Teresa Cardenas v. Madison Realty Capital LP

540 Fed. Appx. 952, 540 F. App'x 952, 2013 WL 5779800, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 21974
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 28, 2013
Docket12-16142
StatusUnpublished

This text of 540 Fed. Appx. 952 (Teresa Cardenas v. Madison Realty Capital LP) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Teresa Cardenas v. Madison Realty Capital LP, 540 Fed. Appx. 952, 540 F. App'x 952, 2013 WL 5779800, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 21974 (11th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

MARTIN, Circuit Judge:

Madison Realty Capital, LP (Madison) bought substantially all of the assets of Biscayne Park, LLC (Biscayne) as part of a bankruptcy proceeding. Madison argues the Sale Order entered by the Bankruptcy Court included a law suit brought by Biscayne against Wal-Mart before the bankruptcy filing. Teresa Cardenas, the majority shareholder of Biscayne Park, LLC (Biscayne), disputes that the Wal-Mart cause of action was properly a part of the Sale Order. Ms. Cardenas brings this appeal challenging the Bankruptcy Court order affirmed by the District Court, which included the Wal-Mart cause of action as a part of the Sale Order. Upon a careful review of the record, and with the benefit of oral argument, we affirm the rulings of both courts.

I.

In November 2006, Biscayne got a one-year, $8,150,000.00, mortgage with Madison to secure the purchase of a sixteen acre tract. Biscayne hoped to re-sell the property “to a big box retailer (for a sum in excess of twenty million dollars) due to its size and favorable location.” To this end, Biscayne and Wal-Mart entered into a purchase agreement in March 2007. Biscayne Park, LLC v. Wal-Mart Stores E., LP, 84 So.3d 24, 25 (Fla. 3d DCA 2010). However, the purchase agreement allowed Wal-Mart to install wells in order to test the groundwater at the site, and after doing so, Wal-Mart backed out of the deal. Id.

Biscayne then sought and found a new potential buyer, and during negotiations agreed to allow them to test the groundwater using the wells installed by Wal-Mart. Id. When Wal-Mart learned of this plan they sought to stop it, because the company “became concerned about its potential liability resulting from this use of the wells that it had previously installed.” Id. Wal-Mart got a temporary injunction in state court that allowed it to enter the property and seal the wells. Id. at 26. The state court also required Wal-Mart to post a $230,000.00 bond. Id.

Meanwhile, Biscayne remained unable to re-sell the property, and began to have trouble paying back the loan. On account of its inability to pay off the loans in full, Biscayne paid an extension fee of $41,000 in October 2007, and then another such fee in October 2008. The 2008 extension fee was nearly three times the amount paid the year before. After Biscayne’s failure to make certain tax payments and an installment due in May 2009, Madison began foreclosure proceedings in Miami-Dade County Circuit Court. In April 2010, Biscayne filed a voluntary petition for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy code.

Between the beginning of the foreclosure proceedings and the filing of the bankruptcy petition, a Florida appellate court reversed and remanded the decision granting Wal-Mart the injunction that permitted the sealing of the wells. Id. at 27. In setting aside the injunction, the Florida appeals court said “because the wells on Biscayne’s property were destroyed following the entry of an improper injunction, on remand Biscayne can proceed against Wal-Mart’s posted bond on *954 its claim for damages.” Id. (citations omitted). After this ruling of the Florida appeals court, and pursuant to Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 9027, Biscayne filed a Notice of Removal, bringing the Wal-Mart action into the Bankruptcy Court. The removed case consisted of three counts brought by Biscayne in a counterclaim to Wal-Mart’s complaint: (1) Declaratory Judgment; (2) Conversion; and (3) Trespass. The Notice of Removal stated in part: “Upon removal of the claim or cause of action this proceeding is core; or, if non-core, [Biscayne] consents to entry of final orders or judgment by the bankruptcy judge.”

Then in August 2010, the Bankruptcy Court entered a Cash Collateral Order, granting Madison a first priority lien on “[a]ll of the real and personal property of [Biscayne] of any description whatsoever, wherever located and whenever arising or acquired.” Biscayne did not object to the Cash Collateral Order. In October 2010, the Bankruptcy Court entered a Bid Procedures Order, and again, Biscayne did not object. The Bid Procedures Order set certain procedures for the sale of “substantially all of the assets of’ Biscayne.

After a hearing, the Bankruptcy Court found Madison’s bid was the highest and best, and entered a Sale Order for assets described in exhibits to that Order. These included “[a]ll causes of actions and judgments pursuant thereto relating to the Premises,” “[a]ll contract rights, causes of actions, claims, [and] demands of [Biscayne],” and “the right, in the name and on behalf of [Biscayne] to appear in and defend any action or proceeding brought with respect to the Premises.” In addition to listing what was included, the Sale Order also noted what was not, expressly excluding “the $230,000 supersedeas bond posted by Wal-Mart in Miami-Dade County Circuit Court under Case Number 08-67361 CA 22.” Again, Biscayne offered no objection to this Order. As part of the Sale Order, the Bankruptcy Court retained jurisdiction “for the purpose of: (1) determining the validity, enforceability, or priority of any ‘Claim’ (as that term is defined in the Sale Order); (2) enforcing the Sale Order; and (3) determining any disputes under ... the Sale Order.”

After the sale, Madison filed a motion in the Bankruptcy Court seeking a ruling that the “Adversary Proceeding,” namely the counterclaim by Biscayne against Wal-Mart, “was included in the sale of [Biscayne]’s assets to Madison.” At a hearing on this motion, Ms. Cardenas argued that the Sale Order did not transfer the Wal-Mart cause of action because the Sale Order’s “causes of action” language “doesn’t talk about tort claims.... If you read this, all causes of action relating to the premises, does not necessarily sell a tort cause of action against Wal-Mart that’s independent of the land itself.”

II.

Ms. Cardenas moved to dismiss the bankruptcy. In her motion to dismiss, Ms. Cardenas argued that the Wal-Mart cause of action “has been included in the ‘sale of assets’ in a confusing manner which was not in fact intended or understood by the shareholders of [Biscayne].”

On October 7, 2011, the Bankruptcy Court issued the order that is the subject of this appeal. The Bankruptcy Court found that “Madison had a lien on the Wal-Mart Cause Of Action under both the Cash Collateral Order and the Prepetition Loan Documents, and purchased the Wal-Mart Cause Of Action via its credit bid on that Collateral at the Sale Hearing and pursuant to the Sale Order.” The Bankruptcy Court also granted the motion to dismiss the bankruptcy and dismissed the case with prejudice.

*955 Ms. Cardenas appealed the Bankruptcy Court’s Order to the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida. After the case was fully briefed in the District Court, Biseayne filed a Motion to Join in the Appeal and to Adopt the Briefs of the Appellant, which the District Court granted the following day. Ultimately the District Court affirmed the Bankruptcy Court’s Order, rejecting four arguments raised by Ms. Cardenas.

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Bluebook (online)
540 Fed. Appx. 952, 540 F. App'x 952, 2013 WL 5779800, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 21974, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teresa-cardenas-v-madison-realty-capital-lp-ca11-2013.