Pergament v. Brooklyn Law Sch.
This text of 595 B.R. 6 (Pergament v. Brooklyn Law Sch.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
ROSS, United States District Judge:
In this consolidated bankruptcy appeal, the appellant, a bankruptcy trustee, seeks to overturn the determination of the bankruptcy court that he cannot recover from three institutions of higher learning payments that the debtor made for his children's education. Specifically, the bankruptcy court ruled that the schools were not "the initial transferee[s]" of the payments within the meaning of
The bankruptcy court's analysis of this thorny issue was sound, but because the bankruptcy court appears not to have grappled with a key factual question, I vacate the decision below and remand the cases for further proceedings.1
BACKGROUND
On September 30, 2008, a lawsuit was filed against the debtor in these bankruptcy actions, alleging that the debtor had "bilk[ed]" his friend out of "millions of dollars" by encouraging the friend to buy coins from the debtor at inflated prices. See Complaint at 1, Marini v. Adamo ,
While that litigation proceeded, the debtor's son Nicholas in 2009 matriculated at appellee Hofstra University, which he attended until his graduation in 2013. Appellant App. Pt. I, at TA0006, ECF No. 5-1.2 And from April 2009 until December 2012, the debtor made payments totaling approximately $120,000 to Hofstra for Nicholas's tuition. See
Similarly, in 2012, the debtor's daughter Francesca matriculated at appellee Fairfield University, which she attended until her graduation in 2015. Appellant App. Pt. I, at TA0008. From August 2012 until December 2013, the debtor made payments totaling approximately $90,000 to Fairfield for Francesca's tuition. See
*9Meanwhile, the lawsuit against the debtor came to a close. On February 6, 2014, after a bench trial, Judge Joseph F. Bianco of this district ruled for the plaintiffs in that action ( Marini ,
While his bankruptcy case proceeded, however, the debtor continued to spend money on his children's higher education. In 2015, the debtor's son Andrew matriculated at Hofstra, and Francesca began attending appellee Brooklyn Law School.
Then on July 13, 2016, the bankruptcy court converted the debtor's chapter 11 case to a chapter 7 case and ordered the appointment of a trustee. See Appellant App. Pt. I, at TA0005. On August 17, 2016, that trustee, the appellant here, initiated adversary proceedings in the bankruptcy court against the three schools to avoid and recover from them all the above-mentioned tuition payments. See
On March 28, 2018, on cross-motions for summary judgment in the three adversary proceedings, the bankruptcy court granted summary judgment to the schools in a single opinion, ruling that "the undisputed facts establish that the Debtor's children were the initial transferees of the Debtor's transfers, and that the [schools] are entitled to the good faith defense provided by § 550(b)."
[A]ny payments received, from whatever source, were placed in the respective student's school account; funds were only applied toward tuition, and transferred to the school's general account, upon the student's registration for classes; in the event the student withdrew from the program, the student received the refund of any balance in the account.
That grant of summary judgment is the subject of this appeal. Because the trustee has conceded that the schools took the payments in good faith, the sole question on appeal is whether the schools are initial transferees or subsequent transferees under § 550 of the Bankruptcy Code.5
STANDARD OF REVIEW
"[I]n bankruptcy appeals, the district court reviews the bankruptcy court's *10factual findings for clear error and its conclusions of law de novo." R2 Invs., LDC v . Charter Commc'ns, Inc. (In re Charter Commc'ns, Inc.) ,
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ROSS, United States District Judge:
In this consolidated bankruptcy appeal, the appellant, a bankruptcy trustee, seeks to overturn the determination of the bankruptcy court that he cannot recover from three institutions of higher learning payments that the debtor made for his children's education. Specifically, the bankruptcy court ruled that the schools were not "the initial transferee[s]" of the payments within the meaning of
The bankruptcy court's analysis of this thorny issue was sound, but because the bankruptcy court appears not to have grappled with a key factual question, I vacate the decision below and remand the cases for further proceedings.1
BACKGROUND
On September 30, 2008, a lawsuit was filed against the debtor in these bankruptcy actions, alleging that the debtor had "bilk[ed]" his friend out of "millions of dollars" by encouraging the friend to buy coins from the debtor at inflated prices. See Complaint at 1, Marini v. Adamo ,
While that litigation proceeded, the debtor's son Nicholas in 2009 matriculated at appellee Hofstra University, which he attended until his graduation in 2013. Appellant App. Pt. I, at TA0006, ECF No. 5-1.2 And from April 2009 until December 2012, the debtor made payments totaling approximately $120,000 to Hofstra for Nicholas's tuition. See
Similarly, in 2012, the debtor's daughter Francesca matriculated at appellee Fairfield University, which she attended until her graduation in 2015. Appellant App. Pt. I, at TA0008. From August 2012 until December 2013, the debtor made payments totaling approximately $90,000 to Fairfield for Francesca's tuition. See
*9Meanwhile, the lawsuit against the debtor came to a close. On February 6, 2014, after a bench trial, Judge Joseph F. Bianco of this district ruled for the plaintiffs in that action ( Marini ,
While his bankruptcy case proceeded, however, the debtor continued to spend money on his children's higher education. In 2015, the debtor's son Andrew matriculated at Hofstra, and Francesca began attending appellee Brooklyn Law School.
Then on July 13, 2016, the bankruptcy court converted the debtor's chapter 11 case to a chapter 7 case and ordered the appointment of a trustee. See Appellant App. Pt. I, at TA0005. On August 17, 2016, that trustee, the appellant here, initiated adversary proceedings in the bankruptcy court against the three schools to avoid and recover from them all the above-mentioned tuition payments. See
On March 28, 2018, on cross-motions for summary judgment in the three adversary proceedings, the bankruptcy court granted summary judgment to the schools in a single opinion, ruling that "the undisputed facts establish that the Debtor's children were the initial transferees of the Debtor's transfers, and that the [schools] are entitled to the good faith defense provided by § 550(b)."
[A]ny payments received, from whatever source, were placed in the respective student's school account; funds were only applied toward tuition, and transferred to the school's general account, upon the student's registration for classes; in the event the student withdrew from the program, the student received the refund of any balance in the account.
That grant of summary judgment is the subject of this appeal. Because the trustee has conceded that the schools took the payments in good faith, the sole question on appeal is whether the schools are initial transferees or subsequent transferees under § 550 of the Bankruptcy Code.5
STANDARD OF REVIEW
"[I]n bankruptcy appeals, the district court reviews the bankruptcy court's *10factual findings for clear error and its conclusions of law de novo." R2 Invs., LDC v . Charter Commc'ns, Inc. (In re Charter Commc'ns, Inc.) ,
DISCUSSION
Section 550 provides that, when a transfer is avoided under certain sections of the Bankruptcy Code, "the trustee may recover, for the benefit of the estate, the property transferred," from either "the initial transferee of such transfer" or "any [subsequent] transferee of such initial transferee." § 550(a).7 The trustee may not recover from a subsequent "transferee that takes for value ..., in good faith, and without knowledge of the voidability of the transfer avoided." § 550(b)(1). No such good-faith exception applies for initial transferees. See Carroll v. Tese-Milner (In re Red Dot Scenic, Inc.) ,
The Bankruptcy Code does not define "initial transferee," but a body of case law has developed that distinguishes "the initial recipient-that is, the first entity to touch the disputed funds-[from] the initial transferee." Finley ,
A. Whether the schools were mere conduits or initial transferees of the tuition payments depends on when the payments were made.
Tuition for an undergraduate or law degree is not owed all at once. Rather, it is *11typically collected on a periodic basis, such as per semester. See, e.g. , Appellant App. Pt. IV, at TA0751 (stating that, at Fairfield, "[t]uition invoices are sent out in July for the following Fall Semester and in December for the following Spring Semester"). And, at least in the case of the appellee schools, students who withdraw from their program may be entitled to a refund of tuition payments already made on their behalf, depending on how early in the school year they withdraw. See Appellant App. Pt. I, at TA0010. Whether the schools exercise dominion and control over tuition payments immediately upon receipt thus depends on when each particular payment is made. As explained below, in the case of any tuition paid early enough that the recipient school would have been obligated to refund it to the student if he or she then withdrew, the school must be classified as a mere conduit and the student an initial transferee, regardless of whether the student actually withdrew from school. But as for tuition paid so late that the student could never have had any right to obtain it, even had he or she withdrawn from school immediately, the school had dominion and control from the outset and thus is properly considered the initial transferee. For clarity, I refer to payments of the first type as "refundable" and payments of the second type as "nonrefundable."
1. As to refundable payments, the bankruptcy court found that the Seventh Circuit's landmark decision in Bonded was "exactly on point" (id. at TA0021). Although the fact patterns can be differentiated, I agree with the bankruptcy court that Bonded shows why the schools cannot be considered initial transferees of these payments.
In Bonded , a debtor "sent [a] Bank a check payable to the Bank's order ... with a note directing the Bank to 'deposit this check into [a third party]'s account.' " Bonded ,
[The bank] received nothing from [the debtor] that it could call its own .... The Bank had no dominion over the $200,000 until ... [the third party] instructed the Bank to debit the account to reduce the loan; in the interim, so far as the Bank was concerned, [the third party] was free to invest the whole $200,000 in lottery tickets or uranium stocks.
Just so here: even though the schools received the tuition payments directly from the debtor and eventually applied those payments toward his children's incurred tuition charges, the schools did not have dominion over the tuition payments until the children no longer had any legal right to a refund. Before then, the schools' retention of the payments was subject to the possibility that the debtor's children would withdraw from school and take the money with them, and thus the schools had insufficient dominion and control at that point to be considered initial transferees. See Meoli v. Huntington Nat'l Bank ,
2. By the same logic, the schools were the initial transferees of any nonrefundable tuition payments. "[W]hen an initial recipient receives funds as payment of an existing debt, the recipient exercises sufficient control to be held liable as an initial transferee." Custom Contractors ,
In Bonded , for example, the court posited that if the check in that case had come with the instructions, " 'use this check to reduce [the account holder's] loan' instead of 'deposit this check into [his] account,' " then the bank would indeed have been the initial transferee, for the third-party account holder would never have had dominion over the money.
B. The parties' arguments to the contrary fail.
1. The debtor's children were not mere conduits.
The trustee does not forcefully dispute that the schools were mere conduits of refundable tuition payments but argues that the "Debtor's children were mere conduits of the Tuition Payments" as well (Appellant Br. 15, ECF No. 5 ). The trustee argues that it was "the common understanding of all parties that the purpose of the Tuition Payments was to fund the Debtor's children's educations and that the sole function of the Debtor's children in the transaction was to attend school." Reply Br. 6, ECF No. 12.
The trustee is right that that fact distinguishes these cases from Bonded , in which the account holder might plausibly have used the money in his account for any number of things. See Bonded ,
The trustee insists that "the Debtor's children were obligated to use the Tuition Payments to secure college/law school diplomas" (Reply Br. 6), but he offers no legal support for this conclusory assertion. Yet even if the debtor's children had somehow obligated themselves to spend the money transferred to their school accounts on their education, it is not clear that that would change the result.
*13Lowry v. Security Pacific Business Credit, Inc. (In re Columbia Data Products, Inc.) ,
The trustee tries to distinguish Lowry by citation to CNB International, Inc. Litigation Trust v. Lloyds TSB Bank PLC (In re CNB International, Inc.) ,
In CNB , the debtor planned to purchase a corporation whose assets had previously been pledged to a bank. See
The trustee notes that the court in CNB explicitly distinguished Lowry :
[T]he transferor in Lowry did not care what the initial transferee did with the funds once they left the transferor's possession; at that point the funds were at the discretion of the initial transferee, which discretion the transferee had already exercised by contracting with the subsequent transferee. In contrast, CNB, as the transferor, would not have transferred its funds in the first instance if [the initial recipient] had not been bound to transfer them immediately to [the bank] in exchange for, inter alia , the release of [the bank's] ... security interest.
The trustee's argument is reasonable but, in the end, unconvincing. As the CNB court stated, "the crucial distinction between the Lowry transaction and the [ CNB ] Transaction is that the initial transfer from CNB was contractually conditioned upon, inter alia , [the recipient's] immediate transfer of funds to [the bank]."
*14
The trustee also argues that the "Debtor's children [lacked] dominion and control over the Tuition Payments" because they did not believe that, "in the hypothetical event" that they dropped out of school, they had the option to "spend[ ] their father's money on a trip or shopping spree, as opposed to returning the money to Debtor." Appellant Br. 21. And the trustee asserts that, "as between the Debtor and his children, the obligation of the Debtor's children to pursue college degrees was no less real or definite than [a] contractual obligation." Reply Br. 11.
The debtor's children's beliefs and decisions are irrelevant. It may be true that they would have returned any refunded tuition to their father, but what matters is that they had the legal right to keep it. See, e.g., 718 Arch St. Assocs., Ltd. v. Blatstein (In re Blatstein) ,
It doesn't matter whether the children knew that they had the right to keep the money (see, e.g., Whitlock v. Lowe ,
*15Finally, the trustee urges me to follow the decision of the bankruptcy court for the Middle District of Florida in Tardif v. St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church (In re Engler) ,
The trustee argues that the debtor's children are akin to the church in Engler and that the schools are like the nonprofit. See Appellant Br. 17 ("By issuing checks payable to [the schools], Debtor 'earmarked' the Tuition Payments for [the schools], precluding Debtor's children from using the Tuition Payments for purposes other than attending school and rendering them mere conduits of those payments.").
I do not agree. It is the schools that are like the Engler church, and the debtor's children resemble the nonprofit. Cf. Fairfield Br. 21, ECF No. 10 ("[T]he plain old common sense reality [is] that the Payments were made by Debtor to benefit Francesca, not Fairfield.") In Engler , the court's finding that the debtors had "earmarked their contribution for the [nonprofit]" was based on "the memo line of the check"-of which the church was the payee-"specifically" designating the money for the nonprofit.
2. The result here is not dictated by the schools' internal bookkeeping.
As a matter of policy, the trustee argues that it would be "unjust" for the *16result in these cases to turn on the existence of a "student account system" that the schools "created for their own use and benefit." Reply Br. 10. "Had Appellees not established accounts in their respective students' names," the trustee asserts, "there would be no question as to Appellees' status as initial transferees under Section 550." Id. at 3.
The trustee is correct that the schools' internal bookkeeping practices ought not affect the parties' substantive legal rights. Although the bankruptcy court emphasized the existence of the student accounts (see, e.g. , Appellant App. Pt. I, at TA0017 ("These student portals are akin to bank accounts, with the [schools] as the financial institutions maintaining those accounts.") ), the outcome in these cases does not hinge on the existence of the accounts (cf. id. ("Put simply, the student maintained dominion and control over the funds in the account ... because it was the student's decision whether to enroll in classes and have the funds applied towards tuition or to withdraw from the program and have the funds refunded directly to him or her.") ).
The significance of the entitlement to a refund is underscored by Custom Contractors , supra , in which a bankruptcy trustee sued to recover estimated-income-tax payments from the IRS. In that case, the debtor, a limited-liability company, made several payments to the IRS to cover its sole member's estimated income tax.
There was no suggestion in Custom Contractors that the IRS had held the funds in any sort of account accessible only to the member; rather, "the IRS deposited the funds in the general treasury, commingled them with other government funds, and spent them" (
In contrast, Perrino v. Salem, Inc. ,
Here, unlike in Perrino , the debtor's children were not required to use the money transferred by their father to pay for tuition; they could have withdrawn from school and taken the money themselves, to do with as they wished. The schools would have refunded the money to them, not to the debtor. It is for that reason-not because the schools routed tuition payments through "student accounts"-that, with respect to the refundable tuition payments, the bankruptcy court correctly determined that the debtor's children were the initial transferees.
3. The timing matters.
The schools' position, of course, is that the bankruptcy court's ruling was correct as to all the tuition payments, whenever made. Indeed, Hofstra and Fairfield argue that the timing of the debtor's payments is "irrelevant." Hofstra Br. 30; Fairfield Br. 27. In support, they point to language in Custom Contractors saying that "the timing of the transfers has no impact on the IRS's rights or obligations because no matter how much time passes between the transfers, the IRS can never be conceived of as a creditor."
The debtor in Societe Generale wired money from its Crédit Lyonnais bank account to another corporation's Société Générale bank account so that a check that had been recently drawn on the Société Générale account would clear. See
As the Custom Contractors court explained, "[i]n Societe Generale , ... the timing of the transfers was integral to the determination that the bank and the debtor did not enter into a debtor-creditor relationship."
In this appeal, however, timing is everything. Once the deadline to withdraw from school had passed, the schools were actually owed tuition-they were creditors. That neither the schools nor the debtor's children were creditors of the debtor (cf. Fairfield Br. 27; Hofstra Br. 31) is irrelevant. And once the schools received the tuition that they were owed, it was theirs to do with as they wished; at no time could an obligation to refund that money to the debtor's children have arisen. Cf. Custom Contractors ,
C. The bankruptcy court's ruling is unsupported by the record.
The bankruptcy court did not discuss the timing of the tuition payments in detail. Rather, it simply found that the schools "did not exercise dominion and control over the tuition payments at the time ... the Debtor made the transfers" because "the [schools] [were not] authorized to utilize the funds" at that time. Appellant App. Pt. I, at TA0016. And the bankruptcy court stated that if one of the debtor's children "decided to withdraw from [his or her] program, the student, and not the Debtor or the [school], [would be] entitled to any funds remaining in the account."
In so finding, the bankruptcy court appears to have assumed that all the debtor's payments were made early enough to be refundable. See Appellant Br. 22. Insofar as that assumption is correct, I would affirm the bankruptcy court's ruling. But as the trustee observes, "there was no evidence in the record to support this finding."
Because the refundability of the payments affects the initial-transferee determination, I must remand these cases to the bankruptcy court for further factual development.
CONCLUSION
In sum, I agree with the bankruptcy court's reasoning as to refundable payments made by the debtor. But because the record does not support a conclusion that all the payments in these cases were refundable, I vacate the decision of the bankruptcy court and remand these cases for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.15
So ordered.
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