Keeley & Grabanski Land Part. v. John Keeley

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 6, 2011
Docket11-6020
StatusPublished

This text of Keeley & Grabanski Land Part. v. John Keeley (Keeley & Grabanski Land Part. v. John Keeley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keeley & Grabanski Land Part. v. John Keeley, (bap8 2011).

Opinion

United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT

_______________

No. 11-6020 _______________

In re: Keeley and Grabanski Land * Partnership * * Debtor * * Keeley and Grabanski Land Partnership * Appeal from the United States * Bankruptcy Court for the Debtor - Appellant * District of North Dakota * v. * * John Keeley; Dawn Keeley; * Choice Financial Group * * Petitioning Creditors - Appellees *

Submitted: July 22, 2011 Filed: September 6, 2011 _______________

Before SCHERMER, FEDERMAN, and NAIL, Bankruptcy Judges

FEDERMAN, Bankruptcy Judge

Debtor Keeley and Grabanski Land Partnership appeals from the Order of the Bankruptcy Court1 appointing a trustee in its involuntary Chapter 11 case. For the reasons that follow, the Bankruptcy Court’s Order is AFFIRMED.

1 The Honorable William A. Hill, United States Bankruptcy Judge for the District of North Dakota. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

This appeal relates to one of two separate, but related, bankruptcy cases. The first case was a voluntary Chapter 11 case filed by Thomas and Mari Grabanski on July 22, 2010. The second case – the one particularly involved here – was an involuntary Chapter 11 case filed by John and Dawn Keeley on December 7, 2010, against the Keeley and Grabanski Land Partnership, in which the Keeleys and Grabanskis were partners. This appeal involves the appointment of a trustee in the partnership’s involuntary case. However, since the decision to appoint the trustee was based in part on Thomas Grabanski’s conduct in his individual case, we discuss the background of both cases here.

Pre-Bankruptcy Factual Background

Thomas and Mari Grabanski are farmers living in North Dakota who own and operate several farms and other agricultural businesses. John and Dawn Keeley are also farmers living in North Dakota. On February 1, 2007, the Keeleys and Grabanskis formed a partnership, the Keeley and Grabanski Land Partnership (“KGLP”). Thomas Grabanski and John Keeley were the managing partners. Thereafter, KGLP purchased several tracts of farmland, including two large tracts in Texas referred to by the parties as the “Lenth Parcel” and the “Unruh Parcel,” both of which are subject to seller-financed mortgages.

On January 1, 2008, the Keeleys and Grabanskis formed G&K Farms, a partnership which would rent farmland owned by KGLP. KGLP was to use the rents paid by G&K Farms to make the payments on the notes secured by the land. In order to conduct its farming operation in 2008, G&K Farms obtained financing from Choice Financial, which required G&K Farms to provide a blanket lien on its property, including crops. In addition, in connection with an extension of this note, Choice Financial later obtained second mortgages on the Lenth and Unruh Parcels as security

2 for G&K Farms’ debt. G&K Farms also obtained credit from United Agri Products in February 2008, to pay for fertilizer for its farming operations.

The Keeleys assert that although the farms should have been profitable, Thomas Grabanski informed them in 2008 that G&K Farms had sustained a $2.5 million operating loss, despite the fact that the crops had been insured. The Keeleys assert that the Grabanskis have not accounted for this reported loss. As a result of the losses, KGLP sold its properties, except the Lenth and Unruh Parcels, in order to partially pay down G&K Farms’ operating line at Choice Financial.

The Keeleys also assert that, in August 2008, Thomas Grabanski obtained $7 million in secured financing from PHI Services, Inc., on behalf of G&K Farms and other entities he was involved in. He allegedly signed the PHI agreement on behalf of G&K Farms as a co-borrower, despite a provision in the operating agreement that he could not borrow more than $1,000 without Keeley’s permission. The Keeleys assert that Grabanski falsely told them that he signed this note personally, rather than for G&K Farms.

In February 2009, G&K Farms borrowed an additional $1.2 million from Crop Production Services, Inc. for the 2009 growing season. However, after planting its crop in 2009, G&K Farms discontinued operations, and the Keeleys say they have not been told where the proceeds of the crop sales or insurance proceeds from that season went.

In about May 2009, the Keeleys assert, Thomas Grabanski told them that he would pay all of G&K Farms’ debt if the Keeleys would assign their partnership interest in both G&K Farms and KGLP to the Grabanskis. On September 24, 2009, the Keeleys and Grabanskis executed an Agreement to Assign Partnership Interests (the “Transfer Agreement”), wherein the Keeleys agreed to assign their partnership interests effective April 30, 2009. In the Transfer Agreement, the Grabanskis agreed

3 to pay all of both partnerships’ debts, liabilities, and expenses. The Keeleys assert that they had been led to believe that the G&K Farms’ crop proceeds and insurance payments would be used to pay the Choice Financial operating line of credit. As it turned out, very little of those proceeds went to pay down the Choice line.

The Keeleys assert that, in 2010, the Grabanskis abandoned G&K Farms and created a new entity, Texas Family Farms, LLC, to rent and farm the Lenth and Unruh Parcels. Despite farming the land, Texas Family Farms allegedly did not pay rent to KGLP, which in turn failed to pay the Lenth and Unruh note payments, or payments on an irrigation pivot lease for 2010. The Keeleys also assert that much of G&K’s equipment has been re-titled to other Grabanski entities, traded in for other equipment, given away, or lost.

On July 7, 2010, KGLP received a letter from the U.S. Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Services (“NRCS”) which indicated that the NRCS was prepared to offer $2,563,000 for the purchase of a conservation easement on 1,972 acres of the Lenth Parcel as part of a Wetlands Reserve Program.

Five days after KGLP received the offer letter from the NRCS, the Lenths sent a notice to KGLP on July 12, 2010, stating that it was in default under its promissory note and, if not made current by August 31, 2010, the Lenths would commence foreclosure proceedings as to the Lenth Parcel.

Meanwhile, after the Grabanskis and their entities defaulted on their loans from another lender, AgCountry Farm Credit Services, AgCountry obtained state court orders directing the Grabanskis to surrender AgCountry’s collateral, which included the Grabanskis’ and the related entities’ crops and equipment. The Grabanskis allegedly disobeyed those orders, so the state court scheduled a contempt hearing for July 22, 2010, at 11:00 a.m. The Grabanskis filed a voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy

4 petition in their own names at 10:59 a.m that day,2 staying that contempt hearing. Grabanski Grain, LLC, of which the Grabanskis are sole members, was also indebted to AgCountry, and filed its own Chapter 11 on July 23, 2010.3 That case was converted to Chapter 7 on July 26, 2011.

As to the partnership which is the debtor here, KGLP, the Keeleys claim to be creditors because of their joint liability with the Grabanskis on various partnership debts. As stated, under the Transfer Agreement, the Grabanskis had agreed to satisfy all partnership debts. Nevertheless, several creditors of those partnerships sued the Keeleys to recover debts which had allegedly not been paid by the partnership. One of those creditors is PHI Financial, Inc., which asserts a debt of over $7.2 million on the loan Thomas Grabanski allegedly took on behalf of G&K Farms without Keeley’s authorization. In that lawsuit, the Keeleys filed cross claims against the Grabanskis for, inter alia, fraud. Crop Production Services has also sued the Keeleys for nearly $800,000.

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