Heaven's Landing, LLC

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedFebruary 9, 2023
Docket20-21350
StatusUnknown

This text of Heaven's Landing, LLC (Heaven's Landing, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heaven's Landing, LLC, (Ga. 2023).

Opinion

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Date: February 9, 2023 4 how JamesR.Sacca U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge

IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF GEORGIA GAINESVILLE DIVISION IN RE: : Chapter 11 HEAVEN’S LANDING, LLC, : Case No. 20-21350-JRS Debtor. :

ORDER ON CONFIRMATION OF DEBTOR’S FOURTH AMENDED PLAN OF REORGANIZATION This case presents the rare situation where a debtor proposes to pay all of its creditors in cash in full on the Effective Date of the Plan — which in this case is March 3, 2023, about 36 days after the Confirmation Hearing — and preserves the equity interests. This type of result is usually every bankruptcy judge's dream. This case also has the even more rare situation where the secured

creditor – or any creditor – is objecting to being paid in cash in full on the Effective Date of the Plan.1 One of the primary issues in this case is whether the Debtor, who has pledged all of its assets with substantial equity as collateral to support a loan for a non-affiliated entity, can be subrogated to the rights of the secured creditor when it pays the loan in full after default and receipt

of a notice of foreclosure to protect the interest in its property it pledged as collateral. In rendering this decision, the Court has considered all matters of record in this case, including but not limited to the testimony and other evidence presented at two confirmation hearings, JT Funding Inc.’s Objection to the Plan, Debtor’s Response to the Objections, argument of counsel at the Confirmation Hearing, and the briefs submitted to the Court following the Confirmation Hearing. Based on that, the Court makes the following findings of facts and conclusions of law in addition to those announced on the record during the Court’s oral ruling on February 6, 2023 (the “Oral Ruling”). FINDINGS OF FACT

The Debtor is principally owned by Michael Ciochetti, but there are some other limited partners as well. About 23 years ago the Debtor acquired 500 acres of land in the beautiful North Georgia mountains in Rabun County to develop a residential fly-in community known as Heaven’s Landing for $4,075,000 and purchased an adjacent 135 acres for $1,075,000 a few years later. In other words, the Debtor paid about $5,150,000 to acquire this property more than 20 years ago. A residential fly-in community is a subdivision in which there is a private runway for residents to use to fly their private planes in and out of the community where they have either

1 In this Court’s 37 years of experience as a judge and as a Chapter 11 practitioner, it has never seen a case where the secured lender, or any other creditor, has objected to being paid in full in cash on the Effective Date of the Plan. primary or vacation homes. The Heaven’s Landing Subdivision is divided into Phases 1, 2 and 3 (collectively, the “Property”). Phase 1 is approximately 347 acres and Phases 2 and 3 are about 288 acres combined. The Debtor borrowed about $6,000,000 from Community Bank and Trust (“CBT”) and raised about $2,000,000 from investors to develop the property, primarily Phase 1, with improvements such as roads, a 5,000-foot concrete runway and taxi way, 38 hangers, a fuel

farm and a 13,000 square foot clubhouse. Only Phase 1 was pledged as collateral to CBT for its $6,000,000 loan though. Ciochetti personally guaranteed the note to CBT. Phases 2 and 3 were unencumbered. When the Great Recession came in 2008 it hit Georgia banks and the real estate market in North Georgia very hard. The second home market, a big part of the real estate economy in North Georgia, collapsed as the price of land and houses plummeted. It became very difficult to sell a home or raw land and almost impossible to get financing or refinancing for a development project. Georgia also led the nation in bank failures in part because so many of the small banks in North Georgia were deeply invested in mortgages on mountain land and second homes.

The Debtor’s lender, CBT, was one of those banks that failed and was taken over by the FDIC. South Carolina Bank and Trust (“SCBT”) ultimately acquired the assets of CBT, including the loan it had extended to Debtor. The value of its collateral for the loan had dropped because of the economic situation. Even though Debtor had performed its obligations under the loan, the loan had matured or was coming up for maturity and SCBT would not renew it, but SCBT told the Debtor it was willing to settle the loan – with a balance of around $5,700,00 at the time – for $2,600,000, less than 50 cents on the dollar. Ciochetti discussed the loan situation with two of the property owners in Heaven's Landing, John Auer and Terry Stiles. Auer and Stiles agreed to loan Debtor the money to settle the debt at the discounted price and to loan other money to Debtor to continue the development. Auer and Stiles formed JT Funding, Inc. (“JT Funding”) to be the secured lender to settle the debt to SCBT at a discount. When this was proposed to SCBT, the Bank advised them that FDIC regulations would not permit it to settle the debt at a discount if the Debtor still owned Phase 1, or if the Debtor or Ciochetti had an ownership interest in the entity that acquired Phase 1. Therefore, Ciochetti,

Auer and Stiles devised a plan to work around that problem which was acceptable to SCBT. Auer and Stiles formed Heaven’s Landing Development, LLC (“HLD”) to become the owner of Phase 1. The Debtor would do a short sale of Phase 1 to HLD for $2,600,000, SCBT would release its lien, and JT Funding would finance the transaction (the “HLD Note” and together with the Real Estate Deed to Secure Debt and any other related documents, the “HLD Loan Documents”), which was secured by all three phases of the project. JT Funding also made another loan of $1,300,000 to Debtor (the “Debtor Note” and together with the HLD Note, the “Notes) at that time to continue the development of the Property, which loan was also secured by all three phases of the project. Debtor could still own Phases 2 and 3 under this transaction because SCBT did not have those two

phases as collateral. The short sale and the loans closed in 2013. The HLD and Debtor Notes had a term of seven years, maturing in 2020. In addition to receiving interest under the Notes, JT Funding received 22% of the net cash flow from each borrower as defined in the Notes (the “Profit Participation”). Neither Ciochetti nor the Debtor had any ownership interest in HLD or JT Funding. At the hearing, both parties testified that this was really intended to be a loan transaction, but it was set up this way to satisfy the FDIC regulations. Even though HLD became the sole title owner of Phase 1, and Ciochetti had no membership interest in HLD, Ciochetti was required to guarantee the HLD Note to JT Funding and Debtor was required to pledge all of its property, Phases 2 and 3, to collateralize the HLD Note under a single security deed covering all three phases. And even though neither HLD, Auer, nor Stiles had an ownership interest in Debtor, HLD was required to pledge its property, Phase 1, as collateral for the Debtor Note to JT Funding. So basically, this was really a $4,000,000 transaction collateralized by the entire Property, Phases 1, 2 and 3, where a default would result in the foreclosure of the entire Property because the entire Property,

regardless of who held legal title, was pledged as collateral under one single security deed. Auer testified that no valuation was performed before HLD and JT Funding agreed to enter into the transaction with the Debtor.

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