Kismet Acquisition, LLC v. Icenhower (In Re Icenhower)

398 B.R. 902, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 4054, 51 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 32, 2008 WL 5422636
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. California
DecidedDecember 12, 2008
Docket19-00492
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 398 B.R. 902 (Kismet Acquisition, LLC v. Icenhower (In Re Icenhower)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kismet Acquisition, LLC v. Icenhower (In Re Icenhower), 398 B.R. 902, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 4054, 51 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 32, 2008 WL 5422636 (Cal. 2008).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION

LOUISE DeCARL ADLER, Bankruptcy Judge.

I.

INTRODUCTION

In an Order to Show Cause, Kismet Acquisition, LLC (“Kismet”) asks this Court to enter a permanent foreign anti-suit injunction (“OSC re: Anti-Suit Injunction”) against defendants Alejandro Diaz-Barba and his mother, Martha Barba de la Torre (the “Diaz Defendants”). The Diaz Defendants are Mexican nationals who own real and personal property in the United States. Kismet is the successor-in-interest to all of the assets of the bankruptcy estate of Jerry and Donna Icen-hower (“Debtors”), having purchased them from the chapter 7 trustee (“Trustee”). Kismet, as the successor to the Trustee, obtained a judgment from the Court against the Diaz Defendants for avoidance and recovery of a fraudulent transfer and a postpetition transfer of the Debtors’ beneficial interest in a fideicomiso trust holding title to coastal real property in Mexico. The Amended Consolidated Judgment directs the Diaz Defendants to take all actions necessary to cause the Villa Property *906 to be reconveyed to a fideicomiso trust naming Kismet as its beneficiary (“Amended Consolidated Judgment”). 1

The Diaz Defendants refused to comply with the Amended Consolidated Judgment. They engaged in a series of actions in Mexico intended to attack the Amended Consolidated Judgment and to render their performance legally impossible. 2 Kismet wants the transfer ordered by the Amended Consolidated Judgment performed, and the activities in Mexico stopped. Accordingly, it has asked this Court to issue an anti-suit injunction permanently enjoining the Diaz Defendants and anyone having an “identity of interest” with them from taking any actions to attack, vitiate or nullify the Amended Consolidated Judgment, except for filing a direct appeal of the Amended Consolidate Judgment in the U.S. Although this is certainly a case where the litigation in Mexico is vexatious and oppressive, the Court must deny the request.

II.

FACTS

A. Events Prior to Bankruptcy.

Prior to 1997, the Debtors engaged in a business transaction in Mexico with the D. Donald Lonie, Jr., Family Trust (the “Lo-nie Trust”) concerning the beneficial interest in the fideicomiso trust that owned the Villa Property. A dispute arose between the Debtors and the Lonie Trust, and the Lonie Trust initiated an action against the Debtors in the United States District Court for the Southern District of California seeking, inter alia, a determination of the parties’ respective rights and interests in the Villa Property and injunctive relief (the “district court action”).

During the pendency of the district court action, the Debtors secretly transferred their beneficial trust interest to their wholly-owned corporation, Howell & Gardner Investors, Inc. (“H & G”) for no consideration. The district court was unaware of the transfer. It issued a judgment against the Debtors which directed them to either (1) pay monetary damages to the Lonie Trust and re-register a lien on the Villa Property as security for the damages until paid; or (2) reconvey their beneficial interest in the Villa Property to the Lonie Trust, free of any encumbrance, claim, lien, or liabilities.

B. Events in this Bankruptcy Case.

In response to the district court judgment, the Debtors filed this voluntary chapter 7 bankruptcy case on December 15, 2003. The Debtors first disclosed their interest in the Villa Property at their § 341(a) meeting on January 12, 2004. The Debtors did not disclose that Mr. Icenhower was in the process of negotiating a further transfer of the Villa Property from H & G to the Diaz Defendants.

On August 23, 2004, the Trustee filed a fraudulent conveyance action to avoid and recover the Debtors’ transfer of their interest in the Villa Property. Additionally, the Trustee obtained a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction *907 prohibiting the defendants from transferring or encumbering the Villa Property. The Trustee did not name the Diaz Defendants in the Complaint because he was unaware that H & G had already transferred the Villa Property to the Diaz Defendants. Upon learning about H & G’s transfer, the Trustee amended the Complaint to include this subsequent transfer to the Diaz Defendants, and he obtained additional injunctive relief restraining the Diaz Defendants from further transferring or encumbering the Villa Property. Additionally, on August 3, 2006, the Trustee filed an action for alter ego and for substantive consolidation of the Debtors and H & G nunc pro tunc to the petition date, and to avoid and recover H & G’s unauthorized postpetition transfer of the Villa Property to the Diaz Defendants (collectively “Avoidance Actions”). 3

The Trustee was in the process of negotiating a settlement of the Avoidance Actions when Kismet purchased the Lonie Trust’s claims in this bankruptcy ease. 4 Thereafter, Kismet negotiated an agreement with the Trustee to purchase all of the estate’s assets, including the Avoidance Actions, in exchange for Kismet’s payment in full of administrative expenses and allowed general unsecured claims, except Kismet’s own claims which it agreed to subordinate (“Purchase Agreement”). The Purchase Agreement was noticed to all creditors, including the Diaz Defendants, and was subject to overbid. There were no overbids. The Purchase Agreement was approved by the Court by order entered December 7, 2006. 5 Pursuant to the Purchase Agreement, Kismet was substituted into the Avoidance Actions in place of the Trustee as the real party-in-interest.

Kismet is a limited partnership formed by non-Mexican nationals to develop real estate projects in Mexico. The Court understands that Kismet’s goal in pursuing the Avoidance Actions is to recover the Villa Property to include it in a larger development project. The Court understands that Kismet attempted to negotiate a consensual sale of the Villa Property without success. It saw an opportunity to acquire the Villa Property through these bankruptcy proceedings.

C. The Amended Consolidated Judgment and the Acts of Contempt

After a five day trial in the Avoidance Actions, the Court issued Consolidated Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law (“FFCL”) finding, inter alia, that H & G was Debtors’ alter ego; that the Debtors’ bankruptcy estate and H & G should be substantively consolidated nunc pro tunc to the petition date; that the transfer from Debtors to H & G was an avoidable fraudulent conveyance; that the transfer from H & G to the Diaz Defendants was an avoidable postpetition transfer; and that the avoided transfers could be recovered from the Diaz Defendants who were not good faith transferees.

Related

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Bluebook (online)
398 B.R. 902, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 4054, 51 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 32, 2008 WL 5422636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kismet-acquisition-llc-v-icenhower-in-re-icenhower-casb-2008.