Hillen v. City of Many Trees (In re CVAH, Inc.)

570 B.R. 816
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Idaho
DecidedMay 2, 2017
DocketBankruptcy Case No. 14-00888-JDP; Adv. Proceeding No. 15-06030-JDP, Adv. Proceeding No. 15-06031-JDP, Adv. Proceeding No. 15-06046-JDP, Adv. Proceeding No. 16-06014-JDP
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 570 B.R. 816 (Hillen v. City of Many Trees (In re CVAH, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Idaho primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hillen v. City of Many Trees (In re CVAH, Inc.), 570 B.R. 816 (Idaho 2017).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OP DECISION

Honorable Jim D. Pappas, United States Bankruptcy Judge

Introduction

The Bankruptcy Code clothes a bankruptcy trustee with special powers to “avoid”, or undo, transfers made by a debtor to others, in some situations, several years before a bankruptcy case is commenced. In designing bankruptcy proceedings to treat a debtor’s creditors equitably, the trustee’s avoiding powers serve to prevent a debtor from interfering with its creditor’s rights to fairly share in a limited pool of assets by conveying cash or property to others without, for example, receiving reasonably equivalent value in return. In addition, giving a trustee special, federal bankruptcy avoiding powers, the Bankruptcy Code allows trustees to “step into the shoes” of existing creditors to assert their rights under “applicable law” to challenge the debtor’s prebankruptcy transfers.

In these four adversary proceedings, a bankruptcy trustee seeks to avoid transfers made by a corporate debtor during the years prior to its bankruptcy. Because these cash payments did not satisfy any debts legally owed by the debtor, the trustee alleges the transfers resulted in no benefit to the debtor, and under applicable law, could have been avoided by the debt- or’s major current creditor, IRS. The stakes are high: by standing in the shoes of IRS, Trustee seeks to recover a combined total of about $357,000 in these four actions. The defendants who received the transfers from the debtor are resisting the trustee’s efforts.

This decision examines the nearly identical motions to dismiss filed by each of the defendants in these four separate, but related, adversary proceedings prosecuted by plaintiff Noah Hillen (“Trustee”), the chapter 71 trustee in the bankruptcy case of debtor CVAH, Inc. (“CVAH”). See Hillen v. City of Many Trees, LLC, 15-06030-JDP, Dkt. No. 40; Hillen v. Barclays Bank PLC, 15-06031-JDP, Dkt. No. 37; Hillen v. Idaho Power Co., 15-06046, Dkt. No. 38; Hillen v. U.S. Bank, N.A., 16-06014-JDP, Dkt. No. 34 (collectively, “the motions”). Trustee opposes the motions. See City of Many Trees, Tr.’s Resp., Dkt. No. 55 (and identical responses filed in each of the adversary proceedings). The motions challenge Trustee’s legal right to avoid what Trustee alleges were constructively fraudulent transfers made to the defendants by CVAH to pay the personal debts of its owner and others prior to its bankruptcy filing.

[821]*821The Court conducted a consolidated hearing concerning the dismissal motions, at which the parties presented oral argument and responded to the Court’s questions, on March 8, 2017. At the conclusion of the hearing, the Court took the issues raised by the motions under advisement. Having considered the parties’ briefs, oral arguments, and the applicable law, this Memorandum of Decision explains the Court’s reasons for its decision to deny the motions.

Factual Allegations

As alleged in Trustee’s complaints against the defendants, CVAH was organized and operated to provide veterinary services to its customers. Compl. at 3.2 CVAH’s assets consisted of the income generated by the vet practice, including the cash flowing through its bank accounts, and a modest assortment of office furniture, equipment and supplies. Id, The only licensed veterinarian ever employed by CVAH was Richard Koritansky (“Kori-tansky”). Id. CVAH also occasionally employed members of Koritansky’s family in other positions. Id.

CVAH failed to pay corporate income taxes owed to both the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) and the Idaho State Tax Commission (“the ISTC”) for calendar years 2009 through 2013. Id. at 3-5. When CVAH later failed and filed a chapter 7 bankruptcy case on May 27, 2014, CVAH owed IRS and the ISTC a total of approximately $1.5 million. Id. at 2, 5.

In the six years leading up to the petition date, CVAH made a large number of payments from its bank accounts to the four defendants in these actions. See, e.g., Compl. at 5.3 Trustee alleges that, at the time of each of these transfers, CVAH did not owe any debts to the defendants, and that the corporation did not receive anything of value in return for the payments. Id. 5-6. Allegedly, the payments were made to satisfy debts incurred by other individuals or entities, including Koritan-sky and his family members. Id. at 6. Trustee alleges that, at the time the payments were made, CVAH was indebted to IRS and ISTC and could not pay its tax liabilities. Id. at 6.

Trustee claims that CVAH made the transfers with actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud IRS and the ISTC. Id. He alleges CVAH’s principals consistently failed to file required tax returns, despite knowing taxes were owed, until after the company ceased doing business. Id. at 7. He also alleges that CVAH had a history of failing to file tax returns, and avoiding tax payments through the depletion of CVAH’s assets. Id. at 7. Trustee claims that, at the time the transfers were made, CVAH was insolvent, was engaged in business for which its remaining assets were unreasonably small, and that CVAH’s principals believed or should have believed that it would incur debts beyond its ability to pay as they became due. Id.

[822]*822 Procedural Background

Based on these factual allegations, Trustee argues that, under several different statutes, he is empowered to avoid and recover the transfers made by CVAH to the defendants. See, e.g., City of Many Trees, Dkt. No. 1. In the complaints against each of the defendants, Trustee makes three claims for relief, each premised upon a different statute, or combination of such statutory provisions.

In “Claim Three” of the complaints, relying upon a trustee’s avoiding power found in § 544(b)(1), Trustee cites the Idaho version of the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act, and in particular, Idaho Code §§ 55-913 and 55-914,4 as his authority to avoid and recover, as constructive fraudulent transfers, those payments made to the defendants that occurred within the four-year extinguishment period described in those state statutes leading up to the CVAH petition date. Id. at 9-10. The motions do not challenge Trustee’s right to assert these claims.

However, employing a more novel legal theory, in Claims One and Two of the complaints, again asserting § 544(b)(1) powers, Trustee seeks to “step into the shoes” of the creditor IRS, and thereby, to utilize the longer “look-back” periods found in the Federal Debt Collection Procedures Act (“FDCPA”), 28 U.S.C. § 3306, and Internal Revenue Code (“IRC”), 26 U.S.C. § 6502, to recapture any transfers made by CVAH to the defendants within six years prior to the petition filing date. Id. at 7-9. The motions to dismiss argue that Trustee’s Claims One and Two against them fail to state a claim upon which relief may be granted. See Rule 7012(b) (making Civil Rule 12(b) applicable in adversary proceedings).

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570 B.R. 816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hillen-v-city-of-many-trees-in-re-cvah-inc-idb-2017.