In Re QuVIS, Inc.

446 B.R. 490
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas
DecidedFebruary 18, 2011
Docket19-40207
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 446 B.R. 490 (In Re QuVIS, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re QuVIS, Inc., 446 B.R. 490 (Kan. 2011).

Opinion

446 B.R. 490 (2011)

In re QUVIS, INC. Debtor.
Douglas A. Friesen, M.D.; Marilyn R. Friesen Greenbush, Ph.D; Douglas C. Cusick; JFM Limited Partnership I; and the Unsecured Creditors' Committee, Plaintiffs
v.
Seacoast Capital Partners II, L.P., Defendant.

Bankruptcy No. 09-10706. Adversary No. 10-5142.

United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas.

February 18, 2011.

*492 William B. Sorensen, Jr., Morris Laing Evans Brock and Kennedy, J. Michael Morris, Klenda Mitchell Austerman & Zuercher LLC, Wichita, KS, Luke P. Sinclair, Gay Riordan Fincher Munson & Sinclair PA, R. Patrick Riordan, Gary Riordan, Topeka, KS, for Plaintiffs.

J. Maxwell Tucker, Patton Boggs LLP, Dallas, TX, Thomas J. Lasater, Wichita, KS, for Defendant.

ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANT'S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

ROBERT E. NUGENT, Chief Judge.

Plaintiffs assert a cause of action for equitable subordination against defendant Seacoast Capital Partners II, L.P. ("Seacoast") seeking to subordinate defendant's priority from a secured creditor of debtor QuVis, Inc. ("QuVis") to an unsecured creditor.[1] Plaintiffs allege that Seacoast engaged in inequitable or unfair conduct *493 by perfecting its security interest after the initial financing statement (UCC-1) filed by QuVis in 2002 lapsed, and without disclosing the lapse to other noteholder creditors, thereby jumping ahead in priority over most of the noteholder creditors.

Seacoast moves for summary judgment on the equitable subordination complaint.[2] Plaintiffs filed their memorandum in opposition[3] and Seacoast filed its reply,[4] and the Court took the motion under advisement.[5] The Court has reviewed the memoranda, affidavits, discovery and exhibits attached in support of the parties' memoranda and is prepared to rule. The Court has also reviewed its previous Order on Debtor's Motion to Determine Secured Status of Noteholders ("Noteholder Order") entered June 1, 2010 in the main case wherein the Court interpreted the primary loan and security Agreement under which some 70 parties became Noteholders.[6] The readers of the current Order are referred to the Noteholder Order for many of the facts pertaining to the financing of QuVis and the current parties' position in the financing arrangements.[7] The Court will refer to the Noteholder Order from time to time in this Order.

I. SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARDS

Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(c) directs the entry of summary judgment in favor of a party who "shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and that the movant is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law."[8] This Court's function in reviewing a motion for summary judgment is to first determine whether genuine disputes as to material facts exist for trial. In making this determination, the Court may not weigh the evidence nor resolve fact issues.[9] The Court must construe the record in a light most favorable to the party opposing the summary judgment.[10]

Once the Court determines which facts are not in dispute, it must then determine whether those uncontroverted facts establish a sufficient legal basis upon which to grant movant judgment as a matter of *494 law.[11] If different ultimate inferences may properly be drawn from the facts, summary judgment is not appropriate.[12] On a motion for summary judgment, the movant does not need to prove a negative on an issue or element of a claim that the nonmoving party must prove at trial. The movant only needs to point to an absence of evidence on an essential element of the nonmovant's claim.[13]

II. UNCONTROVERTED FACTS

The Court finds the following facts submitted by Seacoast in its opening memorandum and the additional facts submitted by plaintiffs in their opposing memorandum are uncontroverted and material to the equitable subordination claim.

Seacoast is a Small Business Investment Company ("SBIC") licensed by the United States Small Business Administration under the Small Business Investment Act of 1958.[14] Eben S. Moulton ("Moulton") is the managing director of Seacoast.

In early 2005, Seacoast considered lending to or investing in QuVis and conducted due diligence in connection with a proposed purchase of promissory notes to be issued by QuVis. The terms of the notes to be purchased had been previously set out in the First Amended and Restated Convertible Loan and Security Agreement dated and effective June 30, 2003 ("2003 Agreement"), between each "Lender" (referred to here as Noteholder) and QuVis.[15] Neither Seacoast nor Moulton was involved in the negotiation of the 2003 Agreement. As provided for in the 2003 Agreement, QuVis filed a UCC-1 financing statement (the 2002 UCC-1) on March 14, 2002 on behalf of all of the Noteholders who had loaned money to QuVis.[16] As additional loans were made by new Noteholders, QuVis would file amendments to the 2002 UCC-1, adding the new Noteholders as secured parties to the 2002 UCC-1. Plaintiffs Friesen, Greenbush, *495 Cusick and JFM Limited Partnership I were all Noteholders under the 2003 Agreement whose security interests were secured by the 2002 UCC-1. Seacoast did not became a Noteholder until 2005.

On June 1, 2005, Seacoast loaned QuVis $3,160,066.40 and QuVis issued a promissory note in that amount to Seacoast.[17] Seacoast's note bore a maturity date of June 30, 2006. QuVis' board of directors passed a corporate resolution approving the note and transaction with Seacoast.[18] As part of the 2005 loan, QuVis and Seacoast entered into a Joinder Agreement[19] by which Seacoast became a "Lender" as set forth in the 2003 Agreement. Under the 2003 Agreement and the Joinder Agreement, Seacoast's loan commitment was predicated on QuVis granting Seacoast the same valid and perfected security interest in certain QuVis assets that the previous Noteholders had received. In June of 2005, Seacoast believed that the terms of the 2003 Agreement delegated to each Noteholder the contractual duty to share pro rata any collateral recoveries it might obtain with the other Noteholders.

Seacoast also believed that the security interest it received would be of co-equal priority with that of the other Noteholders. Otherwise, Seacoast would not have made the June 2005 loan to QuVis. It would not have accepted a lien that was subordinate to other Noteholders who had already filed their liens of record.[20] Proof that this was both parties' intention is found among the documents in the closing binder related to the June 2005 note. Among the documents is a "UCC Financing Statement Amendment" adding Seacoast as a secured party to the 2002 UCC-1. QuVis was supposed to file the amendment as it was required to do under the 2003 Agreement and as it had done on numerous previous occasions, even as late as May 27, 2005, for other Noteholders. For reasons unknown, QuVis never filed the financing statement amendment listing Seacoast as a secured party.[21]

On November 2, 2005, Seacoast loaned QuVis an additional $719,933.60 and received a note on the same date.[22] Seacoast did not file a UCC-1 financing statement or UCC-2 amendment contemporaneously with this loan.

Part of the deal Seacoast made with QuVis was that Seacoast would be permitted to name a director to the QuVis board.

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446 B.R. 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-quvis-inc-ksb-2011.