Spradlin v. Monday Coal, LLC (In re Licking River Mining, LLC)

571 B.R. 241
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Kentucky
DecidedApril 14, 2017
DocketCase No. 14-10201 Jointly Administered; Adv. No. 16-1035
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 571 B.R. 241 (Spradlin v. Monday Coal, LLC (In re Licking River Mining, LLC)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spradlin v. Monday Coal, LLC (In re Licking River Mining, LLC), 571 B.R. 241 (Ky. 2017).

Opinion

[245]*245MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING MOTION TO PARTIALLY DISMISS FIRST AMENDED COMPLAINT

Tracey N. Wise, Bankruptcy Judge

This matter is before the Court on Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss the Trustee’s First Amended Complaint. [ECF Nos. 25 and 25-1 (memorandum in support, hereafter the “Motion”).] In her First Amended Complaint [ECF No. 24 (“Amended Complaint”)], Plaintiff Phaedra Spradlin, chapter 7 trustee (“Trustee”), on behalf of debtor U.S. Coal Corporation (“U.S. Coal”) and its nine co-debtor subsidiaries (“Subsidiaries”1), asserts claims against Defendant Monday Coal, LLC (“Monday”) for avoidance of fraudulent transfers under chapter 5 of the Bankruptcy Code2 and under Kentucky Revised Statutes §§ 378.010 and 378.020.3 Trustee also asserts claims under chapter 5 of the Bankruptcy Code for avoidance of preferential payments and post-petition transfers, recovery of all avoided transfers, and disallowance of claims. Monday moves to dismiss the Amended Complaint in substantial part for failure to state a claim under Civil Rule 12(b)(6), made applicable to adversary proceedings by Bankruptcy Rule 7012(b).

BACKGROUND AND FACTS ALLEGED IN THE AMENDED COMPLAINT AND ITS EXHIBIT

Trustee filed a complaint commencing this proceeding on June 12,2016, asserting eight Counts on behalf of U.S. Coal and the Subsidiaries against Monday under the same legal theories in the Amended Complaint. On August 9, Monday moved to dismiss the claims except “to the extent to which there are alleged transfers to Monday Coal during the non-insider preference period of February 22, 2014 to May 23, 2014.” [ECF No. 14-1 at 2 n.3 (the “90-day Preference Claim”).] Trustee filed the Amended Complaint over two months later on October 19 in response to Monday’s first motion to dismiss. Monday again seeks a dismissal with the same caveat for the 90-day Preference Claim.

I. Trustee Seeks to Avoid and Recover Transfers to Monday Relating to Agreements between Debtors and Monday.

The Amended Complaint alleges that Debtors were “coal mining operators” that “maintained business relationships with various business entities, through [246]*246which the Debtors regularly purchased goods and services” and that Debtors “regularly paid for services used to facilitate their coal mining operations.” [Am. Compl. ¶¶24, 25.4] Trustee alleges that several Debtors “did not generate any revenue on their own[,]” while others, including Resources, “did generate at least some revenue.” [Id. ¶ 30.] Trustee alleges the manner in which Debtors collectively handled their cash as follows:

Before the commencement of the Bankruptcy Cases, the Debtors operated a unified cash management system which had three main components: (i) cash collection; (ii) cash concentration; and (iii) cash distribution. The Debtors generated and received funds from a wide variety of sources, including revenue from coal supply agreements with various customers, including electricity generators, industrial users, steel mills and independent coke producers. The Debtors made payments by check, wire, and ACH transfer to their suppliers of goods and services, including the transfers at issue and as set forth in this Complaint, from their bank accounts.

[Id. ¶ 29.]

Defendant Monday is an entity from whom “Debtors frequently purchased goods and services.... ” [Id. ¶ 25.] Trustee alleges that Debtors and Monday “apparently entered into numerous agreements, which are evidenced by invoices, communications and other documents (collectively, the ‘Agreements’).”5 [Id. ¶ 32.] The Amended Complaint does not state how Debtors transferred any specific funds to Monday, but summarily alleges that “Monday was consistently paid on its Agreements with the Debtors.” [Id ¶ 37.] The Amended Complaint also alleges that “Debtors and [Monday] conducted business with one another up to and through the Petition Date pursuant to the Agreements,” that Debtors made transfers to Monday, and that “[t]he Debtors paid [Monday] prior to the Petition Date an amount of not less than $3,868,900.08 (“Total Transfers”)....”6 [M ¶¶ 38, 41, 49, 59, 65, 69, 75, 80.] Exhibit A to the Amended Complaint lists transactions with Monday. It identifies the “Company Name” as Resources and itemizes payments to Monday, but it does not expressly specify that Resources is the payor. [ECF 24-1.] That said, based on the Exhibit, it is plausible that Resources is the transferor. Exhibit A contains some specific information (including dates, amounts, and recipient) about “vendor invoices” leading to “vendor payments” (and a few other transaction types) between February 2009 and March 2015, presumably from Resources to Monday, resulting in payments totaling $3,979,634.68. Some line items on Exhibit A also briefly describe services that Monday evidently provided (e.g., “equipment rental,” “service truck & mechanic,” “dozer work”).

The Amended Complaint is unclear whether it seeks to avoid the underlying obligation to pay Monday’s invoices. It does not allege that Monday failed to pro[247]*247vide goods and services in accordance with the Agreements; rather, it states that Monday “allegedly provided goods and/or services to one of the Debtors, including but not limited to the Total Transfers set forth in the invoices between the parties,” [Am. Compl. ¶ 39.] Trustee’s Response to this Motion offers that Debtors’ records suggest that these were not “ordinary course” transactions and claims that Paragraph 40 of the Amended Complaint contains this averment. [ECF No. 27 (“Response”) at 4.] Paragraph 40, however, does not allege this; it states that Monday billed “the Debtors” an average of about $5,380 more per month for its coal-related services in the 12 months immediately before “the Petition Date”7 than it did in the preceding 12-month period, “[e]ven though U.S. Coal claimed to suffer from a decreased demand for coal and reduced production output....” [Am. Compl. ¶ 40.]

II. Trustee Pleads that Monday is an Insider for Purposes of Section 547 Based on its Sole Member’s Familial Ties.

Defendant Monday (a limited liability company) has one member, non-party Jonathan Whitt (“Member”)—the son of John Whitt, a former U.S. Coal board member, principal equity holder, and alleged lender to LR Mining. [Am. Compl. ¶ 23.] Member also is the nephew of Kenneth Whitt, Resources’ Senior Vice President of Operations and “another principal equity holder [in] and alleged lender to” LR Mining. [Id.] The Amended Complaint does not offer the time frame in which either John or Kenneth Whitt held these “insider” positions, or compare that date range with the period in which the Total Transfers were made to Monday. Nevertheless, based on Member’s family ties, Trustee alleges that Monday, the Defendant LLC, “is an ‘insider’ of the Debtors as defined by” § 101(31), and states that “[b]oth John Whitt and Kenneth Whitt had significant influence over the payments to U.S. Coal creditors, including payments to” Monday. [Id. ¶¶ 23]

Trustee further alleges that John Whitt (defined as “Defendant’s Father”) “also was involved in the - operations of Defendant and played a role in negotiating the Agreements,” which “were not arms-length agreements.” [Id.

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Bluebook (online)
571 B.R. 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spradlin-v-monday-coal-llc-in-re-licking-river-mining-llc-kyeb-2017.