Drivetrain, LLC v. FiftySix Investments LLC

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware
DecidedFebruary 22, 2024
Docket22-50441
StatusUnknown

This text of Drivetrain, LLC v. FiftySix Investments LLC (Drivetrain, LLC v. FiftySix Investments LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Drivetrain, LLC v. FiftySix Investments LLC, (Del. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT DISTRICT OF DELAWARE CRAIG T. GOLDBLATT pp, 824 N. MARKET STREET JUDGE 4 WILMINGTON, DELAWARE CA fy. (302) 252-3832 “eh “ey ae February 22, 2024 VIA CM/ECF Re: Drivetrain, LLC v. DDE Partners, LLC, Adv. Proc. No. 22-50439, Drivetrain, LLC v. Fiftysix Investments LLC, Adv. Proc. No. 22-50441, Drivetrain, LLC v. Justin Label and Millennium Trust Company, LLC, Adv. Proc. No. 22-50443 Dear Counsel: In October 2023, this Court issued a Memorandum Opinion resolving cross- motions for summary judgment in each of the three above-captioned adversary proceedings.! In these actions, the plan trustee seeks to avoid and recover, as fraudulent transfers, amounts the debtor paid to the defendants to acquire its own shares in a prepetition tender offer. The Memorandum Opinion explains that the trustee is entitled to the entry of summary judgment in each of these lawsuits. The opinion concludes by directing the parties to settle forms of judgment.

1 The Memorandum Opinion is docketed at D.I. 40 in case no. 22-50439, at D.I. 40 in case no. 22-50441, and at D.I. 43 in case no. 22-50443. Because the pleadings filed in each of the three cases are largely identical, when this Letter Opinion cites to material on the docket [D.I. __], it is referring to the docket in case no. 22-50439.

February 22, 2024 Page 2

Unable to agree on a form of judgment, the parties submitted, on February 15, 2024, a joint certification of counsel setting forth their positions on four points of disagreement. The Court appreciates the clear and simple manner in which the parties have teed up the issues on which they disagree. For the benefit of the parties and any reviewing court, this Letter Opinion sets forth the Court’s reasoning with respect to its resolution of those four points. 1. The parties dispute the plan trustee’s entitlement to prejudgment interest. The Third Circuit explained in In re Hechinger, which was also an avoidance action, that “prejudgment interest should be awarded unless there is a sound reason not to do so.”2 Such an award is appropriate in order to compensate the estate for the time during which it was deprived of the use and possession of the value that had been transferred.3 The only reason that defendants offer in support of their contention that the Court should exercise its discretion against awarding

prejudgment interest is that they have committed no wrongdoing and raised legitimate defenses.4 But that was at least equally true in Hechinger, a preference case in which the defendant had merely been paid on a valid antecedent debt during the 90-day period before the debtor’s bankruptcy filing and asserted colorable

2 In re Hechinger Inv. Co. of Del., Inc., 489 F.3d 568, 580 (3d Cir. 2007) (internal quotation and citation omitted). 3 In re AE Liquidation, Inc., No. 08-13031-MFW, 2016 WL 1238848 (Bankr. D. Del. Mar. 20, 2016); In re USN Commc’n., Inc., 280 B.R. 573, 602 (Bankr. D. Del. 2002). 4 D.I. 44 at 2. February 22, 2024 Page 3

affirmative defenses. The Court accordingly concludes that an award of prejudgment interest is appropriate here. 2. The parties agree that if the Court does award prejudgment interest – as the paragraph above explains that it will – such interest starts running on December 1, 2020, the date on which the plaintiff made a demand on the defendants.5 But the parties dispute the appropriate rate of prejudgment interest. The plan trustee’s initial position is that the Court should use the post-judgment interest rate set forth in 28 U.S.C. § 1961(a), but that it should use the current rate rather than the one in effect at the time interest begins to run. The plan trustee alternatively suggests that the Court use the prime rate as of the time of the demand. Defendants urge the Court to use the post-judgment interest rate in effect at the time of the demand. The notion that the present interest rate should apply, rather than the one in

effect at the time when interest begins to accrue, has no analytic support. The point of prejudgment interest is to compensate the estate for the loss of the funds from the time it made its demand through the date of judgment. Using an interest rate in effect on the date of judgment is thus inappropriate.6

5 See generally In re Meridian Auto Sys.-Composites Operations, Inc., 372 B.R. 710, 725 (Bankr. D. Del. 2007). 6 Perhaps a case could be made for using floating rates over the period in question rather than a fixed rate based on the rate in effect on the date on which the demand was made. See generally Michael S. Knoll, A Primer on Prejudgment Interest, 75 Tex. L. Rev. 293, 316 (1996). The parties, however, have not advanced such an argument here. February 22, 2024 Page 4

The question is therefore which of the rates in effect at the time of the demand should be used. The caselaw instructs that the rate should “fairly and adequately compensate” the plaintiff.7 That said, Judge Walrath correctly observed in In re AE Liquidation that “[m]ost federal courts apply the post-judgment interest rate set forth in section 1961 of title 28 when awarding prejudgment interest.”8 If this Court were writing against a blank slate, it would certainly be open to the argument that the debtor’s actual prepetition cost of capital, or some other commercial interest rate, would more appropriately compensate the plaintiff for the loss of use of the funds than does the statutory post-judgment interest rate. And in fairness, the plan trustee makes this point in its alternative argument for the use of the prime rate. While the Court has some sympathy with this position, it does not see any basis for distinguishing this case from the many other cases in which courts have used the post-judgment interest rate to calculate prejudgment interest. So without excluding

the possibility that the Court might reach a different conclusion in a case in which evidence is presented demonstrating the actual commercial effect on the estate of having been without the transferred funds for the period in question, based on the limited record before it, the Court will follow the approach adopted by most courts and grant prejudgment interest at the statutory post-judgment interest rate in effect at the time demand was made on the defendants. Here, that means that interest

7 In re Frescati Shipping Co., Ltd., 886 F.3d 291, 315 (3d Cir. 2018). 8 2016 WL 1238848 at *3. February 22, 2024 Page 5

should accrue on the amount of the tender offer proceeds received from each defendant, for the period from December 1, 2020 through the date on which judgment is entered, at an annual rate of 0.11 percent. The Court has performed this calculation and will enter judgment in that amount. 3. Defendants argue that the judgment should take account of the defense they claim to have raised under § 548(c) of the Bankruptcy Code. While the Court could certainly have been clearer in its Memorandum Opinion, the Court did consider and reject the argument defendants actually made about the “value” they claim to have provided to the debtors. That argument was about the value of the shares that defendants tendered back to the debtor in the tender offer. The Court concluded (as the defendant acknowledged at argument) that those shares were worthless. As such, the tender of those shares does not give rise to a defense under § 548(c). Defendants now make a new and different argument about how the value

provided in the tender offer was the paying down of the defendants’ valid claims for fraud against the debtor.

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