Per-Co Ltd. v. Great Lakes Factors, Inc. (In re Great Lakes Factors, Inc.)

331 B.R. 347, 63 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 70, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 1914, 2005 WL 2496406
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedJuly 22, 2005
DocketNos. 03-3133, 03-31616
StatusPublished

This text of 331 B.R. 347 (Per-Co Ltd. v. Great Lakes Factors, Inc. (In re Great Lakes Factors, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Per-Co Ltd. v. Great Lakes Factors, Inc. (In re Great Lakes Factors, Inc.), 331 B.R. 347, 63 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 70, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 1914, 2005 WL 2496406 (Ohio 2005).

Opinion

DECISION AND ORDER

RICHARD L. SPEER, Bankruptcy Judge.

Before this Court is the Motion of the Defendant, RFC Banking Company, f/k/a/ the Peoples Banking Company, for a Protective Order pertaining to the Notice of Deposition filed by the Plaintiffs, Per-Co., Ltd and Perry Farms, Inc. According to the Defendant, the Deposition Notice is overbroad, and seeks to insert issues into this litigation which are irrelevant. Based thereon, the Defendant requests this specific relief:

for protection regarding the breadth of testimony requested by Plaintiffs in their Arbitrary Noticed Deposition of Peoples Banking Company, limiting the testimony of Peoples to transactions and negotiations which occurred after 2002, and restricting the inquiry to exclude the Business Manager transactions.

(Doc. No. 83, at pg. 7).

DISCUSSION

The movant for a protective order carries the burden to establish its right thereto. In re FirstEnergy Shareholder Derivative Lit., 219 F.R.D. 584, 587 (N.D.Ohio 2004). Here, the Defendant, RFC Banking Company, f/k/a/ the Peoples Banking Company (hereinafter “Peoples”), has raised two legal grounds, addressed in order below, in support of its Motion for a protective order: (1) relevancy; and (2) overbreadth.

Relevancy, like with evidentiary issues, is the foundation upon which all matters pertaining to a party’s right to discovery lie. Consequently, matters which are found to be irrelevant are excluded from the scope of discovery; no protective order is actually needed. In this matter, Peoples puts forth that the information sought by the Plaintiffs would not help in the prosecution of their action, and is thus irrelevant, because (1) it inappropriately seeks to impute culpability to the Defendant, and (2) involves matters that took place prior to the time the Plaintiffs became involved in the transactions which are at issue.

Rule 26(b)(1) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, made applicable to this proceeding by Bankruptcy Rule 7026, sets forth the parameters for relevancy, providing that the “[p]arties may obtain discovery regarding any matter, not privileged, that is relevant .... to the claim or defense of any party .... ” (emphasis added). Thus, two strictures are placed upon the scope of relevant evidence: (1) although relevant, discovery may not include matters which are privileged; and (2) relevant evidence is limited to issues related to the “the claim or defense” of the parties. It is [350]*350the latter limitation which is at issue in this matter.

Principally, claims and defenses are to be raised in the parties’ pleadings, with the Rules of Procedure providing that a party is required, to the extent applicable, to make a “short and plain statement of the claim” and their “defenses to each claim asserted ...Fed.R.CivP 8(a)/(b). By conditioning relevancy therefore on the claim and/or defense of a party, any controversy regarding its existence must necessarily focus on those claims and defenses raised by the parties in their pleadings. Thompson v. H.U.D., 219 F.R.D. 93, 97 (D.Md.2008) (fact must be germane to a claim or defense alleged in the pleading for information concerning it to be a proper subject of discovery).

In this matter, the Plaintiffs’ Complaint seeks a declaratory judgment that the company, Great Lakes Factors, Inc., is not an alter ego of the company, Great Lakes Funding. And, in the alternative, the Plaintiffs assert a claim having, as its averments, the indicia of an equitable right of subordination against Peoples pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 510(c). (The Defendant filed a counterclaim, seeking, inter alia, that it be deemed to have a first and best interest in all of the assets, accounts and otherwise, of Great Lake Factors.)

With respect to the first, the alter ego doctrine allows a litigant to disregard the corporate form so as to reach assets otherwise unattainable. Flynn v. Greg Anthony Constr. Co., Inc., 95 Fed.Appx. 726, 733 (6th Cir.2003) Under this doctrine, the primary issue is whether two business entities — here this being the two entities using the namesake, Great Lakes — are “fundamentally indistinguishable” from the other. Belvedere Condominium Unit Owners’Ass’n v. R.E. Roark Co., Inc., 67 Ohio St.3d 274, 288-89, 617 N.E.2d 1075, 1077 (1993). An alter ego claim thus places its focus on the putatively alike business entities and away from any acts conducted by a creditor. Accord, Kalb, Voorhis & Co. v. American Financial Corp., 8 F.3d 130, 133 (2nd Cir.1993) (although applied in a different context, pari delicto defense is generally not available in an alter ego action). The exact opposite, however, is true with respect to a claim for equitable subordination under § 510(c) which looks directly to the propriety of the creditor’s conduct. This distinction is crucial.

Those discovery requests which are controverted in this matter, — the testimony regarding transactions and negotiations which occurred between Great Lakes Funding and Peoples prior to 2002, and the Business Manager Program — are admittedly aimed entirely at obtaining information regarding whether Peoples engaged in any inequitable conduct that then led to those losses the Plaintiffs incurred. Thus, with the focus of their discovery requests placed entirely on the propriety of Peoples’ actions, relevancy must be keyed solely to the Plaintiffs’ claim for equitable subordination under § 510(c); not a determination as to whether the alter ego doctrine is applicable in this matter.

In United States Abatement Corp. v. Mobil Exploration & Producing, U.S., Inc. (In re United States Abatement Corp.), the Fifth Circuit explained the doctrine of equitable subordination under § 510(c) as follows:

Equitable subordination is a remedial, not penal, measure which is used only sparingly. This court has established a three-prong test to identify those situations in which equitable subordination is permitted: (1) the claimant must have engaged in some type of inequitable conduct; (2) the conduct must have resulted in injury to the creditors or conferred an [351]*351unfair advantage on the claimant; and (3) the invocation of equitable subordination must not be inconsistent with the provisions of the Bankruptcy Code.
While our three-pronged test appears to be quite broad, we have largely confined equitable subordination to three general paradigms: (1) when a fiduciary of the debtor misuses his position to the disadvantage of other creditors; (2) when a third party controls the debtor to the disadvantage of other creditors; and (3) when a third party actually defrauds other creditors.

39 F.3d 556, 561 (5th Cir.1994). See also In re AutoStyle Plastics, Inc., 269 F.3d 726, 744-45 (6th Cir.2001) (adopting the three-part test).

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331 B.R. 347, 63 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 70, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 1914, 2005 WL 2496406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/per-co-ltd-v-great-lakes-factors-inc-in-re-great-lakes-factors-inc-ohnb-2005.