Simantob v. Claims Prosecutor, LLC (In Re Lahijani)

325 B.R. 282, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 887, 44 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 247, 2005 WL 1223650
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedApril 21, 2005
DocketBAP No. CC-04-1350-KMOSN, Bankruptcy No. SV 98-15561-AG
StatusPublished
Cited by71 cases

This text of 325 B.R. 282 (Simantob v. Claims Prosecutor, LLC (In Re Lahijani)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simantob v. Claims Prosecutor, LLC (In Re Lahijani), 325 B.R. 282, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 887, 44 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 247, 2005 WL 1223650 (bap9 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

KLEIN, Bankruptcy Judge.

What is in a name? Sometimes a lot— of misinformation. If ever there was a misnomer, it is the name of appellee, “Claims Prosecutor, LLC,” which should have called itself “Claims Defender” or “Claims Extinguisher” when purchasing the trustee’s causes of action to retrieve property allegedly transferred by the debtor. Its owner, who is both a defendant and the debtor’s brother-in-law, concedes that the causes of action will not be prosecuted and elected in open court not to attempt to establish that the purchase was in “good faith” for purposes of -the 11 U.S.C. § 363(m) statutory safe harbor from appellate remedies.

This appeal ties together a number of our recent decisions. We have held that the question whether a purchaser at a court-approved sale acted in § 363(m) “good faith” is to be determined by the trial court with findings based on evidence and that the safe harbor can be waived by omission to present such evidence. 1 We have held that sale of avoiding actions may simultaneously implicate § 363 “sale” analysis and “compromise” analysis under Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 9019(a). 2 We have also explained that 11 U.S.C. § 503(b)(3)(B) recognizes that courts may authorize a creditor to sue in the name of the trustee, at its own expense (but subject to reimbursement under § 503(b)), to recover property transferred by a debtor. 3

We now conclude that, when a cause of action is being sold to a present or potential defendant over the objection of creditors, a bankruptcy court must, in addition to treating it as a sale, independently evaluate the transaction as a settlement under the prevailing “fair and equitable” test, and consider the possibility of authorizing the objecting creditors to prosecute the cause of action for the benefit of the estate, as permitted by § 503(b)(3)(B). Accordingly, we REVERSE the order approving the sale of the estate’s causes of action under § 363.

*285 FACTS

Kaveh Lahijani filed a chapter 7 bankruptcy case in April 1998. Discharge was entered in August 1998. The case was closed as a no-asset case in August 1999.

Nine months after the bankruptcy case was closed, the appellants Kamiar Siman-tob and Nasser Lahijani (joined by one other person), who had not been scheduled as creditors and did not otherwise know of Kaveh Lahijani’s bankruptcy, sued him and others in state court in an effort to recover about $10 million that they alleged was embezzled before the bankruptcy.

The action, Simantob, et al. v. Lahijani, et al, sounding in fraud, was filed in a state court in May 2000. 4 It alleged misrepresentation, concealment, rescission, conspiracy, breach of fiduciary duty, constructive trust, and conversion.

While the state court action was pending, the bankruptcy case was reopened and appellee Peter C. Anderson was appointed chapter 7 trustee. The appellants filed a $9,786,000 proof of claim (all claims total about $13 million) and commenced an adversary proceeding to have the debtor’s discharge revoked or have the debt excepted from discharge.

The net result of three years of convoluted state and federal litigation was that, by October 2003, the appellants had lost in state court on all substantive claims for relief and had not succeeded in having the discharge revoked or the debt excepted from discharge.

Left with a simple debt that was subject to a valid discharge, the appellants’ only remaining avenue for recovery was to maximize the value of the bankruptcy estate available for distribution to creditors. This they proposed to accomplish through the exercise of the trustee’s powers to avoid and recover property that the appellants believed Kaveh Lahijani had fraudulently transferred.

Since the trustee (who says he is unable to evaluate the underlying merits and, in any event, lacks the funds necessary to wage war) was unwilling to pursue the fraudulent transfer and turnover causes of action, the appellants offered to purchase them for a price of one-half of net recoveries.

The appellants’ proposal operated to put the avoiding power causes of action into play as assets that could be auctioned.

Kaveh Lahijani’s brother-in-law and co-defendant, Bashan “Bryan” Mashian, formed appellee, Claims Prosecutor, LLC (“ ‘Claims Prosecutor’ ”), in order to acquire the avoiding power causes of action, offering $30,000.

The chapter 7 trustee evaluated the appellants’ 50 percent offer as more beneficial to the estate than $30,000 and filed a motion for permission to assign his trustee avoiding powers to the appellants, subject to overbid.

When “Claims Prosecutor” raised its offer to $100,000, the trustee switched positions and proposed to accept that offer, subject to overbid and court approval.

The trustee subsequently issued a supplemental notice of a contested sale hearing at which the estate property would be auctioned. Pursuant to the notice, which purported to detail overbid procedures, both initial and subsequent overbids had to be in cash or cash equivalent. 5

*286 At the sale hearing on June 2, 2004, the trustee insisted that only cash or cash equivalent offers were acceptable to him. He did not explain why percentage offers were unacceptable.

During the bidding, the appellants offered a number of overbids that included additional percentage recoveries for the estate ($101,000 + 10 percent; $110,000 + 25 percent; and $130,000 + 25 percent). The trustee objected to the percentages because he wanted a sum certain so the case could be closed. 6 When the appellants persisted, they were effectively forced to state their bids without adding percentages of recoveries, even though they made a record that they wanted to do so. 7 Their final bid was for $160,000. 8

*287 The court authorized the trustee to sell the causes of action to “Claims Prosecutor”, for its high bid of $175,000 and, as a back-up, to appellants for $160,000.

When the court was asked to find that the purchaser was acting in “good faith” within the meaning of § 363(m) so that the sale could not be upset on appeal, 9 it (correctly) noted that our § 363(m) decisions in Thomas and Mickey Thompson emphasize the need for evidence to support such a finding and then declined to make a finding unsupported by evidence.

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325 B.R. 282, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 887, 44 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 247, 2005 WL 1223650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simantob-v-claims-prosecutor-llc-in-re-lahijani-bap9-2005.