Pereira v. Dow Chemical Co. (In Re Trace International Holdings, Inc.)

301 B.R. 801, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 1619, 42 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 70, 2003 WL 22904416
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 10, 2003
Docket18-01803
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 301 B.R. 801 (Pereira v. Dow Chemical Co. (In Re Trace International Holdings, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pereira v. Dow Chemical Co. (In Re Trace International Holdings, Inc.), 301 B.R. 801, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 1619, 42 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 70, 2003 WL 22904416 (N.Y. 2003).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION GRANTING DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

STUART M. BERNSTEIN, Chief Judge.

This case raises the novel application of judicial estoppel to inconsistent positions, both of which were taken successfully by the plaintiff in an earlier action against different parties. The defendant, Dow Chemical Company (“Dow”), was not a party to the earlier lawsuit, and has moved for summary judgment based on the inconsistency. For the reasons that follow, its motion is granted.

BACKGROUND

The background to this dispute is set forth in the Court’s prior decision, Pereira v. Dow Chemical Co. (In re Trace Int’l Holdings, Inc.), 287 B.R. 98 (Bankr.S.D.N.Y.2002)(“Trace I ”), familiarity with which is assumed. In brief, Dow purchased Series A Preferred Stock (the “Preferred Stock”) from Trace in 1992. 1 *803 Trace was obligated to pay dividends when lawfully able to do so, and if Trace redeemed the Preferred Stock, it was required to pay accrued dividends at that time. Id. at 110. According to the trustee, Trace paid dividends aggregating $3,575,150.00 to Dow between January 1, 1995 and the petition date, July 21, 1999. This sum included two transfers aggregating $367,325.00, made within one year of the petition date.

Following the conversion of the case from chapter 11 to chapter 7, the trustee commenced this adversary proceeding to recover those payments as actual or constructive fraudulent transfers under bankruptcy, New York and Delaware law. The trustee contends that the transfers were dividend payments made by Trace at a time when it was insolvent. The trustee had also commenced an action against Trace’s former officers and directors in the District Court. That action was assigned to Judge Sweet. To the extent relevant to these proceedings, the trustee contended in the District Court that the directors had violated Delaware law by authorizing the payment of the Dow dividends at a time when Trace was insolvent.

A. The Trustee’s Insolvency Analysis

The trustee proposed to prove Trace’s insolvency at the relevant times (1995-1998) through the expert report and testimony of Thomas M. Blake of Ernst & Young, LLC. 2 To compute Trace’s solvency, Blake relied on two methods: the fair market balance sheet method and the cash flow and capital adequacy method. 3 According to his Report, the first approach “calculates the fair enterprise value of a company’s assets and liabilities, including contingent liabilities on a going concern basis. A company is insolvent if its liabilities exceed its enterprise value assets on a fair market value basis.” (Report 4.)

The process required Blake to make adjustments to Trace’s non-GAAP balance sheet “to present each asset and liability on a fair market value basis.” (Report 6.) One of the adjustments involved Trace’s obligation to redeem the Preferred Stock. For the purposes of his analysis, Blake characterized the redemption obligation as a “cash obligation,” and treated it just like Trace’s other liabilities. (Report 14.) Blake concluded that “Trace was insolvent at various points in time from the fourth quarter of 1995 through the fourth quarter of 1998 on a fair market value balance sheet basis.” (Report 5.)

The cash flow and capital adequacy method of valuation “measures a company’s ability to pay its debts into the future .... [and] a company is insolvent if it cannot generate and/or obtain enough cash to pay for its projected obligations and fund its business requirements for working capital and capital expenditures with a reasonable cushion to cover the variability of its business needs over time.” (Report 4.) Blake treated Trace’s obligation to pay the Preferred Stock dividends (as well as the Convertible Preferred dividends) as a component of cash outflow, the same treatment afforded to Trace’s corporate and interest expenses. (Report 16-17.) Blake concluded that Trace was insolvent under the cash flow and capital adequacy method *804 at all times during the four years under review. (Report 5.)

B. The First Motion For Summary Judgment

Prior to the trial in the District Court, Dow filed a motion for summary judgment in this adversary proceeding. Dow argued, inter alia, that the trustee could not contend that the Preferred Stock dividend obligation was a liability for valuation purposes, and simultaneously maintain that it was not an “antecedent debt.” He should, therefore, be estopped or precluded from recovering the transfers. I acknowledged the apparent inconsistency, see Trace I, 287 B.R. at 110, but concluded that dismissal on this basis was premature:

Nevertheless, the trustee should not be prevented, at this point, from contending that the payments to Dow were dividends. First, Dow has not pointed to any mandatory authority that forecloses the trustee’s position. Second, Dow has conceded that judicial estoppel does not apply because no court has adopted the trustee’s position that the Preferred Stock obligations are liabilities for valuation purposes, [citations omitted.] Dow’s argument ignores the limitations on judicial estoppel, yet garners precisely the same benefits that the doctrine would afford. Third, the trustee may change his position, or in Dow’s view, adopt a more consistent position at trial.

Trace I, 287 B.R. at 111. In the end, I granted the motion to the extent of dismissing the claims based on actual fraud and on Delaware law, and denied the balance of the motion. Id. at 112.

C. Motion For Reargument

Prompted by the completion of the District Court trial, Dow subsequently moved for reargument, or alternatively, for a stay until the District Court rendered its decision. Dow pointed out in its motion that Blake had testified consistently with his Report, and the Report had been received in evidence. Noting that Blake’s trial testimony and the receipt in evidence of his Report were cumulative of what had already been placed before me, I denied the motion for reargument.

I also noted that the trustee had taken the same inconsistent position identified by Dow before the District Court:

[The trustee’s] fifth count is based on the payment of illegal dividends under Delaware law. He has requested specific findings from District Judge Sweet that Trace paid the dividends to the Series A Preferred Stockholders while it was insolvent, [citation omitted.] If the Series A Preferred payments are dividends under the Delaware law prohibiting the payment of dividends by an insolvent company, they are also dividends for fraudulent transfer purposes. See 287 B.R. at 108 (payment of a dividend by an insolvent Delaware corporation is unlawful, and may be recovered as a fraudulent transfer). Yet in computing solvency, the trustee treated the dividends as “cash obligations,” the same as he has done here....

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301 B.R. 801, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 1619, 42 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 70, 2003 WL 22904416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pereira-v-dow-chemical-co-in-re-trace-international-holdings-inc-nysb-2003.