Feldman v. Chase Home Finance (In Re Image Masters, Inc.)

421 B.R. 164, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 4104, 2009 WL 4894462
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 17, 2009
Docket13-20484
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 421 B.R. 164 (Feldman v. Chase Home Finance (In Re Image Masters, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Feldman v. Chase Home Finance (In Re Image Masters, Inc.), 421 B.R. 164, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 4104, 2009 WL 4894462 (Pa. 2009).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

RICHARD E. FEHLING, Bankruptcy Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

On September 18, 2007, Image Masters, Inc., OPFM, Inc., Mortgage Assistance Professionals, Inc., Mortgage Assistance Professionals, Inc. II, Discovered Treasures, Inc., and Dividit, Inc (together “Debtors”) each filed voluntary petitions for relief under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code. On September 19, 2007, Lynn E. Feldman, Esquire, was appointed to serve as the Chapter 7 Trustee of the Debtors’ bankruptcy estates (“Trustee”). She moved for an Order Directing Joint Administration of these bankruptcy cases, which motion I granted on October 4, 2007. My October 4, 2007 Order consolidated these six cases for procedural and administrative purposes only and directed that they be jointly administered. For years preceding their bankruptcy filings, Debtors participated through and with their principal in a substantial Ponzi scheme, defrauding many of their customers, homeowners, and investors.

With no allegation that the Defendants in this adversary proceeding participated in or knew anything about Debtors’ bad deeds, Trustee filed an adversary complaint against Defendants on March 16, 2009, based upon the Ponzi scheme. Trustee seeks to avoid various transfers, which aggregate $23,552,441.36, made by Image Masters to the Defendants on the grounds that the transfers constitute fraudulent or preferential transfers under both or either of the United States Bankruptcy Code and the Pennsylvania Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act (“PUFTA”). 1 Defendants filed Motions To Dismiss the Complaint, 2 in which they argue that the Complaint fails to state a claim for avoidance of the transfers under theories of either constructive or actual fraud, fails to plead fraud with particularity, and fails to join necessary parties. I conducted oral argument on the Motions in July 2009, the briefs have now been filed, and the Motions are therefore ready for disposition. This Memorandum Opinion constitutes my findings and conclusions of law that the Trustee’s Complaint fails to state a claim for avoidance of the transfers based upon *172 constructive or actual fraud that are plausible on its face, fails to allege fraud with the required particularity, and fails to join necessary parties.

II. FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND HISTORY OF THE PONZI SCHEME

The Debtors are related entities and were, prior to the filing of their bankruptcy petitions, wholly owned, controlled and operated by Mr. Wesley Snyder (“Snyder”). The Trustee’s Complaint alleges that Snyder used the Debtors to orchestrate a multi-million dollar Ponzi scheme that defrauded more than 800 homeowners and investors out of millions of dollars. Snyder’s scheme was called a “WrapAround Equity Slide Down Discount Mortgage Program.”

As part of his scheme, Snyder asked homeowners to refinance their existing mortgages through conventional mortgage loans with Defendants (“conventional loans”). Snyder induced the homeowners to use the conventional loan refinancings to “cash out” the equity in their homes in a first closing by borrowing more money from Defendants than they needed to pay off the existing mortgages. At a second, subsequent closing, after the first closing with Defendants, Snyder persuaded the homeowners to give Image Masters the excess funds they had received from their conventional loan refinancings with Defendants (the “wrap amount”). The homeowners then signed new notes and mortgages in favor of Image Masters (together and separately, the “Image Masters Notes and Mortgages”) in the same amount as their conventional loans with the Defendants, but at lower interest rates and, in some cases, for shorter terms than the conventional loans. As a result, the monthly payments due by the homeowners under the Image Masters Notes and Mortgages were lower than the monthly payments due to Defendants under their conventional loans. The mortgages securing the conventional loans were properly recorded in the appropriate Recorder of Deeds Offices, but the Image Masters Mortgages were never recorded.

The Image Masters Notes and Mortgages did not eliminate the mortgages securing Defendants’ conventional loans. 3 Instead, the Image Masters Mortgages purported to “wrap around” the Defendants’ mortgages. In addition, Image Masters contractually assumed responsibility for paying the homeowner’s monthly payments to the Defendants. On a monthly basis, therefore, the homeowners paid Image Masters the monthly payments required under the Image Masters Notes and Mortgages. In turn, Image Masters was obliged under its agreements with the homeowners to pay Defendants the monthly payments owed by the homeowners to Defendants under the conventional loans. Neither Snyder, Image Masters, nor any of the other Debtors, however, had a direct relationship with the Defendants obligating them to make payments to Defendants on the home *173 owners’ conventional loans. The Defendants were not parties to any of the Image Masters Notes and Mortgages or subrogation agreements, and the Complaint does not aver that any of the Defendants participated in, or were actually aware of, the Image Masters Notes and Mortgages or the subrogation agreements.

Snyder informed the homeowners that the “wrap amounts” would be either (1) used by Image Masters immediately to pay down the homeowners’ conventional loans or (2) invested by Image Masters, with the proceeds being used by Image Masters to pay the difference between what the homeowners paid Image Masters and what the homeowners’ were obligated to pay to the Defendants on the conventional loans. No profits were actually earned on the “wrap amounts,” and Snyder did not use the “wrap amounts” to reduce the principal balances owed by the homeowners on the conventional loans. Snyder used the payments he received from new homeowners to keep preexisting homeowners’ conventional loans with Defendants current. 4

To perpetuate this illegal scheme, Image Masters set up dummy accounting records to reflect the interest, principal, and monthly payments due to the Defendants under the conventional loans and the interest, principal, monthly payments, and prepayments that the homeowners believed had been applied to pay the conventional loans. Image Masters provided the homeowners with monthly statements 5 that showed a reduction in their Image Masters Note and Mortgage equal to the wrap amount (which had not been paid by Image Masters on account of, or to reduce, the principal of the conventional loans). The monthly statements also showed a credit for that month’s mortgage payment to Image Masters plus any additional principal submitted to Image Masters by the homeowner.

The homeowners did not receive statements from Defendants on the conventional loans, however, because Image Masters required that the homeowners sign change of address forms directing Defendants to send all correspondence regarding the conventional loans to Image Masters. Image Masters also sent each homeowner an Internal Revenue Service Form 1098 at the end of each year, specifying the amount of interest the homeowner could deduct.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
421 B.R. 164, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 4104, 2009 WL 4894462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feldman-v-chase-home-finance-in-re-image-masters-inc-paeb-2009.