Stillwater Liquidating LLC v. Net Five at Palm Pointe, LLC (In re Stillwater Asset Backed Offshore Fund Ltd.)

559 B.R. 563
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 2, 2016
DocketCase No. 12-14140 (MEW); Adv. Pro. No. 14-02245 (MEW)
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 559 B.R. 563 (Stillwater Liquidating LLC v. Net Five at Palm Pointe, LLC (In re Stillwater Asset Backed Offshore Fund Ltd.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stillwater Liquidating LLC v. Net Five at Palm Pointe, LLC (In re Stillwater Asset Backed Offshore Fund Ltd.), 559 B.R. 563 (N.Y. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION ON MOTIONS TO DISMISS

MICHAEL E. WILES, UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE

Stillwater Liquidating LLC claims that the “Stillwater Funds” were defrauded in 2010 when their assets were transferred to the Gerova group of companies and then, a few months later, to the Net Five group of companies. Stillwater Liquidating seeks to recover the properties or their values. Some defendants are persons and entities who allegedly committed the fraud. Other defendants are buyers of real property, or secured lenders, who are sued as “subse-quent transferees” of properties that the Stillwater Funds once owned. See 11 U.S.C. § 550. The secured lenders (but not the buyers) also are accused of aiding and abetting the alleged fraud and joining in a conspiracy to commit it.

These claims sound straightforward, but they are not. The original Complaint was eighty-one pages long. The Court directed that clarifying amendments be made, which led to the filing of a thirty-four page Supplement with 949 pages of exhibits. An Amended Complaint made further changes and is 124 pages long, with 112 pages of its own exhibits. The hope was that the amendments would provide clarity, partic-ularly as to the alleged fraudulent trans-fers. Instead, Stillwater Liquidating has stubbornly mischaracterized transactions, conflated parties and events, and tried to gloss over important details about the as-sets that were transferred and the nature of the Stillwater Funds’ property interests. As a result the lengthy pleadings are packed with plain errors, contradictions and poorly conceived claims.

Many of the defendants filed motions to dismiss. Some of the moving defendants have since settled the claims and have been dismissed from the case. This Opin-ion addresses the remaining motions. The Court holds:

(1) All claims asserted against Para-digm Credit Corporation (“Paradigm”), Calhoun Commercial Construction LLC (“Calhoun”), SFN Dekalb Holdings LLC (“SFN”), John R. Daniel and Yvette Daniel (the “Daniels”), and Ste-phen J. McDonald and Vicki McDonald (the “McDonalds”) should be dismissed; and
(2) To the extent the Amended Com-plaint asserts fraudulent transfer claims against the Net Five Defendants (de-fined below) based on transfers of assets that never belonged to a debtor in a bankruptcy case, those claims also should be dismissed. However, the Net Five Defendants’ joinder in motions to dismiss filed by other parties is not, by [570]*570itself, sufficient to warrant a dismissal of the other claims against them.

The Court will hold a conference on Sep-tember 27, 2016 at 11:00 a.m. to discuss further proceedings, including whether all or some of the dismissals should be with prejudice.

I. Background

Although there are many Stillwater Funds, there are only two funds that owned assets that are relevant to the pending motions to dismiss. One is a Dela-ware limited partnership named Stillwater Asset Backed Fund, L.P.; the parties have referred to this entity as the “Onshore Fund,” but in order to distinguish it more easily from other funds the Court will refer to it as the “Delaware Fund.” Prior to 2010 the Delaware Fund and its subsid-iaries made real estate loans and other types of loans. The other relevant fund is a Cayman Islands entity named Stillwater Asset Backed Offshore Fund Ltd. (the “Offshore Fund”), which was the debtor in the bankruptcy case in which this adver-sary proceeding has been filed. The Off-shore Fund bought “participation inter-ests” that related to loans made by the Delaware Fund and by other entities.

In January 2010 the Stillwater Funds entered into a number of agreements with the Gerova companies. Stillwater Liquidat-ing alleges that through these agreements the assets of the Delaware Fund and the Offshore Fund were transferred to the Gerova companies. Those assets allegedly included mortgage loans, real properties and participation interests in the same.

In May 2010, the Gerova companies agreed with an entity named Planet Five Development Group LLC (“Planet Five”), and with two individuals who were associ-ated with Planet Five, to form a joint venture. The joint venture company was a Florida limited liability company named Net Five Holdings LLC (“Net Five Hold-ings”). Stillwater Liquidating alleges that the Gerova companies transferred the as-sets formerly owned by the Delaware Fund and the Offshore Fund to Net Five Holdings and its subsidiaries.

At various times after May 2010 the lender and buyer defendants either bought properties that had once been owned by the Stillwater Funds and their subsidiar-ies, or made loans that were secured by such properties.

Investors in the Stillwater Funds were unhappy with the 2010 transactions, and at least three separate class actions were filed in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York in 2011, alleging violations of federal securities laws and breaches of fiduciary duty by Gerova, various individuals and the manag-ers of the Stillwater Funds. See In re Stillwater Capital Partners Inc. Litigation, Case No. 11-CV-2737; Goldberg, et al. v. Gerova Financial Group, Ltd., et al., Case No. 11-CV-07107; Arar, et al. v. Gerova Financial Group, Ltd., et al., Case No. 11-CV-3081. In 2012, a number of investors also commenced an involuntary bankruptcy- case in this Court against the Offshore Fund; that case later was converted to a voluntary chapter 11 case (Case No. 12-14140).

Stillwater Liquidating was formed as part of a settlement agreement in 2014 that resolvéd the three class actions listed above and other disputes. The settlement was “memorialized” in four documents: a Global Settlement Agreement, a so-called “Stillwater Agreement,” the limited liability agreement through which Stillwater Liquidating was formed, and the con-firmed plan of reorganization in the Off-shore Fund’s chapter 11 case, which was confirmed by Judge Gropper on August 13,2014. Amended Complaint ¶ 1 n.4, ECF No. 297. The Amended Complaint alleges [571]*571that through these agreements Stillwater Liquidating is now the owner of “all of the claims ■ owned by Gerova relating to the assets at issue hereunder and formerly owned by the Stillwater Funds,” as well as “all of the claims owned by the Stillwater Funds.” Id. ¶¶21,22, 65.

II. The Claims

The Amended Complaint asserts 16 claims. Some are statutory claims, and oth-ers are common law claims. All of the claims are asserted by Stillwater Liquidat-ing as the alleged assignee of other entities.

The primary claims are fraudulent transfer claims asserted by Stillwater Liq-uidating as alleged assignee of the Stillwa-ter Funds. Counts I through IV name “Gerova” and “Net Five” as defendants (more on those defined terms below). These four.claims allege that the transfers of the Stillwater Funds’ assets to Gerova, and Gerova’s later transfers of those as-sets to Net Five, “individually and collec-tively” were fraudulent transfers that were designed to defraud the creditors of the Stillwater Funds, Amended Complaint ¶¶ 389, 397, 405, 413. Stillwater Liquidat-ing contends that the Stillwater Funds may challenge those fraudulent transfers pursuant to section 544 of the Bankruptcy Code and New York state law.1

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Bluebook (online)
559 B.R. 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stillwater-liquidating-llc-v-net-five-at-palm-pointe-llc-in-re-nysb-2016.