Mirlis v. Greer

80 F.4th 377
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedAugust 30, 2023
Docket21-202
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 80 F.4th 377 (Mirlis v. Greer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mirlis v. Greer, 80 F.4th 377 (2d Cir. 2023).

Opinion

21-202 Mirlis v. Greer

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Second Circuit ______________

August Term, 2022

(Argued: February 21, 2023 Decided: August 30, 2023)

Docket No. 21-202 ______________

ELIYAHU MIRLIS,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

–v.–

SARAH GREER,

Defendant-Appellant.

______________

Before: WALKER, LYNCH, and ROBINSON, Circuit Judges. ______________

Defendant-Appellant Sarah Greer appeals the district court’s judgment awarding damages to Plaintiff-Appellee Eliyahu Mirlis to recover funds Greer received as the result of various alleged fraudulent transfers. The district court entered a default against Greer as a sanction under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(b) for her repeated failure to comply with discovery orders, and ultimately entered a default judgment against Greer for fraudulent transfers, awarding Mirlis damages calculated based on three checks Greer drew from bank accounts she held jointly with her debtor husband.

We conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in determining that Greer’s noncompliance during discovery warranted a default. We also conclude that, on this record, Greer’s withdrawals from accounts she held jointly with her husband constitute fraudulent transfers under Connecticut law. We accordingly AFFIRM.

AFFIRMED.

MATTHEW K. BEATMAN, James M. Moriarty, John L. Cesaroni (on the brief), Zeisler & Zeisler, P.C., Bridgeport, CT, for Plaintiff-Appellee

RICHARD P. COLBERT, Matthew J. Letten (on the brief), Day Pitney LLP, New Haven, CT; Jonathan J. Einhorn (on the brief), Law Office of Jonathan J. Einhorn, New Haven, CT, for Defendant-Appellant. ______________

ROBINSON, Circuit Judge:

Defendant-Appellant Sarah Greer appeals the district court’s judgment

awarding damages to Plaintiff-Appellee Eliyahu Mirlis to recover funds Greer

received as the result of an alleged fraudulent transfer—namely, money she

withdrew from bank accounts she held jointly with her debtor husband and placed

into her personal, individually held bank accounts.

2 The district court entered a default against Greer as a sanction under Federal

Rule of Civil Procedure 37(b) for her repeated failure to comply with discovery

orders, and ultimately entered a default judgment against Greer for fraudulent

transfers, awarding Mirlis damages calculated based on three checks Greer drew

from bank accounts she held jointly with her debtor husband.

For the reasons set forth below, we conclude that the district court did not

abuse its discretion in determining that Greer’s noncompliance during discovery

warranted a default. We also conclude that, on this record, Greer’s withdrawals

constitute fraudulent transfers under the Connecticut Uniform Fraudulent

Transfer Act (“CUFTA”), Conn. Gen. Stat. §§ 52-552e, 52-552f, and Connecticut

common law. We accordingly AFFIRM.

BACKGROUND

Mirlis is a creditor of Greer’s husband, having secured a judgment against

him of over $21 million in June 2017. 1 See Mirlis v. Daniel Greer, No. 3:16-cv-678

(MPS), Judgment, Dkt. No. 163 (D. Conn. June 6, 2017). Greer’s husband was on

notice of the claims that gave rise to Mirlis’ underlying lawsuit since at least 2002,

1 Unless otherwise specified, the facts set forth here are drawn from the district court’s Ruling on Motion for Default Judgment, Mirlis v. Greer, No. 3:18cv2082(MPS), 2021 WL 405886 (D. Conn. Jan. 4, 2021), reconsideration denied, 2021 WL 1711649 (D. Conn. Apr. 30, 2021), and the facts alleged in Mirlis’s complaint. Because the district court’s judgment was based on an order of default against Greer, the district court appropriately accepted the facts alleged in Mirlis’s complaint as true.

3 when the conduct giving rise to Mirlis’s claims against him began, and Greer

herself was on notice since at least May 2016, when the underlying lawsuit was

filed.

As relevant to this appeal, in order to collect on the judgment against her

husband, Mirlis brought claims against Greer arising from three allegedly

fraudulent transfers to her. Greer and her husband held joint checking accounts

at Liberty Bank and Start Community Bank. The Liberty Bank account was

opened in January 2010, after Greer’s husband was on notice of the claims that

gave rise to the suit against him, see J. App’x 439 (reflecting a “Consumer Signature

Card” for the Liberty account dated January 13, 2010), and the Start account was

opened in February 2017, after Mirlis sued Greer’s husband, see also J. App’x 405-

07 (reflecting a “New Account Review Form” for the Start account dated February

17, 2017). Greer’s husband contributed all of the funds in the Liberty account, and

almost all of the funds in the Start account. 2

2 Greer testified that she did not know whether she had deposited any funds into the Start account, and that, “[b]esides Social Security,” she would have had no funds available in 2017 to have deposited in that account. J. App’x 425. In addition, Mirlis alleged that Greer deposited the money she earned into a separate account owned solely by her. A review of the May and June 2017 Start bank statements (the only statements for this account in the record) confirms that the

4 In May 2017, about a week before the jury returned its verdict in the

underlying action between Mirlis and Greer’s husband, Greer drafted a $5,000

check from the Start account payable to herself. This check was then deposited

into an account Greer held solely in her own name. The next month, in June 2017,

after the jury verdict but a day before judgment was entered against Greer’s

husband, Greer drafted a $220,000 check from the Liberty account payable to

herself. Greer deposited this check into an account at another bank that she

recently opened solely in her name. Greer testified at her deposition that she

transferred the funds from the Liberty account “[b]ecause [she] did not want it

taken.” J. App’x 427. After judgment was entered in Mirlis’s action against Greer’s

husband, Greer wrote a $13,000 check drawn from the Start account; that check

Start account balance as of April 29, 2017 was $10,932.26, and that a total of approximately $30,641.80 was deposited into the account between April 29 and Greer’s second withdrawal of $13,000 on June 16, 2017. J. App’x 430-31, 434-35. The only record evidence of a deposit of social security benefits for Greer reflects a $1,997.70 payment from the Social Security Administration on May 24. J. App’x 431. (There was also a deposit of the same amount on June 28, 2017, but that was after Greer made the withdrawals at issue in this case. J. App’x 435.) This is substantially less than the $18,000 she withdrew that Mirlis contends constituted fraudulent transfers, and only a small portion of the monies in the account as of April 29 or deposited thereafter by Greer’s husband. In addition, Greer’s contributions to the Start account were further offset by payments she made from the account to third parties. See, e.g., J. App’x 420, 422 (Greer acknowledging that she made payments to third parties from the Start account in May and June 2017); J. App’x 432, 436 (copies of checks with Greer’s signature). Because Greer has not argued on appeal or in the proceedings below that she personally contributed funds to the Start account, we need not determine with more specificity her precise contributions to the account.

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