Raymond James & Associates Inc v. Jalbert

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 10, 2023
Docket6:22-cv-05050
StatusUnknown

This text of Raymond James & Associates Inc v. Jalbert (Raymond James & Associates Inc v. Jalbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raymond James & Associates Inc v. Jalbert, (W.D. La. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA LAFAYETTE DIVISION

RAYMOND JAMES & ASSOCIATES, CIVIL DOCKET NO. 6:22-CV-05050 INC., GEORGE LONGO and DANYAL SATTAR, Appellants

VERSUS JUDGE DAVID C. JOSEPH

CRAIG JALBERT, in his capacity as MAGISTRATE JUDGE DAVID J. Chapter 11 Liquidating Trustee for AYO GERMAN PELLETS LOUISIANA, LLC and LOUISIANA PELLETS, INC., Appellee.

MEMORANDUM RULING Pending before the Court is an APPEAL [Doc. 1], brought by Raymond James & Associates, Inc. (“Raymond James”), George Longo, and Danyal Sattar (collectively, the “Raymond James Defendants”) from a Final Judgment rendered on August 15, 2022, by the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Louisiana (“Bankruptcy Court”). For the following reasons, the Bankruptcy Court's Final Judgment is AFFIRMED, and the Raymond James Defendants’ appeal is DENIED. BACKGROUND I. Facts and Procedural History The adversary proceeding underlying this appeal arises out of the interplay between two other matters: (i) the 2016 Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing of Louisiana Pellets, Inc. (“Louisiana Pellets”) and German Pellets Louisiana, LLC (“GPLA”) (collectively, “Debtors”), Case No. 16-80162, United States Bankruptcy Court, Western District of Louisiana (the “Bankruptcy Case”), and (ii) a state court case filed by the liquidating trustee appointed at the conclusion of the Bankruptcy Case, 28th Judicial District Court, LaSalle Parish, Louisiana, Case No. 40802 (the “State Court Litigation”). As background, Louisiana Pellets was the owner of a wood pellet manufacturing facility in Urania, Louisiana. German Pellets, an affiliated entity,

oversaw construction of the plant and operated it for the brief period it was in production. Construction was financed by the issuance of seven series of bonds by the Louisiana Public Facilities Authority (“LPFA”). Raymond James was engaged to assist in the sale of the bonds and to serve in an advisory role to Louisiana Pellets. Longo and Sattar were Raymond James executives charged with overseeing the bond sale. Raymond James then marketed and sold those bonds to a number of

institutional investors. In connection with the sales of the bonds, the LPFA, Louisiana Pellets, and Raymond James entered into bond purchase agreements wherein Louisiana Pellets agreed to indemnify Raymond James for any loss stemming from alleged misrepresentations or omissions in the offering memoranda for the subject bonds. Louisiana Pellets and GPLA filed bankruptcy shortly thereafter. One of the principal issues in the Chapter 11 liquidation proceeding was the roughly $300

million in bond debt issued to finance construction of the wood pellet facility. The Bankruptcy Case resulted in significant loss to, among other creditors, the bondholders who purchased bonds from Raymond James. The Bankruptcy Court entered a Confirmation Order on September 8, 2017, which confirmed the Plan (the “Bankruptcy Plan”) and substantially completed the Bankruptcy Case. At the conclusion of the Bankruptcy Case, Craig Jalbert was appointed to serve as a liquidating trustee (the “Liquidating Trustee”). Importantly, the Confirmation Order specifically holds that, “[t]he Liquidating Trust shall have a separate existence from the Debtors.” The Liquidating Trust Agreement establishing the Liquidating Trustee also specifically delineates that the “[t]rust shall not be

deemed a successor-in-interest of the Debtors for any purpose other than as specifically set forth herein or in the Plan” and that it is being “established for the purpose of liquidating the Trust Assets and taking all actions necessary to wind down and close the Estate.” Accordingly, the Liquidating Trust Agreement transferred the assets and rights of the Debtors to the Liquidating Trust, but did not transfer debts or liabilities.

Although the Raymond James Defendants were not included as potential creditors in the Debtors’ filings, it is undisputed that Raymond James: (i) was aware of the Chapter 11 filings and monitored the proceedings, (ii) did not file a proof of claim asserting indemnity claims against the Debtors for any misrepresentations in the offering memoranda, and (iii) did not object to provisions of the Bankruptcy Plan and Confirmation Order that barred subsequent assertion of “any setoff, right of subrogation, surcharge, or recoupment of any kind against any obligation due the

Debtors.” In April of 2019, certain of the Louisiana Pellet bondholders assigned to the Liquidating Trustee their claims against the Raymond James Defendants stemming from misstatements in the bond offering memoranda. Following his receipt of these assignments, the Liquidating Trustee filed claims in the State Court Litigation for violation of Louisiana’s Blue Sky Law and Florida’s Securities Act. Importantly, the Liquidating Trustee’s right to assert these claims came solely from the assignments of the bondholders and are not claims of the Debtors. In response to these claims, the Raymond James Defendants asserted the “affirmative defenses”1 of compensation, setoff, recoupment, and indemnity pursuant to the indemnification provisions in the

relevant bond purchaser agreements. On November 3, 2021, the Liquidating Trustee filed the adversary proceeding underlying this appeal seeking declaratory judgment that these affirmative defenses were discharged by the Bankruptcy Plan and Confirmation Order. The Liquidating Trustee and Raymond James Defendants subsequently filed cross-motions for summary judgment and the Raymond James Defendants also filed a Rule 60(b)

Motion seeking relief from the Confirmation Order pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b) and Fed. R. Bankr. P. 9024. These motions were heard by the Bankruptcy Court on April 6, 2022. On July 29, 2022, the Bankruptcy Court issued its Ruling on Competing Motions (“Bankruptcy Court Ruling”) [Doc. 6-1, pp. 109 – 137] followed by its August 15, 2022, Final Judgment, ordering that: 1) The Motion for Summary Judgment filed by the Liquidating Trustee is GRANTED; and

2) The Motion for Summary Judgment and the Motion for Relief from Confirmation Order filed by Defendants are DENIED; and specifically that:

1 Under Louisiana law, [a]n affirmative defense is one that “raises new matter which, assuming the allegations in the petition to be true, constitutes a defense to the action and will have the effect of defeating plaintiff's demand on its merits.” Webster v. Rushing, 316 So. 2d 111, 114 (La. 1975). a) Defendants are bound by the Debtors’ Joint Chapter 11 Plan of Liquidation (the “Plan”);

b) Defendants are not entitled to relief from the Confirmation Order under Rule 60(b);

c) The plain language of the Plan discharges the affirmative defenses of setoff, compensation, recoupment or similar defenses asserted by the Defendants in the State Court Action filed by the Liquidating Trustee; and that

d) Even if those defenses were not discharged, Defendants’ affirmative defenses of setoff, compensation or recoupment are not available to be asserted against the claims brought by the Liquidating Trustee in the State Court Action.

[Doc. 1-1]. II.

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