Kip Kaler v. Louie Slominski

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMay 14, 2015
Docket14-6037
StatusPublished

This text of Kip Kaler v. Louie Slominski (Kip Kaler v. Louie Slominski) 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
Kip Kaler v. Louie Slominski, (bap8 2015).

Opinion

United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel For the Eighth Circuit ___________________________

Nos. 14-6037 and 14-6042 ___________________________

In re: Keeley and Grabanski Land Partnership

lllllllllllllllllllllDebtor

------------------------------

Kip M. Kaler, in his capacity as Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Trustee of the Debtor Keeley and Grabanski Land Partnership

lllllllllllllllllllll Plaintiff – Appellant/Cross-Appellee

v.

Louie Slominski

lllllllllllllllllllll Defendant – Appellee/Cross-Appellant ___________________________

Appeals from United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of North Dakota - Fargo ____________

Submitted: April 23, 2015 Filed: May 14, 2015 ____________

Before FEDERMAN, Chief Judge, NAIL and SHODEEN, Bankruptcy Judges. ____________ FEDERMAN, Chief Judge

In this adversary proceeding, the Bankruptcy Court avoided a lease of farmland between Debtor Keeley and Grabanski Land Partnership, and Louis Slominski, as a fraudulent transfer. Pertinent to this appeal, the Court also held that Slominski was obligated under § 550(a) to pay the Trustee the fair market rent for the time he occupied the land prior to the avoidance, rather than the lower rent called for by the lease. And, the Court awarded Slominski an offset, as a good faith transferee pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 550(e), for the costs of his improvements to the land, namely, the wheat crops he planted there and certain taxes he paid. Both parties appeal the Court’s calculation of the money judgment under § 550, and the Chapter 11 Trustee appeals the Court’s refusal to grant a new trial based on newly-discovered evidence relating to whether the lease was executed pre- or post-petition. For the reasons that follow, we AFFIRM, IN PART, and REVERSE, IN PART.

STATUTORY BACKDROP

This dispute involves the application of § 550, which provides the remedy in the event of an avoided fraudulent transfer. Section 550(a) provides, in relevant part, that to the extent that a transfer is avoided under § 548, “the trustee may recover, for the benefit of the estate, the property transferred, or, if the court so orders, the value of such property” from the transferee. 1 Section 550(e)(1) then provides for a lien (in effect, a setoff) against the trustee’s recovery for good faith transferees: Such good faith transferees are entitled to receive a setoff for the lesser of (A) the costs of improvements made after the transfer and (B) any increase in the value of the

1 11 U.S.C. § 550(a). 2 property as a result of the improvements.2 Here, both parties assert that the Bankruptcy Court erred in its application of § 550.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

John and Dawn Keeley filed an involuntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition against Debtor Keeley and Grabanski Land Partnership on December 6, 2010. The Keeleys had been co-owners of the Debtor with Thomas and Mari Grabanski, but had had a falling out with them. The Bankruptcy Court granted the order for relief on January 7, 2011, and Kip Kaler was appointed as the Chapter 11 Trustee on April 5, 2011.

The Debtor’s principal assets consisted of two separate pieces of farm property located in Texas (collectively, the “Texas Properties”), which were the subject of a lease by the Debtor to Louis Slominski, a friend of Thomas Grabanski. Slominski and the Debtor asserted that the lease between them started as a verbal lease in November 2010, but just a few days prior to the December 6, 2010 involuntary bankruptcy filing, the lease had been reduced to writing via a “Farm Lease Crop Share” dated December 1, 2010 (the “Lease”). As discussed more fully below, the Trustee asserts that the Lease was actually executed postpetition (no earlier than April 2011), and that it had been backdated to December 1, 2010 to make it appear to have been entered prepetition.

In any event, the written Lease provided for a three-year term commencing December 1, 2010, and expiring November 1, 2013, thus covering the 2011, 2012, and 2013 crop years. The Lease called for Slominski, as the tenant, to pay the Debtor, as the landlord, twenty percent of the gross proceeds derived from the land,

2 11 U.S.C. § 550(e)(1). 3 with a minimum annual payment of $300,000. Lease payments were due in arrears on the first day of November of each year between 2011 and 2013. Slominski farmed the Texas Properties in 2011 without objection from the Trustee and, on November 10, 2011, Slominski deposited into his attorney’s trust account a check in the amount of $314,464.55, representing the rent calculated under the terms of the Lease for 2011.

Meanwhile, the Trustee was trying to sell the Texas Properties. However, potential buyers did not want to buy the properties with the Lease in place, so the Trustee filed this adversary proceeding on August 26, 2011, seeking to avoid the Lease as being entered postpetition without authorization under 11 U.S.C. § 549 or, alternatively, as a fraudulent transfer under § 548(a)(1), asserting that the rent under the Lease was less than fair market value.

While that adversary proceeding was pending, the case was converted to Chapter 7 on October 11, 2011. Kip Kaler has continued to act as trustee in the Chapter 7 case.

In the adversary proceeding, the Bankruptcy Court held, by Order entered March 7, 2012, that the Lease had been entered into prepetition, so § 549 did not apply. However, the Court found that the fair market rent under the Lease was $490,845 per year and, therefore, the rent charged to Slominski under the Lease was below fair market value. Thus, the Court avoided the Lease as a fraudulent transfer under § 548 on that basis, and terminated the Lease.

The Court also held that Slominski was a good faith purchaser under § 550(e), but that Slominski had failed to prove the value of his improvements to the land at that point. Nevertheless, the Court held that Slominski was entitled to the crops growing on the land, but, in order to receive those crops (or their proceeds), 4 Slominski was required to pay the 2011 rent under the terms of the Lease, plus a pro- rata share of the 2012 fair market rent for the time Slominski occupied the property. The Court ordered that the $314,464.55 being held in Slominski’s attorney’s trust account for the 2011 rent be paid over to the Trustee. At that point, no money judgment was entered because the Court determined it lacked the necessary evidence to make full and proper determinations as to Slominski’s setoff under § 550(e).

At about this same time as the March 2012 Order, the Trustee sold the Texas Properties. As was later clarified, those land sales included alfalfa crops growing on them, but not the growing wheat crops. After the Lease was terminated, the Trustee hired a local farmer to harvest the wheat crops, and the bankruptcy estate netted $442,218.09 from the wheat after harvest costs and management fees. Slominski claimed below, and does here, that he is entitled to those crop proceeds for the year 2012.

After several requests to clarify, reconsider, and amend orders in the adversary proceeding, the Court entered an Order dated October 7, 2013, concerning the remedy under § 550 for the fraudulent transfer. In that Order, the Court held that the estate was entitled to fair market rent for the entire time Slominski was in possession of the property.

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Kip Kaler v. Louie Slominski, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kip-kaler-v-louie-slominski-bap8-2015.