Estate of Jackson v. General Electric Capital Corp. (In re Fundamental Long Term Care, Inc.)

569 B.R. 904
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedMay 5, 2016
DocketCase No. 8:11-bk-22258-MGW; Adv. No. 8:13-ap-00893-MGW
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 569 B.R. 904 (Estate of Jackson v. General Electric Capital Corp. (In re Fundamental Long Term Care, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Jackson v. General Electric Capital Corp. (In re Fundamental Long Term Care, Inc.), 569 B.R. 904 (Fla. 2016).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION ON PERMANENT INJUNCTION

Michael G. Williamson, Chief United States Bankruptcy Judge

Phil: What would you do if you were stuck in one place and every day was exactly the same, and nothing that you did mattered?
Ralph: That about sums it up for me.

In the 1993 movie classic, Groundhog Day, Phil Connors, a Pittsburgh television weatherman played by Bill Murray, finds himself living the same day over and over again. After begrudgingly making the trip from Pittsburgh to Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania to cover the annual Groundhog Day festivities, Connors gets stuck in a blizzard on his way out of town and is forced to stay the night in Punxsutawney. When Connors awakens the next day, it is Groundhog Day again, which he is forced to relive over and over. The rest of the movie finds Connors desperately trying to break the Groundhog Day time loop:1 he kidnaps the groundhog and ends up dying during his getaway attempt; he electrocutes himself; he lets himself get hit by a truck; he jumps from a tall building. Not even death, however, can break the time loop. No matter what he does, Connors is [906]*906stuck living the same day over and over.2 At times, Rubin Schron, a wealthy real estate investor from New York, must feel like Phil Connors in Groundhog Day.

Nearly six years ago, Schron woke up to find himself ensnared in state court proceedings supplementary that three probate estates initiated to collect on billions of dollars of empty-chair verdicts against Trans Health Management, Inc. (“THMI”), one of the Debtors in this case.3 For the past six years, Schron has desperately tried to extricate himself from the Probate Estates’ collection efforts.4 He obtained an injunction enjoining the state court claims against him and requiring all of those claims to be litigated in this proceeding so they could be resolved in a single forum; when the Probate Estates attempted to continue their collection efforts against him in state court while this proceeding was pending, Schron obtained an order preventing the Probate Estates from circumventing this Court’s injunction by recasting their claims under a different theory; and once all the claims against him were brought in this forum, Schron obtained a dismissal of those claims with prejudice. But not even dismissal of all of the Probate Estates’ claims against Schron with prejudice is enough to break the litigation loop. No matter what he does— whether obtain an injunction or prevail on the merits — Schron finds himself defending the Probate Estates’ efforts to go back to state court to pursue their proceedings supplementary.

The only way for the Court to break this loop is to enjoin the Probate Estates from pursuing claims that were or could have been litigated against Schron in this Court. An injunction is necessary to protect this Court’s final judgment in Schron’s favor. Absent an injunction, the Probate Estates will ignore this Court’s rulings and use repetitious state court litigation against Schron to extract a settlement out of him. Moreover, the injunction was an integral part of the Court’s finding that nearly $24 million in settlements — which brought an end to exceedingly complex litigation that has involved 25 lawsuits (including adversary proceedings) and 15 appeals before 11 courts and 17 judges in five states over 11 years — are fair and equitable. Accordingly, for the reasons discussed below, the Court has enjoined the Probate Estates from pursuing any claims against Schron arising out of the same nucleus of facts in their adversary complaint in this proceeding.

BACKGROUND

Rubin Schron is, by all accounts, an extremely wealthy real estate investor from New York. In 2002, Schron’s lawyer (Leonard Grunstein) and investment banker (Murray Forman) convinced Schron to fund the acquisition of 120 nursing homes from Integrated Health Services (“IHS”), [907]*907which was in chapter 11 bankruptcy in Delaware. Abe Briarwood, the entity that actually acquired the IHS homes, leased them to THI of Baltimore, Inc. In March 2006, Forman and Grunstein devised a scheme that allowed them to acquire the former IHS homes from THI Baltimore, as well as the assets of THMI, a nursing home management company that managed the THI Baltimore homes, without acquiring THMI’s liabilities.5 There is no evidence Schron had any involvement in the March 2006 transaction that allowed For-man and Grunstein to divest THMI of its assets.6

Schron finds himself trapped in proceedings supplementary.

The Probate Estates claim the March 2006 transaction was an elaborate “bust-out” scheme intended to thwart their efforts to collect on personal injury claims they had filed against THMI. At the time of the March 2006 transaction, three of the Probate Estates had sued THMI and its former corporate parent, Trans Healthcare, Inc. (“THI”), for injuries that allegedly occurred at nursing homes THI owned and THMI managed.7 According to the Probate Estates, the March 2006 transactions resulted in hundreds of millions of dollars of THMI’s assets being transferred in exchange for $100,000. As a result of the transaction, THMI was left a liability-ridden shell with no assets to satisfy the Probate Estates’ claims.

After three of the Probate Estates obtained $1.2 billion in default judgments against THI and THMI,8 they initiated proceedings supplementary against Schron in state court to collect those judgments because THMI no longer had any assets and Schron was a “deep pocket.”9 [908]*908The case against Schron was, to say the least, flimsy. It hinged on the allegation that he owned the two entities — Fundamental Long Term Care Holdings (“FLTCH”) and Fundamental Administrative Services (“FAS”) — that acquired or ultimately ended up with THMI’s assets for far less than they were worth as a result of the March 2006 transaction.10 But the exhibits the Probate Estates attached to their impleader motions to support that allegation, in fact, showed that (1) Forman and Grunstein — not Schron— owned FLTCH and FAS; and (2) Forman and Grunstein were acting in their own self-interest — not on behalf of Schron — in attempting to acquire THMI’s assets.11 Although the Probate Estates presented no evidence in the proceedings supplementary that Schron actually received or ben-efitted from the transfer of THMI’s assets, Schron was nonetheless ordered to show' cause why assets in his possession should not be used to satisfy one of the judgments (a $110 million judgment in the Jackson case)12 and added as a defendant to the second judgment (a $200 million judgment in the Numiata case).13

Schron obtains an injunction enjoining the proceedings supplementary.

After this involuntary bankruptcy case was filed, the Court enjoined the Probate Estates from pursuing their state court proceedings supplementary to collect the THI and THMI judgments from Schron.14

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Related

Helms v. Zellmer
N.D. Illinois, 2021
Zellmer v. Helms
N.D. Illinois, 2021
Thorn v. Saul
N.D. Illinois, 2019
Juanita Jackson v. Rubin Schron
Eleventh Circuit, 2019

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
569 B.R. 904, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-jackson-v-general-electric-capital-corp-in-re-fundamental-long-flmb-2016.