Actrade Liquidation Trust v. Greenwich Insurance (In Re Actrade Financial Technologies, Ltd.)

424 B.R. 59, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 4059, 2009 WL 5219033
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 31, 2009
Docket19-22352
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 424 B.R. 59 (Actrade Liquidation Trust v. Greenwich Insurance (In Re Actrade Financial Technologies, Ltd.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Actrade Liquidation Trust v. Greenwich Insurance (In Re Actrade Financial Technologies, Ltd.), 424 B.R. 59, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 4059, 2009 WL 5219033 (N.Y. 2009).

Opinion

INTRODUCTION

ALLAN L. GROPPER, Bankruptcy Judge.

Actrade Capital, Inc., one of the above-captioned debtors (“Actrade”), filed for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code on December 12, 2002, and confirmed a plan of liquidation on January 7, 2004. The largest claim in the Actrade case was filed by the Chapter 7 Trustee (the “Allou Trustee”) of Allou Distributors, Inc. (“Allou”), another debtor then and now in liquidation proceedings in the Eastern District of New York, Case No. 03-8232(ESS). The Allou claim charges that $48 million in payments made by Allou to Actrade were fraudulent conveyances under the Bankruptcy Code and under applicable state law (the “Allou Claim”). The Allou Claim was converted into an adversary proceeding and, after a period of litigation, the Actrade Liquidation Trust, successor-in-interest to Actrade, and the Allou Trustee (together, “Plaintiffs”) entered into a settlement agreement (the “Allou Settlement”).

The Allou Settlement provided for a settlement of the Allou Claim for $14 million. It was a condition of the Allou Settlement that Actrade obtain said sum from sureties that had issued payment bonds that protected Actrade in the event Allou did not satisfy its obligations to Actrade. The sureties include Greenwich Insurance Company (“Greenwich”), XL Reinsurance *61 America (“XL”) (together, the “Sureties”) and the Great American Insurance Company (collectively with the Sureties, “Defendants”). 1 This Court approved the Allou Settlement by order dated June 16, 2009, but without prejudice to the Defendants’ rights to contest liability on the bonds. The Actrade Liquidation Trust and the Allou Trustee thereafter jointly filed this adversary proceeding on May 12, 2009, seeking a declaratory judgment that the Defendants are liable on bonds aggregating $14 million that they had issued in favor of Actrade (as obligee) and on behalf of Allou (as principal). The Defendants asserted a number of defenses, including (with respect to Greenwich and XL) that Actrade had released them from all claims in connection with a prior settlement. On September 18, 2009, this Court denied the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment on the defense of release, and the parties proceeded to trial, at which the sole issue was the viability of the release defense.

Based on the following findings of fact and conclusions of law, the Court determines that the Sureties’ defense of release does not bar Plaintiffs’ action.

THE FACTS ESTABLISHED AT TRIAL

The Court held a two-day trial on the construction of the release invoked by the Sureties. The Sureties called five witnesses. Two were from Avalon Risk Associates (“Avalon”), an insurance agency authorized to issue surety bonds in the name of Greenwich throughout the United States, either directly or through brokers, to handle claims in connection with the bonds, and to bill and collect premiums and fees. 2 The two Avalon witnesses were Ronald E. Wiss (“Wiss”), a former practicing attorney and vice president of Avalon in charge of the Actrade relationship, and Scott Mitchell Adams (“Adams”),' president and principal owner of Avalon. The Sureties also called Wayne D. Lambert (“Lambert”), a claims adjuster at Forcon International and later Cashin, Spinelli & Ferretti, LLC (“CSF”), which replaced Avalon in 2006 as claims adjuster for surety bonds issued by Greenwich; Karen Gilman (“Gilman”), attorney for the Sureties in connection with the settlement relied on by the Sureties; and Jonah Meer (“Meer”), trustee of the Actrade Liquidation Trust and representative of the Plaintiffs. Plaintiffs did not call any witnesses. The parties also introduced deposition testimony from Wiss, Adams, Lambert, Gilman, Meer, and Richard McCormick (“McCormick”), Actrade’s former senior executive, as well as Jeffrey Marell and Jeffrey Saferstein, attorneys *62 at Paul Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP (“Paul Weiss”) who represented Actrade at the relevant time.

I. The Parties

Actrade was a public company that provided short-term financing to buyers and sellers of goods through a “Trade Acceptance Draft” program (the “TAD Program”). Instead of buying goods on credit, or issuing a post-dated check, a buyer would obtain from Actrade and issue to the seller a TAD, an instrument (allegedly similar to a check) equal in value to the full amount of the invoice price for the goods plus Actrade’s commission on the transaction. The seller would assign or tender the TAD to Actrade, and Actrade would pay the seller the invoice amount (the face amount of the TAD less Actrade’s commission). Upon maturity of the TAD, its face amount (including Actrade’s commission) would automatically be debited from the buyer’s bank account and deposited into Actrade’s account. The typical maturity date for a TAD was one month after payment was made to the seller. 3

One of Actrade’s customers was AIlou, which purported to be a nationwide distributor of health and beauty aids, pharmaceuticals, fragrances and cosmetics. The AIlou Trustee’s claim against Actrade alleges that $48 million of payments made by AIlou to Actrade in repayment of TADs were avoidable fraudulent conveyances. The above-described settlement between Actrade and the AIlou Trustee states that Allou’s claims are not predicated on a finding that Actrade knowingly participated in the AIlou fraud or knew that AIlou was purporting to purchase goods that never existed. 4 The AIlou Trustee’s claims are more generally predicated on the contention that Allou’s payment to Ac-trade on an invoice from one of Allou’s alleged suppliers — an invoice that Actrade had discounted in the TAD program — was not for reasonably equivalent value because the invoice was fraudulent, created by an AIlou affiliate, and that it represented goods that never existed.

The Sureties are engaged in the business of providing surety bonds in connection with various commercial transactions. 5 Greenwich and its affiliate XL issued bonds aggregating at least $14 million (the “AIlou Bonds”) in favor of Actrade guaranteeing payment by AIlou on its TADs. The AIlou Bonds required the Sureties to pay (i) if AIlou failed to “make payment in full of the face amount of any TAD” when such amount became due, or (ii) if “any prior payment made to Obligee [Actrade] is recovered from the Obligee pursuant to the Bankruptcy, insolvency or similar law in accordance with an order of as [sic] court *63 of competent jurisdiction. 6 Thus, the Sureties were liable under the Allou Bonds not only if Allou failed to make payment when due, but also if a payment made by Allou was recovered as an avoidable preference or fraudulent conveyance in connection with a bankruptcy or similar proceeding involving Allou.

II. The AmPad and PUSA Transactions

The Sureties also issued other bonds in favor of Actrade, guaranteeing payment by other parties in Actrade’s TAD Program.

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Bluebook (online)
424 B.R. 59, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 4059, 2009 WL 5219033, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/actrade-liquidation-trust-v-greenwich-insurance-in-re-actrade-financial-nysb-2009.