Goldsmith v. Massad (In re Fiorillo)

494 B.R. 119, 2013 WL 2636985, 2013 Bankr. LEXIS 2423
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJune 3, 2013
DocketBankruptcy Nos. 10-44179 MSH, 11-43854 MSH; Adversary Nos. 12-4005, 12-4006
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 494 B.R. 119 (Goldsmith v. Massad (In re Fiorillo)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goldsmith v. Massad (In re Fiorillo), 494 B.R. 119, 2013 WL 2636985, 2013 Bankr. LEXIS 2423 (Mass. 2013).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON THE MOTIONS TO DISMISS OF DEFENDANTS COMMERCE BANK & TRUST COMPANY, DAVID MASSAD, LBM FINANCIAL, LLC AND MARCELLO MALLEGNI

MELVIN S. HOFFMAN, Bankruptcy Judge.

Table of Contents

Introduction.128

Background.128

Facts.129

The Properties .130

28 A, B, C and D North Quinsigamond Avenue.130

425B Salisbury Street.131

157 Shrewsbury Street.134

88 Shrewsbury Street.135

249 Lincoln Street.136

49 Old Colony Drive.137

The Prior State and Federal Court Lawsuits .137

The Debtors’ and SSDC’s Bankruptcy History.139

Jurisdiction.140

The Rooker-Feldman Doctrine.140

Jurisdiction Generally.142

Positions of the Parties.145

Motion to Dismiss Standards.146

Discussion.147

Civil RICO.147

The Racketeering Enterprise.148

The Impact on Interstate Commerce.149

The Pattern of Racketeering Activities and the Predicate Acts .150

RICO’s Statute of Limitations.151

RICO Conspiracy.153

Counts I and II-Violation of Civil RICO and RICO Conspiracy.153

23 A, B, C and D Quinsigamond Avenue.153

425B Salisbury Street.154

157 Shrewsbury Street.155

[128]*12888 Shrewsbury Street.156

249 Lincoln Street.156

49 Old Colony Drive.156

Claims Derivative of Those of Ms. Krowel.157

Counts III and IV: Breach of Contract and Implied Covenant of Good Faith and Fair Dealing.157

Res Judicata.158

Conclusion.159

Introduction

Before me are three motions filed by the defendants in these consolidated adversary proceedings1 to dismiss the identical four-count complaints filed by Jonathan Goldsmith and Joseph Baldiga, the chapter 7 trustees (the “Bankruptcy Trustees”) of the bankruptcy estates of debtors, Nicholas Fiorillo and his wife, Tracy Krowel, (sometimes collectively referred to as the Fiorillos) respectively. Mr. Goldsmith asserts against the defendants certain claims of Mr. Fiorillo’s bankruptcy estate as well as claims held by Mr. Goldsmith as the assignee of the Shrewsbury Street Development Companies, Inc. (“SSDC”), the Fiorillo Family Trust (the “Family Trust”) and the 49 Old Colony Drive Trust (the “Colony Trust”). Mr. Baldiga maintains that he too is the assignee of the Family Trust’s and the Colony Trust’s claims against the defendants and in his complaint he asserts those claims along with claims of Ms. Krowel’s bankruptcy estate. The complaints allege in counts I and II that defendants Marcello Mallegni and David Massad violated § 1962(c) and (d) of Title 18 of the U.S.Code, the Racketeering Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”) and in counts III and IV that all defendants breached certain contracts and the attendant duties of good faith and fair dealing implicit in them.2 As discussed in more detail below, each motion raises common bases for dismissal: that the complaints fail to state claims under RICO, that the claims are time-barred, that the claims are barred by the doctrine of res judicata and that the bankruptcy court lacks subject matter jurisdiction under the Rooker-Feldman doctrine. In their joint response, the Bankruptcy Trustees concede that counts III and IV of the complaints against Commerce Bank and Trust Company and David Massad should be dismissed.

Background

These adversary proceedings are the latest in a series of lawsuits brought by Mr. Fiorillo, Ms. Krowel and SSDC in the Massachusetts state courts and in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts against some or all of these defendants. These adversary pro[129]*129ceedings also follow an action or actions brought in state court against Ms. Krowel by a third party, Santo Arcuri, whose judgment against Ms. Krowel in at least one of the lawsuits plays a significant role in the complex web of dealings described below.3 The state and federal court lawsuits, all of which have been dismissed or settled (or in the case of one of the actions brought by Mr. Arcuri, in which final orders have entered), involve many of the same properties and facts upon which the Bankruptcy Trustees base their claims in these adversary proceedings. The Bankruptcy Trustees contend that at least some of the prior lawsuits were resolved as a result of ongoing racketeering activities. Facts

The facts are drawn from the complaints filed in the adversary proceedings, the exhibits to the motions to dismiss and to the Bankruptcy Trustees’ joint response. All of the exhibits were incorporated by reference in the complaint or are public records. I have also taken judicial notice of the dockets and pleadings filed in the debtors’ and SSDC’s previous bankruptcy cases (which are detailed below) in order to present a more complete picture of the parties and properties at issue in these adversary proceedings.

Defendant, Marcello Mallegni, is the manager of and a substantial shareholder in defendant, LBM Financial, LLC (“LBM”). Defendant, David Massad, is the chairman of defendant, Commerce Bank, and also holds an interest in LBM. The complaints allege that Messrs. Malleg-ni and Massad controlled a racketeering enterprise through an association-in-fact composed of all of the defendants and two non-defendants, Michael Norris and Pamela Massad, who are attorneys who represented the defendants in some of the transactions at issue in these adversary proceedings.4 Messrs. Massad and Mal-legni are alleged to have promised loans to the Fiorillos or SSDC, a company formed by Mr. Fiorillo in March 2005, and owned, at least in part, by Mr. Fiorillo and of which he is the president, on terms that never materialized. The Bankruptcy Trustees allege that Messrs. Massad and Mallegni coerced the Fiorillos and SSDC into accepting loans on usurious terms, forced the Fiorillos, SSDC and the Family Trust to repay debts which they did not owe and used threats of violence and loss of property to extort money and other property from Mr. Fiorillo, Ms. Krowel, SSDC, the Family Trust and the Colony Trust.

The transactions of which the Bankruptcy Trustees complain were primarily among Mr. Fiorillo, a commercial real estate developer, on the one hand and the defendants on the other.5 The allegations [130]*130indicate that the transactions generally followed a common pattern: (i) Mr. Fiorillo, seeking to finance a real estate investment, was promised a loan on terms that were more favorable than those actually presented at the loan closing; (ii) if he complained, he was threatened with the loss of funding for the loan, with the attendant risk of losing a deposit or being sued by a seller, and possible foreclosure of other properties financed with the defendants; and (iii) repayment of the loans was virtually impossible as the payoff amounts provided by the defendants often exceeded significantly what was owed according to the loan documents thereby creating loan to value ratios that would not permit conventional refinancing.

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Bluebook (online)
494 B.R. 119, 2013 WL 2636985, 2013 Bankr. LEXIS 2423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldsmith-v-massad-in-re-fiorillo-mab-2013.