Redmond v. NCMIC Finance Corp. (In re Brooke Corp.)

568 B.R. 378, 2017 Bankr. LEXIS 1320
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas
DecidedMay 15, 2017
DocketCASE NO. 08-22786; ADV. NO. 12-6043
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 568 B.R. 378 (Redmond v. NCMIC Finance Corp. (In re Brooke Corp.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Redmond v. NCMIC Finance Corp. (In re Brooke Corp.), 568 B.R. 378, 2017 Bankr. LEXIS 1320 (Kan. 2017).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION FOLLOWING TRIAL FINDING THE TRUSTEE MAY AVOID CONSTRUCTIVELY FRAUDULENT TRANSFERS AND RECOVER THEIR VALUE FROM THE DEFENDANT

Dale L. Somers, United States Bankruptcy Judge

Plaintiff Christopher J. Redmond, as Trustee (Trustee) of Brooke Corporation (Brooke Corp), Brooke Capital Corporation (f/k/a Brooke Franchise Corporation) and Brooke Investments, Inc., seeks to avoid as constructively fraudulent conveyances numerous cash transfers totaling $4,448,511.23 that Brooke Capital made to defendant NCMIC Finance Corporation (NCMIC) during the four years before Brooke Capital filed for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. The Trustee asserts these claims under 11 U.S.C. §§ 544 and 5481 and the Kansas Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act (KUFTA), K.S.A. 33-201 to -212, and seeks to recover the same from NCMIC under § 550 and K.S.A. 33-208.2 Evidentiary hearings were held on eight days during April3 and five [387]*387days during June of 2016.4 Closing arguments were heard on July 12, 2016. The Trustee appeared in person and by counsel Michael J. Fielding and John J. Cruciani of Husch Blackwell LLP. NCMIC appeared by its president, Gregory M. Cole, and by counsel Paul B. Sinclair, Jason L. Bush, and Brendan L. McPherson of Polsi-nelli PC. The parties stipulated that this Court has jurisdiction of the parties and the subject matter, that the Court may try the proceeding to a conclusion and enter a final judgment, and that the proceeding is governed by the law of the State of Kansas and the United States Bankruptcy Code.5 For the following reasons, the Court holds that NCMIC is liable to the Trustee for $3,373,515.61.

The following outline is provided for the reader’s convenience.

BACKGROUND FACTS.. .388

A. THE PARTIES.. .388

B. BROOKE’S INSURANCE AGENCY FRANCHISE BUSINESS.. .388

C. MANY BROOKE FRANCHISEES WERE NOT SUCCESSFUL.. .390

D. LOANS TO BROOKE AGENTS.. .390

E. NCMIC’S RELATIONSHIP WITH BROOKE... 392

F. BROOKE’S ACCOUNTING AND FINANCIAL EXPERTS.. .393

G. THE 2008 COLLAPSE OF BROOKE.. .394

ANALYSIS AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW... 394

A THE TRUSTEE’S CLAIMS.. .394

B. THE PRIMARY CONTESTED ISSUES... 395

C. EXCEPT FOR THE TRUSTEE’S MOTION ON NCMIC’S COUNTERCLAIMS, THE RULE 52(c) MOTIONS ARE DENIED... 396

D. THE TRUSTEE HAS ESTABLISHED THE ELEMENTS OF HIS CONSTRUCTIVE FRAUDULENT CONVEYANCE CLAIMS.. .397

1. Brooke Franchise Had a Property Interest in the Subsidized Loan Payments Transferred to NCMIC.. .397
2. Brooke Franchise Was Continuously Insolvent During the Four Years Preceding the Filing of its Bankruptcy Petition ...401
3. Brooke Franchise Did Not Receive Reasonably Equivalent Value (REV) in Exchange for the Transfers.. .411

4. NCMIC Is Not Entitled to the For-Value-and-in-Good-Faith Defenses of § 548(c) and K.S.A. 33-208.. .416

5. The Trustee May Avoid Brooke Franchise’s Transfer of Subsidized Loan Payments to NCMIC.. .417

E. SECTION 550 ISSUES.. .417
1. Liability under § 550... 417
2. Brooke Credit Was a Conduit, and Not an Initial Transferee of the Subsidized Loan Payments Transferred to NCMIC... 417
3. Alternatively, If Brooke Credit Was an Initial Transferee, the Trustee May Recover from NCMIC Because It Has [388]*388Not Satisfied the For-Value-In-Good-Faith Defense of § 550(b)... 428 •
4. The Amount of Recovery... 428
a. The Trustee’s Claim.. .428
b. The Court Adopts Revised Exhibit C (as Corrected) Prepared by the Trustee’s Expert as Establishing the Loan Subsidizations Brooke Franchise Paid to NCMIC... 428
c. The Avoided Transfers Are Limited to Those for which Brooke Franchise Had Not Been Reimbursed as of the Date Brooke Franchise Filed for Relief under the Bankruptcy Code.. .437
d. Because of the Trustee’s Settlements of Adversary Proceedings Against Agents, the Single Satisfaction Rule of § 550(d) Bars the Trustee’s Recovery of $8,175 of the Transfers Included on Revised Exhibit F...438
e. The Trustee May Recover $3,373,515.61 from NCMIC.. .442
F. THE TRUSTEE’S REQUEST FOR PREJUDGMENT INTEREST IS DENIED... 442

CONCLUSION.. .443

BACKGROUND FACTS.

The following findings of fact primarily address the background of this contentious adversary proceeding. Additional findings of fact supporting the Court’s decisions of contested issues are included in the Analysis portion of this memorandum opinion.

A. THE PARTIES.

Brooke Corp, a holding company that supported the Brooke insurance franchise operation, was a publicly-traded Kansas corporation. When most of the events giving rise to this case occurred during the four years prior to the filing of Brooke Corp’s bankruptcy petition on October 28, 2008, virtually all of Brooke’s business was carried out by Brooke Franchise Corporation and Aleritas, which until July 2007 were wholly-owned subsidiaries of Brooke Corp. In November 2007, Brooke Capital, a publicly-traded Kansas corporation headquartered in Kansas and 81% owned by Brooke Corp, became the successor to Brooke Franchise. The parties have stipulated to refer to Brooke Capital as Brooke Franchise without regard to the name change. Aleritas Capital Corporation (formerly Brooke Credit Corporation), 62% owned by Brooke Corp after July 2007, is a Delaware corporation headquartered in Kansas. The parties have agreed to refer to Aleritas as Brooke Credit without regard to its name change.

Defendant NCMIC is the finance subsidiary of NCMIC Group Inc., a subsidiary of a mutual holding company owned by the policy holders of NCMIC Insurance Company, who are all chiropractors. NCMIC Group Inc. owns two malpractice insurance carriers, a risk retention group, and two insurance agencies. NCMIC engages in equipment financing for health care and other small businesses, credit card issuing, insurance premium financing, and commercial lending. At the end of 2007, NCMIC’s entire portfolio had a value of approximately $187 million, which included $36.7 million in participation interests in loans made to Brooke insurance franchisees that had been originated by Brooke Credit.

B.

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Bluebook (online)
568 B.R. 378, 2017 Bankr. LEXIS 1320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redmond-v-ncmic-finance-corp-in-re-brooke-corp-ksb-2017.