In re: Artesian Future Technology, LLC

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 28, 2023
Docket23-1046
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re: Artesian Future Technology, LLC (In re: Artesian Future Technology, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re: Artesian Future Technology, LLC, (bap9 2023).

Opinion

FILED NOT FOR PUBLICATION NOV 28 2023 SUSAN M. SPRAUL, CLERK U.S. BKCY. APP. PANEL UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY APPELLATE PANEL OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT

In re: BAP No. NC-23-1046-SGB ARTESIAN FUTURE TECHNOLOGY, LLC, Bk. No. 22-40396 Debtor.

BRIAN QUINLIVAN, Appellant, MEMORANDUM* v. ARTESIAN FUTURE TECHNOLOGY, LLC, Appellee.

Appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of California Charles D. Novack, Bankruptcy Judge, Presiding

Before: SPRAKER, GAN, and BRAND, Bankruptcy Judges.

INTRODUCTION

Unsecured creditor Brian Quinlivan appeals from an order

confirming debtor Artesian Future Technology, LLC’s (“AFT”) liquidating

plan and approving its compromise under Rule 9019 1 with AFT’s principal

* This disposition is not appropriate for publication. Although it may be cited for whatever persuasive value it may have, see Fed. R. App. P. 32.1, it has no precedential value, see 9th Cir. BAP Rule 8024-1. 1 Unless specified otherwise, all chapter and section references are to the and his parents, as well as the denial of his reconsideration motions. The

compromise was an integral part of the plan.

This appeal is equitably moot. Quinlivan failed to request a stay

pending appeal. Most of the plan’s material provisions have been

consummated and priority creditors have received distributions on their

claims. These creditors would be adversely affected by reversal. Moreover,

it would be impracticable to unwind the plan and compromise by

attempting to claw back the payments made to these creditors required in

any rescission. Accordingly, this appeal is hereby ORDERED DISMISSED

as moot.

FACTS2

A. The rise and fall of AFT.

Prior to its bankruptcy filing, AFT was in the business of

manufacturing custom computers for gaming and cryptocurrency mining.

Noah Katz was AFT’s sole owner, its managing member, and its chief

executive officer. Both parties attribute AFT’s apparently precipitous

downfall to a live-streamed sweepstakes drawing AFT held. During the

event, Noah denied a small internet streamer a prize. The disgruntled

streamer’s complaints about the event resulted in a plague of negative

Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. §§ 101–1532, and all “Rule” references are to the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure. 2 We exercise our discretion to take judicial notice of documents electronically filed in the underlying bankruptcy case. See Atwood v. Chase Manhattan Mortg. Co. (In re Atwood), 293 B.R. 227, 233 n.9 (9th Cir. BAP 2003). 2 social media publicity for AFT. As a result, in March 2022, AFT ceased

operations and laid off its employees.

B. AFT’s bankruptcy filing, the retention of a chief reorganization officer, and the sale of AFT’s tangible assets.

AFT filed a subchapter V petition under chapter 11 in April 2022.

Mark Sharf was appointed to serve as subchapter V trustee. With

bankruptcy court approval, AFT retained legal and financial professionals,

as well as a chief reorganization officer, Dr. Edward Webb of BPM, LLC.

Katz’s parents provided AFT with a secured loan to retain Webb and the

legal and financial professionals. The loan was secured by AFT’s remaining

assets, which included its computers and parts inventory and intangible

assets like its name and customer list. According to Katz, there was no

other available funding source to enable AFT to retain the necessary

professionals.

The bankruptcy court approved an auction sale of AFT’s inventory

and equipment for $140,000, with the parents’ lien attaching to the net sale

proceeds.

C. AFT’s plan and compromise with the Katz family.

In July 2022, AFT filed its liquidating plan. Its key terms included:

(1) payment in full of priority wage and benefit claims and consumer

depositor claims; (2) payment in full of priority tax claims over five years;

and (3) pro rata distribution of $50,000 to general unsecured creditors.

Katz’s parents were to fund the plan in exchange for any claims AFT might

3 hold against the Katz family or others.

In conjunction with the plan, AFT moved for authorization to settle

any claims AFT might have against the members of the Katz family or

others. AFT posited that absent the settlement, it would have insufficient

funds to satisfy priority wage and benefit claims of $122,089 and customer

deposit claims of $5,653.00. Moreover, there would be no funds to pay

priority tax claims and general unsecured claims.

As part of the transaction, Katz’s parents agreed to waive their

$843,055.92 general unsecured claim. The parents also agreed to waive

their secured claim of $398,425 and to relinquish their lien on the net

proceeds from sale of AFT’s tangible assets. Additionally, Katz agreed to

waive his $535,597.71 general unsecured claim against AFT. This was said

to represent the amounts he advanced to AFT, plus liabilities of AFT he

guaranteed or assumed, less amounts AFT transferred to Katz. Though

subsequent amendments to the compromise further refined the transaction,

the core of the transaction never materially changed.

Webb filed a declaration in support of the compromise. Based on his

review of AFT’s records he could not identify any claims against the

parents and believed that any claims against Katz would be complicated,

expensive, and time consuming largely because Katz ran AFT’s finances

through his personal accounts ostensibly for tax purposes. Perhaps more

importantly, Katz appeared destitute, lacked a job, and seemed unable to

obtain a new one.

4 D. Quinlivan’s objection, and the confirmation and compromise proceedings.

In August 2022, Quinlivan objected to AFT’s proposed plan.

Quinlivan alleged that the plan and the settlement were nothing more than

a bad faith attempt to wipe out the Katz family’s personal liability to AFT’s

creditors. The objection is somewhat difficult to follow. Quinlivan

contended that Katz’s parents “floated” loans to AFT as part of a scheme to

use a large amount of AFT’s revenue (allegedly never reported) to fund the

family’s lavish lifestyle—instead of using AFT’s revenue to pay its bills as

they came due. He further claimed that the real purpose of the plan and

settlement was to wrongfully enable the Katz family “to buy the alter ego

claims so that Creditors like myself can not seek proper justice in civil court

at a later date.” 3 Quinlivan additionally alleged that AFT’s “overall

estimated profit was somewhere between $4.5m and $6.5m,” though where

all this money went had not been adequately or reasonably explained.

Quinlivan suspected Katz placed AFT’s revenues into undisclosed

3 Quinlivan’s statement regarding alter ego claims makes little or no sense—at least under California law. Alter ego doctrine is not a claim at all. It is a legal theory that sometimes enables a claimant to pierce the corporate veil and extend liability so that the creditor can seek to recover from the business entity’s principal(s) on account of the business entity’s liabilities to the claimant. See Schaefers v. Blizzard Energy, Inc. (In re Schaefers), 623 B.R. 777, 784–85 (9th Cir.

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