Deluxe Building Solutions, LLC

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 13, 2023
Docket5:21-bk-00534
StatusUnknown

This text of Deluxe Building Solutions, LLC (Deluxe Building Solutions, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deluxe Building Solutions, LLC, (Pa. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

IN RE: : : CHAPTER 7 DELUXE BUILDING SOLUTIONS, LLC, : : CASE NO. 5:21-bk-00534-HWV Alleged Debtor. :

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This matter comes before the Court on the second phase of a Motion to Dismiss the Involuntary Chapter 7 Petition filed by the Alleged Debtor, Deluxe Building Solutions, LLC (the “Alleged Debtor”). (Doc. 120.) For the following reasons, the Court will deny the requested relief. I. JURISDICTION The Court has jurisdiction over this matter pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 157 and 1334. This matter is a core proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(A) (matters concerning the administration of the estate). II. FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL POSTURE1 As established during the first phase of hearings on the Motion to Dismiss, the Alleged Debtor is a United States-based manufacturer of large-scale commercial volumetric steel modular buildings formerly operating out of Berwick, Pennsylvania. (Doc. 121-2, p. 15.)2 The Alleged Debtor is affiliated with a larger group of companies that focus on various aspects of architecture, engineering and construction software, technologies, and other innovations collectively known as the “Deluxe Group.” (Id.) Frydco Capital Group, LLC (“Frydco”) and

1 The Court has issued a prior opinion in this case and incorporates the factual background from same. (Doc. 268.) Additional facts are included only where necessary for the analysis below.

2 For ease of reference, and where appropriate, the Court utilizes the page numbers from the CM/ECF footer. Winter Investors, LLC (“Winter”) owned all interests in the Alleged Debtor through December 31, 2020, after which iBUILT Group, LLC (“iBUILT”) became the owner of same. (Doc. 165, pp. 169, 210; Doc 216, p. 147.) Jacob Frydman (“Frydman”) controls the Alleged Debtor as its designated Manager. (Doc. 121-2, p. 15.)

SyncPark, LLC (“SyncPark”) is a Delaware limited liability company with an address at 4 South Stanwich Road, Greenwich, Connecticut. (Id. at 3, 54.) SyncPark was formed to develop a system that moves vehicles through an automated self-parking facility using linear synchronous motor technology (the “SyncPark System”). (Id. at 15.) Andrew W. Hayes (“Hayes”) and James G. Wieler (“Wieler”) own and control SyncPark. (Doc. 144, p. 41; Doc. 242, p. 22.) In early 2020, the Alleged Debtor and SyncPark entered a joint venture to design, manufacture, and build automated self-parking garages modeled after the SyncPark System throughout the United States. (Doc. 121-2, p. 16.) To that end, on April 29, 2020, the Alleged Debtor and SyncPark entered into an operating agreement (the “JV Operating Agreement”) to

form a joint venture, which they named SyncPark USA, LLC (the “Joint Venture”). (See Doc. 121-2.) According to the JV Operating Agreement, Frydman and Hayes were non-member managers of the Joint Venture, and Wieler and Hayes were its executives. (Id. at 3.) As its managers, Frydman and Hayes made up the Board of the Joint Venture. (Id. at 33.) By agreement, the Alleged Debtor and SyncPark were each required to make an initial capital contribution in exchange for their ownership interest in the Joint Venture. (Id. at 16.) SyncPark’s initial capital contribution to the Joint Venture included all its rights, title, license, and interest in and to the SyncPark System, and all the other assets it owned in exchange for a 50% membership interest in the Joint Venture. (Id. at 16, 20.) The Alleged Debtor’s initial capital contribution included an in-kind contribution of: (1) space in one of its buildings in Berwick, Pennsylvania, for use by the Joint Venture; (2) certain design services, components, and construction work, each as defined in the JV Operating Agreement; and (3) a commitment to fund necessary purchases and engineering work that it or other entities in the Deluxe Group

could not manufacture or provide; all in exchange for a 50% membership interest in the Joint Venture. (Id.) This funding commitment was capped by the JV Operating Agreement at approximately $500,000, with the precise amount to be identified in a budget prepared by Wieler and Hayes and submitted to the Board for approval. (Id. at 20, 33.) To advance the Joint Venture’s purpose, the Joint Venture’s members and executives decided to build a test garage using the SyncPark System as a proof of concept for investors (the “POC Garage”). (Id. at 15.) Despite apparent efforts to build the POC Garage, Frydman admits the Alleged Debtor had difficulty doing so because of its financial struggles throughout its relationship with the Joint Venture. (Doc. 165, pp. 216–17.) According to Frydman, the original members of the Alleged Debtor, Winter and Frydco, invested approximately $31 million to

support the Alleged Debtor from January 2018 through December 31, 2020. (Id. at 216.) While there was evidence that the Joint Venture could become profitable, in Winter and Frydco’s view, the Alleged Debtor’s significant financial deficit eventually outweighed the promise held by the Joint Venture. (Id. at 216–17.) Thus, effective December 31, 2020, Frydman asserts that Winter

and Frydco transferred all their ownership interests in the Alleged Debtor to a newly formed member of the Deluxe Group called iBUILT. (Doc. 165, p. 210; Doc. 216, p. 147.) Contemporaneously, Frydman asserts that the Alleged Debtor also transferred its employees to iBUILT to continue its limited operations, causing the Alleged Debtor to effectively cease all operations as of December 31, 2020.3 (Doc. 165, pp. 210, 217; Doc. 216, pp. 115–16, 121–22; Doc. 245, ¶¶ 123–24.) To enable what some have called a “brand refresh,” or a transition of the Alleged Debtor to iBUILT, the Alleged Debtor contracted with Ana Michelle Matthews Andreotti (“Andreotti”)

to design an “End-to-End Platform Infographic.” (Doc. 319, p. 166; PC Ex. 36.) This infographic was created to demonstrate the operations of iBUILT in pictorial form. (Doc. 319, pp. 144–45.) Andreotti’s work occurred during the week of November 16, 2020, and was completed by November 20, 2020, with an invoice for $5,000 issued by Andreotti on the completion date. (PC Ex. 35; PC Ex. 36.) After transitioning to iBUILT, Frydman asserts that iBUILT began to furlough or lay off most employees transferred to it from the Alleged Debtor. (Doc. 144, p. 58; Doc. 165, p. 106; Doc. 216, pp. 115–16; Doc. 217, p. 108.) As a result of these events, and because the Alleged Debtor was not operating in the traditional sense, the Alleged Debtor ceased payment on many of its financial obligations, including the amount owed to Andreotti, while waiting for its only

source of income from receivables and anticipated litigation payouts to arrive. (Doc. 216, pp. 100–01.) Another such casualty was a sublease obligation with Underscore Marketing, LLC (“Underscore Marketing”). While the sublease term ran from July 2019 until June 2021, the Alleged Debtor did not make payments on this obligation after April 2020.4 (See PC Ex. 7, p. 2; Doc. 325, pp. 75, 79; PD Ex. 23.)

3 After December 31, 2020, the Alleged Debtor continued operating solely to collect outstanding receivables, including potential recoveries from pending litigation, and pay as many of its liabilities as possible. (Doc. 165, p. 216.)

4 Frydman testified that sublease payments did not occur because of the COVID-19 pandemic, which served to deny the Alleged Debtor access to the leased premises due to large-scale shutdown orders in New York during this time.

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Deluxe Building Solutions, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deluxe-building-solutions-llc-pamb-2023.