In Re Frascella Enterprises, Inc.

360 B.R. 435, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 455, 47 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 239, 2007 WL 474043
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 8, 2007
Docket19-10785
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 360 B.R. 435 (In Re Frascella Enterprises, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Frascella Enterprises, Inc., 360 B.R. 435, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 455, 47 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 239, 2007 WL 474043 (Pa. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion

DIANE WEISS SIGMUND, Chief Judge.

Before the Court are (1) the request for confirmation of the Amended Plan of Reorganization (the “Plan”) proposed by Fras-eella Enterprises, Inc. d/b/a Cash Today (the “Debtor”) and (2) the Motion of creditors Lawrence Turner, Linda Davis and Demyri Hill (together with the class they seek to represent, the “Consumers”) for Estimation of their Class Claim (“Estimation Motion”). The Debtor opposed the Estimation Motion on various procedural and substantive grounds. Certain of those objections were overruled for the reasons stated herein and on the record, and an *437 estimation hearing was held prior to the plan confirmation hearing. 1 The Consumers were the sole objectors to confirmation, 2 and without regard to their yet to be quantified claim, all other classes of creditors voted to accept the Plan.

BACKGROUND

Introduction. The Debtor is presently in the business of operating check cashing retail stores. Its expenses which have exceeded its income have been borne by affiliated companies through intercompany transfers and joint management arrangements. Exhibit T-l. The three remaining check cashing stores are to be closed and their assets liquidated upon confirmation. 3 Instead the objective of the Debtor’s reorganization is to resume the payday lending business 4 discontinued by the Debtor in 2005 when Pennsylvania imposed restrictions on that enterprise. The Debtor intends to accomplish this through a merger with Frascella Enterprises of Delaware LLC (the “Subsidiary”) which acquired the Debtor’s portfolio of payday loans shortly before the Chapter 11 case was commenced and has continued to make these short term loans as a Delaware corporation. After the merger, the Subsidiary will be the surviving entity and will assume the obligations to the Debtor’s unsecured creditors under the Plan. Specifically the reorganized company (“Reorganized Fras-cella”) 5 will be responsible for annual payments to unsecured creditors in the amount of $200,000 for five years commencing twelve months after the effective date of the Plan. 6 The Debtor, as well as *438 other entities discussed below, are owned entirely by the Frascella Brothers. The Subsidiary is, as its name implies, owned by the Debtor.

Background of the Frascella Brothers Lending Business. In 2000 the Debtor was formed with the intention of making payday loans over the phone, internet and significantly in retail stores which would also provide check cashing services. In anticipation of more favorable state legislation, the Debtor leased a number of storefronts to provide these loans. 7 Meanwhile, banks were not excluded from making the short term loans to borrowers whose state usury law prohibited them so long as the loan did not violate the bank’s state usury law. Delaware state law does not impose a usury limitation, and thus in 2000 the Debtor formed a relationship with County Bank of Rehobeth, Delaware (“County Bank”) 8 whereby the Debtor would accept the loan applications over the internet, telephone or at one of its storefront offices and submit them to County Bank who would fund the loans. At the end of each day, the Debtor purchased a 90% participation in the loan portfolio (and concomitantly acquired a 90% share of the revenues earned from the loans) with County Bank retaining a 10% interest. Disci. St. § 5.2. In order to raise the capital necessary to purchase the loan participation, the Debtor borrowed from seventeen investors pursuant to promissory notes which paid monthly interest annualized at 30%. Id. 9 As of the Petition Date, the Debtor was current on its obligations to the investors but still owed them $2,270,000. See also infra p. 10.

In March 2005, the FDIC announced new regulations which would foreclose the continuation of the bank lending model described above. On March 17, 2005 the Frascella Brothers formed the Subsidiary and applied for a Delaware license to provide these loans which were not permitted under Pennsylvania usury laws. In response to the regulatory climate, County Bank exited the short-term lending business on May 1, 2005. Looking for a way to continue the payday lending business, the Debtor purchased the remaining 10% interest in the existing loan portfolio for $120,000 and turned to an affiliate, Ambassador Financial Services, Inc. (“Ambassador”) as the “interim lender” for new and existing payday loans until the Subsidiary obtained a Delaware banking license to continue making the loans. Disci. St. § 5.2 at 12-13. Ambassador, as discussed below, was in the same line of business for itself. 10 When the Subsidiary received its *439 Delaware license on December 23, 2005, it presumably began to operate a payday lending business as it now intends to do after the merger with the Debtor.

The Litigation. The Debtor’s Chapter 11 case, which was filed on January 30, 2006, has been animated by two actions, both of which the Debtor removed from the state court shortly after filing its bankruptcy petition. The first (“Richmond Action”), in which Richmond Financial, Inc. alleged fraudulent transfers and civil conspiracy among the Frascella Brothers and their various entities, including the Debtor, was settled. 11 The other action, which continues to define this case, is a consumer class action (the “Class Action”) commenced by Lawrence Turner, Linda Davis and Demyri Hill, on behalf of themselves and all others similarly situated, against Frascella Enterprises, Inc. d/b/a Cash Today and its principals David Frascella and Larry Frascella. Adv. No. 06-101. The Class Action seeks redress for certain allegedly usurious short term loans made to Pennsylvania consumers by the Frascella Brothers through the Debtor d/b/a Cash Today.

While the Class Action was removed to this Court many months ago, the case has become mired in a dispute about jurisdiction. After removing the lawsuit to federal court from the state court, the Debtor promptly filed a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction, invoking the enforceability of an arbitration clause in the loan contracts it entered into with the Consumers. In response, the Consumers averred that the arbitration provision upon which the Debtor relies is procedurally and substantively unconscionable and therefore legally unenforceable. 12 Concluding that there *440 were insufficient facts upon which to find that arbitration was mandated, I denied the motion to dismiss 13

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Bluebook (online)
360 B.R. 435, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 455, 47 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 239, 2007 WL 474043, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-frascella-enterprises-inc-paeb-2007.