Birdsell v. U.S. West Newvector Group, Inc. (In Re Cellular Express of Arizona, Inc.)

275 B.R. 357, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 300, 39 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 89, 2002 WL 483774
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Arizona
DecidedMarch 28, 2002
DocketBankruptcy No. 99-04210-PHX-RJH. Adversary No. 01-00225
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 275 B.R. 357 (Birdsell v. U.S. West Newvector Group, Inc. (In Re Cellular Express of Arizona, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Birdsell v. U.S. West Newvector Group, Inc. (In Re Cellular Express of Arizona, Inc.), 275 B.R. 357, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 300, 39 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 89, 2002 WL 483774 (Ark. 2002).

Opinion

*359 OPINION ON MOTION TO DISMISS TRUSTEE’S SECOND AMENDED COMPLAINT

RANDOLPH J. HAINES, Bankruptcy Judge.

Before the Court is the Defendants’ motion to dismiss the Trustee’s amended adversary complaint, essentially on statute of limitations grounds. The issue is whether an original, timely complaint that merely states that preferential and fraudulent transfers were made to the defendants within the applicable prepetition time periods, without identifying or describing any transactions, gives defendants sufficient notice of the particular transactions complained of, for a post-statute of limitation amendment specifying the transactions to relate back under F.R.Civ.P. Rule 15(c). On the facts presented here, this Court concludes it does not.

This order constitutes the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law.

Factual and Procedural History

Cellular Express of Arizona, Inc. (the “Debtor”) commenced this bankruptcy case by filing a voluntary Chapter 11 petition on April 15, 1999. The case was converted to Chapter 7 on June 15, 1999, and David A. Birdsell was appointed as the Chapter 7 Trustee (“Trustee”).

The Trustee filed his original adversary complaint on April 13, 2001, just two days before expiration of the two-year statute of limitations provided by § 546(a)(1)(A). 1 Counts One and Two, the only ones presently before the Court, sought to avoid transfers made to the Defendants as preferential pursuant to § 547 and as fraudulent transfers pursuant to §§ 544 and 548, respectively.

In Count One, the Trustee alleged on information and belief that certain Defendants were insiders of the Debtors, that the Insider Defendants were owed varying amounts by the Debtor prior to the petition date; that property of the debtor was transferred to the Insider Defendants for, and/or on account of antecedent debts owed to the Insider Defendants; that such transfers were within 90 days or one year before the petition date; that the transfers were made while the Debtor was insolvent or that such transfers rendered the Debtor insolvent; and that the transfers allowed the Insider Defendants to receive more for the antecedent debts than the Insider Defendants would have received under a distribution in a Chapter 7 bankruptcy case. The prayer for relief as to Count One sought avoidance of “all transfers of the debtor’s property to such Insider Defendants” within one year prior to the filing of the bankruptcy petition pursuant to § 547, and judgment for the amount of “all such transfers” pursuant to § 550.

In Count Two, the Trustee incorporated all of the allegations made in Count One and also alleged on information and belief that in the one year and in the four years 2 prior to the filing of the bankruptcy petition, the Debtor transferred property of the Debtor to the Insider Defendants; that the transfers were made at a time when the Debtor was insolvent or the Debtor became insolvent as a result of the transfers; that the Debtor received less than reasonably equivalent value in exchange for Debtor’s transfers; and that the transfers were made with the actual *360 intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors. The prayer for relief as to Count Two sought to avoid “the transfers of the debtor’s property to the Insider Defendants” within one year and four years prior to the petition date pursuant to §§ 544 and 548, and judgment for the amount of such transfers, in an amount to be proven at trial, pursuant to § 550.

Except for reciting the statutory elements for preference and fraudulent transfer claims, the original adversary complaint did not identify or describe any specific transfers or types of transfers to the Insider Defendants.

Certain of the Insider Defendants 3 moved for a more definite statement under Bankruptcy Rule 7012(b) which incorporates Federal Rule 12(e) of the Rules of Civil Procedure. They argued that the Trustee failed to allege the nature of any of the subject transfers, whether the transfers were in money or other property, the dates of any such transfers, or the amounts of any such transfers. Defendants also stated that the Trustee failed to allege whether all of the Defendants were recipients of one transfer or whether it is claimed that each Defendant received one or more separate transfers. Defendants argued that without knowing what it is that the Trustee claims was a preferential or fraudulent transfer, that the Defendants are unable to respond to the claims of the Trustee.

The Court granted the motion for more definite statement, and on September 13, 2001, the Trustee filed a second amended complaint. 4 The second amended complaint alleged the same elements for avoidable preferential and fraudulent transfers and also included allegations concerning the specific transactions related to each of the Defendants. For example, as to Insider Defendant Kenneth Widener, the second amended complaint identified six checks by check number, date and amount that were allegedly avoidable as preferences. But except for including the identified allegedly preferential transfers, the second amended complaint was not much of an improvement on the fraudulent transfer count, merely identifying the transactions as “inter-company transfers and payment of inter-company obligations.”

Certain Insider Defendants filed the present motion to dismiss, arguing that the statute of limitations of § 546(a) had expired by the date that the second amended complaint was filed. 5 They also maintained that the second amended complaint does not relate back to the date of the original complaint because the federal re *361 lation back doctrine 6 applies only -where the original complaint put the defendants on notice of the particular transaction or set of facts upon which the plaintiff bases his claim. The Trustee responded that the second amended complaint does relate back because it merely restates the original claims with greater particularity. The Trustee argues that the second amended complaint does not bring new claims against the Defendants, or attempt to add new parties to the litigation, and that the proof required under the second amended complaint is the same as for the claims stated in the original complaint.

There is no dispute that the second amended complaint was filed after the expiration of the § 546 statute of limitations applicable to the Trustee’s avoiding powers.

Discussion

Leave to amend pleadings “shall be freely given when justice so requires.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(a). This rule is applied with “extreme liberality” in the Ninth Circuit. Magno v. Rigsby (In re Magno), 216 B.R. 34, 38 (9th Cir. BAP 1997) (citations omitted). In exercising its discretion concerning the allowance of amendments to pleadings, the court is “guided by the underlying purpose of Rule 15 to facilitate decision on the merits, rather than on the pleadings or on technicalities.”

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275 B.R. 357, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 300, 39 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 89, 2002 WL 483774, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birdsell-v-us-west-newvector-group-inc-in-re-cellular-express-of-arb-2002.