In Re Tri-Continental Exchange Ltd.

349 B.R. 627, 2006 WL 2671336
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. California
DecidedSeptember 11, 2006
Docket19-20513
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 349 B.R. 627 (In Re Tri-Continental Exchange Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Tri-Continental Exchange Ltd., 349 B.R. 627, 2006 WL 2671336 (Cal. 2006).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION REGARDING RECOGNITION OF FOREIGN MAIN PROCEEDING

CHRISTOPHER M. KLEIN, Bankruptcy Judge.

This memorandum decision supplements and revises this court’s rulings that were made orally on the record at the time of hearing.

A creditor contends these joint liquidations under the laws of St. Vincent and the Grenadines (“SVG”) should be recognized as foreign “nonmain,” as opposed to “main,” proceedings under 11 U.S.C. §§ 1502(4)-(5). The answer turns on the situs of the chapter 15 debtors’ “center of main interests,” which term is not defined and requires a fact-based inquiry in which the default position focuses on the registered office.

Here, the chapter 15 debtors conducted regular business operations at their registered offices in Kingstown, St. Vincent, in a manner that equates with a “principal place of business” under concepts of United States law. This suffices to qualify SVG as the “center of main interests” even though the enterprise perpetrated an insurance scam primarily in the United States and Canada. Hence, the three winding-up proceedings in SVG will be recognized in the United States as “foreign main proceedings.”

The second issue presented is whether, in the name of “protecting” United States creditors, to impose restrictions beyond those prescribed in chapter 15 on the ability of the foreign representatives, and of the foreign court, to administer or realize the debtor’s assets within the territorial jurisdiction of the United States. The answer is in the negative because all creditors in this instance will be better served by, as contemplated by 11 U.S.C. § 1521(a)(5), entrusting administration and realization of assets to the foreign representatives without imposing a superfluous, and potentially inconsistent, tranche of judicial supervision.

Facts

The debtors, Tri-Continental Exchange Ltd. (“TCE”), Combined Services Ltd. (“CSL”), and Alternative Exchange Ltd. (“AME”), are insurance companies organized as international business companies under the laws of the nation of St. Vincent and the Grenadines (“SVG”) and are the subject of winding-up proceedings in the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court, High Court of Justice, under the SVG Companies Act, No. 8 of 1994 and related statutes, that were filed by the International Financial Services Authority (“IFSA”) of SVG as claim nos. 541-543 of 2004. The Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court appointed Malcolm Butterfield, Brian Glas *630 gow, and Simon Whicker as joint provisional liquidators on December 14, 2004, and as joint liquidators on June 14, 2005.

The debtors’ only offices were located at Marcóle Plaza, Halifax Street, Kingstown, St. Vincent, where there were approximately twenty employees. There presently are no employees and no business being conducted.

Between 1995 and 2004, the debtors sold approximately 5,800 insurance policies in the United States and Canada, with estimated gross premiums of about $45,000,000. The liquidators speculate (the books and records are not yet in their hands) that liabilities on the policies could be 130-140% of premiums.

The debtors, who lacked required insurance licenses and who falsely represented that their coverage was backed by licensed and rated insurers, advertised greatly reduced rates to industries that are difficult to insure, such as taxi drivers, truckers, roofers, bars, restaurants, and clubs.

The debtors’ lead underwriter, Lloyd Thomson, worked in the debtors’ registered offices in Kingstown, SVG. He typically received completed applications via facsimile transmission from customers or “consultants.” He would prepare and fax a quote for the insurance from the offices in SVG. If the client accepted, he would send confirmation of the security and policy number, and other information, from those offices.

Checks for premium payments were mailed to drop boxes in the United States, then forwarded in bundles to the debtors’ office in SVG, where they were endorsed for deposit and then sent back to the United States and deposited into accounts maintained by the debtors, from which wire transfers were made to accounts in Jersey (Channel Islands), Ireland, Gibraltar, and elsewhere.

Although some small claims were paid, most claims went unpaid, often on theories of large deductibles and restrictive conditions barring coverage.

The impresario of this insurance scam was an individual who assumed the identity “Robert Lewis Brown” (and obtained a United States passport) in 1994 but who was really Matthew Wallace Schachter, a United States citizen who relocated from New Hampshire to Nevada in 1984 when New Hampshire authorities issued a warrant for his arrest on check-kiting charges. He worked in the barter industry and eventually was indicted in Nevada for federal tax evasion, which indictment was dismissed in 1996 because he had not been found. As “Brown,” he had relocated to SVG by late 1994 and was establishing TCE, CSL, and AME.

The debtors’ activities attracted the attention of various insurance regulators in the United States and Canada, resulting in cease and desist orders in at least nine jurisdictions against one or more of the debtors and “Brown.” In 2001, “Brown” was twice convicted in absentia in Canada for violating cease and desist orders. In 2003, a Canadian arrest warrant was issued for “Brown’s” arrest for insurance fraud relating to TCE.

In March 2004, as a result of pressure from SVG’s IFSA to require the debtors to comply with SVG’s International Insurance Act of 1998, the IFSA issued a statutory insurance manager’s license to TCE to act as insurance manager for CSL and a Class II insurance license to CSL, which provided the IFSA with a $100,000 deposit for the benefit of policyholders. Another condition of the licenses was that “Brown” relinquish control of the debtors, with which he complied only in form (and complied with an order to leave SVG for immigration violations, relocating to Barbados).

*631 On August 9, 2004, a criminal complaint alleging mail fraud, money laundering, and related crimes was filed against “Brown” in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California. The record indicates that the federal investigation was assisted by the California Commissioner of Insurance.

“Brown” was arrested in Canada on September 3, 2004, six days before the debtors’ offices in Kingstown were searched by SVG law enforcement agents, accompanied by United States counterparts, pursuant to a request under the Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty between the United States and SVG. Most of the debtors’ books and records were seized, inventoried as evidence, and turned over to United States law enforcement authorities.

The United States seized a total of $1,603,653.95 from two bank accounts and a law firm during September 2004 and filed an in rem civil forfeiture action in 2005. United States v. Approx. $1,200,000.00 in U.S. Currency Seized from First Cal. Bank Acct. No. 2005638, et al., No. Civ. 05-149-DFL-KJM.

“Brown” died while in pretrial custody.

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Bluebook (online)
349 B.R. 627, 2006 WL 2671336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-tri-continental-exchange-ltd-caeb-2006.