BANK LEUMI USA v. KLOSS

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 13, 2023
Docket2:17-cv-07729
StatusUnknown

This text of BANK LEUMI USA v. KLOSS (BANK LEUMI USA v. KLOSS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BANK LEUMI USA v. KLOSS, (D.N.J. 2023).

Opinion

Not for Publication UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF NEW JERSEY

BANK LEUMI USA, Plaintiff, Civil Action No. 17-7729 (EP) (AME) ° OPINION EDWARD J. KLOSS and KLOSS COMPANY, LLC (d/b/a CRIB & TEEN CITY), Defendants.

PADIN, District Judge. This action stems from non-party Munire Furniture Company, Inc.’s (“Munire”’) default on $17 million loaned to it by Plaintiff Bank Leumi USA (the “Bank”).!_ The Bank claims that its losses on that loan presently stand at $8,512,713.22. D.E. 64975. It is now attempting to recover $2.65 million of those losses from Defendants Edward J. Kloss and his company, Kloss Company LLC d/b/a Crib & Teen City (hereinafter, “Crib & Teen City”), who are also Munire creditors. Currently pending before the Court is the Bank’s motion for partial summary judgment, brought pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56. D.E.s 62-68. The Bank requests that the Court find, as a matter of law: (1) that Kloss owes it $675,000 based on his alleged breach of a March 11, 2009 Subordination Agreement which the Bank required Kloss to sign as a condition of it agreeing to loan an initial $15 million to Munire; and (2) that Kloss and Crib & Teen City owe the Bank an additional $2 million — i.e., the entire sum which the Bank agreed to lend to

' Valley National Bank is the successor-by-merger of Bank Leumi USA, and is the entity now pursuing this lawsuit.

Munire on November 12, 2013, after Munire had already spent nearly all of the $15 million which the Bank originally loaned to it — under a fraud in the inducement theory based on Kloss’s November 15, 2013 execution of a document titled Ratification and Reaffirmation of Subordination Agreement. Defendants oppose the Bank’s motion. See D.E.s 70-72. The Court has considered the motion without oral argument. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 78(b); L.Civ.R. 78.1(b). For the following reasons, the Bank’s motion for partial summary judgment is DENIED. 1. BACKGROUND A. Factual Background In early-2011, Munire approached the Bank seeking a $15 million revolving loan. D.E. 64 During the underwriting process for approving for the loan, Munire disclosed that it owed Kloss $1.5 million. /d. §5. Kloss, at that time, was the proprietor of Crib & Teen City, a chain of children’s furniture stores. Jd. 6. Crib & Teen City sold, among its products, Munire-produced furniture. See id. § 16. The Bank advised Munire that as a condition to approving the $15 million loan, Munire and Kloss would be required to execute a Subordination Agreement by which Munire and Kloss would acknowledge that Munire owed Kloss $1.5 million, and Kloss would agree to subordinate that indebtedness to the debt Munire owed to the Bank. /d. ¥ 8. The Subordination Agreement was executed by all parties on March 9, 2011. D.E. 65-4. It lists Kloss as the “Creditor.” /d. It lists Munire as the “Debtor.” /d. And it defines “Liabilities” as all of the Debtor’s, i.e., Munire’s, “obligations to the Bank.” See id. ¥ 1. Section | of the Subordination Agreement states: All claims and demands, and all interest heretofore or hereafter accrued thereon, which [Kloss] now has or may hereafter have or acquire against [Munire] . . . shall not be paid, and no payment on account thereof, nor any security interest therein, shall be created,

received, accepted or retained .. . unless and until [Munire] has paid and satisfied in full all of its obligations to the Bank .... Id. In Section 2, Kloss and Munire affirmatively represent that Munire’s debt to Kloss totaled “$1,500,000.00 plus interest (at an annual rate of 10%) and no more.” Id. § 2. Section 3 sets forth the consequences for a breach of the Subordination Agreement: “In the event of a breach by either [Munire] or [Kloss] in the performance of any of the terms of this agreement, or if any representation or warranty of [Munire] or [Kloss] hereunder shall prove to be materially false, all of the Liabilities[, 7.e., all of Munire’s ‘obligations to the Bank,’ shall, without notice or demand, become immediately due and payable.” Jd. ¥ 3. Section 6 states that “[Munire] and [Kloss] agree to pay the Bank, on demand, all expenses of any kind, including reasonable counsel fees, which the Bank may incur in enforcing any of its rights hereunder, or defending or prosecuting any action related to transactions with the undersigned.” Jd. 4 6. In the months after the parties executed the Subordination Agreement, Kloss continued to collect monthly interest payments on his $1.5 million loan. D.E. 64 § 15. But these interest payments were not made in cash. Instead, Munire credited Kloss’s company, Crib & Teen City, for money that Crib & Teen City owed to Munire for its purchases Munire-manufactured furniture which Crib & Teen City thereafter sold to retail customers. /d. § 16. Between March 2011 and October 2013, Kloss received $400,000 in this form of credit-as-interest payments on his $1.5 million loan to Munire. /d. § 29. By November 2013, Munire had almost fully expended its available $15 million in Bank- issued credit and its balance stood at $14,940,000. Jd. § 30. Munire, at that time, requested that the Bank loan it an additional $2 million. Jd. § 31. The Bank granted Munire’s request on

November 12, 2013. See id. 32 (‘On or about November 12, 2013, the Bank and Munire entered into an [amended credit agreement] which increased the revolving line of credit available to Munire from $15 million to $17 million.”). On November 13, 2013, with its credit line increased by $2 million to $17 million, Munire drew down $1.5 million. /d. § 55. Munire drew down the remaining $500,000 two days later, on November 15, 2013. Jd. § 56. On November 15, 2013, Kloss executed a Bank-issued document titled “Ratification and Reaffirmation of Subordination Agreement” (the “Reaffirmation Agreement”). D.E. 65-15; accord D.E. 64 § 47. Under the Reaffirmation Agreement, Kloss agreed that the terms of the Subordination Agreement would remain in full force and effect. D.E. 65-15. Kloss further represented that “as of [November 15, 2013,] the aggregate outstanding principal amount [owed by Munire to Kloss was] $1,500,000.” /d.; accord D.E. 64949. The Bank avers without pointing to specific support in the record — that its approval of the supplemental $2 million loan to Munire was conditioned upon Kloss representing to the Bank that he had complied with the Subordination Agreement and reaffirming his commitment to continue so doing. D.E. 64 § 33. Between November 2013 and August 2014, Kloss collected a total of $275,000 in interest payments — again in the form of credits on the money Crib & Teen Furniture owed to Munire for its purchases of Munire-manufactured furniture — on Kloss’s $1.5 million loan to Munire. Id. § 61. From the time that Kloss executed the Subordination Agreement in March 2011 through and including August 2014, Kloss collected a total of $675,000 in credit-as-interest payments on his $1.5 million loan to Munire. Jd. § 62. The Bank declared Munire in default on its $17 million loan in September 2014, and on September 18, 2014, the Bank commenced an action against Munire in the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey. /d. § 67. Munire filed for bankruptcy on the following day,

September 19, 2014 (the “Munire Bankruptcy Action”). Jd. § 68. On November 3, 2014, Kloss and Crib & Teen City each filed a proof of claim in the Munire Bankruptcy Action. Jd. 4 70. Kloss, in his proof of claim rider, noted that Munire owed him at least $1.5 million, and that interest payments on this loan “were made by providing Crib & Teen City with monthly credits against the amounts due by Crib & Teen City for merchandise purchased [from Munire].” Jd. § 71. B.

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BANK LEUMI USA v. KLOSS, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-leumi-usa-v-kloss-njd-2023.