Scharrer v. Fundamental Long Term Care Holdings, LLC (In re Fundamental Long Term Care, Inc.)

500 B.R. 147, 24 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. B 174, 2013 WL 4866336, 2013 Bankr. LEXIS 3786
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedSeptember 12, 2013
DocketCase No. 8:11-bk-22258-MGW; Adv. No. 12-ap-01198-MGW
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 500 B.R. 147 (Scharrer v. Fundamental Long Term Care Holdings, LLC (In re Fundamental Long Term Care, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scharrer v. Fundamental Long Term Care Holdings, LLC (In re Fundamental Long Term Care, Inc.), 500 B.R. 147, 24 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. B 174, 2013 WL 4866336, 2013 Bankr. LEXIS 3786 (Fla. 2013).

Opinion

Chapter 7

MEMORANDUM OPINION ON PROPER FORUM FOR FRAUDULENT TRANSFER AND ALTER EGO CLAIMS

Michael G. Williamson, United States Bankruptcy Judge

This Court recently enjoined Fundamental Long Term Care Holdings and Funda[149]*149mental Administrative Services from pursuing a lawsuit they filed in federal court in New York seeking a declaration that they are not liable under any fraudulent transfer or alter ego theories for judgments entered against the Debtor’s wholly owned subsidiary — Trans Health Management, Inc. (“THMI”). Those fraudulent transfer and alter ego claims may belong to this estate if the Trustee can establish that the Debtor and THMI should be treated as the same entity. So the Court concluded any attempt to preempt those claims interferes with the Trustee’s administration of this estate.

In the meantime, the District Court recently remanded an appeal to this Court to determine whether the Debtor and THMI should be treated as the same entity under any legal or equitable theory. The Court has also learned that creditors of this estate are pursuing fraudulent transfer and alter ego claims against the Fundamental entities (and others) in state-court proceedings supplementary. In light of all of that, the Court must now decide whether to allow the Fundamental entities to re-file their declaratory judgment action with this Court and require the creditors to litigate the fraudulent transfer and alter ego claims as part of that proceeding.

Bankruptcy Code § 541 — as well as 28 U.S.C. ■§ 1334 — gives this Court exclusive jurisdiction over property of the estate. In the state-court proceedings supplementary, the creditors have acknowledged that the assets they are seeking to recover under a fraudulent transfer theory belong to THMI. For that reason alone, the Court believes it is appropriate to enjoin the state-court proceedings supplementary and require all the parties to litigate the fraudulent transfer and alter ego claims here.

But even if those assets were not property of the estate, the result would be the same for two reasons: First, continuation of the state-court proceedings supplementary unnecessarily interferes with the Trustee’s administration of this estate because the claims being pursued by the creditors are virtually identical to the claims belonging to this estate. As a consequence, the proceedings supplementary could lead to inconsistent results in two different cases. Second, the District Court has now ordered this Court to determine whether the Debtor and THMI should be treated as the same entity. That determination is, in effect, a condition precedent to any fraudulent or alter ego claims the Trustee may assert in this case. Accordingly, this Court will require all of the parties — the Trustee, the creditors, and the “targets” of any fraudulent transfer or alter ego claims — to litigate those claims in one proceeding before this Court.

Background

The Court is no stranger to the facts of this case. As set forth in more detail in the Court’s previous rulings, the Debtor acquired THMI from Trans Health, Inc. (“THI”) in 2006 as part of a stock purchase agreement.1 At the time, THI and THMI were defendants in three wrongful death cases.2 Since then, three more have been [150]*150filed against THI and THMI.3 The Debt- or was ultimately forced into bankruptcy involuntarily after being held liable in state-court proceedings supplementary for a $110 million judgment in one of the cases.4 Since this involuntary case was filed, it has been, perhaps like many (or most) others, proceeding along two tracks.

One of those tracks is claims administration. The claims administration in this case has centered on THMI’s liability in the state court wrongful death cases because the Debtor’s liability for any claim is derivative of THMI’s liability. So there was initially a struggle over who had the right to control THMI’s defense in the wrongful death cases.5 The Debtor (and others) were fearful the Trustee would, if given control over THMI’s defense, simply throw in the towel, resulting in significant claims against the estate. After the Court ruled that the Trustee had the right to control THMI,6 there was a dispute over whether she should have access to THMI’s litigation files from the wrongful death cases.7 More recently, the Court has spent considerable time determining whether the judgment against the Debtor, which ultimately led to this involuntary case, was procured by fraud and whether a settlement of three wrongful death actions currently pending against THMI in state court (as well -as a settlement with a third party) was fair and reasonable and in the best interests of the creditors.8 It is this claims administration track of the case that has received much of the Court’s attention.

Meanwhile, this case has been simultaneously proceeding (albeit somewhat quietly) down a second track: asset recovery. From the outset of this case, the Trustee — consistent with her duty under Bankruptcy Code § 704 — has been concerned with recovering assets sufficient to pay any claims against the estate. Early on, after the order for relief was entered in this case, the Trustee began seeking the Debtor’s books and records, as well as those belonging to THMI, in an effort to [151]*151identify the Debtor’s assets (including potential causes of action on behalf of the estate).9 The Trustee also sought to take the Rule 2004 examination of a number of entities and individuals — such as the Fundamental entities, Murray Forman, Leonard Grunstein, and Rubin Schron — who have consistently been referred to throughout these proceedings (by all concerned) as “targets” of fraudulent transfer and alter ego claims by the Trustee.10 Those efforts ultimately resulted in an omnibus discovery order that gave the Trustee the right to conduct discovery regarding (i) the Debtor’s assets and liabilities; (ii) control of the Debtor’s assets and operations; (iii) potential avoidance actions; and (iv) the possibility of including other business entities or assets in the Debtor’s bankruptcy estate.11

Where the Trustee is headed with that discovery is really no secret to anyone involved in this case: the Trustee intends on pursuing the “targets” to recover hundreds of millions of dollars (if not more than a billion dollars) that she believes belongs to the Debtor’s chapter 7 estate. In fact, the Trustee has openly stated what her goal is.12 And she has openly stated the means for accomplishing that goal— namely, potential alter ego and fraudulent transfer claims against the “targets.”13 Aside from the fact that some of the discovery issues this Court has been dealing with relate to the asset-recovery track, the asset-recovery track had not received much attention from this Court until the end of last year.

That was when two of the targets (the Fundamental entities) decided to — in their own words — “get a. little proactive”14 and bring a claim against THMI in federal district court in New York seeking a declaration that they were not liable for any alter ego or fraudulent transfer claims or, in the alternative, that any statutes of limitations for those claims had expired.15

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Bluebook (online)
500 B.R. 147, 24 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. B 174, 2013 WL 4866336, 2013 Bankr. LEXIS 3786, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scharrer-v-fundamental-long-term-care-holdings-llc-in-re-fundamental-flmb-2013.