In Re Flamingo 55, Inc.

378 B.R. 893, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 3653, 2007 WL 4224342
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Nevada
DecidedOctober 17, 2007
Docket12-52708
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 378 B.R. 893 (In Re Flamingo 55, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Nevada primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Flamingo 55, Inc., 378 B.R. 893, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 3653, 2007 WL 4224342 (Nev. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION ON TRUSTEE’S AND EMERALD GATE’S OBJECTION TO SUBROGATION CLAIM

BRUCE A. MARKELL, Bankruptcy Judge.

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I.Introduction

Gregory Grantham and John Saba are two California attorneys who also jointly invest in businesses and real estate. After foreclosure of a California property in which they had an interest, they filed a claim in this bankruptcy. 1 That claim asserts that Nevada property owned the debtor, Flamingo 55, Inc. (“Flamingo 55”), also secured the claim satisfied by the California foreclosure. Accordingly, Grantham and Saba claim they are now subrogated to the foreclosing entity’s claim against Flamingo 55.

Timothy Cory, the chapter 7 trustee (“Trustee”), and Emerald Gate Construction, Inc. (“Emerald Gate”), each objects to the claim on myriad grounds. After a review of the lengthy and convoluted record, this court sustains the Trustee’s and *900 Emerald Gate’s objections, and disallows Grantham and Saba’s claim.

II. Facts — “Over, Under, Sideways, Down” 2

Grantham and Saba’s claim originated with a failed limited liability company, Broadway-Acacia, LLC (“BA”). BA was organized in 1997. Its members were Grantham, Saba, Mervyn Phelan, Sr., Mer-vyn Phelan, Jr., and Craig Brown. Each member was to have a 20% interest, even though Grantham and Saba contributed 60% of the enterprise’s funds. Case No. 03-19478, Docket No. 84, Memorandum of Points and Authorities p. 2 (May 28, 2004).

In late 1997, BA purchased property at 410 Broadway in Laguna Beach, California (“California Property”) from the Resolution Trust Company for $500,000. BA later invested another $100,000 for renovations and improvements. This was a good investment; indications are that by 2001 the California Property’s value had increased to almost $1.8 million due to the improvements and other work. Further, indications in the record show that BA may have refinanced the property and used a portion of the refinancing proceeds to invest in other real estate. Id.

All would have been well but for the fact that Grantham and Saba had thrown their lot in with crooks. In May 2001, Brown, Phelan, Sr., and Phelan, Jr., caused BA to encumber its real estate. The purpose of this encumbrance was to allow another entity controlled by the Phelans and Brown to acquire land in Nevada. That entity, then known as Senior Care Homes, Inc., 3 formed a wholly-owned subsidiary to take title to the Nevada property. That subsidiary is the debtor in this case, Flamingo 55. Acting through Senior Care, the Phelans and others caused Flamingo 55 to acquire 54 unimproved lots in Las Vegas, Nevada (the “Nevada Property”). 4 Five hundred thousand dollars of the downpayment for the acquisition came from a $675,000 loan made by Datacom, Inc. (“Datacom”). Both BA and Flamingo 55 signed the note representing the loan. Datacom secured the note with a first deed of trust on the Nevada Property, and a second deed of trust on the California Property. The seller of the Nevada Property, an entity currently known as Emerald Gate, received cash and notes as consideration for the conveyance of the Nevada Property to Flamingo 55. 5

All of the relevant parties also signed a “Cross-Collaterization Agreement” under *901 which they all agreed that Datacom could look to any of its security in any order in case of a default. This included Phelan Jr. and Brown, BA’s managing members. This document is additionally significant because it does not establish any particular priority in terms of payment, and does not use words of guaranty or any form of secondary liability to describe BA’s role. After some delays, the transaction closed, with Flamingo 55 taking title to the Nevada Property.

Grantham and Saba allege that they did not learn of the Flamingo 55 transaction until after it occurred. They then reassessed their relationship with the Phelans and Brown and began various legal actions to attempt to unwind the deal.

One of the first successes in their campaign was a $4.5 million default judgment against Senior Care obtained on September 6, 2002. (Case No. 01CC10469, Orange County) (“Default Judgment”). Pursuant to the Default Judgment: “Broadway-Acacia, LLC” 6 was recognized as a failed, de facto, Delaware limited liability company, and was held to be a general partnership; as so characterized, BA was dissolved; Saba was designated partner in charge of wrapping up BA’s affairs; and Grantham and Saba were awarded the California Property.

Grantham and Saba then attempted to domesticate the Default Judgment in Nevada. In October 2002, even though Flamingo 55 was not a party to the Default Judgment, Grantham and Saba applied for a Nevada judgment based upon the Default Judgment. In an effort to evade this action, Phelan, Sr. caused Flamingo 55 to transfer the Nevada Property to Vegas Townhome Partners, L.P. (“VTP”) on November 12, 2002. Senior Care, by then known as Investco, also executed a stock power for the general partner of VTP, Vegas Townhome Partners Management, Inc., in favor of Richfield Financial, LLC, an affiliate of Phelan and his cronies. Case No. 03-19478, Docket No. 84, Memorandum of Points and Authorities pp. 4-5 (May 28, 2004).

In May 2003, Grantham and Saba sued Flamingo 55, VTP, Senior Care and others alleging that the transfer to VTP was fraudulent as to them. In this lawsuit, Grantham and Saba took the position that they were creditors of Flamingo 55 as a result of the Default Judgment, and that, through the doctrine of reverse veil-piercing, the Nevada Property (after avoidance of the fraudulent transfer to VTP) should be encumbered to secure the debts owing under the Default Judgment.

For reasons that are not in the record, VTP transferred the Nevada Property to R.H. Construction and Red Rock Asset Trust on July 1, 2003; these latter two entities were controlled by Grantham and Saba. An involuntary chapter 7 bankruptcy case was then begun against Flamingo 55 on July 21, 2003; the court entered an order for relief on January 15, 2004. VTP commenced a voluntary chapter 11 case on December 12, 2003; this case was converted to a case under chapter 7 on March 18, 2004. Ultimately, both cases were substantively consolidated on May 12, 2004, and the Trustee was confirmed as the chapter 7 trustee for the consolidated case.

The Trustee soon filed a fraudulent transfer action against, among others, Grantham and Saba seeking to avoid the July 1, 2003 transfer of the Nevada Property to the Grantham and Saba-controlled *902 entities. (Adv.Pro. 04-1168). In July-2004, that lawsuit was settled by the re-conveyance of the Nevada Property to Flamingo 55. 7 Case No. 04-1168, docket No. 16, Settlement Stipulation p. 3-4 (May 6. 2005).

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Bluebook (online)
378 B.R. 893, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 3653, 2007 WL 4224342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-flamingo-55-inc-nvb-2007.