Ficus Investments, Inc. v. Private Capital Management, LLC

61 A.D.3d 1, 872 N.Y.S.2d 93
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 20, 2009
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 61 A.D.3d 1 (Ficus Investments, Inc. v. Private Capital Management, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ficus Investments, Inc. v. Private Capital Management, LLC, 61 A.D.3d 1, 872 N.Y.S.2d 93 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Lippman, P.J.

This action arises out of allegations that Thomas Donovan and other named defendants misappropriated millions of dollars in funds and assets from plaintiff Private Capital Group, LLC. There have been extensive pretrial proceedings, and the parties are appealing four orders granting various forms of relief. The primary issue we address is whether certain individual defendants are entitled to advancement of their expenses under the company’s Operating Agreement.

Plaintiff Ficus Investments, Inc. is a Florida corporation with its principal place of business in Florida. Ficus is the managing member and 80% owner of plaintiff Private Capital Group, LLC (the Company), a Florida limited liability company with its principal place of business in New York. The Company is in the business of buying, managing and selling nonperforming real estate mortgages. Defendant Private Capital Management (PCM), a New York limited liability company with its principal place of business in New York, is the Company’s minority member and holds the remaining 20% ownership. PCM is owned [4]*4equally by defendant Thomas B. Donovan and former defendant Lawrence A. Cline.1

The Company began operations in December 2005, capitalized by a series of documented loans provided by Ficus totaling approximately $314 million. Plaintiffs allege that Donovan and Cline soon became dissatisfied with their compensation and, in July 2006, began transferring money from the Company to PCM in a series of undocumented loans. In January 2007, Donovan and Cline transferred $9,872 million from the Company to PCM. Donovan and Cline freely admit that they took this money but assert that, despite the absence of any type of security agreement, the distribution had been authorized by a Ficus representative. When Ficus discovered the transfer, it demanded that the money be returned. Donovan and Cline refused and instead apparently attempted to negotiate changes to the Operating Agreement.

Ficus representatives met with Donovan and Cline on March 20, 2007 to advise them that, as manager, Ficus would be taking control of the Company’s accounts, funds and any major new commitments. Since Donovan and Cline maintained the position that they had the authority to manage the Company, Ficus adopted resolutions giving itself authority over the Company’s operations and advised Donovan, Cline and the Company’s banks of the change.

Plaintiffs commenced this action on or about March 21, 2007, asserting several causes of action, including breach of fiduciary duty, conversion and unjust enrichment. That same morning, plaintiffs allege that defendants began removing books, records and financial information from the Company’s Jericho, New York office. The complaint asserts that when Ficus representatives arrived at the premises and began their review of the Company’s operations, Donovan and other named defendants were evasive and uncooperative.

During this time, plaintiffs allege, Donovan continued to transfer Company funds to accounts under his control. In support of this allegation, Cline provided an affidavit stating that approximately $12.5 million in Company funds, along with about $3 million remaining from the disputed $9,872 million “loan,” were transferred to a bank account in the name of de[5]*5fendant Private Lender Warehouse Corp. After the balance was transferred to another Private Lender Warehouse Corp. account, about $12.5 million of the money was deposited into an account in the name of Private Capital Management Corp. (a separate entity from PCM, the LLC with 20% membership interest in the Company). Plaintiffs allege that the $12.5 million was disbursed to defendants, or to entities under their control— many with confusingly similar names. The balance was apparently disbursed to some of the individual defendants and was used to pay for defendants’ litigation expenses.

On March 26, 2007, Supreme Court granted plaintiffs a temporary restraining order preventing defendants from making transfers or distributions in contravention of the resolutions that gave Ficus operational authority, preventing them from removing, destroying, concealing or altering Company books and records or documents pertaining to Company business, and requiring defendants to cooperate with Ficus and give Ficus free access to the premises, books and records.

On April 10, 2007, nearly every Company employee resigned and went to work for Donovan at his new business, Private Capital Management Group of New York, LLC. Ficus then obtained another temporary restraining order giving it control over the Company’s day-to-day operations and assets, directing that defendants provide information and Company records pertaining to another entity, Copperfield Investments, Inc.,2 and preventing defendants from removing or destroying such records. Several days later, the court issued yet another temporary restraining order, requiring the return of any Company assets that had been transferred to Copperfield without full consideration. The court noted, however, that it did not have the power to enjoin Copperfield itself, as Copperfield had not yet been made a party. The court also denied PCM’s motion for the appointment of a temporary receiver to run the Company. Later that night, before the complaint was amended to include Copperfield as a defendant, Donovan and Cline placed Copperfield into bankruptcy.

On May 14, 2007, the three temporary restraining orders were consolidated into a preliminary injunction without objection. A few weeks later, Supreme Court issued another injunction—this time preventing defendants from transferring, [6]*6concealing or otherwise disposing of the “approximately $9,000,000” that Donovan and Cline had taken as an undocumented “loan” and requiring defendants to post a $1 million undertaking.

After Cline settled with plaintiffs in July of 2007, certain other named defendants also settled, and each agreed to provide information pertaining to the Company. Cline provided an affidavit stating that a portion of the funds that Donovan had taken from the Company and deposited in an account under the name of Private Capital Management Corp. was subsequently used to acquire nonperforming mortgages from North Fork Bank. In addition, the former defendants represented that “[t]here were no active ‘separate Donovan businesses’ ” being run from the Company’s Jericho location. Rather, the Donovan-controlled “shell” entities had been completely funded by Company assets.

In December 2007, Supreme Court issued an order preventing defendants from taking any action on specific mortgages without 48 hours’ advance written notice to plaintiffs’ counsel, including the mortgages purchased from North Fork and various other “missing mortgages” that plaintiffs were unable to locate, which were all allegedly procured with Company funds. The court later clarified the May 2007 preliminary injunction, finding it necessary to turn the mortgages funded with Ficus monies (North Fork and missing mortgages) over to an escrow agent to maintain the status quo and prevent dissipation of the proceeds before the question of who was entitled to the mortgages could be resolved. The court then signed plaintiffs’ proposed order designating PHH Corporation escrow agent for the 85 mortgages at issue and directing that defendants deliver the mortgages, all documents pertaining to the mortgages, and any funds received on account of any of the mortgages.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 A.D.3d 1, 872 N.Y.S.2d 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ficus-investments-inc-v-private-capital-management-llc-nyappdiv-2009.