Taylor Associates v. Diamant (In Re Advent Management Corp.)

178 B.R. 480, 95 Daily Journal DAR 10590, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 346, 1995 WL 126290
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 16, 1995
DocketBAP No. CC-94-1413-HMeV. Bankruptcy No. LA-89-03782-JD/KM. Adv. No. LA-91-61036-KM
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 178 B.R. 480 (Taylor Associates v. Diamant (In Re Advent Management Corp.)) 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
Taylor Associates v. Diamant (In Re Advent Management Corp.), 178 B.R. 480, 95 Daily Journal DAR 10590, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 346, 1995 WL 126290 (bap9 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

HAGAN, Bankruptcy Judge:

Lawrence Diamant (“trustee”) is the Chapter 7 trustee for the debtor, Advent Management Corporation (“Advent”). The trustee commenced an action against Taylor Associates (“Taylor”) to recover sums alleged to be either avoidable preferences under section 547, 1 or fraudulent transfers under section 548. The bankruptcy court granted partial summary judgment to the trustee, holding, inter alia, that the transfers to Taylor were transfers of an interest of the debtor in property. Taylor filed two motions for reconsideration. Both motions were denied. Taylor appeals the denial of the second motion. We AFFIRM.

FACTS

1. Facts Underlying the Disputed Transfers.

This action involves a three-sided transfer. Prior to bankruptcy, Taylor provided temporary services to Coastal Insurance Company (“Coastal”). Taylor received payment for these services from Advent, the sole owner of Coastal. It is these payments that are the subject of this adversary proceeding.

Coastal underwrote insurance policies, including auto insurance policies for high-risk drivers. However, Coastal had no employees and few of the physical assets necessary to conduct the business. Advent possessed “virtually all” of the employees and most of the furniture, fixtures, and equipment needed for operations. Advent handled all of Coastal’s day-to-day administrative operations.

Advent had an unwritten agreement with Coastal regarding compensation for its services as Coastal’s managing agent. Advent received 25% of premiums earned and approximately 100% of the policy fees earned, in addition to unallocated loss adjustment expenses representing 6% of the premiums written.

However, in addition to these funds, Coastal diverted over $48 million in assets to Advent. These transfers were recorded in Coastal’s books as “advances.” There was no written agreement or memorialization of the transfers, they were not collateralized, and there was no interest charged. A report of the California Auditor General concluded the advances were “payments on expenses its affiliates had not fully incurred yet and might never incur if the policies they were writing were not renewed each month.” Auditor General’s Report, Taylor’s Excerpts of Record (hereinafter “Taylor’s ER”) at 462. The “Task Force Report on Coastal Insurance Company,” prepared by the California Department of Insurance, indicated some of the “advances” to Advent went into personal loans to officers and directors, and personal and other expenses associated with Advent’s operations. Task Force Report, Taylor’s ER at 620-626.

On February 2, 1989, Coastal was taken over by the California Department of Insurance. The Insurance Commissioner for the State of California (“Commissioner”) was appointed as conservator for Coastal, and later as Coastal’s liquidator. Advent filed its chapter 7 petition on February 23, 1989.

2. Procedural Posture.

On March 14,1991, the trustee commenced the underlying adversary proceeding against Taylor for the recovery of a number of these payments. This initial complaint sought the return of a number of allegedly preferential transfers under section 547. After conducting discovery, the trustee concluded Taylor had never been a creditor of the debtor, and filed his first amended complaint pleading an additional cause of action to recover fráudu- *483 lent transfers under section 548. The first amended complaint requested return of 36 payments made in the one year prior to Advent’s bankruptcy. In his motion for summary judgment, the trustee requested the return of two additional payments. The total amount transferred in all 38 payments was $193,112.09. Taylor’s answer to the first amended complaint admitted that 14 of the transfers to Taylor were transfers of Advent’s property. The trustee filed a motion for summary judgment on October 7, 1992. Taylor opposed the motion. Taylor contended, among other things, that there was a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the transfers were transfers of property of Advent. The bankruptcy court asked Taylor’s counsel if Taylor wished a continuance to conduct further discovery on this issue, and counsel declined.

The court granted partial summary judgment in favor of the trustee. The court’s findings, entered on March 8, 1993, found that the 38 transfers were transfers of property of Advent. The court concluded the trustee’s evidence of a transfer from Advent’s general account constituted a prima facie showing the money was Advent’s property, and Taylor failed to come forward with evidence sufficient to create a genuine issue of material fact.

Taylor obtained new counsel, who on March 18, 1993, filed a motion seeking: (1) leave to amend its answer to the first amended complaint; (2) an order altering or amending the prior order, reconsidering the prior order, or alternatively granting relief from the order for excusable neglect; and (3) an order reopening discovery (hereinafter, “first motion to reconsider”). The basis for the motion was that newly-discovered evidence (three reports by public entities, including the two cited above) raised a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the transfers were of property of Advent. The motion was also based on the argument that Taylor’s previous counsel erred, first in admitting that 14 transfers were transfers of property of the debtor, and second in declining additional discovery. Taylor contended the transfers were transfers of money misappropriated from Coastal by Advent, and consequently Advent held those monies in constructive trust for Coastal.

A hearing on the first motion to reconsider was held on May 5, 1993. The court denied all aspects of the motion. The court found that the previous counsel had not admitted the 14 transfers or declined additional discovery by mistake, but as a strategic decision regarding the conduct of the case. The court also concluded Taylor would be unable to trace the funds sufficiently to establish the existence of a constructive trust.

With specific regard to the motion to reconsider the prior summary judgment ruling, the court noted it could be analyzed under either Rule 59(e) 2 or Rule 60(b). The court held the three reports could have been discovered through due diligence at the time of the summary judgment hearing, and concluded relief under Rule 59(e) was therefore not appropriate. The court also rejected the conclusion it should reconsider under Rule 60(b), because there was no excusable neglect; the previous counsel had made a strategic decision not to contest the issue. The order denying the first motion to reconsider was entered on July 8, 1993.

Taylor filed its “Notice of Motion and Motion for Reconsideration of Order Re: ‘Property of the Debtor’” on January 28, 1994 (hereinafter, “second motion to reconsider”). This motion was based on the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals decision in Mitsui Manuf. Bank v. Unicom Computer Corp. (In re Unicom Computer Corp.), 13 F.3d 321 (9th Cir.1994). In Unicom, the Court of Appeals dealt with an action to recover an avoidable preference under section 547.

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178 B.R. 480, 95 Daily Journal DAR 10590, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 346, 1995 WL 126290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-associates-v-diamant-in-re-advent-management-corp-bap9-1995.