State of La. v. Public Investors, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 14, 1994
Docket93-05366
StatusPublished

This text of State of La. v. Public Investors, Inc. (State of La. v. Public Investors, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of La. v. Public Investors, Inc., (5th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals,

Fifth Circuit.

No. 93-5366.

STATE of Louisiana, Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

PUBLIC INVESTORS, INC., et al., Defendants,

Robert L. MARRERO, Trustee of the Bankruptcy Estate of Public Investors, Inc., Appellant.

Oct. 17, 1994.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana.

Before WISDOM, DAVIS and DUHÉ, Circuit Judges.

WISDOM, Circuit Judge:

The State of Louisiana sued a bankrupt insurance holding company, and the company's

bankruptcy trustee filed a counterclaim. The State voluntarily dismissed its claim against the

company. The district court then dismissed the trustee's counterclaim against the state, holding it

barred by the State's Eleventh Amendment sovereign immunity and by the statutory "discretionary

function" exception from liability of La.Rev.Stat. § 9:2798.1. The trustee appeals the dismissal of

his counterclaim. We find it unnecessary to look beyond the state statute to resolve this case, and

we AFFIRM.

I.

The parties conducted little discovery, if any, before the district court dismissed this case.

Most of the facts, however, are undisputed, because appellant Robert Marrero adopted the State's

pleadings as his own against the other named defendants. The pertinent facts, as taken from the

parties' joint pleadings, are as follows.1

Public Investors, Inc. is an insurance holding company. It is bankrupt, and appellant Marrero

1 We take the allegations contained in the parties' joint pleadings as true in evaluating a dismissal of a claim. See Hishon v. King & Spalding, 467 U.S. 69, 73, 104 S.Ct. 2229, 2232-33, 81 L.Ed.2d 59 (1984). is its trustee. Public Investors engaged in several dubious financial transactions with some of its

subsidiary companies and some of their officers. Some of those financial transactions were approved

in advance by officials of the State. Marrero's counterclaim alleges that some State officials violated

unspecified duties in approving the transactions. The two sets of transactions underlying Marrero's

counterclaim are as follows.

First, in October 1989, Public Investors sold two of its wholly owned subsidiaries (Universal

Guaranty Life Insurance Co. and Alliance Life Insurance Co.) to another corporation (First

Commonwealth Corp.) for about $26 million in cash plus a $10 million promissory note. About $21

million of the proceeds of that sale was diverted to insurance companies outside the State of

Louisiana.2 About $13 million of the proceeds of the sale was diverted to another Louisiana

company.3

Second, in a quick series of transactions over a period of about five months, Public Investors

and the other defendants sold and resold a parcel of real estate to each other, inflating the price

substantially each time. The property involved was Parkway Plaza, the site of an unfinished office

building in San Antonio, Texas. On December 14, 1988, Hickory Development Corporation

purchased Parkway Plaza from the FDIC for $11/2 million.

About one year after the initial purchase, the defendants conducted a quick series of repeated

sales of Parkway Plaza. On November 30, 1989, Hickory Development sold the property to

"Parkway Plaza Corp." or "Parkway Plaza, Inc." for $7 million. The buyer immediately resold the

property on December 8, 1989 to Public Investors for $71/2 million. Public Investors sold the

property on December 17, 1989 to Insurance Premium Assistance Corporation ("IPAC") for $10

million. IPAC reso ld the property two days later to Fidelity Fire & Casualty Insurance Co.

("Fidelity") for $10 million. On April 1, 1990, Fidelity sold Parkway Plaza to Southshore Holding

2 Marrero's counterclaim alleges that, of the cash proceeds of the sale, "$21,113,356.00 was diverted to Kansas, Ohio and Nebraska insurance companies". 3 More specifically, Marrero alleges that of the proceeds of the sale, "$12,846,162.00 ... was transferred to Midwest Life Insurance Company, then a Nebraska insurance company, which was later re-domesticated as a Louisiana insurance company, and which is now in a liquidation proceeding brought by the Insurance Commissioner of the State of Louisiana." Corp. ("Southshore") for $13 million. Two days later, Southshore resold the property for $15 million

to "Concord Capitol", which resold it that same day to Midwest Life for $17 million. Each of the

buyers of Parkway Plaza was alleged to have been effectively a shell corporation owned or controlled

by one or more of the named individual defendants. Defendants B.F. Shamburger and Gary Jackson

were alleged to have "dominated the affairs" of the various defendant corporations. The defendants

also allegedly engaged in a series of transactions involving resale of the various mortgage loans on

Parkway Plaza that had accumulated during the course of transactions described above.

Public Investors filed its Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition on March 21, 1991. The case was

converted to a Chapter 7 proceeding on May 20, 1991. On September 16, 1991, the State of

Louisiana sued Public Investors and seventeen other defendants, including related corporations and

some of their officers and directors, in Louisiana state court. The State sought a declaratory

judgment that all the defendants constituted a "single business enterprise", an accounting of the

various transactions engaged in and assets possessed by the defendants, and asked that any of the

defendants' assets found to have been "improperly transferred, wasted, misapplied or

misappropriated" be deposited into the registry of the court for "further disposition in accordance

with law".4 Marrero notes, we think correctly, that this demand for marshalling of the defendants'

assets would have violated the automatic bankruptcy stay that protected Public Investors.

In response to the State's lawsuit, Marrero (1) removed the case to federal court under 28

U.S.C. §§ 1334 and 1441, (2) filed a crossclaim against the other defendants named in the State's

complaint, adopting the state's pleadings as his own in the crossclaim, and (3) filed a $28 million

counterclaim against the State. The counterclaim charged that unnamed officials of the Louisiana

Department of Insurance5 failed to perform their duties because they approved, or failed to prevent,

4 Cf. Green v. Champion Ins. Co., 577 So.2d 249 (La.App.), writ denied, 580 So.2d 668 (La.1991). In Green, the liquidator ad hoc of an insolvent insurance company sought and obtained a declaration that the insolvent company and several related companies were a "single business enterprise", thereby making the assets of all the related companies available to satisfy the insolvent company's debts. Green was not complicated, as this case is, by the existence of a pending federal bankruptcy proceeding. 5 The only official named in Marrero's counterclaim is "James H. "Jim' Brown, Commissioner of Insurance for the State of Louisiana, in his capacity as the Liquidator of Midwest Life Insurance Public Investors's shady transactions at a time Marrero says they knew Public Investors was

insolvent.6 Marrero charges the State with a loss of some $21 million from the sale of Public

Investors' subsidiaries, plus some $7 million from the Parkway Plaza transactions.

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