In re: RIC (Austin), LLC; Panache Development & Construction, Inc., et al. v. Romspen Mortgage, LP; Romspen (Reomaster) Holdings, Inc.

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Texas
DecidedMay 21, 2026
Docket24-01061
StatusUnknown

This text of In re: RIC (Austin), LLC; Panache Development & Construction, Inc., et al. v. Romspen Mortgage, LP; Romspen (Reomaster) Holdings, Inc. (In re: RIC (Austin), LLC; Panache Development & Construction, Inc., et al. v. Romspen Mortgage, LP; Romspen (Reomaster) Holdings, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re: RIC (Austin), LLC; Panache Development & Construction, Inc., et al. v. Romspen Mortgage, LP; Romspen (Reomaster) Holdings, Inc., (Tex. 2026).

Opinion

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Dated: May 21, 2026. Chet hpin G. Brot, CHRISTOPHER G. BRADLEY UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE

IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS AUSTIN DIVISION In re: § § Case No. 24-10264-cgb RIC (AUSTIN), LLC, § Chapter 11 Debtor. § § PANACHE DEVELOPMENT & § CONSTRUCTION, INC., et al., § Plaintiffs and Counter-Defendants, § : ROMSPEN MORTGAGE, LP, § ROMSPEN (REOMASTER) § Adv. No. 24-01061-cgb HOLDINGS, INC., § Defendants and Counter-Plaintiffs. § § V. § § Adam Zarafshani, an individual, § Third-Party Defendant. §

COMBINED OPINION ON PLAN CONFIRMATION AND ADVERSARY PROCEEDING

On February 26, 2026, RIC (Austin), LLC (the “Debtor”) filed its Combined Disclosure Statement and Second Amended Chapter 11 Plan (the “Plan”).1 The Court held a hearing on the Plan, along with trial of the related adversary proceeding,2 from April 22, 2026 to April 28, 2026. At the conclusion of the hearing, the Court took confirmation and the adversary proceeding under advisement.

In this opinion, the Court explains why it will confirm the Plan, deny the Panache Parties’ claims for equitable subordination and recharacterization as well as their objection to the Romspen Parties’ claims, and find a breach of the Subordination and Intercreditor Agreement contract by AFMN. The Court will withhold a ruling on remedies for breach of contract at this time pending further briefing and proceedings.

Summary/Preliminary Statement

Because it is easy in a case of this complexity to “lose the forests for the trees,” and because the Court is producing this opinion under some time pressure but feels that a ruling on a case as vigorously litigated as this deserves a fulsome explanation, the Court includes this preliminary statement intended to provide an overview of the Court’s view of this case as a whole together with some facts and observations that apply to all of the findings below.

This matter has been on the Court’s docket, and has been a lot of work for all of the attorneys as well as the Court, for well over a year. Although the Court has had to make this ruling fairly soon after trial because the estate is running out of money, there is nothing in this ruling that has not been considered carefully and at length based on everything in the record and all of the manifold arguments made by the parties. Below, the Court has tried to explain its views as to the most substantive arguments, but in any case, even arguments that have not been specifically addressed here have, in fact, been considered carefully, and this ruling disposes of them.

The group that the Court is going to call the Panache Parties (or sometimes “Mr. Zarafshani,” since they are all effectively his) are going to lose on the key issues, but not for want of effort. They have left no stone unturned. They brought a very large number of theories (some now abandoned) and engaged in a remarkably broad discovery, which, even over forceful objection, the Court largely permitted.

1 In re RIC (Austin), LLC, No. 24-10264 (the “Main Case”), ECF No. 288 (Plan). 2 Panache v. Romspen (In re RIC (Austin), LLC), Adv. No. 24-01061 (the “Adversary Proceeding”). Ultimately, they tried this case with a large team of skilled and experienced and well- prepared counsel, airing many of Romspen’s internal documents, cross-examining numerous high-ranking executives at length, and so on.

This case is about a troubled commercial development in East Austin sometimes called the Motorola site. Romspen had loaned a large amount of money to this development, under the name Zen Garden, before a prior bankruptcy, in which Mr. Adam Zarafshani was also involved as part owner and developer.

In the Zen Garden bankruptcy, in order to avoid a lengthy court fight about allegations Mr. Zarafshani brought that were notably similar to those brought here, the parties reached a deal pursuant to which Mr. Zarafshani and Romspen would split the equity in a new ownership entity, Romspen’s existing debt would be prior to Mr. Zarafshani’s existing debt, and construction debt funded by either Romspen or another lender would come in at higher priority than either.

Fundamentally, this case is about Mr. Zarafshani trying to get out of the deal he made back in the Zen Garden bankruptcy. That deal has not worked out well for either party, and the property remains in sad shape to this day despite the immense sums that have been sunk into it.

As noted, the Zen Garden deal put Mr. Zarafshani’s equity interest, as well as the debt owed him, junior to a very large chunk of Romspen debt as well as new construction debt to be incurred. In other words, he would only come into the money if the project was successful enough at least to pay Romspen’s existing debt and the construction loan back.

Romspen itself ended up funding the construction; the parties were never able to bring in another lender, in part because the project, and even the plans for the project, were never in good enough shape. (The Panache Parties claim Romspen prevented other lenders from coming in, but the Court did not find this claim credible. 3 ) In any case, the new construction debt was incurred: Romspen

3 Much credible testimony in the record demonstrates that there were numerous bars to financing, including the condition of the property and the lack of detailed budgets, and most of the bars were due directly to the Panache Parties. Even Mr. Weldon indicated Romspen’s support of financing. Adversary Proceeding, ECF No. 187, Trial Tr. (Day 2, April 23, 2026) at 107:6-9 (“Was RMLP supportive of obtaining third-party financing so that -- as set forth in the binding term sheet? MR. WELDON: Yes.”). See also id. at 13:12-16 (third-party lender would want the information Romspen was requesting but had not received, “if not infused more than $37 million in additional funds into the property, largely spent at Mr. Zarafshani’s discretion with little oversight and little demonstrable progress, including no ability to attract any actual tenants.4 Despite this new money loaned and the passage of time, the property remained far away from the goals the parties had for it. Romspen understandably lost faith in the project and asked Mr. Zarafshani to curtail spending sharply and ultimately to step back from his construction role while preserving other roles, for instance in marketing the project. Faced with Romspen’s decision to remove him from his role in construction of the project, he walked from the remaining roles that Romspen wanted him to play.5

Ultimately one of his affiliates filed this involuntary bankruptcy case. Panache/Zarafshani didn’t put any money on the table to make the case a success or to preserve the bankruptcy estate’s property, however—they left that, again, to Romspen, which funded another $5+ million into this bankruptcy case, money that was used to hire estate professionals who have managed the property and proposed a plan of reorganization. They held an auction for the equity in the project. The Panache Parties chose not to participate in that auction, but Romspen again put its money into the plan and won the auction.

Despite Romspen’s immense investments that have not shown much by way of results, Mr. Zarafshani strenuously argues that Romspen’s fiduciary duty required it to infuse another $37 million or more into the property. In filing the adversary proceeding against Romspen and in opposing confirmation of the Debtor’s plan, Mr. Zarafshani seeks to put his interests above Romspen’s interests—both new and old. He and his affiliate entities and their large legal team have litigated to that effect, throwing up a large number of theories and angles to try to overturn the effect of the legal arrangements to which Mr. Zarafshani knowingly consented and to unseat the realities of this failed project.

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In re: RIC (Austin), LLC; Panache Development & Construction, Inc., et al. v. Romspen Mortgage, LP; Romspen (Reomaster) Holdings, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ric-austin-llc-panache-development-construction-inc-et-al-txwb-2026.