Ghei v. Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (In re First Regional Bancorp)

560 B.R. 772, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 180778
CourtDistrict Court, C.D. California
DecidedAugust 16, 2016
DocketCase No. 2:15-cv-4377-SVW; Bankruptcy No.:2:13-bk-31372-ER; Adversary Case No.: 2:14-ap-01221-ER
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 560 B.R. 772 (Ghei v. Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (In re First Regional Bancorp)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, C.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ghei v. Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (In re First Regional Bancorp), 560 B.R. 772, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 180778 (C.D. Cal. 2016).

Opinion

ORDER AFFIRMING BANKRUPTCY COURT’S ORDER

STEPHEN V. WILSON, UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE

I. INTRODUCTION

This is an appeal from the Bankruptcy Court’s May 27, 2015 Amended Order Granting in Part and Denying in Part the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, as Receiver for First Regional Bank of California’s (“FDIC-R’s”) Motion to Dismiss Frist Amended Complaint (“Amended Older”). (6-7 ER 131-266; 2:14-ap-01221-ER Dkt. 94.) At the heart of this appeal is (1) whether the First Amended Complaint (“FAC”), filed by Vikaran Ghei and Michael Zaitzeff (collectively, “Trustees”), contains sufficient facts to establish an implicit contractual agreement between Frist Regional Bancorp (“Debtor” or “Bancorp”) and the Frist Regional Bank of California (the “Bank”), whereby the Bank’s approximately $29,000,0001 in federal tax refunds (collectively, the “Refund”) would be treated as property of Debtor’s bankruptcy estate; and (2) whether the Bankruptcy Court erred by denying the FAC without leave to amend.

II. FACTUAL2 AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. Background

Prior to its bankruptcy in 2012, Debtor and the Bank filed consolidated tax returns. (5 ER 101 ¶ 16.) Debtor’s principal business was to serve as the holding company for the Bank, one of its subsidiaries. (5 ER 99 ¶ 1.)

In 2008, the Bank was in a compromised financial situation after incurring substantial losses in 2007 as a result of the deterioration of national economic conditions, including the decline of the Southern California real estate market. (5 ER 101 ¶ 15.) On January 29, 2010, the California Department of Financial Institutions closed the Bank and appointed the FDIC-R as the Bank’s Receiver. (5 ER 99 ¶ 1.) Simultaneously, the FDIC-R assigned all of the Bank’s deposits and certain of its other assets and liabilities to Frist Citizens Bank of Raleigh North Carolina (“FCB”) through an asset purchase agreement with FCB. (5 ER 99 ¶ 2.) Since January 29, 2010, Debtor has been winding up its affairs. (5 ER 103 ¶ 3.)

Then, on June 19, 2012, Debtor filed a voluntary chapter 11 petition. (5 ER 99 ¶ 3.) On August 23, 2013, the Bankruptcy Court entered an Order Confirming Debt- or’s Second Amended Chapter 11 Liquidating Plan (“Plan”). (5 ER 99 ¶4.) Pursuant to the Plan, a Liquidating Trust [775]*775(“Liquidating Trust”) was established and Trustees were appointed as the trustees of the Liquidating Trust to facilitate the liquidation of Debtor’s assets. (5 ER 99-100 ¶¶4-5.) Substantially all of Debtor’s assets were vested in the Liquidating Trust. (5 ER 99 ¶4.)

The FDIC-R, in its capacity as receiver for the Bank, filed amended tax returns on behalf of the Bank for the 2004, 2005, and 2006 tax years3 (5 ER 103 ¶22), which Debtor initially filed on a consolidated basis.4 (5 ER 100 ¶7.) These amended tax refunds offset the Bank’s losses against its income and enabled the FDIC-R to claim substantial tax refunds of approximately $29 million. (Answering Brief at 1; 6 ER 142; 12 ER 328.) On December 3, 2012, the FDIC-R filed a proof of claim, designated claim number 18 (“FDIC-R POC”), relating in part to FDIC-R’s right to the Refund. (5 ER 100 IT 6; 5 ER Ex. B at 120-21.)

On April 16, 2014, Trustees commenced the adversary proceeding against the FDIC-R by filing their initial complaint (“Initial Complaint”), which contained a counterclaim to the FDIC-R’s POC seeking declaratory relief that the Liquidating Trust was entitled to the Refund.5 (1 ER 1-14.) Trustees’ Initial Complaint relied on an Affiliate Transaction Policy (“ATP”), which Debtor adopted in July 2007. Trustees alleged that the ATP specified “the manner in which taxes associated with Consolidated Returns would be allocated and treated among ... Debtor and the Bank” and created a debtor-creditor relationship between Debtor and the Bank.6 (1 ER 5 ¶ 17) Specifically, Trustees alleged that the ATP “allocates between ... Debt- or and the Bank the benefits and burdens of taxes and/or refunds that may be or become owed and/or due in connection with such Consolidated Returns” and “does not create any trust running from ... Debtor to the Bank.” (1 ER 6-7 ¶¶ 29-30.) Trustees seemed to implicitly suggest in Paragraphs 29-30 that because the Bank benefits from the ATP at Debtor’s expense, it must also share any burdens associated with taxes and tax refunds, including sharing tax refunds attributable to its losses with Debtor. Trustees did not attach the ATP to their Initial Complaint or cite to specific provisions that established the alleged tax-sharing agreement between the parties. The ATP does not explicitly discuss how tax returns should be allocated between Debtor and the Bank and instead contains general policy statements, including the following:

• “It is the General Policy of ... [Debtor] to serve as a source of fi[776]*776nancial strength for its subsidiaries.... [Debtor] will do nothing to benefit itself financially at the expense of the financial condition of a subsidiary.” (5 ER Ex. A at 112.)
• “Federal and State tax returns of ... [Debtor] and its subsidiaries are prepared on a consolidated basis in which ... [Debtor] is the taxpayer of record. Because each entity within ... [Debtor] generates a different amount of profit or loss, each is theoretically responsible for a portion of ... [Debtor’s] overall tax expense. For example, the Bank typically generates a profit, while ... [Debtor] (on a stand-alone basis) typically incurs a loss. Were ... [Debtor] to collect the portion of the overall tax expense attributable to the Bank’s profit from the Bank, this would be inconsistent with the General Policy, in that ... [Debtor] would not be serving as a source of financial strength for the Bank. In addition, timing differences occasionally arise between the time when profits (and the resulting taxes) are generated and the time when those taxes must actually be paid. Were ... [Debtor] to collect such taxes at the time they are generated and use the funds until the taxes are paid, this would also be inconsistent -with the General Policy.” (5 ER Ex. A at 112.)
• Debtor’s “practice is to make all tax payments at the Bank level. In this way, the Bank maintains the possession and use of funds until the tax payments are actually made. In addition, this arrangement enables the Bank to benefit from tax losses which are incurred by ... [Debtor] or other First Regional subsidiaries. This practice results in a strengthening of the Bank’s financial position, and thus is consistent with the General Policy.” (5 ER Ex. A at 113.)

The ATP is undated and is not signed by either party. (5 ER Ex. A.)

On June 20, 2014, the FDIC-R filed a motion to dismiss the Initial Complaint (“Initial Motion”) partially on the grounds that no tax-sharing agreement exists between Debtor and the Bank. (2 ER 15-95.) Trustees filed an Opposition to the Initial Motion where they alleged that the tax-sharing agreement “is evidenced, in part, by the [ATP].” (2:14-ap-01221-ER Dkt. 31 at 7.) Trustees also cited Ninth Circuit precedent establishing that a tax-sharing agreement can be implied, but offered no evidence that such an implied tax-sharing agreement existed between Debtor and the Bank. (Id. at 7.) The Bankruptcy Court issued a Memorandum of Decision (“Memorandum of Decision”) on October 2, 2014 granting the Initial Motion with leave to amend.

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Bluebook (online)
560 B.R. 772, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 180778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ghei-v-federal-deposit-insurance-corp-in-re-first-regional-bancorp-cacd-2016.