Hyman v. Bast Amron LLP (In re Cargo Transportation Services, Inc.)

502 B.R. 875
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedNovember 26, 2013
DocketCase No.: 8:11-bk-00432-MGW; Adv. Pro. No.: 8:13-ap-00580-MGW
StatusPublished

This text of 502 B.R. 875 (Hyman v. Bast Amron LLP (In re Cargo Transportation Services, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hyman v. Bast Amron LLP (In re Cargo Transportation Services, Inc.), 502 B.R. 875 (Fla. 2013).

Opinion

Chapter 11

MEMORANDUM OPINION ON CROSS MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

Michael G. Williamson, United States Bankruptcy Judge

Under 11 U.S.C. § 550(a)(1), a trustee can recover the value of a preferential transfer from an initial transferee unless the transferee served as a mere conduit for the transfer and otherwise acted in good faith. Here, the Debtor made six preferential transfers to the Defendant as part of a settlement agreement in a preference action in another confirmed Chapter 11 case. The settlement funds were deposited into the Defendant’s trust account; however, the Defendant had no right to use the funds. The Defendant was required to transfer the funds as directed by the plan trustee with the presiding bankruptcy court’s approval. Under these circumstances, the Court concludes that the Defendant was a mere conduit for the preferential transfers and otherwise acted in good faith. Accordingly, the Court will enter summary judgment in favor of the Defendant.

Factual and Procedural Background

Larry S. Hyman (the “Plan Trustee”), has sued the law firm of Bast Amron LLP (the “Law Firm”) to recover certain preferential transfers. The factual background leading up to the preference action is not in dispute. Between October 22, 2010 and December 31, 2010, the debtor made six transfers in the amount of $5,000 for total álleged preferences of $80,000. The debtor filed its Chapter 11 petition on January 12, 2011. Therefore, each of the six transfers in question was made within 90 days of the debtor’s bankruptcy petition.

The Law Firm received the transfers in its capacity as counsel for the plan trustee in another confirmed Chapter 11 case involving a debtor by the name of Solar Cosmetics Labs, Inc. In that case, the Law Firm represented the plan trustee of the Solar Cosmetics Liquidating Trust (the “SC Trust”).

The Debtor in this case was a defendant in a preference action brought by the SC Trust that was settled for $150,000. The settlement amount was divided into twenty-nine (29) payments: an initial payment in the amount of $10,000 and twenty-eight (28) subsequent payments of $5,000 to be paid every two weeks. Under the terms of the settlement, the settlement payments were to be paid to the Law Firm’s trust account. The settlement was approved by the bankruptcy court in the Solar Cosmetics case.

Along with the settlement, the bankruptcy court also approved a contingency fee arrangement which called for specific payment of the contingency fee equal to one-third of the settlement amount. Under the contingency fee arrangement ap[877]*877proved by the bankruptcy court in the Solar Cosmetics case, the Law Firm was to be paid directly from the recoveries made from the preference actions brought on behalf of the SC Trust.

In accordance with the settlement, the Debtor in this case transferred six payments amounting to $30,000 to the Law Firm’s trust account during the preference period. The settlement funds were then transferred from the Law Firm’s trust account to its operating account. Fees that had been approved in the Solar Cosmetics Chapter 11 case were then paid, and the balance was transferred to the SC Trust.

According to the Law Firm, it never exercised any legal control over the settlement funds received. Instead, the Law Firm merely held the funds in trust for delivery to the SC Trust in accordance with orders of the bankruptcy court in the Solar Cosmetics case, which controlled every step of the process in approving and implementing the terms of the settlement. The Law Firm did not have the ability to direct where the funds would be transferred other than through the direction of the plan trustee of the SC Trust and with approval of the bankruptcy court in the Solar Cosmetics case.

Conclusions of Law1

Under § 547(b) of the Bankruptcy Code, a trustee may avoid a preferential transfer made within 90 days before the date of the filing of the petition. And § 550 of the Bankruptcy Code authorizes the trustee to recover the value of any preferential transfer avoided under § 547 from the “initial transferee” of the preferential transfer. In this case, there is no dispute that the six transfers in question fall within the 90-day preference period. The issue is whether the Plan Trustee can recover the value of the six transfers in question from the Law Firm as an “initial transferee” under § 550(a)(1).

This Court previously presided over a case involving potential avoidable transfers to a law firm in the case of In re Harwell.2 The District Court’s affirmance of this Court’s decision was reversed by the Eleventh Circuit in a case that clarified the law applicable to attorneys and other parties who serve as intermediaries in the transfer of funds from a party that later files bankruptcy to the firm’s trust account to then be disbursed as directed by the client.3

Under the holding of Harwell, a law firm may be considered the “initial transferee” even where the funds are deposited into the firm’s trust account for the benefit of a client. In some sense, the attorney involved in such a transaction certainly has control to write checks from the firm’s trust account. However, courts, including the Eleventh Circuit, reject a literal meaning of “initial transferee” in favor of a “control” or “conduit” test to determine whether in such instances the recipient of an avoidable transfer of assets is the “initial transferee.”4

Under the “control” test, as explained by the Eleventh Circuit in Harwell, the recipient of an avoidable transfer is an “initial transferee” only if the recipient exercises legal control over the assets, such that the recipient has the right to use [878]*878the assets for its own purposes, and not if the recipient merely serves as a conduit for assets that were under the actual control of the intended transferee.5 The “control” test is an equitable exception to the literal statutory meaning of initial transferee.6 An initial recipient seeking to take advantage of this equitable exception must not only establish that it did not have control over the assets, that is, that the initial recipient merely served as a conduit for the assets that were under the actual control of the debtor transferor, but also that it acted in good faith and as an innocent participant in the underlying transfer.7

On remand, this Court applied the test set forth by the Eleventh Circuit, and concluded that the defendant attorney in Har-well could make no credible argument that he was an unwitting or innocent participant in the transfers made by the debtor. The attorney knew that transfers were intended to get the money away from his client’s major creditor’s collection efforts.8 He knew a judgment had been entered against his client.9 And he knew that the transfers that he was instructed to make by his client to either the client or family members were meant to keep the money away from the creditor. In fact, the attorney in Harwell

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Bluebook (online)
502 B.R. 875, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hyman-v-bast-amron-llp-in-re-cargo-transportation-services-inc-flmb-2013.