F. Supp. at 561.

b. The Citizens Bank Credit Card

Glenn Beane next seeks reimbursement for the amount paid to settle a dispute with Citizens Bank for outstanding charges on a credit card, issued to Materials, which he personally guaranteed. The testimony adduced at the hearing demonstrated that the balance due was incurred to cover payroll expenses of Mii, for wages earned in the first half of 2004. That testimony described the type of expense associated with "research, experimentation, and development activities" which Mii agreed to pay for when it executed the R D Agreement with Materials, to justify ascribing this debt to Mii. As a member of Mii, who paid for Mii's debt, Glenn Beane is entitled to seek indemnification for the expenses incurred. See RSA 304-C:9, I. Glenn Beane has carried his burden of proof that he is likely to succeed on this claim to justify the attachment sought.

c. The Nason Suit

The record demonstrates that both Glenn and Alan Beane, along with Materials and Mii, were sued by a former employee who sought unpaid wages after his January 22, 2002 termination, under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001, et seq. ("ERISA"). See Def.'s Ex. W. Glenn and Alan Beane were both trustees and plan administrators within the meaning of ERISA. The parties reached a settlement, see Def.'s Ex. X, and the matter was dismissed with regard to Glenn Beane. Because the record indicates this claim was against Mii and Materials, for which Mii would have assumed responsibility under the R D Agreement, and that Glenn Beane covered, at least in part, expenses for which the company was primarily liable, he is likely to prevail on his claim for indemnification from Mii for the costs associated with settling this dispute.

d. The Hubner and Hammer Actions

Glenn Beane next seeks reimbursement for costs associated with two lawsuits brought by former employees William Hubner and Christopher Hammer against Mii, to enforce wage claims awarded by the New Hampshire Commissioner of Labor. See Def.'s Exs. BB and EE. The New Hampshire Superior Court held Glenn Beane in contempt for his failure to appear as a representative of Mii; however, the matters against him were dismissed after the court realized he had resigned from Mii on February 4, 2004 and, therefore, could not represent the company. See Def.'s Exs. DD GG. This administrative error, however, cannot be attributed to Mii. Accordingly, Glenn Beane is not likely to succeed on his claim for reimbursement of the expense incurred in resolving these two matters.

e. The Pension Plan Claims

Glenn Beane's largest claim for reimbursement is related to the company's pension plans, for which he remains liable as a fiduciary under ERISA. He contends that he has spent $2,000 to answer questions from the United States Department of Labor and Internal Revenue Service related to the company's pension plan, and to resolve certain administrative charges and other expenses related to the plan's administrator, Summit Financial Corporation ("Summit"). Glenn Beane also asserts a right to reimbursement of $150,000, which he anticipates he will be required to pay to satisfy potential claims from former employees.

Glenn Beane's claim for indemnification of the $2,000 he has spent to comply with both the government and Summit clearly represent liabilities for which Mii is primarily liable and which he, in his fiduciary capacity, was addressing to limit that liability. He, therefore, is likely to succeed on his claim for reimbursement of that expense.

On the other hand, the potential liability that could arise from claims by former employees is too contingent to support any claim for indemnification. See Jolicoeur v. Conrad, 106 N.H. 496, 498, 213 A.2d 912, 914 (1965) (barring recovery for future damages for personal injuries that have not occurred); Hayes v. Morrison, 38 N.H. 90, 1859 WL 3721, *5 (1859) (disallowing claim for contribution to debt which is indefinite and contingent); see also Lennox v. Brady, 101 N.Y.S.2d 22, 24 (N.Y.Sup.Ct. 1950) (denying attachment of property not subject to judgment); 6 Am.Jur. 2d Attachment and Garnishment § 48 (1999) ("As a general rule, before a debt can be subject to garnishment, it must, at the time the writ is served, be existing, ascertainable, and not contingent upon other events.").

It is elementary that no effective levy can be made merely upon a right based upon a contingency which may or may not happen in the future. . . . It is well settled that an indebtedness is not attachable unless it is absolutely payable at present, or in the future and not dependable upon any contingency.
Lennox, 101 N.Y.S.2d at 24 (quotation omitted). Based on the proffers made by both parties, the plan is adequately funded, and Alan Beane maintains possession of and control over the pension plan records. If Alan Beane would cooperate with the government and Summit to keep the plan in compliance with ERISA, the anticipated liability may not become a reality; the debt is, therefore, wholly contingent presently, and Glenn Beane's claimed liability is merely speculative. See 6 Am. Jur. 2, Garnishment and Attachment § 48 ("A contingency in this sense refers to one which controls the obligation to pay and not simply to the timing or form of payment."). He is not likely to succeed on his claim in Count IV for reimbursement of the potential pension plan claims, because he cannot be indemnified for an expense he has not incurred or a liability he has not assumed.

Finally, Alan Beane makes two arguments in opposition to the requested attachment. First, Alan Beane contends that his voluntary bankruptcy proceeding stayed any claims against his estate, and that the relief from the stay Glenn Beane obtained does not entitle him to the attach the promissory note from Lovejoy. See Pls.' Mem. in Support of Obj. to Def.'s Pet. to Attach at 2-4 (discussing 11 U.S.C. § 362(a)(1) (4) and citing authority) (document no. 37-1). Second, Alan Beane argues that the current claim to the promissory note is barred by the statute of limitations, because he assumed control over the property in February 2004 and Glenn Beane did not assert his challenge to that assumption of control until July 2007, which is beyond the three year statute of limitations set forth in RSA 508:4 (1997). Neither claim is persuasive, however, because the undisputed evidence demonstrated that the promissory note Glenn Beane seeks to attach is the property of Mii, not Alan Beane. See Def.'s Ex. I, bates page numbers 825, 845-46 (Mii's tax return showing Lovejoy sale as income). Therefore, whether or not Alan Beane's property is beyond Glenn Beane's reach is immaterial to the attachment sought here, which is for Mii's property, not Alan Beane's property.

Counsel for Alan Beane proffered that an amended tax return corrected that representation and demonstrated the promissory note in fact belongs to him; however, neither the amended return, nor any other evidence, was admitted at the hearing to support that proffer. I am bound to base my judgment on the record before the court.

2. Defendant's Ability to Pay

When, as is the case here, a plaintiff meets its burden of proving a likelihood of success on the merits to justify the prejudgment attachment sought, the burden shifts to defendant to demonstrate that it has sufficient assets to satisfy any potential judgment against it. See RSA 511-A:3. The record demonstrates that the proceeds from Mii's promissory note, totaling $167,250, are in an IOLTA trust account held by Alan Beane's attorneys. See Pet. to Attach (document no. 33-3 and 33-4). Glenn Beane has demonstrated he is likely to succeed on his claims for:3) Pension plan legal expenses = $2,000

1) Citizens Bank settlement = $27,000 2) Nason Suit settlement = $7,000 TOTAL = $36,000. Clearly the promissory note is more than adequate to cover the demonstrated claims against Mii. There are at least two other claims, however, competing for that money: Alan Beane asserts an ownership interest in it, having exercised his alleged rights under the Security Agreement; and counsel to Alan Beane are holding the funds in an IOLTA account, to cover the costs of legal fees he may incur. Either or both of those interests could dissipate the funds Glenn Beane seeks to secure by this petition to attach. Because of the various adverse interests in the proceeds of the promissory note, Mii's ability to satisfy a judgment which Glenn Beane is likely to secure against it is tenuous. Under the circumstances presented here, I find Mii does not have the ability to satisfy the potential judgment and conclude that the attachment should issue.

Conclusion

For the reasons set forth above, Glenn Beane's petition to attach (document no. 33) is granted in part and denied in part. An attachment in the amount of $36,000 shall issue against the proceeds from the Lovejoy promissory, currently being held in the IOLTA trust account of Lawson Persson P.C., account number 24900683, at Meredith Village Savings Bank in Meredith, New Hampshire.

SO ORDERED.


Summaries of

Beane v. Beane

United States District Court, D. New Hampshire
Oct 18, 2007
Civil No. 06-cv-446-SM (D.N.H. Oct. 18, 2007)
Case details for

Beane v. Beane

Case Details

Full title:Alan F. Beane and Mii Technologies, LLC Plaintiff and Nominal Plaintiff v…

Court:United States District Court, D. New Hampshire

Date published: Oct 18, 2007

Citations

Civil No. 06-cv-446-SM (D.N.H. Oct. 18, 2007)

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