Kelley v. Kanios

CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedMay 20, 2019
Docket0:18-cv-00823
StatusUnknown

This text of Kelley v. Kanios (Kelley v. Kanios) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kelley v. Kanios, (mnd 2019).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA

Douglas A. Kelley, in his capacity as the Case No. 18-cv-823 (SRN/SER) PCI Liquidating Trustee for the PCI Liquidating Trust,

Plaintiff,

v. MEMORANDUM ORDER AND Chris M. Kanios; Chris M. Kanios 401(k) OPINION Savings Plan; National City Bank, as Custodian of the Chris M. Kanios 401(k) Savings Plan; and Steve Papadimos,

Defendants.

Elizabeth M. Forsythe, Michael E. Rowe, J. David Jackson, and Lucas J. Olson, Dorsey & Whitney LLP, 50 South Sixth Street, Suite 1500, Minneapolis, MN, 55402, for Plaintiff.

Henry B. Roberts, Jr., H. Buswell Roberts, Jr. PLLC, 200 Country Club Road Southwest, Suite B1, Blacksburg, VA 24060, and Michael L. Gust, Anderson, Bottrell, Sanden & Thompson, PO Box 10247, Fargo, ND, 58106, for Defendants.

SUSAN RICHARD NELSON, United States District Judge This case arises out of the wreckage of local businessman Tom Petters’s infamous, years-long Ponzi scheme, which lasted from the mid-1990s through June 2008, and which left Petters’s creditors with over three billion dollars in unpaid liabilities. In this particular case, Plaintiff, the Liquidating Trustee for one of Petters’s now-defunct companies, Petters Company Inc. (“PCI”), seeks to “avoid,” or “claw back,” approximately four million dollars of interest payments, or “transfers,” received by Defendants Steve Papadimos and Chris M. Kanios during the heyday of Petters’s scheme, i.e., 1997 to 2006, on grounds that those interest payments (and the promissory notes underlying the payments) were made

directly in furtherance of Petters’s fraud, and are therefore subject to “claw back” under the Trustee’s interpretation of the Minnesota Uniform Fraudulent Transfers Act (“MUFTA”). Because the Court agreed with the Trustee’s interpretation of MUFTA during a November 2018 jury trial the Court conducted in a companion case to this one, see Kelley v. Boosalis, No. 18-cv-868 (SRN/TNL), 2018 WL 6322631 (D. Minn. Dec. 3, 2018), and because the Trustee believes there are no material facts in dispute that would warrant

another jury trial here, the Trustee now moves for summary judgment. Defendants not only oppose the motion, but argue that they, not the Trustee, are the parties entitled to summary judgment. This is so, Defendants argue, because the Court erred in the Boosalis case. And, Defendants continue, were the Court to adopt the “proper” interpretation of MUFTA here, the Trustee’s case would fail as a matter of law. In the

alternative, Defendants also argue that the Court should certify the meaning of certain critical terms under MUFTA to the Minnesota Supreme Court, so that that Court could resolve what Defendants describe as “unsettled” questions of state law. Defendants further contend that, at the least, the Trustee’s summary judgment motion should be denied on grounds that a jury trial is still needed to resolve genuine disputes of material fact.

For the reasons explained below, the Court grants the Trustee’s summary judgment motion in full. Judgment will accordingly be entered for the Trustee. I. BACKGROUND A. Factual History1 1. Defendants Lend Millions of Dollars to Petters Company, Inc., Between 1997 and 2006, and Receive Millions of Dollars of Interest in Return

Steve Papadimos and Chris Kanios (collectively, “Defendants”) are a married couple that live in the suburbs of Toledo, Ohio. Papadimos is a government attorney and Kanios is a physician. (See Pl.’s Ex. 30 [Doc. No. 110-3] (“Kanios Dep.”) at 6-7.) At some point in 1997, Papadimos heard about an investment opportunity with a Minneapolis businessman named Tom Petters, and, more specifically, with a “diverting” business that Petters was running with consumer goods. In short, Papadimos believed, Petters needed Papadimos’s money so that Petters could buy large lots of older, unsold consumer goods from wholesalers, and then re-sell, or “divert,” those goods to retailers at a substantial profit. (See, e.g., Pl.’s Ex. 23 [Doc. No. 110-2] (“Papadimos Dep. I”) at 46-47 (Q: What did you think were funding? A: Oh, that I was lending money. . . there would be promissory

1 In describing the background of this case, the Court will occasionally cite to testimony that certain key witnesses have given (under oath) in other Petters-related trials. Although Defendants argue that citing this testimony constitutes hearsay or is precluded by collateral estoppel (see Defs.’ Br. in Opp. to Pl.’s Mot. for Summ. J. [Doc. No. 112] (“Defs.’ Opp. Br.”) at 14-17), the Court disagrees. The Trustee has amply demonstrated that all of the testimony cited herein could be produced “in a form that would be admissible in evidence” at trial. Target Corp. v. All Jersey Janitorial Serv., Inc., 916 F. Supp. 2d 909, 914 (D. Minn. 2013). That is, either the witness will be available for this trial, or, if not available, their testimony would constitute non-hearsay under Fed. R. Evid. 804(b)(1). (See, e.g., Pl.’s Reply Br. [Doc. No. 116] at 6 (noting that “[s]hould [this case] proceed to trial, Coleman and Martens, both of whom testified at the [earlier, related] Boosalis trial and gave depositions, can and will so testify again”).) And, as for “collateral estoppel,” that doctrine is irrelevant under the circumstances; the Court is not attempting to conclusively apply any of its prior factual findings or rulings against Defendants. notes, and that Petters, PCI was buying distressed goods, bankruptcy goods, liquidated goods, and re-selling them.”). Papadimos also thought that, because Petters was working

with “distressed goods and bankruptcy goods,” Petters would be generating 40 to 60 percent in “annual rate[s] of return.” (See Defs.’ Ex. B. [Doc. No. 105-1] (“Papadimos Dep. II”) at 17 (describing a conversation he had with one of Petters’s associates).) Before investing with Petters, though, Papadimos did some due diligence. Among other things, he (a) had a short meeting with Petters in Minneapolis, and, while there, observed that Petters owned actual warehouses and retail stores that had “thousands of

boxes” inside of them (see Papadimos Dep. II. at 13-14), (b) spoke with Thomas Hays (a well-regarded lawyer who worked with Petters) on multiple occasions, and learned that Hays was confident about Petters’s business acumen (id. at 15-19), (c) talked to at least one business that Petters had purportedly conducted a merchandise transaction with, Montgomery Ward, and confirmed that a business relationship existed between the two

companies (id. at 34, 76), and (d) read articles in the Minneapolis Star-Tribune newspaper about Petters’s businesses (thus again confirming the fact that the businesses did exist) (id. at 31, 76, 132). Consequently, in July 1997, Papadimos decided to begin lending to Petters’s wholly-owned company, Petters Company, Inc. (“PCI”).2 (See Defs.’ Ex. J [Doc. No. 105-

2] (“July 8, 1997 Promissory Note”).) Papadimos first lent money to PCI in 30- or 60-day loans, with an annualized interest rate averaging about 38 percent. (See Pl.’s Ex. 22 [Doc.

2 Petters was, at all relevant times, PCI’s sole shareholder and President. (See Pl.’s Ex. 2 [Doc. No. 110-1] (“Petters Crim. Trial Tr.”) at 646-48 (Coleman).) No. 110-2] (“Martens – Papadimos Tracing Report”) at ECF p. 494.) As time went on, however, Papadimos lent Petters larger sums of money, and often simply “rolled” his

principal investment from one promissory note to another, so as to keep receiving interest payments without putting any “new” money into PCI. (See Pl.’s Ex. 20 [Doc. No. 110-2] (“Martens – Papadimso Transfers Report”) at ECF p.

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