In re Sound View Elite Ltd.

565 B.R. 534
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 27, 2017
DocketCase No. 18-13098 (MKV) (Jointly Administered), Case No. 15-12273 (MKV) (Jointly Administered)
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 565 B.R. 534 (In re Sound View Elite Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy 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 Sound View Elite Ltd., 565 B.R. 534 (N.Y. 2017).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER ON COMPETING MOTIONS WITH RESPECT TO STAY RELIEF

MARY KAY VYSKOCIL, UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE:

Before the Court are two motions (the “Mirror Motions”), one jointly filed by Corinne Ball, in her capacity as the Chap[537]*537ter 11 Trustee of the Soundview debtors (the “Trustee”), and John Ayres and Matthew Wright, in their capacities as Joint Liquidators of certain other related debtors located in the British Virgin Islands1 (together with the Trustee, the “Trustees”), and the other filed by creditors Pasig Ltd. and its owners Julie and Roger Corman (the “Cormans”).2 First, the Trustees move to stay and enjoin prosecution by Pasig and the Cormans of their Second Amended Complaint filed in the Superior Court of California, case no. BC576B79 (the “California Action”) against Citco Group Limited and certain of its affiliated entities (“Citco”) [ECF No. 972]3 (“Stay Motion II”). In Stay Motion II, the Trustees argue that the California Action violates the automatic stay, and should be enjoined because the claims being asserted belong to the Debtors. Pasig and the Cor-mans contend that they are pursuing their own individual claims for injuries independent of the Debtors. See “Objection” to Stay Motion II. [ECF No. 981]. Second, Pasig and the Cormans seek in their motion relief from the automatic stay, to the extent it applies, to permit litigation of their Second Amended Complaint in the California Action. [ECF No. 1179] (the “Pasig Motion”).4

The dispositive issue raised by both motions is whether the claims in the Second Amended Complaint are non-derivative, individual claims that establish particularized injuries to Pasig and the Cormans directly traceable to the defendants, or conversely, whether the Second Amended Complaint impermissibly ' asserts claims that belong to the Debtors or seeks derivatively to redress injury to the Debtors and/or the general creditor body. For the reasons set forth below, the Court denies Stay Motion II and grants the Pasig Motion as set forth herein.

BACKGROUND

Prior to the petition date, Soundview Elite Ltd. and its affiliated entities (collectively, the “Soundview Debtors”)5 were open-ended investment companies registered in the Cayman Islands. Both the Soundview Debtors and the BVI Debtors (collectively, the “Debtors”) were created and owned by Citco until they were acquired in 2008 by Alphonse “Buddy” Fletcher (the “Richcourt Acquisition”). As a result of the Richcourt Acquisition, Fletcher Asset Management (“FAM”) obtained a majority interest in the Debtors, and the Debtors became part of a family of investment funds managed by Fletcher and his related entities. Following the Richcourt Acquisition, Citco continued to provide certain services to the Debtors.

[538]*538 Proceedings in this Court

The six Soundview Debtors filed their respective chapter 11 petitions on September 24, 2018, and the cases are being jointly administered. See ECF No. 40. Subsequently, Corrine Ball, Esq. was appointed the Chapter 11 Trustee of the Soundview Debtors. ECF No. 164. While the chapter 11 cases were pending, the BVI Debtors filed for liquidation in the" BVI, and John Ayres and Matthew Wright were approved as Joint Liquidators in the BVI proceedings. Thereafter, the Joint Liquidators commenced chapter 15 cases, and the Court has since granted recognition. See Recognition Order, Case No. 15-12273, ECF No. 13.

After her appointment, the Trustees commenced, on behalf of both the Sound-view and BVI Debtors, an adversary proceeding (the “Citco Adversary Proceeding”) alleging that Citco participated in Fletcher’s mismanagement of the Debtor funds and seeking, among other things, damages for Citco’s alleged breach of its fiduciary duties owed to the Debtors, aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duties, fraud, and unjust enrichment. See Amended Complaint, Adv. P. No. 15-01346, ECF No. 52,6

The California Action

In the 1990s, the Cormans had invested with investment manager George Soros. See Pasig Motion [ECF No. 1179] at ¶ 10. At that time, a Citco entity provided administrative services to Soros Assets. See Pasig Motion at ¶ 11. In 1996, Ermanno Unternaehrer, a Citco executive, purportedly told the Cormans they would be better off if they transferred some of their investments to investment vehicles managed by Citco. See Pasig Motion at ¶ 12.

Allegedly relying on a number of Citco’s representations, the Cormans decided to move their investments from Soros and invest money with Citco-related entities. See Pasig Motion at ¶ 13-14. To facilitate these investments, in the early 2000s, on the advice of Unternaehrer, the Cormans formed Pasig Ltd. (“Pasig”), a BVI entity, to serve as their personal investment vehicle. See Deel. of Richard K Milin in Support of Debtors’ Objection to Motion of Pasig, LTD., Roger Corman and Julie Corman for Relief From The Automatic Stay, (the “Milin Decl.”) [ECF No. 1211], Exh. 4 (the “Sec. Am. Complaint”) at ¶¶ 43-44. In June 2008, after the Richcourt Acquisition, Citco transferred to the Debt- or funds managed by Fletcher, allegedly without the knowledge of the Cormans, approximately $73 million of the Cormans’ investment, including their interests in Pa-sig. See Sec. Am. Complaint ¶ 55. After the transfer to Fletcher, Citco continued to provide administrative services for the investments of Pasig and the Cormans. See Sec. Am. Complaint ¶60. By November 2008, the Cormans’ investments allegedly were insolvent, and the Cormans were restricted from withdrawing their invested funds. See Sec. Am. Complaint ¶ 74.

On March 23, 2015, Pasig and the Cor-mans commenced the California Action by filing a complaint (the “Original Complaint”) against Citco and related parties (the “Citco Defendants”) in California state court. Pasig and the Cormans sought damages caused by Citco’s alleged breach [539]*539of fiduciary duties and contractual obligations to the Cormans, among other things. At the core of the Original Complaint are Citco’s specific representations, which the Cormans allege they reasonably relied on when entering into agreements with Citco to become the Cormans’ personal financial advisor.

Citco moved to quash the Original Complaint, arguing that the California court lacked personal jurisdiction over the Citco Defendants. Pasig and the Cormans opposed the motion, and cross-moved for an expedited trial, due in part to Mr. Cor-man’s advanced age. Denying Citco’s motions, the California court found that it had personal jurisdiction over the Citco Defendants7 and ordered an expedited trial based on Mr. Corman’s age and failing health.

Shortly after the California court’s ruling, Pasig and the Cormans filed the First Amended Complaint, in response to which certain Citco Defendants filed demurrers arguing that the Cormans lacked standing to recover for losses of Pasig. The California court rejected Citco’s argument, finding that the First Amended Complaint was based on Citeo’s alleged wrongful conduct as the Cormans’ personal investment ad-visors, and not on the Cormans’ status as Pasig shareholders.

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Bluebook (online)
565 B.R. 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-sound-view-elite-ltd-nysb-2017.