MERRILL RANCH PROPERTIES, LLC v. AUSTELL Et Al.

784 S.E.2d 125, 336 Ga. App. 722, 2016 Ga. App. LEXIS 197
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 28, 2016
DocketA15A2313
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 784 S.E.2d 125 (MERRILL RANCH PROPERTIES, LLC v. AUSTELL Et Al.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MERRILL RANCH PROPERTIES, LLC v. AUSTELL Et Al., 784 S.E.2d 125, 336 Ga. App. 722, 2016 Ga. App. LEXIS 197 (Ga. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

McMlLLIAN, Judge.

Appellant Merrill Ranch Properties, LLC (“Plaintiff” or “Appellant”) brought suit 1 against appellees 2 seeking, among other things, *723 to set aside certain transfers and conveyances that Plaintiff contends were made in violation of Georgia’s Uniform Fraudulent Transfers Act, OCGA § 18-2-70 et seq. (the “UFTA”). 3 The trial court granted summary judgment to appellees, and Plaintiff filed this appeal. We now affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings as more fully set forth below.

The underlying facts, although somewhat complex and confusing, 4 are largely undisputed. 5 In 2006, the Peoples Bank of Winder, Georgia (“Peoples Bank”) extended a $100 million revolving line of credit (the “Loan”) to WHM Merrill Ranch Investments LLC (the “Borrower”). The Loan was evidenced by a Loan Agreement dated September 28, 2006 and a Promissory Note executed “of approximately even date herewith”; it was secured by certain real property located in Arizona. The Loan was guaranteed by real estate developer W. Harrison Merrill (“Harrison Merrill”) and eight trust entities 6 he controlled (collectively “Guarantors”). In addition to Peoples Bank, numerous other banks held participation interests in the Loan.

Over time, $89 million was extended to the Borrower under the Loan. However, the Borrower was unable to make the required payments on the debt, and the Loan was declared in default on or around September 26, 2008. A few months later, in February 2009, Peoples Bank purchased by credit bid the Arizona property securing the Loan, and in April 2009, Peoples Bank instituted proceedings in Arizona against the Borrower and Guarantors to recover the deficiency owing after the sale of the property (the “Arizona litigation”).

*724 While the Arizona litigation was pending, on September 28, 2009, Peoples Bank entered into a written agreement with a “Steering Committee of Subparticipant Lenders,” to sell its interest in the Loan and collateral (“Agreement”). The Agreement expressly provided that an unidentified legal entity would be created prior to closing to consummate the transaction, and Plaintiff was formed about a month later for this purpose. On October 28 and 29, 2009, Peoples Bank executed a series of documents, including an allonge to the note, which transferred and assigned its interests in the Loan to Plaintiff, and Plaintiff wired the purchase money for the Loan to Peoples Bank.

After Plaintiff was substituted for Peoples Bank in the Arizona litigation, the parties settled the suit for $10 million, plus post-judgment interest, and the judgment was entered accordingly on June 14, 2011. 7 Plaintiff petitioned to domesticate the judgment in the Superior Court of Fulton County, Georgia and on August 15,2011, the court entered an order domesticating the Arizona judgment.

During post-judgment discovery, Plaintiff determined that shortly after the Loan was declared in default in September 2008, three limited liability companies with corporate relationships to Merrill companies 8 made transfers of unsecured real property (collectively the “2008 LLC Real Estate Transfers”) to various newly-created entities that were, in turn, directly or indirectly “owned” by trusts established for the benefit of Harrison Merrill, his then-wife whom he was in the process of divorcing, and his five children (“Children’s Trusts”). Although the 2008 LLC Real Estate Transferors were neither guarantors of the Loan nor Judgment Debtors and the property transferred had not been pledged to secure the Loan, the LLC Real Estate Transferors were at least partially owned by several of the Judgment Debtors.

Additionally, Plaintiff discovered that at the beginning of 2010, the Item Nine Will Trust, which is one of the Judgment Debtors, transferred its membership interests in five limited liability companies to the Merrill Family Partnership, LLC, which was “owned” by the Children’s Trusts (“Item Nine Will Transfer”). And another transfer also occurred sometime at the beginning of 2010 9 when *725 Merrill Mining,, LLC transferred stock it owned in S-Corporation Florence Copper Mining Inc. 10 either directly or indirectly to the Children’s Trusts (“Merrill Mining Transfer”). Although neither Florence Copper nor Merrill Mining were guarantors of the Loan or Judgment Debtors, Judgment Debtor MCRT was a member of Merrill Mining, LLC.

On July 30, 2012, Plaintiff filed its initial complaint 11 under the UFTA seeking to set aside or impose a constructive trust on the assets involved in the Merrill Mining Transfer. Shortly before the suit was filed, on March 9,2012, and then after the suit was filed on December 19, 2013, Plaintiff obtained charging orders against the membership and ownership interests of various Judgment Debtors in numerous limited liability companies, 12 including the 2008 LLC Real Estate Transferors and the Merrill Mining Transferor.

Plaintiff amended its complaint several times, and on January 9, 2014, Plaintiff filed a motion and proposed amended complaint to add additional defendants and/or fraudulent transfer claims based on the 2008 Real Estate Transfers and the 2010 Item Nine Will Transfer. On April 22, 2014, the trial court granted Plaintiff’s motion to amend, and on April 29, 2014, Plaintiff amended its complaint to add these fraudulent transfer claims and defendants.

Subsequently, the parties filed opposing motions for summary judgment, and following a hearing, the trial court denied Plaintiff’s summary judgment motion and granted appellees’ motion, entering judgment in favor of appellees on all claims. The trial court based its ruling on the following findings: (1) the Loan assignment to Plaintiff was ineffective and thus Plaintiff was not the holder of the Loan; (2) even if the assignment of the debt was proper, the fraud claims were not assignable as a matter of law; (3) Plaintiff lacked standing under *726 the UFTA because it was not a creditor or subsequent creditor of the non-judgment debtor LLC transferors; and (4) the Loan, domesticated Arizona Judgment, and charging orders did not create “a direct nexus” or basis of direct liability between Plaintiff and the LLC transferors. As more fully set forth below, we now reverse in part and affirm in part the trial court’s order and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

1. As a preliminary matter, we must decide if the Loan was properly assigned to Plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
784 S.E.2d 125, 336 Ga. App. 722, 2016 Ga. App. LEXIS 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merrill-ranch-properties-llc-v-austell-et-al-gactapp-2016.