Pirani v. Baharia (In Re Pirani)

824 F.3d 483, 75 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1302, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 9730, 62 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 176, 2016 WL 3063261
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 27, 2016
Docket15-40538
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 824 F.3d 483 (Pirani v. Baharia (In Re Pirani)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pirani v. Baharia (In Re Pirani), 824 F.3d 483, 75 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1302, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 9730, 62 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 176, 2016 WL 3063261 (5th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

STEPHEN A. HIGGINSON, Circuit Judge:

This is an appeal from a district court’s order affirming a bankruptcy court judgment rendered after trial in an adversary action. The adversary action comprises the claims, counterclaims, and affirmative defenses between two sides of a business scheme to buy, renovate, and operate a Days Inn in Sherman, Texas. Abdul Karim Pirani — appellant here — and his brother, Nasim Aziz, formed the plan to buy the hotel. Appellees are the investors that the brothers convinced to buy a fifty-percent stake in the scheme — Malik Baharia, Abdul Hamid Gilani, and Nadirshah Lalani— and the company that the three investors formed to hold their membership interest.

*489 I.

In 2008, two brothers, Pirani and Aziz, decided to buy and renovate a Days Inn in Sherman, Texas. They formed a purchasing entity for the hotel, Circle Sherman, LLC, and looked for investors. Eventually, - they recruited three individuals — Baharia, Gilani, and Lalani — who agreed to buy a fifty-percent stake in Circle Sherman. The three investors formed HNM Partners, LLC, to hold their membership interest.

In February 2009, the brothers and the investors borrowed close to $2.5 million for the project. To receive the loan, both brothers and all three investors signed three documents in favor of their lender, One World Bank: (1) a note, which set out the terms of the loan; (2) a deed of trust, which secured the loan with a lien on the hotel; and (3) a guaranty agreement, in which they agreed to guarantee, “jointly and severally,” full payment of the loan in the event of a default on the note. The two brothers signed the guaranty agreement in their individual capacities. The three investors signed for their company, HNM, and also in their individual capacities.

Almost immediately after obtaining the loan, the two sides fell out over the planned renovations of the hotel. By April, HNM had sued the brothers in state court. By August, the parties had settled, having agreed that Circle Sherman would buy back HNM’s fifty-percent stake in the company, with the brothers promising to personally guarantee the purchase price.

The settlement agreement also contains a promise that Gilani, Baharia, and Lalani would be released from their personal guaranties under the guaranty agreement with One World Bank. Specifically, section 3.2 of the settlement agreement provides:

In the event that the Company obtains a third party investor for the purpose of purchasing HNM’s Membership Interest, the Company shall in good faith make best efforts to have the Bank release Gilani, Baharia and Lalani from their personal guaranties of the Loan. If the Company is unable to obtain a release from the Bank of the guaranties, Gilani, Baharia and Lalani agree to continue to be guarantors of the Loan until July 9, 2012 at which time they shall be released either through the Company’s refinancing of the Loan or sale of the Hotel.

“Company” is defined four different ways in the agreement. First, the opening paragraph of the settlement agreement defines the parties as follows: “Baharia ... Gilani ... [and] Lalani ... for themselves individually and on behalf of HNM Partners, LLC (collectively ‘HNM’) on the one hand” and “Aziz ... [and] Pirani, for themselves and on behalf of Circle Sherman, LLC (collectively the ‘Company’) on the other.” Second, section 3.1(a) of the agreement provides: “Nasim Aziz, Abdul Karim Pira-ni and HNM Partners LLC are the sole members of Circle Sherman LLC (‘the Company’).” Finally, sections '4.1 and 4.2, which govern the parties’ respective litigation releases, provide'two more definitions.

Shortly thereafter, Circle Sherman defaulted on the note. One World Bank demanded payment from each of the guarantors and eventually sued all of the guarantors in Texas state court. Thereafter, it foreclosed on the hotel, which sold for $2,350,000, leaving a deficiency of $828,190.13. The brothers arid the investors raised a no-deficiency affirmative defense to One World Bank’s demand for payment, arguing that the hotel was worth significantly more than it sold for at foreclosure.

Within the bank litigation, Baharia, Gila-ni, Lalani, and HNM filed three breach-of-contract crossclaims against Circle Sherman and the brothers. First, they claimed *490 that Circle Sherman and the brothers had breached their settlement agreement by-failing to buy back HNM’s membership interest (the “payment claim”). Second, they claimed that Circle Sherman and the brothers had breached the settlement agreement by failing to secure the release of Baharia, Gilani, and Lalani from the guaranty agreement (the “release claim”). Finally, they claimed that Circle Sherman and the brothers had breached the settlement agreement by defaulting on the note. The state court granted summary judgment in favor of HNM on the payment claim.

The state court set a date for trial on the brothers’ and investors’ common no-deficiency defense against One World Bank’s demand for payment. On the (literal) eve of trial, One World Bank, Pirani, and Aziz notified the court that they had “settled” with each other, and the next day they did not appear in court. Only the three members of HNM showed up for trial.

Under One World Bank’s settlement agreement with Pirani and Aziz, One World Bank assigned the note, the guaranty agreement, and all of the bank’s claims against HNM to a third-party entity— owned by Pirani — that later transferred the note, guaranty agreement, and claims to Pirani. In exchange, Pirani — through the third-party — paid One World. Bank $300,000.

After One World Bank and the brothers notified the court of their settlement and failed to appear at trial, the court dismissed, without prejudice, the bank’s claim against HNM and the three investors. It then severed HNM’s payment crossclaim against the brothers, on which it had already granted summary judgment in favor of HNM, into a separate suit, and dismissed, without prejudice, Baharia, Gilani, Lalani, and HNM’s remaining crossclaims against Circle Sherman and the brothers, on the ground that the remaining cross-claims were “derivative of and subject to the [bank]’s claim” against HNM. In the severed case containing only the payment claim, the court issued an agreed final judgment in favor of Baharia, Gilani, Lala-ni, and HNM for $616,181.16: the amount that Circle Sherman had promised to pay to buy back HNM’s fifty-percent membership interest, plus interest.

In July 2012, Pirani filed for bankruptcy. In the bankruptcy proceeding, HNM filed a proof of claim against Pirani’s bankruptcy estate based on the state-court agreed final judgment on the payment claim. Pira-ni then initiated this adversary proceeding, bringing a- claim against HNM and Baha-ria, Gilani, and Lalani for breach of the guaranty agreement that had been assigned to him by the bank. He sought to recover $828,190.13 — the full amount of the alleged deficiency on the note. As an affirmative defense against Pirani’s guaranty claim, HNM and the three investors asserted that no deficiency existed with respect to the note, because the hotel’s fair market value at the time of foreclosure exceeded the foreclosure sale price by more than the alleged deficiency. They also counterclaimed for breach of the settlement agreement and breach of fiduciary duty. Pirani argued that the counterclaims were barred by res judicata.

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824 F.3d 483, 75 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1302, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 9730, 62 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 176, 2016 WL 3063261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pirani-v-baharia-in-re-pirani-ca5-2016.