Kalisch v. Maple Trade Finance Corp. (In Re Kalisch)

413 B.R. 115, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 3686, 51 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 19, 2008 WL 5611810
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 31, 2008
Docket19-10076
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 413 B.R. 115 (Kalisch v. Maple Trade Finance Corp. (In Re Kalisch)) 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
Kalisch v. Maple Trade Finance Corp. (In Re Kalisch), 413 B.R. 115, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 3686, 51 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 19, 2008 WL 5611810 (N.Y. 2008).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION GRANTING JUDGMENT AFTER TRIAL IN FAVOR OF MAPLE TRADE FINANCE CORPORATION

JAMES M. PECK, Bankruptcy Judge.

The trial in these two related adversary proceedings took place over three days in *118 July, and the Court provided some initial reactions to the evidence at the close of the hearing on July 31, 2008. In light of these comments and with the hope of avoiding additional costs and delay associated with preparing post-trial submissions, the Court encouraged the parties to meet and confer regarding a possible settlement of claims and defenses. Those efforts were unsuccessful. Proposed findings, conclusions and briefs were submitted to chambers in November and have been sealed in accordance with a “so ordered” stipulation of counsel due to the potentially incriminating nature of some of the evidence. Second Amended Post Trial Scheduling Order, Adv. No. 06-01717, (ECF Doc. # 22). Counsel presented closing arguments on December 4, 2008.

This decision resolves issues raised in these adversary proceedings, consolidated for trial, brought by Debtor Mark Allen Kalisch (also known and identified in this decision as “Marco”) and his wife Debtor Mayra Diaz Kalisch (“Mayra” and, together with Marco, the “Kalisches”) concerning the validity, priority and enforceability of a security interest granted by Marco to Maple Trade Finance Corporation (“Maple Trade”) in certain shares of stock in 2 East 12th St. Owners Corp. (the “Coop”) and the three proprietary leases appurtenant to those shares evidencing ownership of three combined apartment units on the ground floor of a townhouse at 2 East 12th Street in Manhattan (collectively, the “Apartment”). The security interest was granted by Marco as guarantor to secure an asset-based commercial loan in the original amount of $1.5 million (the “Loan”) from Maple Trade to Marco Kal-isch Imports, Inc. (“MKI”), a corporation wholly owned by Marco that is engaged in the business of importing and reselling diamonds. Maple Trade Trial Exhibit 1, Loan Agreement §§ 3, 11; Maple Trade Trial Exhibit 3, Loan Security Agreement at 2-3.

Marco is an ethically challenged businessman who admits to having performed and conspired with others to perform various allegedly wrongful acts in Brazil for personal gain and to having failed to honor his promise to Mayra to share ownership of the Apartment with her. Trial Transcript (Under Seal), 14:8-15:23, 29:4-31:12, 44:5-21, July 24, 2008 A.M. 1 ; Trial Tr. (Under Seal), 66:14-68:18, July 24, 2008 P.M. Marco, regardless of his admitted failings, tells a riveting story of high risk opportunism in the Amazon jungle that must be mostly true; after all, it is hard to imagine that any rational witness under these circumstances would make up something so personally incriminating if it were not mostly the truth. 2

Marco’s version of the facts becomes harder to accept as true, however, in relation to his dealings with Maple Trade. Marco has shown himself to be economical *119 ly motivated to the point of doing what he knows to be indefensibly wrong, making him a witness of doubtful reliability in describing his version of conversations with employees of Maple Trade. Trial Tr. (Under Seal), 6:9-15, July 24, 2008 A.M. In evaluating his testimony, the Court has taken into account both Marco’s character and the fact that he stands to benefit economically if he can show that Maple Trade knowingly financed his activities in Brazil.

Marco also is positioned to benefit regardless of whether he or Mayra prevails as plaintiff against Maple Trade. Given that Marco is an admitted scoundrel, it is not entirely clear whether these companion litigations have been orchestrated by the Kalisches and whether there is true adversity between them. Despite the possibility that the Kalisches are working together in their efforts to preserve the rental income generated by the Apartment, 3 it is not necessary to decide whether they are adverse to one another or aligned in order to resolve the issues presented.

As explained below, the Court finds that Maple Trade has been granted a valid, senior secured claim that is enforceable in accordance with its terms despite (i) Marco’s contentions that Maple Trade should be barred from recovery under the doctrine of in pari delicto because it financed an unlawful scheme to acquire diamonds in Brazil, and (ii) Mayra’s argument that she should be deemed an owner of the Apartment as of a date that predates the Loan in accordance with promises made to her by Marco, notwithstanding the lack of contemporaneous written evidence of joint ti-tie to the Apartment sufficient to satisfy the New York State Statute of Frauds. 4 In Marco’s case, the allegations of misconduct by Maple Trade were not proven, and in Mayra’s case, no legal or equitable grounds exist to modify the title documentation for the Apartment to the detriment of Maple Trade. Nonetheless, Mayra is entitled to judgment against Marco for his failure to fulfill his promise to grant her a valid and enforceable ownership interest in the Apartment. She also- has the right to assert a claim, based on that judgment, for damages caused by that breach of promise in Marco’s bankruptcy case.

INTRODUCTION AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND

1. Marco’s Adversary Proceeding

The story told by Marco could be the basis of a screenplay instead of a bankruptcy court decision. The factual background, swirling with references to shady dealings and long journeys into remote areas of the Amazon jungle, describes an apparently illegal conspiracy to obtain rough diamonds from the Cinta Larga Indians in Brazil and import those diamonds into the United States for ultimate sale in the diamond market of Antwerp. Trial Tr. (Under Seal), 6:9-15, July 24, 2008 A.M.

Marco was a central actor in these corrupt activities. He asserts that he shared with Maple Trade a business plan describing his activities, and that Maple Trade, as lender to MKI, became a participant in the scheme by providing financing for the unlawful importation of diamonds that were sourced through an entity known as M3 organized in Brazil by Marco and two oth *120 er business partners. 5 Trial Tr. (Under Seal), 6:19-7:19, 37:11-41:25, July 24, 2008 P.M.; Trial Tr. (Under Seal), 29:4-18, July 24, 2008 A.M. Marco in his testimony blurs the structural distinctions between MKI and M3 and conveniently treats both entities as if they were divisions of a single business enterprise. Trial Tr. (Under Seal), 37:11-41:25, 83:6-20, 92:9-11, July 24, 2008 P.M. Marco contends that Maple Trade should forfeit the right to recover amounts advanced to MKI as borrower because Maple Trade had information, both direct and indirect, revealing that the diamonds were being imported by MKI under highly suspect circumstances from unauthorized sources in Brazil.

The advances from Maple Trade to MKI were secured principally by Marco’s grant of a security interest in shares of stock issued in his name that represented ownership in the Apartment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
413 B.R. 115, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 3686, 51 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 19, 2008 WL 5611810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kalisch-v-maple-trade-finance-corp-in-re-kalisch-nysb-2008.