Regions Bank v. NBV Loan Acquisition Member LLC

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedMay 12, 2022
Docket1:21-cv-23578
StatusUnknown

This text of Regions Bank v. NBV Loan Acquisition Member LLC (Regions Bank v. NBV Loan Acquisition Member LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Regions Bank v. NBV Loan Acquisition Member LLC, (S.D. Fla. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA Miami Division Case Number: 21-23578-CIV-MORENO REGIONS BANK, Plaintiff, VS. NBV LOAN ACQUISITION MEMBER LLC, et al., Defendants.

ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART THE DEFENDANTS' MOTIONS TO DISMISS The plaintiff in this case, Regions Bank, became a judgment creditor of non-party NBV Loan Acquisition LLC in a Florida state bankruptcy action. Now, Regions brings nineteen different claims for alter ego, fraudulent transfer, and civil conspiracy against six defendants that are related to NBV Loan in various ways: Allen Greenwald, Scott Greenwald, and Amy Greenwald, collectively referred to as the Greenwalds, as well as NBV Loan Acquisition Member LLC, Billy’s Creek Preserve LLC, and GFS Corp, collectively referred to as the Corporate Defendants. Scott and Amy are listed as defendants individually and as trustees of the Greenwald Family Trust and the Greenwald Dynasty Trust. The Greenwalds and the Corporate Defendants both moved to dismiss the complaint. After Regions filed an amended complaint, both groups of defendants rernewed their motions to dismiss (D.E. 30, 31). The Court has considered the motions, the response in opposition, the replies, pertinent portions of the record, and being otherwise fully advised in the premises, it is ADJUDGED that the motions are GRANTED in part and DENIED in part. Specifically, the

motions to dismiss are granted as to Counts XIV, XVI, and XVII, but are denied as to the remaining counts. I. Background Allen and Scott Greenwald are real estate developers who run The Greenwald Group. In 2005, Scott began to develop “The Lexi,” a condominium in Florida. To fund the project, Lexi borrowed 56 million dollars from Regions and other banks (“the Bank Group”)—referred to as the senior loan for the property. Lexi also borrowed six million dollars from Scott’s parents, named Allen and Jill Greenwald—teferred to as the junior loan. At that time, Regions and the Bank Group entered an “intercreditor agreement” with Allen and Jill which required that Regions provide notice to Allen and Jill if Lexi defaulted on the senior loan. So in general, there are two loans: (1) the senior loan between Lexi and the Bank Group and (2) the junior loan between Lexi and Allen and Jill Greenwald. To fund the junior loan, Allen and Jill borrowed six million dollars from Great Florida Bank. After the loan was executed, Lexi, with Allen, Jill, and Great Florida Bank, modified it to extend the maturity date and also to require a two-million-dollar capital account. Lexi obtained the funds for that capital account through a two million dollar advance on the junior loan, again financed by Allen and Jill through a loan from Great Florida Bank, bringing their debt to Great Florida Bank to eight million dollars total. Allen and Jill later restructured their debts to Great Florida Bank by splitting the loan into two amended promissory notes, referred to as Note A and Note B, each worth four million dollars. Asa result of all this, the lines of debt to keep in mind were slightly modified. Lexi owes 56 million dollars to Regions and the Bank Group. Lexi also owes eight million dollars to

Scott's parents, Allen and Jill, who in turn are on the hook to Great Florida Bank for eight million dollars, which is divided in half and categorized as Note A and Note B. A few years after Lexi’s inception, a financial crisis devastated the United States and in particular its real estate market. Lexi defaulted on the senior loan during that time, though the parties do not specify the exact date. By 2015, a new bank entered the picture. Florida Community Bank obtained Great Florida Bank’s interest in the project and subsequently demanded payment of Note A from Allen and Jill. It was around then that Allen retained attorney Eric Salpeter. According to the complaint, Salpeter’s mission was to form a limited liability company called NBV Loan Acquisition that would facilitate Allen’s clandestine purchase of the Greenwald family’s debts to Florida Community Bank at a discount. In other words, while Florida Community Bank was seeking the payment of Note A from Allen at the front door, Allen, through his attorney, would form a concealed corporate entity to go around the back door and purchase the debt from Florida Community Bank. Allen also wanted Florida Community Bank’s interest in pending litigation against Regions and the Bank Group so that he could pursue a claim that it had initiated against the other banks involved with the senior loan, including Regions (more on that litigation later). To that end, Salpeter formed NBV Loan in Delaware in 2015 as an anonymous limited liability company. Though Allen remained undisclosed as a formal matter, he owned and controlled NBV Loan. As NBV Loan’s authorized representative, Salpeter then initiated negotiations with Florida Community Bank to purchase the Greenwald debt. Throughout this process Salpeter concealed Allen’s interest in NBV Loan at Allen’s direction. After a couple rounds of negotiation, Florida Central Bank accepted NBV Loan’s offer for the Greenwald debt in

exchange for 3.9 million dollars. By December 2015, NBV and Florida Central Bank had consummated the transaction and all related debts were conveyed. An entity apparently bearing some relationship to the Greenwald family, named “GFS, Corp.” provided 3.75 million dollars to NBV Loan to acquire the debt. Specifically, GFS made a series of cash transfers to Salpeter’s trust account, who in turn transferred the cash to Florida Community Bank. As a part of the transaction, Florida Community Bank asked that NBV Loan provide a document identifying NBV Loan’s managers and members. Salpeter maneuvered this hiccup by forming “NBV Loan Acquisition Member LLC,” a Florida limited liability company, which was represented to Florida Community Bank as the only member of NBV Loan. It was not until after the acquisition of the Greenwald debt and the substitution of NBV Loan as the party of record in the Lexi bankruptcy that Allen replaced Salpeter as the member and manager of NBV Member. For these reasons and others, Regions alleges that NBV Loan was and is an empty shell, controlled by Allen to avoid and defraud creditors. NBV Loan has not issued member certificates, it does not file tax returns, and it does not report income or expenses. Instead, all of NBV Loan’s income and expenses are claimed by NBV Member and reported on Allen’s personal tax returns. With regularity, Allen used NBV Loan and NBV Member as his personal bank and used them for personal purposes, like paying his lawyers for his personal legal representation. State Litigation As mentioned above, Great Florida Bank sued the Bank Group for breach of the intercreditor agreement in 2010; specifically, it alleged that the Bank Group failed to provide notice of Lexi’s default to Allen and Jill. After NBV Loan acquired the Greenwald debt, it was substituted for Florida Community Bank (which had since obtained Great Florida Bank’s

interest) in the suit.! This suit was eventually consolidated with the Lexi bankruptcy action. NBV Loan settled the suit with all banks in the Bank Group except Regions. In November 2016, Regions served a proposed settlement to NBV Loan, which NBV Loan declined. A bench trial followed, after which the court entered judgment for Regions. Because NBV Loan had rejected the settlement offer and lost at trial, the court entered a supplemental final judgment for 3.7 million dollars in attorneys’ fees and costs incurred in the litigation. Events Following the Settlement Offer and Supplemental Final Judgment Regions alleges that after both the settlement offer and supplemental final judgment, the Greenwald family engaged in a series of transactions to ensure that NBV Loan would be judgment proof.

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Regions Bank v. NBV Loan Acquisition Member LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/regions-bank-v-nbv-loan-acquisition-member-llc-flsd-2022.