Aspen Village At Lost Mountain Memory Care, LLC

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedNovember 26, 2019
Docket19-40263
StatusUnknown

This text of Aspen Village At Lost Mountain Memory Care, LLC (Aspen Village At Lost Mountain Memory Care, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aspen Village At Lost Mountain Memory Care, LLC, (Ga. 2019).

Opinion

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Be), ke bors |< “Ay: Discs = oe IT IS ORDERED as set forth below:

Date: November 26, 2019 Barbara Ellis-Monro U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF GEORGIA ROME DIVISION IN RE: CASE NO. 19-40263-BEM Aspen Village at Lost Mountain Memory Care, | LLC, Debtor. ! CHAPTER 11 ORDER ON CONFIRMATION OF DEBTOR’S THIRD AMENDED PLAN OF REORGANIZATION DATED SEPTEMBER 13, 2019 This case came before the Court for a hearing (the “Hearing’”’) on September 19, 2019 on confirmation of chapter 11 plans filed by Aspen Village at Lost Mountain Assisted Living, LLC (“Assisted Living”) and Aspen Village at Lost Mountain Memory Care, LLC (“Debtor” or “Memory Care’) (collectively, the “Debtors’). Confirmation was opposed by Debtors’ secured creditor, MidCap Funding Investment IV, LLC (“MidCap’”). At the Hearing, Joyce Pearson, Thomas Tropea, and Gregory Hays testified, Debtors’ exhibits 42 through 46 were admitted! into evidence, and counsel presented closing arguments. After carefully

' Additional documents had been admitted at a prior evidentiary hearing and were considered by the Court. See page 5, infra.

considering all of the evidence presented at the Hearing and at the prior evidentiary hearings in this case, the arguments and briefs of the parties and the entire record of both cases, the Court now enters its findings of fact and conclusions of law as provided by Fed. R. Bankr. 7052 as applied by Fed. R. Bankr. P. 9014. I. FACTS

Debtor is a Georgia corporation that owns a mostly completed building and the 5.8 acres of real property on which it sits. The property is situated across the street from an assisted living facility (the “Assisted Living Facility”) owned by Assisted Living. The building is designed to be a memory care facility with a capacity of 48 residents upon completion (the “Memory Care Facility”). Although it sat vacant for some time the Court found that as of January of 2019, the Memory Care Facility had a completed building envelope, fencing, locked doors, grading and landscaping and that most of its windows were in good condition. The Court further found that completion of construction at the Memory Care Facility should take approximately four months from the time it is fully re-started.

Debtor is owned by Robert Fouse (“Fouse”) and Anderson Glover (“Glover”), 45% and 55%, respectively. It has no employees. As proposed, the Memory Care Facility would, like the existent Assisted Living Facility, be a “Class A” facility of above average quality.2 Assisted Living and Memory Care are designed to operate as a “campus”. Fouse was engaged as an architect in July of 2008 to help create and execute a master plan for a 32-acre site, which would have been a three-part campus including active adult, assisted living, and memory care housing. The land for the Memory Care Facility was procured at the end of 2014. The active adult land was sold at a foreclosure auction some time in 2018.

2 The Court notes the testimony of MidCap’s construction expert, David Daniel, at the MFR Hearing might oppose this characterization. However, his testimony was directly refuted by more persuasive testimony from Joyce Pearson and Thomas Tropea, who have both visited the Facility more recently than Mr. Daniel. On February 5, 2016, Debtors obtained a loan from MidCap (the “Loan”) to refinance a preexisting Department of Housing and Urban Development loan and to pay some other outstanding debt. The Loan is secured by a first priority security interest in the real and personal property of the Debtors. As part of the loan transaction, Debtors and MidCap entered into a credit and security agreement, which has been modified several times (as modified, the

“Credit Agreement”). [See MidCap’s exhs. 21-23]. The original principal amount of the Loan was $18.05 million, which included a $4.4 million construction draw for development of the Memory Care Facility. For the first 18 months, only interest payments were due on the Loan. The first principal and interest payment was due in May of 2018; it has not been made. Site work at the Memory Care Facility began in September of 2016 and construction began in either January or February of 2017. Construction slowed down beginning in November of 2017. At some point after that, the actual percentage completion of the building was less than the amount of work for which the general contractor had been paid, and MidCap declined to fund additional construction payments. The MidCap Loan became “out of balance,” a

term of art that means the cost to complete the building was greater than the remaining amount of the construction holdback. After MidCap’s construction consultants, EMG, recommended $0 funding in February of 2018, MidCap funded approximately $20,000, somewhat less than the general contractor requested, and exercised its right to do a cost to complete report on the Memory Care Facility. By March of 2018, MidCap had ceased funding the Loan and sent Debtor a notice of default for failing to pay an administrative fee, for liens against the Memory Care property and for failing to meet construction milestones. Construction of the Memory Care Facility halted completely by May of 2018. Because the Loan was out of balance, construction was not complete and Debtor had not paid the principal and interest payment due on May 1, MidCap notified Debtors of these additional defaults in May and again in June of 2018 with respect to the failure to make the June principal and interest payments as well as the prior defaults noted. [MidCap’s exh. 25]. Thereafter, MidCap notified Debtors that it would advertise a foreclosure of both Facilities in October 2018, November 2018, and January 2019. [MidCap’s exh. 26].

II. BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY This case was filed under chapter 11 on February 5, 2019. [Doc. 1] 3. On March 1, 2019, a hearing (the “Ombudsman Hearing”) was held on the necessity of the appointment of a patient care ombudsman in Assisted Living4 on its motion to excuse the appointment of such ombudsman [19-40262, Docs. 41, 47]. Dr. David Lovell testified at the Ombudsman Hearing. The Court granted the motion to excuse the appointment later that same day. [19-40262, Doc. 53]. An evidentiary hearing was held on MidCap’s stay relief motions on April 18, 2019 and May 13, 2019 (the “MFR Hearing”). [Docs. 13 and 24]. William Ray Childs, David

Daniel, Robert Fouse, Michael Fleck, Anthony Williams and Joyce Pearson testified and Debtor’s exhibits 1-12, 14-23, 25-30, 33-41 and MidCap’s exhibits 5, 6a, 7-24, 26, and 29 were admitted into evidence. In denying MidCap’s motion for stay relief, the Court found that the value of Assisted Living’s real and personal property was $15.8 million, and the value of Memory Care’s real and personal property was $4.6 million for a total of $20.4 million. [19- 40262, Doc 76 ¶ 4.6].

3 All citations to docket entries refer to Memory Care, case 19-40263, unless otherwise specified.

4 No ombudsman was necessary for Memory Care, as the facility is not operational and has no residents. Debtor’s first plan of reorganization was filed April 15, 2019. [Doc. 42]. MidCap filed its ballot rejecting the plan on August 12, 2019. [Doc. 69]. MidCap filed is Objection[s] to Confirmation of Chapter 11 Plan [Doc. 85] on August 30, 2019. Robert Fouse filed an objection to confirmation on September 9, 2019, [Docs. 92, 93] but this objection was resolved with a third amendment to the plans, filed September 13, 2019. [Doc. 94] (the “Plan”).

III.

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