The New York Insurance Department, as Liquidator of Nassau Insurance Company, pursued Jeanne Diloreto for 20 years to recover what it contended were assets diverted from Nassau, recovering a judgment in state court that it attempt to execute upon. Superintendent DiNallo ended up filing an involuntary bankruptcy petition against Ms. Diloreto, which was dismissed, in part based upon procedural infirmities. Diloreto sought damages for a bad faith filing, and established to the satisfaction of the bankruptcy court that the motivation for filing the petition was related to a potential recovery in an ancillary malpractice action that Diloreto had filed against her former law firm. The bankruptcy court judge determined that while the filing by Superintendent DiNallo had not been in bad faith, Diloreto nevertheless was entitled to a judgment against Superintendent DiNallo in his capacity as Liquidator in an amount exceeding $70,000 for attorney’s fees and costs, which it Ordered could not be offset against the Liquidator’s state court judgment against Diloreto. This is a procedurally tortured case, centering on a very long running dispute, which included Diloreto purchasing property in Florida shortly after the state court judgment was entered, apparently in the hope of shielding assets under the Florida homestead provision. In re Diloreto, Bank. No. 07-15413 (US Bank. Ct. E.D. Pa. June 19, 2008).
This post written by Rollie Goss.