In re Living Hope Southeast, LLC

505 B.R. 237, 2014 WL 523384, 2014 Bankr. LEXIS 582
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 29, 2014
DocketNo. 4:12-bk-11082
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 505 B.R. 237 (In re Living Hope Southeast, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Living Hope Southeast, LLC, 505 B.R. 237, 2014 WL 523384, 2014 Bankr. LEXIS 582 (Ark. 2014).

Opinion

ORDER DENYING MOTION FOR RELIEF

AUDREY R. EVANS, Bankruptcy Judge.

On July 25, 2013, the Court heard Pinewood Enterprises, L.C.’S Motion for Relief From the Automatic Stay (the “Motion for Relief’) filed by Pinewood Enterprises, L.C. (“Pinewood”) (Dkt. # 106); Trustee Renee S. Williams’s Objection to Pinewood Enterprises L.C.’s Motion for Relief From Stay filed by Renee Williams (the “Southwest Trustee”) (Dkt. # 190); the First Amended Objection To Pinewood Enterprises, L.C.’s Motion For Relief From The Automatic Stay filed by the Southwest Trustee (Dkt. # 314); and the Objection to Motion for Relief from Stay filed by Michael E. Collins (the “Southeast Trustee”) (Dkt. # 323). Dr. James Naples has been substituted for Pinewood with respect to the Motion for Relief. See Order Denying in Part Motion to Substitute (Dkt. # 316).1 At the close of evidence, the Court explained it would allow closing briefs and entered an order setting forth deadlines for those briefs, and they have since been timely filed. For the reasons explained herein, the Court denies Naples’s Motion for Relief.

INTRODUCTION

The factual background and history of this Chapter 11 Debtor, as well as certain related entities and individuals, has been described extensively in the Addendum to: Order Granting Motions to Appoint Trustee (Dkt. #293) entered on July 9, 2013 [239]*239(the “Addendum”). The Court will not repeat that background here. The Debtor is an Arkansas Limited Liability Company that provides outpatient psychiatric services and has been profitable most months since filing bankruptcy according to its operating reports. From the case’s inception, according to multiple statements made before this Court, the purpose of this Debtor’s Chapter 11 filing has been to allow it to operate while defending litigation in several courts, and to bring that litigation to a close and liquidate claims against it so that it could determine whether it could propose a feasible Chapter 11 plan. On April 19, 2013, the Court granted motions to appoint a Chapter 11 Trustee, and on May 2, 2013, the Court ordered the appointment of Michael E. Collins as the Trustee of the Debtor. The Southeast Trustee is now seeking a buyer for the Debtor.

The Motion for Relief currently before the Court seeks relief from the automatic stay to allow Naples to pursue litigation against the Debtor and 12 other defendants that has been pending in the Miller County Circuit Court since 2006 (the “Miller County Case”).2 Naples has not yet filed a claim in this bankruptcy case but has actively participated in this case and asserts that it is a creditor of the Debtor based on the pending Miller County Case. The claims deadline has been tolled with respect to Naples until a decision is reached on the Motion for Relief. See Order Extending Bar Date as to Certain Parties and Denying, in Part, Motion to Set Aside or Stay the Ex Parte Order Fixing the Time for Filing Proofs of Claim, or to Extend Bar Date and for an Emergency Hearing, entered on June 25, 2013 (Dkt. # 274). If relief from stay is not granted to allow Naples to proceed with the Miller County Case, Naples admittedly will file a claim in this case (Transcript at 121, 124) and the Court will then determine whether the Debtor is liable to Naples in the context of claims litigation.

There are two other active creditors in this case: the Southwest Trustee, who holds a liquidated claim in the amount of $1.19 million (the “Southwest Judgment”), and two entities represented by Greg Stephens:3 the Estate of Wanda Stephens4 and Living Hope Institute (“LHI”). (These two entities are collectively referred to as the “Greg Stephens Entities”.) The Southwest Judgment was awarded by Judge James G. Mixon in Williams v. Living Hope Southeast, an adversary proceeding in which the Southwest Trustee sought to capture the monetary value of Southwest’s post-petition transfer of its business to the Debtor. Williams v. Living Hope Southeast (In re Living Hope Southwest), No. 4:09-ap-7023 (the “Southwest AP”). Appeals related to the Southwest Judgment are pending in the United States District Court for the Western District of Arkansas.

Greg filed claims in this case on behalf of the Estate of Wanda Stephens and LHI. [240]*240Greg also filed cross-claims on behalf of his mother’s estate and LHI5 in the pending Miller County Case against the Debtor and other cross-defendants (i.e., Kimbro, Alice, Mike Grundy, and various related entities of the Stephenses). Although Greg attempted to have a consent judgment entered in favor of these entities in the Miller County Case approximately one year ago, he has not sought relief from the automatic stay in the Debtor’s case to pursue those cross-claims in Miller County.6 The Miller County Case is described below in more detail.

THE MILLER COUNTY CASE

The most recently amended complaint (the “Second Amended Complaint” or “Complaint”) filed in Miller County names 13 defendants, including the Debt- or. The litigation was originally brought by Pinewood after Living Hope Southwest breached a lease and allegedly damaged the real property (a building) it leased from Pinewood. The Complaint alleges that the Debtor (and others) should be held liable for the debts of Living Hope Southwest and/or LHI through a triangular veil-piercing theory. The Complaint seeks to pierce the corporate veil of Living Hope Southwest to impose liability on its members, Kimbro and Alice, and to reverse-pierce the veil of other related entities, such as the Debtor, to impose liability on those entities for the debts of Alice and Kimbro. The Complaint also asserts that the defendants engaged in a civil conspiracy to defraud Pinewood. Alleging that each is the alter ego of the other, the Complaint attempts to hold Alice, Kimbro, Mike Grundy (the Debtor’s CEO), Robert Williams who is now deceased (former trustee of the A.K. Trust, the principal owner of the Debtor) and related entities liable for the debts of LHI based on allegations that these defendants caused LHI to transfer its business to the Debtor and used LHI’s Medicare provider numbers. The debt owed to Pinewood by LHI is based on a $1.3 million consent judgment entered against LHI (arising from its guaranty of Living Hope Southwest’s lease obligation to Pinewood). The Complaint further endeavors to pierce the Debtor’s corporate veil to reach the assets of its 99% member, the A.K. Trust. The Complaint seeks punitive damages and a constructive trust on any assets conveyed by a defendant to another defendant except those transfers made by the Debtor (because, according to Naples’s brief, any [241]*241causes of action stemming from transfers by the Debtor are vested in the Southeast Trustee).7 Finally, the Complaint requests an accounting and sanctions for alleged violations of an injunction previously entered in the Miller County Case; these alleged violations include payments made by the Debtor. In Sum, the Complaint seeks to hold all of these entities and individuals liable for any debt owed to Pinewood by any of these entities or individuals.

Due to the bankruptcies of defendants Living Hope Southwest,8 Kimbro,9

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
505 B.R. 237, 2014 WL 523384, 2014 Bankr. LEXIS 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-living-hope-southeast-llc-areb-2014.