Ball v. Soundview Composite Ltd. (In re Soundview Elite Ltd.)

543 B.R. 78, 2016 Bankr. LEXIS 33
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 4, 2016
DocketCase No. 13-13098 (REG) (Jointly Administered); Adv. Proc. No. 14-01923 (REG)
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 543 B.R. 78 (Ball v. Soundview Composite Ltd. (In re Soundview Elite 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
Ball v. Soundview Composite Ltd. (In re Soundview Elite Ltd.), 543 B.R. 78, 2016 Bankr. LEXIS 33 (N.Y. 2016).

Opinion

DECISION ON MOTIONS FOR ■'SUM- , MARY - JUDGMENT . AND ASSET FREEZING PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION

ROBERT E. GERBER, UNITED' STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE:

In the chapter 11 cases of debtors Soundview Elite Ltd. (“Elite”) and its affiliates (collectively, and with Elite, the “Soundview Debtors”), plaintiff Corinne Ball (the “Trüstee”) was appointed chapter 11 trustee for the Soundview Debtors after this Court removed Alphonse Fletcher (“Fletcher”) and others under Mr. Fletcher’s control from possession.3 Until the [82]*82Soundview Debtors needed to be liquidated (in the Cayman Islands, under which they were organized, and the United States, where they were headquartered), the Soundview Debtors were investment companies — ‘open ended mutual funds”4 —taking investor money and placing that money in other investments.

One such investment (in this case, by debtor Elite, one of the six companies that are debtors in this chapter 11 case) was in another investment company, defendant Soundview Composite Ltd. (“Composite”), which is riot a debtor in this Court. As of the time of the events relevant here, Composite was also under Mr. Fletcher’s control, and it remains under Mr. Fletcher’s control.

In this' adversary proceeding under the umbrella of the Sóundview Debtors’ chapter 11 cases, the Trustee, on behalf of debtor Elite, sues .to recover the “Owed Amount,” ie., the net .asset value of Elite’s investment — which effectively is everything Composite would have after the payment of Composite’s creditor liabilities,5 since. Elite is. the. only .shareholder with an economic interest in Composite6— after Elite .made a redemption request that Composite repeatedly acknowledged but now refuses to honor. The Trustee also seeks a preliminary injunction (replacing a consensual hold on Elite’s assets that was put into place when this controversy first came up) freezing Composite’s assets to avoid their dissipation.

More' specifically, the Trustee seeks (i) turnover, under sections 541 and 542 of the Bankruptcy Code, of the net asset value of Elite’s holdings; (ii) an accounting; (iii) attorneys’ fees, costs, and litigation expenses, and (iv) other relief that the Court considers proper.

The Trustee now moves, pursuant to Fed.R.Bankr.P. 7056 and Fed.R.Civ.P. 56, for summary judgment — though this might better be regarded as partial-’ summary judgment, because (as the Trustee readily acknowledges) the Debtor’s redemption entitlement — while to ‘the entirety of Composite’s” remaining assets — is to those assets after the payment of any senior third-party creditor claims, which are not yet known with precision.

Composite’s position — ie., Mr. Fletcher’s position — is inexplicable, and offensive to the Court. It is obvious that once any existing senior Composite liabilities have been satisfied, the entire remaining balance of Composite’s assets rightfully belongs to Elite. That Elite made a re[83]*83demption request has been repeatedly acknowledged-by persons and.entities'acting for Mr, Fletcher, or entities under. Mr. Fletcher’s control. Mr. Fletcher,, acting through companies he controlled, was on. both sides of the redemption request at the time it was made. But Mr. Fletcher (who, as noted*-still..controls Composite) nevertheless refuses to return Elite’s.,in-, vestment — or what is left of it.

On behalf of Composite, Mr. Fletcher contends that almost all of the evidence supporting the'redemption request is inadmissible, and that what is admissible is “ambiguous”; that he can find no record of the redemption request and (though he and his staff were on both sides of the transaction at the time, and repeatedly acknowledged it before) cannot remember it; and that he isn’t sure whether, assuming any redemption request was made, the request complied with necessary formalities. Mr. Fletcher also contends that Composite has the right, under “gating”7 provisions in the investment documents, to “gate” Elite’s redemption request — even though there are no other Composite shareholders to protect; gating here would servé no purpose; and he offérs no evidence to support the notion that Composite took any action to gate this redemption request.

Sooner or later, the Trustee will win. But Mr. Fletcher’s resistance to meeting his obligations to his investors, and constraints on the statutory .and constitutional authority of a bankruptcy judge to enter a final order bringing the resistance to an end, have tied this case up in knots. ‘ • •

To minimize the delay Fletcher’s resistance has occasioned, and given how obvious her entitlement (at least in overall terms) is, the Trustee has sought to recover her entitlement by the Bankruptcy Code’s “Turnover” provision, section 542 of the Code. But for reasons discussed below, the Trustee’s entitlement is not one that section 542 can enforce, and her main entitlements are to declaratory relief, an accounting, and a related judgment — as to which a bankruptcy judge cannot enter a final order. And the Court also needs to quantify' Composite’s creditor claims before it can fix the amount of the inevitable judgment. The most the Court can grant at this point is partial summary judgment (though this, because it is not a final order, is fully within the,; Court’s statutory and constitutional authority) and an injunction freezing C.omposite’s assets until the issues are fully determined and (as is certain) the Trustee ultimately wins.

The Court grants each, for the reasons described below. -

Facts

Under familiar principles, the Court relies solely on undisputed facts.’

A. The Composite Articles of Association and Private Placement Memorandum

Composite was formed in May 2007 under the “Articles of Association of Sound-view Composite, Ltd.” (the “Composite Articles”).8 That same month, Composite issued a Confidential Private Placement Memorandum (the “Placement Memorandum”) setting forth the terms and conditions of a stock offering by which Composite would offer- six classes of non-voting shares.9

[84]*84Among other things, the Placement Memorandum described shareholders’ entitlement to redeem their shares. As described in the Placement Memorandum, a shareholder has the right to redeem some or all of its Composite shares on any quarterly redemption date by sending a facsimile request for redemption to Composite’s subadministrator,10 The Composite Articles prescribe that any redemption request:

“[ (i) ] shall be in writing,
[ (ii) ] shall- specify the number and Class of Participating Shares to .which it-relates or indicate the manner in which the number of .Participating Shares to be redeemed, is to be determined and
[ (iii) ] shall be signed by the holder thereof... ,”11

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Bluebook (online)
543 B.R. 78, 2016 Bankr. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ball-v-soundview-composite-ltd-in-re-soundview-elite-ltd-nysb-2016.