Carefree Ranch, Inc. v. Lenard (In re Lenard)

849 F.2d 974, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 9853, 1988 WL 68261
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 21, 1988
DocketNo. 87-4813
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 849 F.2d 974 (Carefree Ranch, Inc. v. Lenard (In re Lenard)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carefree Ranch, Inc. v. Lenard (In re Lenard), 849 F.2d 974, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 9853, 1988 WL 68261 (5th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

ALVIN B. RUBIN, Circuit Judge:

Representing an unsecured creditor of a bankrupt debtor, the bankruptcy trustee seeks to nullify two transfers of a ranch and to return the property to the debtor’s estate to satisfy the creditor’s claim. The bankruptcy court, applying Louisiana law, found that (1) the first transfer, from the debtor and her husband to a corporation owned and controlled by their daughter, was a simulation; (2) the second transfer, ostensibly from the corporation to a third party, was therefore in reality from the debtor; and (3) the second transfer consequently increased the debtor’s insolvency and could be set aside by means of a revo-catory action under the Louisiana Civil Code. The court held, however, that the third-party purchaser in the second sale acted in good faith and so could recover the price he paid for the land. The district court affirmed on all points. We in turn affirm the district court’s judgment.

I.

The trustee of the bankruptcy estate of Dorothy Lenard brought this action under 11 U.S.C. § 544(b) on behalf of one of Lenard’s unsecured creditors, Tallulah Production Credit Association. Section 544(b) provides in relevant part that “[t]he trustee may avoid any transfer of an interest of the debtor in property ... that is voidable under applicable law by an unsecured creditor.” After a hearing, the bankruptcy court, following Louisiana law as the “applicable law,” entered judgment for the trustee.

The bankruptcy judge found these facts, which the district court accepted as not clearly erroneous: On August 2, 1983, the [976]*976Lenards executed an act of sale transferring their 470-acre ranch to Carefree Ranch for the stated price of $15,000 cash. Carefree Ranch is a corporation whose president and sole shareholder is the Le-nards’ daughter, Paula Michelle Lenard. William and Dorothy Lenard continued to live on the property after the 1983 sale to Carefree. They owed about $89,000 to Tal-lulah Production Credit Association and had other debts that rendered their financial situation precarious. Two years later, on August 6, 1985, Carefree sold 460 acres of the land to Hugh Coleman for $30,000 cash.

Analyzing the first sale, the bankruptcy court found that on August 3, 1983, Dorothy Lenard’s father, Lamar Robinson, made out two money orders totalling $15,-000 ($7,500 each) to Dorothy or William Lenard. Deposit slips show that these money orders eventually ended up in Carefree’s account on August 3 and 5. On August 4, William Lenard made out two checks totalling $15,000 ($7,500 each) to Lamar Robinson. On August 5, Paula Michelle Lenard made out two checks total-ling $15,000 ($7,500 each) to William or Dorothy Lenard; these were deposited in the Lenards’ account the same day. This series of transactions leaves everyone even but produces a paper trail appearing to show that Paula Michelle paid her parents $15,000 (about $32 an acre) for the land.

Paula Michelle Lenard made two different claims concerning how she had obtained the $15,000: first, at her deposition, that she had earned it working at an A & W Root Beer stand between 1974 and 1983 and had kept it in a piggy bank; and second, at the hearing, that she had sold an antique coin collection for that amount to a family friend, James Cook, who also collects coins. The bankruptcy judge found her testimony not credible because these explanations conflicted and because James Cook, at his deposition, could not remember the details of this coin transaction or, indeed, any other coin purchases he had made.

Five months after the sale, in January 1984, the Lenards renewed their $89,000 note to Tallulah. In the balance sheet they furnished to Tallulah in connection with this renewal, they listed the 470 acres of land as an asset, valuing it at $625 an acre for a total of $293,750, although the property had ostensibly been sold to Carefree Ranch. Their total net worth at the time was $261,205; thus, apart from the land, they had a negative net worth of $32,545.

William Lenard died in March 1985, and Dorothy declared Chapter 7 bankruptcy in June 1985. At a creditors meeting on July 31, at which Paula Michelle Lenard was present, a creditor questioned the validity of the August 1983 sale. Based on this and other indications, the bankruptcy court found, Paula Michelle knew creditors were trying to reach this property and intended to help her mother defraud them. A week after the meeting, on August 6, Carefree, represented by Paula, sold 460 acres of the property to Coleman for $30,000 (about $65 an acre) in a transaction the bankruptcy judge found had been “hastily'contracted.” This second sale, the judge found, rendered Dorothy Lenard, the debtor, insolvent.

II.

Bankruptcy Rule 8013 provides that a district court hearing an appeal from the bankruptcy court shall not set aside the bankruptcy court’s findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous. Nevertheless, Carefree and Coleman argue, the district court should not have deferred to the bankruptcy court’s findings of fact because the judge who entered them had not presided at the hearing, having replaced the judge who had presided, and he therefore lacked the opportunity to observe witnesses personally in judging their credibility.

This contention is probably now waived, as Carefree and Coleman did not present it to the district court in their statement of the issues on appeal, but in fact assumed that the court should apply the clearly-erroneous standard. In any event, the contention lacks merit. Like Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a), Rule 8013 was amended effective August 1, 1987 — before the district court ruled on October 6 — expressly to shield fact-findings “whether based on oral or documenta[977]*977ry evidence.” Even before the amendment, Rule 8013 stated unqualifiedly that “[f]ind-ings of fact shall not be set aside unless clearly erroneous” before adding: “and due regard shall be given to the opportunity of the bankruptcy court to judge the credibility of witnesses.”

The change in the rule merely clarifies that, as the Supreme Court has stated in the analogous context of district court fact-findings under Rule 52(a),1 the trial judge’s ability to observe witnesses is not, as Carefree and Coleman contend, a necessary condition for application of the elearly-erroneous rule. The deference given to the trial court’s fact-findings also conserves judicial resources by avoiding appellate retrials of factual matters.2

III.

We turn then to the 1983 sale that the bankruptcy and district courts found void as a “simulation”—a sale “in which thq parties do not have genuine intent to transfer or convey property, even though such sale be clothed in concrete form or legal formalities.”3 The plaintiff seeking to prove that a sale was a simulation may, using either direct or circumstantial evidence, create a rebuttable presumption of a simulation in either of two cases: first, under La.Civ.Code article 2480, if the thing sold “remains in the possession of the seller” under usufruct or precarious title; and second, under jurisprudential law, if the “facts and circumstances ... create a highly reasonable doubt as to whether the putative sale is real.”4

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Related

Arens v. Boughton
176 B.R. 781 (W.D. Louisiana, 1993)
Lenard v. Lenard
849 F.2d 974 (Fifth Circuit, 1988)

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Bluebook (online)
849 F.2d 974, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 9853, 1988 WL 68261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carefree-ranch-inc-v-lenard-in-re-lenard-ca5-1988.