Stoebner v. Opportunity Finance, LLC (In re Polaroid Corp.)

543 B.R. 888
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 14, 2016
DocketJOINTLY ADMINISTERED UNDER CASE NO. 08-46617; Court File No. 08-46617; Court File Nos: 08-46621 (GFK), 08-46620 (GFK), 08-46623 (GFK), 08-46624 (GFK), 08-46625 (GFK), 08-46626 (GFK), 08-46627 (GFK), 08-46628 (GFK), 08-46629 (GFK); ADV 10-4600
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 543 B.R. 888 (Stoebner v. Opportunity Finance, LLC (In re Polaroid Corp.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stoebner v. Opportunity Finance, LLC (In re Polaroid Corp.), 543 B.R. 888 (Minn. 2016).

Opinion

ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANTS’ MOTIONS FOR DISMISSAL

GREGORY F. KISHEL, CHIEF ■ UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE

This adversary proceeding came before the court for hearing on two separate motions for dismissal. One movant was Defendant DZ Bank AG Deutsche Zentral-Genossenschaftsbank,- Frankfurt am Main (“DZ Bank”). It appeared by its attorney, H. Peter Haveles, Jr., Kaye Scholer LLP. The remaining named Defendants (collectively, “the Opportunity Finance defendants”) made the other motion. They appeared by their attorney, Joseph G. Petrosinelli, Williams & Connolly LLP. The Plaintiff (“the Trustee”) appeared by his attorneys, Richard T. Thomson, Stephen J. Creasey, and Amy L. Schwartz, Lapp, Libra, Thomson, Stoebner & Puseh. This decision is based on the written submissions for both motions, the Trustee’s Second Amended Complaint, and the arguments of counsel.

[890]*890INTRODUCTION

This adversary proceeding is another outgrowth of the largest bankruptcy cases ever commenced in the District of Minnesota — those of Petters Company, Inc. (“PCI”) and certain of its affiliates, BKY 08-45257, and the related group of cases in which the Polaroid Corporation was the lead debtor, BKY 08-46617. The precipitant of the bankruptcy filings was the failure of massive criminal activity perpetrated by Thomas J. Petters. through PCI. Measured by aggregate, losses, it was the largest case of financial fraud in Minnesota history. It appears to have been the third largest Ponzi scheme in United States, history. ...

Before late September, 2008, Tom Petters was a prominent presence in- entrepreneurial circles in Minnesota. After starting in the 1980s as a direct retailer of overstock and surplus merchandise, he built a sizeable corporate edifice under the umbrella of PCI and another holding company, Petters Group Worldwide, LLC (“PGW”). Through PCI, Tom Petters held himself out as an intermediary for the sale and acquisition of merchandise inventory directly between retailers, outside customary producer-retailer channels. In retail-trade circles, this sort of activity'is called “diverting.” After Tom Petters was arrested in early October, 2008, it emerged that the great majority of PCI’s activity was “diverting” of a different sort — a sham, an elaborate Ponzi scheme. Over a period of years, more than 200 parties were involved in lending to PCI that was ostensibly to finance inventory transactions. Post-collapse investigation revealed that such funding was actually used to repay earlier lenders to PCI.

Federal criminal charges were brought against Tom Petters. In connection with them, a receiver was appointed to secure and marshal his assets. Soon after that, the receiver put PCI and a group of its affiliated entities into bankruptcy under Chapter 11. The Trustee’ in the PCI-related cases is engaged in a massive “clawback” litigation effort to remediate the brunt of the scheme’s failure on the lender-investors left unsatisfied at the end.1

Apart from his activity through PCI, Tom Petters had acquired interests in independent, established business operations of veiy different profiles; Sun Country Airlines (acquired in full October, 2006); the mail-order retailer Fingerhut Direct Marketing, n/k/a Bluestem Brands (significant equity acquired 2004/2007); and, here, the Polaroid Corporation (acquired in full April, 2005).2 PCI’s faltering and failure had a rapid cascade-effect for the Polaroid Corporation and its affiliates.3 Bankruptcy filings for the Polaroid Corporation and a group of its affiliates followed, within two months.4

[891]*891As pleaded, however, this adversary proceeding comes out of the prehistory of all that. It is based on acts and events, that happened before Tom Petters acquired the, Polaroid Corporation’s actual structure.

The Trustee’s suit is premised on a discrete chain of business and lending transactions. He describes them in the complaint as follows.5 Before April, 2005, Tom Petters transacted with the, Polaroid enterprise as it was operated under previous ownership. He used .a company in.his personal enterprise structure for these dealings. The Polaroid Corporation of that time was his contractual counterparty. Through these transactions Tom Petters procured and distributed new consumer goods, under license of the Polaroid brand and marks. To put it directly: the transactions at issue in this adversary proceeding involved the generalized banner of the Polaroid" name; but, at the time of the transactions at issue Tom Petters was contracting. with the Polaroid enterprise,from the outside.6 The Opportunity Finance defendants were involved in those transactions, as lenders that provided the funding to Tom Petters for the acquisition, branding, and disposition -of the 'goods. DZ Bank, as a senior secured, lender to the Opportunity Finance defendants, provided those parties the funding for their lending to the Petters enterprise.

In his initial pleading, the Trustee postured this adversary proceeding similarly to the'“clawback” litigation pending in the PCI cases.7 The Trustee cites 11 U.S.C. § 544(b) as his statutory empowerment to sue' for avoidance.8 He relies on the fraudulent-transfer law of Minnesota for the substantive governance.9 For these cases, the applicable statute is the' Minnesota enactment of the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act, MinmS tat. §§ 513.41 — 513.51 (2014) (“MUFTA”).10 His complaint bla[892]*892zons many of the saíne factual theories, legal concepts, and arguments to justify this suit; it-fe'atures much the same'wording1 in its text.---';The effort is obvious: to evoke a strong resonance with the essence of “clawback” — a complex of legal remedies advanced to relieve end-victims from1 the patent inequity left after the failure of a Ponzi scheme.11

However — as will be seen — there are marked differences between the theory and basis of suit for the PCI docket, and, the pleaded factual basis and legal substance of this adversary proceeding. This is a product of the historical boundary line that lies at Tom Petters’s acquisition of the Polaroid enterprise in 2005, when he ceased to be a contractual counterparty with the enterprises’s previous owner and himself took the ownership of the Polaroid enterprise that ended up in bankruptcy.

At this point, the most crucial difference lies at the bottom of the legal framework for avoidance litigation in bankruptcy: the named plaintiffs standing as trustee to bring suit on the subject transfers, and whether his chosen remedy even applies to those- transfers. For a motion for' dismissal, that issue presents the biggest defect in the Trustee’s fact-pleading — transplanted as it was from litigation that featured similar legal claims but different fact-pleading. Were that defect somehow remedied, there is another large gap in the facts he pleads for the relief he seeks'. That one stems from a development in precedential case law that occurred after this matter was sued out.

THE PARTIES; THEIR POSTURE IN RELATION TO THE CLAIMS IN SUIT

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Bluebook (online)
543 B.R. 888, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stoebner-v-opportunity-finance-llc-in-re-polaroid-corp-mnb-2016.