In Re Fortune Natural Resources Corp.

350 B.R. 693
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedSeptember 28, 2003
Docket19-10535
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 350 B.R. 693 (In Re Fortune Natural Resources Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Fortune Natural Resources Corp., 350 B.R. 693 (La. 2003).

Opinion

REASONS FOR DECISION

G.A. BROWN, Bankruptcy Judge.

Before the court is the objection of the Unsecured Creditors’ Committee (“UCC”) and others 1 to the pre-petition claim of Greenwich Legal Associates, LLC (“Greenwich”) in the amount of $300,000. 2 The UCC objects on two related grounds, asserting that Greenwich is both an attorney of the debtor and an insider of the debtor, and is thus entitled to a claim equivalent only to the reasonable value of the services it provided to the debtor, not the full $300,000. Section 502(b) of the Bankruptcy Code provides that “if ... objection to a claim is made, the court ... shall determine the amount of such claim ... as of the date of the filing of the petition, and shall allow such claim except to the extent that ... (4) if such claim is for services of an insider or attorney of the debtor, such claim exceeds the reasonable value of such services.” 3

I.

Greenwich’s claim arises from a Business and Management Consulting Agreement, dated as of February 4, 2004, between the debtor and Lacoff Associates, LLC (the “Agreement”) under which La-coff Associates agreed “to make its representatives available to consult with [the debtor’s] board of directors ... concerning *695 matters relating to proposed business combinations or transactions, tax statutes and regulations and the use of net operating loss carryforwards, and general matters of importance concerning the business and financial affairs of ...” the debtor. The agreement specifically excepted “any ... services normally performed by public accounts [sic].” For this, Lacoff Associates was to be paid a monthly fee of $75,000 plus expenses. The agreement was “amended,” supposedly on May 1, 2004, to assign Lacoff Associates’ “rights, duties, and obligations” under the agreement to Greenwich.

Both Lacoff Associates and Greenwich are Connecticut limited liability companies. 4 Brandon Lacoff and Lacoff Associates are the only two members of Greenwich. 5 Brandon Lacoff is Lacoff Associates’ sole member. 6 Brandon La-coff is both an attorney and an accountant, and is the son of Martin Lacoff, a director of the debtor.

II.

The UCC bases its objection on its assertion that Greenwich is an insider or an attorney of the debtor. If it is either, Greenwich is entitled only to a claim equivalent to the reasonable value of its services under section 502. 7 The UCC asserts that Greenwich is an insider; Greenwich asserts that it falls outside the definition. 8

A.

Bankruptcy Code section 101(31) lists certain specific categories of insiders, but the list is not exclusive. Indeed, “[b]ankrupcty law recognizes two types of insiders: those specifically identified in § 101(31), commonly referred to as ‘per se’ insiders, and those not so identified but who have a sufficiently close relationship with the debtor to be insiders, commonly referred to as ‘non-statutory’ insiders.” 9

Under section 101(31) an “insider” of a corporation “includes” the following: “(i) [a] director of the debtor; (ii)[an] officer of the debtor; (iii)[a] person in control of the debtor; ... or (vi)[a] relative of a ... director, officer, or person in control of the debtor.” 10 A “relative,” in turn, is an “individual related by affinity or consan *696 guinity within the third degree.” 11 Both Martin and Brandon Lacoff are “statutory” insiders of the debtor (Martin because he is a director and Brandon because he is Martin’s son) but Greenwich is not.

Again, however, the fact that Greenwich does not fit squarely within any of the five types of corporate insiders explicitly denoted in section 101(31) does not pretermit the inquiry, for section 101(31) sets forth only a non-exclusive list, providing examples of what the term insider “includes.” 12 “ ‘[I]neludes’ ... [is] not limiting.” 13 Indeed, when Brandon Lacoff is without question an insider of the debtor, it would be both folly and a triumph of form over substance to hold that the LLC over which Brandon exerts complete control is not an insider. Certainly Congress’ reasons for requiring heightened scrutiny for certain individuals apply with equal force to entities entirely controlled by such individuals. To hold otherwise would be to eviscerate this section of the code by inviting insiders to escape judicial scrutiny simply by incorporating themselves.

Beyond the Code’s explicit or per se insiders, “insider status may be based on a professional or business relationship with the debtor, ... where such relationship with the debtor [is] close enough to gain an advantage attributable simply to affinity rather than to the course of business dealings between the parties.” 14 The idea that affinity between two entities might lead to a skewed course of dealing was not too far from Congress’ collective mind, according to which “[a]n insider is one who has a sufficiently close relationship with the debtor that his conduct is made subject to closer scrutiny than those dealing at arm[’]s length with the debt- or.” 15 Presumably, in enacting section 502 (which calls for a court to scrutinize insider claims for reasonableness), Congress was generally leery of the advantages an insider-creditor of a debtor may enjoy over outsider-creditors simply by virtue of being an insider. These advantages stem from the understandable tendency of a debtor to favor creditors close to it. Outsider-creditors are disadvantaged to the extent that the insider-creditors are able to recover disproportionately on an excessive claim. To be sure, a claim is unreasonably excessive in the first place presumably because of the creditor’s insider status. A debtor’s general favoritism toward an insider may cause the debtor to behave in an economically irrational way, agreeing to pay an unreasonable amount for the insider’s services or goods. Indeed, “insider transactions [are] less vulnerable to the market pressures that help control arm’s-length transactions.” 16 When a creditor is not an insider, market forces will be unhindered, and there is then less likelihood that a creditor’s claim *697 will exceed the reasonable value of its services to the debtor; ergo, there is less of a need for a court to scrutinize the reasonableness of a claim.

Greenwich is certainly close enough to Fortune to raise the prospect that dealings between the two entities might be significantly influenced by affinity instead of rational market forces.

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Bluebook (online)
350 B.R. 693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-fortune-natural-resources-corp-laeb-2003.