Rahn's Oil & Propane, Inc. v. Ettel Logistics, Inc., ELI Logistics, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedJune 1, 2015
DocketA14-1374
StatusUnpublished

This text of Rahn's Oil & Propane, Inc. v. Ettel Logistics, Inc., ELI Logistics, Inc. (Rahn's Oil & Propane, Inc. v. Ettel Logistics, Inc., ELI Logistics, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rahn's Oil & Propane, Inc. v. Ettel Logistics, Inc., ELI Logistics, Inc., (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

This opinion will be unpublished and may not be cited except as provided by Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A14-1374

Rahn’s Oil & Propane, Inc., Respondent,

vs.

Ettel Logistics, Inc., et al., Defendants,

ELI Logistics, Inc., et al., Appellants.

Filed June 1, 2015 Affirmed Larkin, Judge

Stearns County District Court File No. 73-CV-12-9149

John L. Greer, John F. Mathews, James P.A. Morrighan, Hughes Mathews Greer, P.A., St. Cloud, Minnesota (for respondent)

David T. Johnson, Amundson & Johnson, P.A., Paynesville, Minnesota (for appellants)

Considered and decided by Schellhas, Presiding Judge; Larkin, Judge; and Reyes,

Judge. UNPUBLISHED OPINION

LARKIN, Judge

In this appeal from judgment following a court trial of respondent’s claims to

recover on a debt owed by appellants, appellants assert that the district court erred in its

resolution of respondent’s claims under the Minnesota Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act

(MUFTA). We affirm.

FACTS

Respondent Rahn’s Oil & Propane Inc. sued appellants ELI Logistics Inc.,

Michael Ettel, Judith Ettel, and Frederick Ettel, claiming that appellants are liable under

MUFTA for a fuel bill incurred by Ettel Logistics Inc.1 The district court held a court

trial and made findings of fact, which are summarized below.

Ettel Logistics was a trucking company that operated from October 2008 until July

2011. Its business included milk-hauling routes. Kristine Kussman, Michael’s wife, was

the sole shareholder, officer, and director of Ettel Logistics. Michael and Kussman

owned the property from which Ettel Logistics operated. They agreed that Michael

would not be a shareholder of the company because he had a substantial tax debt, but

they planned to make Michael a co-owner after he paid off the debt. Although Michael

was not an owner, he managed the trucking operations, was involved in important

decisions for the company, and held himself out to other companies as an owner or

officer of Ettel Logistics.

1 Respondent included additional defendants and claims in the lawsuit, but those defendants have not appealed and the additional claims are not at issue.

2 Ettel Logistics had an account with Rahn’s Oil for the purchase of fuel. David

Rahn, an owner of Rahn’s Oil, originally believed that Kussman and Michael owned

Ettel Logistics. Kussman and Michael approached Rahn together to open the account,

and Rahn regularly dealt with Michael, and not Kussman.

In November 2010, Michael and Kussman divorced. Shortly thereafter, Ettel

Logistics began issuing checks to Rahn’s Oil that were not honored by the bank.

Between December 2010 and February 2011, Ettel Logistics issued eight such checks,

and its account with Rahn’s Oil accumulated a past-due balance of $74,740.63. Rahn

tried to discuss the debt with Michael, but Michael told him that Kussman was

responsible for financial matters. When Rahn explained why he thought Michael was

responsible for the debt, Michael told Rahn that he was “going to have to take [Michael]

to court.”

As Ettel Logistics’ business began to fail, Michael’s parents, Judith and Frederick,

provided financial assistance in an attempt to save it. They personally guaranteed loans

to Ettel Logistics in the amount of $195,243.49.

In spring 2011, Kussman began negotiating with the Ettels to sell them Ettel

Logistics. The Ettels pressured Kussman to “ensure that Mike and his parents were taken

care of” and not to sell the milk-hauling routes or contracts to anyone else. During

negotiations, Michael estimated the value of the annual income from the milk routes to be

$481,370. Kussman valued the income at $610,000.

In July 2011, Ettel Logistics transferred its assets to ELI Logistics Inc., a company

owned and directed by Judith and managed by Michael. The written asset-purchase

3 agreement states a purchase price of $596,681.79 “plus any amounts due under

equipment lease with Financial Pacific Leasing.”2 The agreement states that the purchase

price is “allocated entirely to equipment,” and it does not assign any value to the milk-

hauling contracts. The agreement also states that “[p]ayment of purchase price is in the

form of assumption of debt by [b]uyer” and provides that ELI would assume all bank

debt owed by Ettel Logistics. But under the language of the agreement, ELI did not

assume Ettel Logistics’ debt to Rahn’s Oil. The agreement provided that Ettel Logistics

was entitled to accounts receivable up to and including the July 22 milk routes, which

amounted to $52,000. Finally, Kussman was required to sign a quit claim deed regarding

her interest in the real property on which the business was located and received less than

$500 for it.

Judith testified that she would not have purchased the business if she had not

personally guaranteed nearly $200,000 in loans to help fund Ettel Logistics. Frederick

testified that, because Ettel Logistics was failing, he and his wife were afraid they would

lose their house, which they had put up as collateral for the loans.

Throughout the negotiations and sale of the business, Ettel Logistics continued to

incur debt with Rahn’s Oil. By the date of the sale, Ettel Logistics owed Rahn’s Oil

$120,654.50. None of the appellants told Rahn about the sale of Ettel Logistics until

seven days after it occurred. After the sale, Kussman told Rahn that she did not know

how she could repay him. Rahn’s Oil obtained a default judgment against Ettel Logistics

2 The district court did not make findings regarding any amounts due under the equipment lease with Financial Pacific Leasing.

4 in the amount of $122,191.95 and docketed the judgment in September 2011. In October

2011, Ettel Logistics published Notice of Intent to Dissolve as a corporation to creditors.

Rahn’s Oil mailed a Notice of Claim to Ettel Logistics, alleging a claim in the amount of

$196,932.58 for the default judgment, statutory interest, and statutory penalties for

dishonored checks.

Rahn’s Oil commenced the underlying action under MUFTA in September 2012.

Robert Covell, a certified valuation analyst and certified public accountant, testified for

Rahn’s Oil. He conducted a business valuation of Ettel Logistics and determined that the

value of the assets transferred from Ettel Logistics to ELI was $788,682. Covell testified

that the price Ettel Logistics received for its assets was not reasonably equivalent to the

value of its assets. Covell did not conduct his own appraisal of the trucks and equipment,

but arrived at a value of $596,682 based on the language of the written agreement, which

allocated the entire purchase price to the trucks and equipment. Covell concluded that

the milk contract rights were worth $192,000.

James Kloster, a machinery and equipment appraiser, testified for appellants. He

conducted a valuation of the equipment transferred under the agreement and concluded

that the transferred assets were worth $375,000. He did not opine regarding the value of

the milk routes or the business as a whole.

The district court concluded that the asset transfer from Ettel Logistics to ELI was

actually and constructively fraudulent under MUFTA. The district court further

concluded that it was “appropriate to pierce the corporate veil” and that “[h]olding

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