In Re Bayou Group, LLC

431 B.R. 549, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 1228, 52 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 280, 2010 WL 1416776
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 5, 2010
Docket19-35331
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 431 B.R. 549 (In Re Bayou Group, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Bayou Group, LLC, 431 B.R. 549, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 1228, 52 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 280, 2010 WL 1416776 (N.Y. 2010).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON MOTION OF UNOFFICIAL COMMITTEE PURSUANT TO 11 U.S.C. §§ 503(b)(3)(D) and (b)(4)

ROBERT D. DRAIN, Bankruptcy Judge.

The members of the Unofficial Creditors Committee of the Bayou OnShore Funds (the “Unofficial Committee” or “Committee”) 1 have requested the entry of an order under section 503(b)(4) of the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. §§ 101 et seq., allowing, as administrative expenses, the fees and expenses of counsel to the Committee for pre-bankruptcy services (the “Motion”). The Motion seeks payment by the estate of $677,829.17. The United States Trustee objected to the Motion, as have certain judgment debtors — generally known as the “Sonnenschein Defendants” — of the debtors herein (the “Debtors” or the “OnShore Entities”). A creditor, DB Structured Products, Inc., joined in the Sonnenschein Defendants’ objection. 2

The Court has reviewed the pleadings filed in connection with the Motion as well as the exhibits thereto, including the contemporaneous time and expense records of the Unofficial Committee’s counsel, and considered the record of the March 5, 2010 hearing on the Motion. This Memorandum of Decision states the Court’s basis for substantially granting the Motion and, except as noted, overruling the objections.

Background

Notwithstanding the rationale in Samuel Israel Ill’s July 26, 2005 letter to investors that he was closing the Bayou family of funds to devote more time to his family and personal life, it became clear in the late summer of 2005 that the Bayou funds (including the OnShore Entities) were a Ponzi scheme, their earnings fraudulently reported and largely fictitious, and, therefore, that they were doomed to collapse. Soon thereafter, federal authorities raided the funds’ Connecticut offices and seized their contents, and the funds’ principals were placed in federal custody and their assets were subjected to seizure and forfeiture. (Eventually certain cash of the Debtors and/or their principals also was turned over by Arizona regulators to the Department of Justice.) Nevertheless, apparently because of disagreements among the SEC, the CFTC and the Department of Justice, the governmental authorities did not actively seek the appointment of an equity receiver for the OnShore Entities. 3

*554 When it became clear that the appointment of an equity receiver might not be forthcoming, various investors in the OnShore Entities who had been unable to redeem their investments before the funds’ collapse and, therefore, were looking for ways to make good their losses, contacted each other. Although still operating largely in the dark, by January 2006, several of them determined, with the advice of counsel to individual investors, to form the Unofficial Committee to represent the interests of defrauded investors as a whole.

The largest investor, Silvercreek sent a notice of the proposed formation of the Unofficial Committee to all creditors with whom it or other investors were in contact, and the United States Attorney’s office also agreed to include a notice of the Committee’s proposed formation in a general notice to Bayou fraud victims, which apparently was mailed on February 2, 2006. Declaration of Jonathan J. Fisher in Support of the Unofficial On-Shore Creditors’ Committee of the Bayou Family of Companies’ Motion to Appoint a Receiver ¶¶ 4-5. Forty-two creditors with in excess of $109 million of unpaid investments responded. On February 7, 2006, six of the largest investors agreed to sit on the Unofficial Committee and to retain counsel for the Committee, the cost of which they agreed to share pro rata based on the amount of their unpaid investments. Id. ¶¶ 5-6.

Actually the Unofficial Committee retained two firms: Preston Gates Ellis & Rouvelas Meeds LLP (now K & L Gates LLP), on February 22, 2005, and Kasowitz, Benson, Torres & Friedman LLP (“KBLT & F”), on March 1, 2005.

With K & L Gates’ assistance, the six investors further publicized and organized the Unofficial Committee’s formation and held the Committee’s first official meeting, which took place on February 28, 2005.

Based on the March 5, 2010 hearing record and on the Unofficial Committee’s Bylaws, which were approved at a March 14, 2005 meeting, it appears that the Committee was indeed established to represent the collective interests of all unsecured creditors of the OnShore Entities, the vast majority of which were defrauded investors. The Unofficial Committee’s overarching goal was “to represent the interests of creditors holding unsecured claims against one or more of the on-shore entities comprising the Bayou family of companies ... by facilitating the marshalling of assets of Debtor and prompt distribution to creditors.” By-laws of the Unofficial On-Shore Creditors’ Committee of the Bayou Family of Companies (“Bylaws”) Art. II. This goal was inconsistent with interests that the individual Committee members may have had to increase their own recovery at the expense of other similarly situated creditors. Given the Unofficial Committee members’ cost sharing agreement, it also was in their interest to add to the voting membership of the Committee and thus reduce their pro rata share of the costs. The Unofficial Committee sought wide participation in its activities, not only encouraging investors to become voting members but also inviting investors to participate as non-voting ex officio members.

It was clear even before the Unofficial Committee’s formation that a significant source of creditor recovery (and perhaps the primary source, given that the Bayou funds’ hard assets and the assets of its principals had been seized and were subject to criminal forfeiture) was the Debt *555 ors’ potential claims against investors who had redeemed or partially redeemed their investments before the OnShore Entities’ collapse. The Sonnenschein Defendants, so-called “full redeemers,” turned out to be such a target; DB Structured Products, Inc., a so-called “partial redeemer” (that is, an investor who was repaid some but not all of its investment before the OnShore Entities’ collapse) was another.

DB Structured Products, Inc. has contended that the Unofficial Committee ignored its legitimate concerns as a creditor in respect of its claim for the portion of its investment that was not redeemed, and, in fact, after the commencement of the bankruptcy case the official committee of unsecured creditors, which substantially overlapped with the prepetition Unofficial Committee, may have favored strategies to exert litigation leverage on DB and other similarly situated partial redeemers that gave short shrift to those entities’ rights as creditors. However, review of counsel to the Unofficial Committee’s time records and the other pleadings filed in connection with the Motion establish that the Unofficial Committee did not engage in such conduct prepetition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
431 B.R. 549, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 1228, 52 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 280, 2010 WL 1416776, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bayou-group-llc-nysb-2010.