In Re: Larisa Ivanovna Markus

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 3, 2020
Docket1:19-cv-09611
StatusUnknown

This text of In Re: Larisa Ivanovna Markus (In Re: Larisa Ivanovna Markus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District 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: Larisa Ivanovna Markus, (S.D.N.Y. 2020).

Opinion

USDC SDNY DOCUMENT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK DOC #: □□□ nn a ne a a ne □□ DK DATE FILED: 4/3/2020 LARISA IVANOVNA MARKUS, : Appellant, : : 19-cv- 10781 (LJL) -V- : 19-cv-09611 (LJL) YURI VLADIMIROVICH ROZHKOV, : OPINION & ORDER Appellee. : □□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□ +--+ +--+ = ---- = X LEWIS J. LIMAN, United States District Judge: Victor A. Worms (“Worms”), as counsel for debtor Larisa Ivanovna Markus (“Markus”) in a Chapter 15 proceeding, appeals the Bankruptcy Court’s orders imposing sanctions on him and awarding fees to his opposing counsel. For the following reasons, the Bankruptcy Court’s sanctions and fees orders are affirmed in part and vacated in part. Both orders are remanded for further proceedings. I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND Larisa Ivanovna Markus is a Russian citizen. BK-ECF 2 at 2.' From 1995 through 2016, she served as president of Vneshprombank, formerly one of Russia’s largest banks. Id. at 3. In 2016, the Moscow Arbitration Court declared Vneshprombank insolvent and commenced a bankruptcy proceeding. /n re Foreign Econ. Indus. Bank Ltd., “WVneshprombank” Ltd., 607 B.R.

! This opinion references various materials from the Bankruptcy Court’s docket, which has case number 19-10096, and is abbreviated here as “BK-ECF.” Immediately following “BK-ECF” is the docket number of the cited material, followed by number of the page where that material appears. Citations to “ECF” reference this Court’s docket. Because there are two related appeals at issue, the opinion references two different ECF dockets, each bearing a different case number. The appeal of the Bankruptcy Court’s sanctions order has case number 19-cv-9611, while the appeal of the Bankruptcy Court’s fees order has case number 19-cv-10871. This opinion uses “Sanctions ECF” to reference the sanctions appeal (19-cv-9611) and “Fees ECF” to reference the fees appeal (19-cv-10871). As with the Bankruptcy Court citations, immediately following “Sanctions ECF” or “Fees ECF” is the docket number of the cited material, followed by number of the page where that material appears.

160, 163 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2019).2 In 2017, following a criminal conviction and appeal in Russian courts, Markus received an eight-and-a-half year prison sentence for large-scale fraud. BK-ECF 5-4, 5-5. According to the judgment of conviction, Markus “creat[ed] an organized criminal group from the Bank’s employees and other persons,” with the intent to “steal a significant amount of funds from the Bank.” BK-ECF 5-4 at 29. Her role in the enterprise was,

inter alia, “to find trusted persons and promote them to executive positions in the governing bodies of the Bank; . . .to plan the obtaining and further distribution of criminal proceeds, including outside of the Russian Federation; [and] to take action aimed at fostering the trust of the individuals who were the Bank’s clients.” Id. at 3–4. Approximately one month after the Moscow Arbitration Court declared Vneshprombank insolvent, one of Markus’s creditors applied for commencement of a personal bankruptcy proceeding against Markus. BK-ECF 6 at 2. That application was granted. Id. The Moscow Arbitration Court appointed Yuri Vladimirovich Rozhkov as Markus’s financial administrator. Id. In May 2017, the Moscow Arbitration Court initiated a procedure to liquidate

Markus’s assets and appointed Yuri Vladimirovich Rozhkov to preside over the liquidation. Id. Under Russian Bankruptcy Law, Yuri Vladimirovich Rozhkov is responsible for pursuing actions against persons or entities that contributed to Markus’ insolvency. Id. On January 10, 2019, Yuri Vladimirovich Rozhkov, proceeding as Markus’s Foreign Representative (hereinafter, “FR”), filed a Verified Petition Under Chapter 15 for Recognition of Foreign Main Proceeding in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York (“Chapter 15 Petition”). BK-ECF 2. The FR’s declaration in support of the Chapter 15 Petition explained that he intended to “seek discovery concerning Ms. Markus’ assets which

2 On February 15, 2017, the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York granted the petition of Vneshprombank’s trustee to recognize Vneshprombank’s Russian bankruptcy proceeding as a foreign main proceeding. See Bankruptcy ECF Case No. 16-13534 at Dkt. No. 24. might be located in the United States.” BK-ECF 6 at 6. On April 1, 2019, the Bankruptcy Court entered an order granting Chapter 15 recognition of the insolvency proceeding against Markus. BK-ECF 29. Discovery issues began almost immediately. See BK-ECF 45 at 65 (FR’s counsel referencing “a host of discovery disputes” at a hearing on April 11, 2019). In early May, counsel

for the FR (hereinafter, “the FR”) asked the Bankruptcy Court to hold a conference regarding discovery. BK-ECF 52. The Bankruptcy Court granted the request, setting a conference for May 29, 2019. Id. The day before the conference, Victor A. Worms filed an appearance on behalf of Markus. BK-ECF 55. By letter dated May 28, 2019 (but docketed May 29, 2019), Worms advised that he intended to file a motion to vacate the recognition order, and he requested a stay of all proceedings pending a ruling on that motion. BK-ECF 56.3 The conference proceeded as scheduled on May 29, 2019. Soon after it began, Worms orally requested “an interim stay of the discovery issues” in light of the “extraordinary nature” of the proceedings. BK-ECF 59 at 13. The details of Worms’s position on the recognition order are

not at issue in this appeal; in brief, he asserted that the Bankruptcy Court lacked jurisdiction at the time it entered the recognition order and that Markus had suffered due process violations. Id. at 11. The Bankruptcy Court declined to entertain those arguments at that time, noting, “[W]e are now here for a discovery conference,” but the Bankruptcy Court assured Worms that it would take up those arguments if Worms brought “a proper motion.” Id. at 12–13. The Bankruptcy Court then heard argument on various discovery issues. Summarizing the landscape, the Bankruptcy Court discerned “a little bit of exaggeration going on on both sides”; while the FR was inaccurate to complain that he had received “nothing,” there was

3 Worms later informed the Bankruptcy Court that he completed and filed the letter at 12:02 a.m. on May 29, 2019. BK-ECF 59 at 10. “clearly, clearly a pattern of not complying with . . . discovery obligations” on the part of certain Markus-related entities. Id. at 29. Ultimately, the Bankruptcy Court ordered counsel for certain entities to make a production that day. Id. at 32. Worms objected, arguing that he needed to see “any production relating to” Markus. Id. The Bankruptcy Court refused to delay the production, despite Worms’s protestation that he “only got involved in the case yesterday.” Id. On June 18,

2019, Worms filed a motion to vacate the recognition order. BK-ECF 70. On June 24, 2019, the FR emailed Worms with a proposed subpoena and an invitation to meet and confer the following day. BK-ECF 79-3 at 2. Worms responded: As we say in the Yiddish, you have real chutzpah sending me this proposed subpoena especially since I have maintained all along, and have documented, that this Chapter 15 proceeding is completely illegitimate, and the Recognition Order entered by the Bankruptcy Court is null and void.

Therefore, I will not be meeting and conferring with you concerning the proposed subpoena because it is my unshakable intention to move to quash the subpoena at the earliest possible moment, but in all events prior to the subpoena’s return date of July 8, 2019.

You and your law firm were successfully able to bamboozle an inattentive judge in signing a recognition order and to permit blunderbuss discovery in this proceeding. However, the days of you and your firm running amok in this proceeding are over.

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In Re: Larisa Ivanovna Markus, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-larisa-ivanovna-markus-nysd-2020.