Mukamal v. Nat'l Christian Charitable Found., Inc. (In re Palm Beach Fin. Partners, L.P.)
This text of 598 B.R. 885 (Mukamal v. Nat'l Christian Charitable Found., Inc. (In re Palm Beach Fin. Partners, L.P.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Florida. primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Erik P. Kimball, Judge United States Bankruptcy Court
In count 1 of this adversary proceeding, the sole remaining request for relief, the liquidating trustee for the Palm Beach Finance Liquidating Trust and the Palm Beach Finance II Liquidating Trust sues The National Christian Foundation, Inc. seeking a money judgment for claims arising in state law fraudulent transfer. This Court previously granted summary judgment in favor of the defendant on counts 2 and 3 of the complaint, leaving only count 1 for trial. ECF Nos. 241 and 259. The Court assumes familiarity with its Order on Cross Motions for Summary Judgment [ECF No. 241] and will not repeat the background of the case except as necessary for purposes of this order. After the Court's prior summary judgment ruling, *888the defendant filed its Defendant NCF's Motion for Summary Judgment on Count I [ECF No. 270], the motion at issue here, in which it argues again that it is entitled to summary judgment on count 1 of the complaint. The Court heard argument on the motion on January 4, 2019. The Court has considered the motion, the response [ECF No. 277], and the reply [ECF No. 288] consistent with Fed. R. Civ. P. 56, made applicable here by Fed. R. Bankr. P. 7056, and applicable law.
This bankruptcy case, and the present adversary proceeding, stem from one of the largest Ponzi schemes in United States history. More than twenty years ago, Thomas Petters began soliciting investments to facilitate his purchase of overstock consumer products from manufacturers or suppliers and the sale of those products to major retailers. Mr. Petters claimed to need the financing to bridge the time between payment to the suppliers and receipt of payment from the purchasing retailers. Many of these investments were made directly through Petters Company, Inc. Others were made through special purpose entities affiliated with that company and controlled by Mr. Petters.1 The investments were documented with typical commercial notes and agreements and were supposedly secured by the underlying inventory. Palm Beach Finance Partners, L.P. and Palm Beach Finance II, L.P., the debtors in this case, were formed in 2002 and 2004, respectively, to facilitate investment with the Petters enterprise. Nearly all of the money raised by the debtors was used to purchase notes issued by Petters. Unfortunately, the entire Petters financing scheme was a fiction. There were no agreements to buy or sell merchandise. There was no merchandise. Instead, Mr. Petters and his conspirators ran a multi-billion dollar Ponzi scheme, taking in money from new investors, using some of it to pay prior investors, and absconding with the rest. The scheme came to an end in 2008 when the Federal Bureau of Investigation arrested Mr. Petters, who was later convicted of several federal crimes and sentenced to 50 years in prison.
The principals of the debtors were originally introduced to Petters by Frank Vennes. Mr. Vennes and his company, Metro Gem, Inc. ("MGI"), had invested in Petters transactions for several years. The plaintiff alleges that the debtors are creditors of MGI because MGI and Mr. Vennes made material misrepresentations and omitted materially important facts relating to the Petters investments, and because MGI and Mr. Vennes breached their fiduciary duties to the debtors, thus causing damage to the debtors. The plaintiff filed a separate adversary proceeding against Mr. Vennes and MGI based in fraudulent transfer and tort. The parties settled that action. Among other things, the plaintiff obtained a judgment against MGI in the amount of approximately $ 90.4 million and a judgment against Mr. Vennes in the amount of $ 6 million.
The plaintiff claims that, as creditors of MGI, the bankruptcy estates may avoid fraudulent transfers made by MGI to the defendant. In count 1 of the complaint, the plaintiff seeks avoidance of fraudulent transfers and a money judgment under O.C.G.A. § 18-2-74,2 a Georgia state law *889fraudulent transfer claim. See ECF No. 100. These claims are based on four payments made by MGI to the defendant between January and December 2006, aggregating $ 9,010,000. The plaintiff also seeks prejudgment interest and an award of attorneys' fees and costs.
The fraudulent transfer claims presented in count 1 are not claims unique to bankruptcy. They are not specifically provided for under the Bankruptcy Code itself, such as preference or fraudulent transfer claims under
To obtain relief under O.C.G.A. § 18-2-74, the plaintiff must prove that MGI did not receive "a reasonably equivalent value in exchange for the transfer" and that MGI "was engaged or was about to engage in a business or transaction for which the remaining assets of the debtor were unreasonably small in relation to the business or transaction." The first of these two elements, that MGI did not receive reasonably equivalent value, is not disputed in this case. The focus of the present motion for summary judgment is on the second element, whether MGI was engaged or was about to engage in a business or transaction for which its remaining assets were unreasonably small. In ruling on the prior cross-motions for summary judgment, the Court held that to prove this element of its claim the plaintiff must show that the transfer sought to be avoided bears a causal relationship with, at a minimum, MGI's distressed capital position immediately following the transfer. ECF No. 241. In other words, as an initial matter the plaintiff must show that, as a result of the transfer, MGI did not have remaining assets sufficient to maintain its business. When this question was previously addressed by the Court, the parties had not provided sufficient evidence to permit the Court to ascertain the financial status of MGI at the relevant times and so it was not possible to compare the financial status of MGI before and after the transfers to determine whether any of the transfers caused MGI to be left with unreasonably small assets. As a result, the Court previously denied summary judgment on count 1.
Georgia, like every other state, provides for avoidance of a transfer made for less than reasonably equivalent value where the transferor's remaining assets are unreasonably small in relation to its business or the transaction. O.C.G.A.
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Erik P. Kimball, Judge United States Bankruptcy Court
In count 1 of this adversary proceeding, the sole remaining request for relief, the liquidating trustee for the Palm Beach Finance Liquidating Trust and the Palm Beach Finance II Liquidating Trust sues The National Christian Foundation, Inc. seeking a money judgment for claims arising in state law fraudulent transfer. This Court previously granted summary judgment in favor of the defendant on counts 2 and 3 of the complaint, leaving only count 1 for trial. ECF Nos. 241 and 259. The Court assumes familiarity with its Order on Cross Motions for Summary Judgment [ECF No. 241] and will not repeat the background of the case except as necessary for purposes of this order. After the Court's prior summary judgment ruling, *888the defendant filed its Defendant NCF's Motion for Summary Judgment on Count I [ECF No. 270], the motion at issue here, in which it argues again that it is entitled to summary judgment on count 1 of the complaint. The Court heard argument on the motion on January 4, 2019. The Court has considered the motion, the response [ECF No. 277], and the reply [ECF No. 288] consistent with Fed. R. Civ. P. 56, made applicable here by Fed. R. Bankr. P. 7056, and applicable law.
This bankruptcy case, and the present adversary proceeding, stem from one of the largest Ponzi schemes in United States history. More than twenty years ago, Thomas Petters began soliciting investments to facilitate his purchase of overstock consumer products from manufacturers or suppliers and the sale of those products to major retailers. Mr. Petters claimed to need the financing to bridge the time between payment to the suppliers and receipt of payment from the purchasing retailers. Many of these investments were made directly through Petters Company, Inc. Others were made through special purpose entities affiliated with that company and controlled by Mr. Petters.1 The investments were documented with typical commercial notes and agreements and were supposedly secured by the underlying inventory. Palm Beach Finance Partners, L.P. and Palm Beach Finance II, L.P., the debtors in this case, were formed in 2002 and 2004, respectively, to facilitate investment with the Petters enterprise. Nearly all of the money raised by the debtors was used to purchase notes issued by Petters. Unfortunately, the entire Petters financing scheme was a fiction. There were no agreements to buy or sell merchandise. There was no merchandise. Instead, Mr. Petters and his conspirators ran a multi-billion dollar Ponzi scheme, taking in money from new investors, using some of it to pay prior investors, and absconding with the rest. The scheme came to an end in 2008 when the Federal Bureau of Investigation arrested Mr. Petters, who was later convicted of several federal crimes and sentenced to 50 years in prison.
The principals of the debtors were originally introduced to Petters by Frank Vennes. Mr. Vennes and his company, Metro Gem, Inc. ("MGI"), had invested in Petters transactions for several years. The plaintiff alleges that the debtors are creditors of MGI because MGI and Mr. Vennes made material misrepresentations and omitted materially important facts relating to the Petters investments, and because MGI and Mr. Vennes breached their fiduciary duties to the debtors, thus causing damage to the debtors. The plaintiff filed a separate adversary proceeding against Mr. Vennes and MGI based in fraudulent transfer and tort. The parties settled that action. Among other things, the plaintiff obtained a judgment against MGI in the amount of approximately $ 90.4 million and a judgment against Mr. Vennes in the amount of $ 6 million.
The plaintiff claims that, as creditors of MGI, the bankruptcy estates may avoid fraudulent transfers made by MGI to the defendant. In count 1 of the complaint, the plaintiff seeks avoidance of fraudulent transfers and a money judgment under O.C.G.A. § 18-2-74,2 a Georgia state law *889fraudulent transfer claim. See ECF No. 100. These claims are based on four payments made by MGI to the defendant between January and December 2006, aggregating $ 9,010,000. The plaintiff also seeks prejudgment interest and an award of attorneys' fees and costs.
The fraudulent transfer claims presented in count 1 are not claims unique to bankruptcy. They are not specifically provided for under the Bankruptcy Code itself, such as preference or fraudulent transfer claims under
To obtain relief under O.C.G.A. § 18-2-74, the plaintiff must prove that MGI did not receive "a reasonably equivalent value in exchange for the transfer" and that MGI "was engaged or was about to engage in a business or transaction for which the remaining assets of the debtor were unreasonably small in relation to the business or transaction." The first of these two elements, that MGI did not receive reasonably equivalent value, is not disputed in this case. The focus of the present motion for summary judgment is on the second element, whether MGI was engaged or was about to engage in a business or transaction for which its remaining assets were unreasonably small. In ruling on the prior cross-motions for summary judgment, the Court held that to prove this element of its claim the plaintiff must show that the transfer sought to be avoided bears a causal relationship with, at a minimum, MGI's distressed capital position immediately following the transfer. ECF No. 241. In other words, as an initial matter the plaintiff must show that, as a result of the transfer, MGI did not have remaining assets sufficient to maintain its business. When this question was previously addressed by the Court, the parties had not provided sufficient evidence to permit the Court to ascertain the financial status of MGI at the relevant times and so it was not possible to compare the financial status of MGI before and after the transfers to determine whether any of the transfers caused MGI to be left with unreasonably small assets. As a result, the Court previously denied summary judgment on count 1.
Georgia, like every other state, provides for avoidance of a transfer made for less than reasonably equivalent value where the transferor's remaining assets are unreasonably small in relation to its business or the transaction. O.C.G.A. § 18-2-74. Georgia, like every other state, also provides for avoidance of a transfer made for less than reasonably equivalent value when the transferor is insolvent or is rendered insolvent by the transfer. O.C.G.A. § 18-2-75. But the two measures of financial distress at the core of these claims-insolvency and unreasonably small assets-are distinct both in terms of the evidence required to prove them and, importantly for this case, the creditors that may pursue them.
"A debtor is insolvent if the sum of the debtor's debts is greater than all of the debtor's assets at a fair valuation." O.C.G.A. § 18-2-72. This definition of "insolvent" in the Georgia statute is essentially the same as the definition of insolvency relied on for the avoidance provisions of the Bankruptcy Code. Kipperman v. Onex Corp. ,
Neither the Georgia statute, nor the parallel provisions of other uniform statutes or the Bankruptcy Code, provide a definition of "unreasonably small assets" (or "unreasonably small capital" as stated in the Bankruptcy Code). Whether a transfer or obligation leaves a debtor undercapitalized is a question of fact to be determined on a case-by-case basis. Smith v. Litchford & Christopher, P.A. (In re Bay Vista of Va., Inc.),
A transaction or obligation leaves a debtor with unreasonably small assets when it creates an unreasonable risk of the debtor becoming insolvent, but not necessarily a likelihood that the debtor will become insolvent. John H. Ginsberg et al., Befuddlement Betwixt Two Fulcrums: Calibrating the Scales of Justice to Ascertain Fraudulent Transfers in Leveraged Buyouts ,
Both of these standards-insolvency and unreasonably small assets-stem from the Statute of Elizabeth, enacted in 1571. 13 Eliz. c. 5 (1571). The Statute of Elizabeth was aimed at curtailing transfers made with actual intent to delay, hinder, or defraud creditors.
From nearly the emergence of fraudulent transfer law, existing creditors of the transferor had standing to pursue recovery of fraudulently transferred assets. As the law of fraudulent conveyances developed, subsequent creditors, meaning parties to whom the transferor later became indebted, also sought relief. Recovery was permitted where such subsequent creditors were able to show that the challenged transfer was made with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud future creditors such as themselves. Id. at 475-76 (citing mostly 19th Century decisions in the United States). To prove such a case, a subsequent creditor was required to show a connection between the transferor's intent and the harm to the subsequent creditor. Id. at 476 (citations omitted). In other words, the standing of a subsequent creditor to seek avoidance of a transfer depended in part on its ability to show a causal connection between the transfer and nonpayment of the debt owing to the subsequent creditor.
*892In cases brought by subsequent creditors, there developed a new badge of fraud. The badge of insolvency was found lacking in its ability to remedy fraudulent conveyances as to future creditors. To remedy this shortcoming, courts found evidence of actual fraudulent intent where the transferor was left technically solvent following the challenged transfer but the risk of the transferor's continued business was placed on its creditors. Id. (citing numerous early decisions in the United States). "This risk shifting was seen as a species of fraud." Id. at 477. Where a transfer left the transferor without the ability to obtain ongoing capital to operate its business and placed the risk of failure to a great extent on creditors who continued to trade with the transferor, this was found to indicate intent to harm subsequent creditors. The standards developed at that time are the precursor to the unreasonably small assets standard in present law.
Over time, some of the case law addressing subsequent creditor fraudulent transfer claims began to drop the requirement of proof of actual intent to harm future creditors. In some decisions, subsequent creditors needed only to show that the transfer was without consideration and that the transferor's business thereafter lacked reasonable assets or access to capital to cover its foreseeable risks, at which point the burden of disproving a presumption of fraud shifted to the defendant. Id. at 481 (cases cited).
This was the state of the law at the time the Uniform Fraudulent Conveyance Act ("UFCA") was initially adopted by many states in 1918. Id. at 482. In the drafting of the UFCA, there was apparently considerable dispute over the ability of subsequent creditors to avoid constructively fraudulent transfers. Id. at 483-84. In the end, section 5 of the UFCA included a provision permitting subsequent creditors to avoid transfers made "without fair consideration when the person making it is engaged or is about to engage in a business or transaction for which the property remaining in his hands after the conveyance is an unreasonably small capital." UFCA § 5. Notably, section 5 of the UFCA explicitly does away with the need to prove actual intent. Id. The Bankruptcy Act of 1898 included this same standard. Markell, supra , at 484. The Bankruptcy Code, enacted in 1978, adopted nearly the same language, replacing the term "fair consideration" with "reasonably equivalent value" and permitting the avoidance of "obligations incurred" as well as transfers.
As a result of the historical development of fraudulent transfers at common law under parallel theories of relief, there is an important distinction between creditors who may pursue claims under the insolvency approach and creditors who may pursue claims under the unreasonably small assets approach. Under state law, including the UFCA, the UFTA, the UVTA, constructive fraud claims based on insolvency may be brought only by creditors in existence at the time of the transfer or obligation sought to be avoided. Subsequent creditors may not rely on the insolvency of the transferor at the time of the transaction as the basis for a claim. There is some support for the view that this is because subsequent creditors have a better opportunity to determine the transferor's solvency following the transfer and may decline *893to do business with the transferor. Markell, supra , at 492. But constructive fraud claims based on unreasonably small assets may also be brought by those to whom the transferor became indebted after the transfer or obligation.
Beginning with the common law development of the right of subsequent creditors to avoid conveyances where the transferor was left with insufficient capital, through case law under the UFCA, the UFTA, the Bankruptcy Act, and the Bankruptcy Code, the law has consistently required some level of connection between the transfer sought to be avoided and the transferor's failure to pay the subsequent creditor. "An essential element of this formulation is the presence of a connection between the disputed transfer and non-payment of the creditor's claim. This requirement is historical; section 5 [of the UFCA] was distilled from cases which allowed creditors to attack a transfer only if they could somehow connect their non-payment with some universally agreed inference that the transferor, at a relevant time, knowingly left itself with too little reserves." Id. at 499. "The last prerequisite to finding inadequate capital is that the transfer must directly lead to non-payment." Id. at 504-06 (discussing several cases). Under much of the subsequent creditor case law, developing now in its third century, the causation element is not just a connection between the transfer sought to be avoided and the transferor's weakened financial state. Many courts require the causal connection to go further, requiring a showing that the transfer and the resulting financial distress are connected to the non-payment of the creditor's claim itself. A leading commentator has suggested that the subsequent creditor must show that "but for the transfer and the inadequacy of the transferor's resources, the plaintiff's claim would have been paid." Id. at 508.
In the sole remaining count of the complaint, the plaintiff is a subsequent creditor of MGI, seeking to avoid transfers made by MGI long before the plaintiff obtained a judgment against MGI. Under the facts of this case, the plaintiff cannot show that any of the transfers resulted in MGI having unreasonably small assets as the plaintiff conceded that MGI had unreasonably small assets before any of the transfers at issue in this case. But the plaintiff argues, for a second time in the present motion, that there is no need under the law for the plaintiff to show a causal connection between the transfers sought to be avoided and MGI's distressed financial condition. The plaintiff argues that the fact that MGI had unreasonably small assets after each of the transfers is sufficient to support the plaintiff's claims. There is little support for this position and the support that does exist flies in the face of more than 200 years of case law.
In its argument, the plaintiff focuses only on the causal connection between a transfer sought to be avoided and the financial condition of unreasonably small assets. The text of the statute itself supports the conclusion that there must be some connection between the transfer and the transferor's financial distress. As the Court pointed out in its prior order on cross-motions for summary judgment, the statute directs the Court to consider the "remaining assets" of the transferor, that is, the assets left after the transfer sought to be avoided. This requires a comparison of the transferor's capital condition before and after the transfer in question. As a start, the plaintiff must show that the transfer at issue left the debtor with unreasonably small capital. Pioneer Home Builders, Inc. v. Int'l Bank of Commerce (In re Pioneer Home Builders, Inc.) ,
*894Bakst v. United States (In re Kane & Kane) , No. 10-01022-EPK,
In its response, the plaintiff quotes extensively from a particular article, John H. Ginsberg et al., Befuddlement Betwixt Two Fulcrums: Calibrating the Scales of Justice to Ascertain Fraudulent Transfers in Leveraged Buyouts ,
The ABI Article was prompted by the authors' perception of unnecessary uncertainty in fraudulent transfer litigation based on unreasonably small capital, particularly in the context of failed leveraged buyouts.
In the ABI Article, the authors begin by stating a common definition of unreasonably small capital- "A transferor is left with 'unreasonably small capital' if it was 'reasonably foreseeable' at the time of transfer that the transferor would be left with insufficient cash-flow to sustain operations."
A significant portion of the ABI Article is focused on three different approaches, found in the case law, of tying a challenged transfer to a debtor's precarious financial condition and the nonpayment of creditors. The first approach described by the authors would support avoidance of a transfer "if insolvency was reasonably foreseeable at the time of the transfer" even if the "specific conditions precipitating insolvency were unforeseeable" at the time of the transfer. The second approach would necessitate a "specific-proximate-cause test" linking the transfer with non-payment of *895the plaintiff's claim. The third approach would require an "actual-cause test" connecting the transfer with non-payment of the plaintiff's claim.
In defense of the first approach to "causation" addressed in the ABI Article, the authors argue that a transfer that "leaves the transferor undercapitalized harms creditors" by increasing the risk that the transferor will become insolvent and by increasing the risk that when the transferor does become insolvent that insolvency will be more severe.
In the ABI Article, the authors go on to criticize two other approaches to "causation" found in the case law. The second and third approaches discussed in the article are best described by the questions the authors pose to illustrate those approaches.
The second approach would require a court to ask "whether the circumstances precipitating insolvency were reasonably foreseeable." Ginsberg et al., supra, at 101. In other words, a court would need to determine, from the point of view of the date of the transfer, whether the circumstances that actually resulted in the debtor's insolvency were reasonably foreseeable to the parties to the transfer. If they were not, then the transfer would not be subject to avoidance. Under this approach, the "causation" required to be shown is between the transfer and the reasonably foreseeable circumstances that result in the later failure of the debtor. The transfer must not simply create credit risk for existing and future creditors of the debtor, as with the first approach, but must create circumstances where specific conditions are foreseeable which will and do in fact lead to the insolvency of the debtor. A defendant may defeat such a claim by offering evidence indicating that an intervening act or circumstance, such as adverse market conditions not foreseeable at the time of the transfer, was in fact the cause of the transferor's insolvency. As the authors point out, this is the type of causation required by the Third Circuit in its seminal decision in Moody , where the court required "a link between the challenged conveyance and the debtor's insolvency" based on factors foreseeable at the time of the conveyance. Id. at 101-02 (quoting Moody ,
The third approach requires an even more direct "causation" between the challenged transfer and the eventual failure of the debtor. In the ABI Article, the authors define the third approach with the question "whether the transferor would have become insolvent even without the transfer." Id. at 104. The third approach differs from the second in that, rather than looking primarily to the defendant to point out intervening circumstances that were not *896foreseeable at the time of the transfer and that resulted in the transferor's insolvency, the third approach would require the plaintiff to affirmatively prove that the later insolvency of the transferor depended on the specific transfer sought to be avoided. In other words, but for the transfer the transferor would not have become insolvent. This third approach to proving "causation" in the context of unreasonably small assets would markedly constrict matters where avoidance actions would be successful. Even so, the authors of the ABI Article were able to cite decisions where this approach was used. Id. at 104. A leading commentator on bankruptcy law has suggested that this is the appropriate approach to causation. Markell, supra , at 504-05.
In the end, the authors of the ABI Article rejected the second and third approaches to "causation" on the grounds that those approaches fail to remedy harm to creditors in many cases where the fraudulent transfer statutes are intended to apply. Ginsberg et al., supra, at 104-05. But, contrary to the plaintiff's argument, the authors of the ABI Article confirm that fraudulent transfer law in the context of subsequent creditor claims almost universally requires some level of causation. In the view of the authors of the ABI Article, the level of causation required to be proven should be in the form of a connection between the challenged transfer and the financial condition of the debtor that creates undue risk for existing and future creditors. Id. at 90-105.
In its prior ruling on summary judgment, this Court did not require the plaintiff to show a connection between a transfer sought to be avoided and reasonably foreseeable circumstances that would lead to MGI's failure, nor did the Court require the plaintiff to show that any transfer at issue in this case was the but for cause of MGI's eventual failure. This Court required only the minimum required under most of the case law, exactly the "causation" proposed as appropriate in the ABI Article. The plaintiff must show that a transfer the plaintiff seeks to avoid in count 1 resulted in MGI becoming financially distressed such that there was then an unreasonable risk of MGI's eventual failure. The Court notes that, among the types of causation reviewed in the ABI Article, this is the most plaintiff-friendly option.
The chief objection to this view is that a transfer made at a time when a debtor is already in a position where its assets are unreasonably small, when it is already foreseeable that the debtor will become insolvent, is not actionable. A transfer that deepens a debtor's already existing financial instability cannot form the basis of a claim based on unreasonably small assets. The transfer subject to the avoidance action must be the transfer that brought about the condition of unreasonably small assets, thus creating an unreasonable risk of insolvency and payment default. Perhaps it seems initially strange that where a debtor makes a series of transfers some of which are before its assets are so depleted as to put it into the requisite financial uncertainty, and some of which fall after that point, only one of the transfers may be subject to avoidance as only that one transfer will be the straw that broke the camel's back, being the cause of the debtor having unreasonably small assets. But it must be kept in mind that the claim in question is one that may be brought by a creditor that did not exist at the time of the transfer. For such a creditor, the right obtained is a retrospective one unique to this provision of the law. It is reasonable to require that such a subsequent creditor, at a minimum, be able to point to the transfer sought to be avoided as the reason that the debtor was placed in a position *897leaving that future creditor at risk. If the debtor was already in financial distress before the transfer in question such that it was foreseeably doomed to insolvency, the recipient of the transfer should not be placed under the burden of a risk it did not create.
In its response, the plaintiff cites several decisions for the proposition that "[m]any courts find there is no requirement to show a causal link between the transfers at issue and the unreasonably small capital condition." Resp. 9 n.39, ECF No. 277. It is useful to review each of the cited decisions.
In Askenaizer v. Anderson (In re Catco Recycling, LLC) , No. 15-1012,
The plaintiff cites Official Comm. of Unsecured Creditors of TOUSA, Inc. v. Citicorp N. Am. (In re TOUSA, Inc.) ,
The Court does not understand why the plaintiff cited Manning v. Wallace (In re First Fin. Assocs.) ,
In Doctors Hosp. of Hyde Park, Inc. v. Desnick (In re Doctors Hosp. of Hyde Park, Inc.) ,
As the plaintiff argues, it appears that in Geron v. Schulman (In re Manshul Constr. Corp.) ,
In Gilbert v. Goble (In re N. Am. Clearing, Inc.) ,
The plaintiff cites Burtch v. Opus, LLC (In re Opus East, LLC) ,
The plaintiff also cites Samson v. Western Capital Partners LLC (In re Blixseth) ,
It is true, as the plaintiff suggests, that the Third Circuit not long ago declined to specifically rule that its decision in Moody requires proof of a specific causal connection between the challenged transfer and the inadequacy of the debtor's capital position. Whyte v. SemGroup Litig. Trust (In re SemCrude L.P.) ,
In the end, very few reported decisions explicitly state that, to prove a claim based in unreasonably small assets, there must be a "causal link" between the transfer sought to be avoided and the debtor's financial distress following the transfer. But it is apparent from a review of the case law that this is exactly what courts have been doing for more than two centuries. The ABI Article, discussed above, cites a number of these decisions. The few courts that have explicitly rejected the concept of a "causal link" fail to recognize the analyses undertaken by scores of courts in deciding fraudulent transfer cases, fail to understand the historical context and intent of this component of fraudulent transfer law and, in the end, ignore the language of the relevant statutes themselves.
In summary, to prevail under O.C.G.A. § 18-2-74, the plaintiff must show that a payment made by MGI to the defendant left MGI with unreasonably small assets. If MGI already had unreasonably small assets at the time of any challenged payment, then the payment did not leave MGI with unreasonably small assets. It is proper that a future creditor, such as the plaintiff in this case, should not have a claim in that instance as a transfer that has no potential causal connection to MGI's inability to pay the plaintiff's claim should not be actionable.
Based on the evidence before the Court on this motion for summary judgment, MGI had unreasonably small assets prior to any of the transfers at issue in count 1 of the complaint and so none of the transfers are actionable under O.C.G.A. § 18-2-74. At all relevant times, the sums owing to MGI as a result of MGI's investment activity were MGI's primary assets. It is undisputed that the lion's share of this asset category, more than 80%, was attributable to MGI's investments with Petters. As the Court explained in detail in its prior order on cross-motions for summary judgment, in light of Petters' Ponzi scheme and applicable law, MGI did not have an enforceable contract claim against Petters for MGI's expected "investment return." MGI had only a potential right to return of *900principal in the eventual liquidation of the Petters enterprise. The defendant did not offer any evidence contrary to that provided by the plaintiff on the issue of MGI's capital condition at the relevant times. Based on uncontroverted evidence now before the Court, prior to the first of the four payments at issue in count 1, and at all times thereafter, the total funds received by MGI from Petters exceeded the aggregate of every dollar MGI had ever invested with Petters. In other words, from before any payment by MGI to the defendant, MGI had no claim whatsoever against Petters. Indeed, because MGI had received more than return of its capital investment from Petters, MGI was subject to claims in the eventual liquidation of Petters. Yet MGI then had substantial bank debts, outstanding notes payable, and regular expenses. It is obvious that MGI did not have sufficient assets to remain in business well prior to the transfers at issue here and so none of the transfers was the cause of MGI's financial distress.
For the foregoing reasons, summary judgment must be entered in favor of the defendant on count 1 of the complaint. Because the Court will have entered summary judgment in favor of the defendant on all counts of the complaint, the Court will enter judgment in favor of the defendant.
For the foregoing reasons, the Court hereby ORDERS and ADJUDGES as follows:
1. The defendant's request for summary judgment on count 1 of the complaint [ECF No. 270] is GRANTED.
2. The Court will enter a separate final judgment in favor of the defendant on all counts of the complaint.
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