The Truth Tellers, LLC v. Levine

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. West Virginia
DecidedMarch 20, 2023
Docket3:22-cv-00066
StatusUnknown

This text of The Truth Tellers, LLC v. Levine (The Truth Tellers, LLC v. Levine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. West Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Truth Tellers, LLC v. Levine, (N.D.W. Va. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF WEST VIRGINIA MARTINSBURG

THE TRUTH TELLERS, LLC,

Appellant,

v. CIVIL ACTION NO.: 3:22-CV-66 (GROH)

DAVID A. LEVINE,

Appellee.

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER AFFIRMING BANKRUPTCY COURT

The Truth Tellers, LLC, appeals from the Memorandum Opinion and Order of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of West Virginia entered on March 31, 2022, docketed in 3:20-ap-36. ECF No. 1. Therein, the bankruptcy court denied the relief sought by the Truth Tellers in its adversary complaint, finding that the disputed transfers were dischargeable in the underlying bankruptcy proceeding. Upon review and consideration of the parties’ briefs and joint appendix, the record, and pertinent case law, the Court finds that the facts and legal arguments are adequately presented, and the decisional process would not be significantly aided by oral argument. Thus, a hearing is unnecessary in this matter. Fed. R. Bankr. P. 8013(c), 8019(b)(3). For the reasons that follow, the bankruptcy court’s decision is AFFIRMED. I. Background1 A. Factual Background Two individuals lie at the heart of this case: Anne Meador and David Levine. In

1 The facts recited are taken from the parties’ briefs, joint appendix, and the designated record on appeal. September 2018, the two met at a Jefferson County Development Authority meeting, which focused on the planned Rockwool factory installation. Ms. Meador and Mr. Levine remained in touch over the next year, seeing each other at meetings and protests. Nearly a year later, in the beginning of August 2019, their relationship evolved from platonic and casual to romantic and intimate.2 Nearly immediately after the blossoming of their physical

relationship, the pair became business partners as well. Later that month, Ms. Meador and Mr. Levine met with an attorney to form The Truth Tellers, LLC. During their meeting, Mr. Levine suggested that the attorney create the LLC in Ms. Meador’s name. Ms. Meador became the President and sole Member of Truth Tellers, while Mr. Levine became Secretary. Mr. Levine requested that the attorney draft an operating agreement for the LLC, but the agreement was not completed. On August 30, 2019, Ms. Meador opened a bank account for Truth Tellers, and Mr. Levine was a signatory on the account. Both Ms. Meador and Mr. Levine had authority to open, close, and conduct business on the account. Additionally, both Ms. Meador and

Mr. Levine completed signature cards for the account. They used a building owned by Mr. Levine as the mailing address for the bank statements, and the pair planned to use that building as the corporate office for Truth Tellers. The bank account for Truth Tellers was also linked with two other business accounts, one for Indeco Union3 and one for Climate Pictures4. As President of Climate Pictures, Ms. Meador accessed its online bank account regularly. She organized payroll

2 Mr. Levine was married to another woman, Monica Levine, at this time. 3 Indeco Union is another company of Mr. Levine’s. He created the company in 2017 with another individual as a public benefit corporation hoping to finance solar energy and green infrastructure projects using security token offerings on blockchain. 4 Climate Pictures is a nonprofit organization created by Mr. Levine in order to film a documentary about Rockwool. Mr. Levine had previously hired Ms. Meador as President of Climate Pictures. and health insurance for Climate Pictures and generally reviewed the organization’s finances to ensure its debits were covered. Shortly after opening the bank account for Truth Tellers, Ms. Meador deposited $50,000.00 into the account. First, she deposited $20,000.00 by wire transfer on

September 6, 2019, and then an additional $30,000.00 by wire transfer on September 16, 2019. Around this time, Mr. Levine was in a precarious financial state, so much so that he was considering filing for bankruptcy protection. Ms. Meador was aware of Mr. Levine’s financial condition when they established Truth Tellers together and opened its bank account. Throughout the month of September, Mr. Levine made repeated withdrawals (“disputed transfers”) from Truth Tellers’s bank account. First, on September 6, 2019, the same day that Ms. Meador deposited $20,000.00 into the account, Mr. Levine transferred $19,000.00 via check to his personal bank account that he shared with his wife, Monica Levine. Mr. Levine used $16,400.00 of this transfer to pay his mortgage servicer,

Specialized Loan Servicing. He deposited the remaining $2,599.00 into his personal bank account. A week later, on September 13, 2019, Mr. Levine transferred $700 from Truth Tellers’s account to the checking account of ThreeSquare, LLC.5 On September 18, 2019, two days after Ms. Meador deposited an additional $30,000.00 into Truth Tellers’s account, Mr. Levine transferred $15,000.00 from Truth Tellers’s account into Indeco’s checking account. Mr. Levine’s final transfer occurred on September 20, 2019, when he transferred $15,250.00 to Indeco’s checking account. Mr. and Mrs. Levine filed a Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition just three months later,

5 ThreeSquare is a real estate holding company established by Mr. and Mrs. Levine in 2002. on December 13, 2019.6 Initially, the Levines did not list Truth Tellers as a creditor in their bankruptcy schedule. Even so, Truth Tellers still received service of the Levines’s bankruptcy proceeding and timely filed a proof of claim. On February 3, 2020, Ms. Meador signed a convertible note, on behalf of Truth

Tellers, from Indeco. The note provided that, on the closing date, Truth Tellers would invest $161,500.00, with $86,500.00 being new cash, while the remaining $75,000.00 referred to cash invested previously: $20,000.00 on August 30, 20197, $30,000.00 on September 16, 2019, and $25,000.00 on November 29, 2019. The note provided for repayment of the money invested with interest at the time of maturity or for conversion into preferred stock in Indeco upon a qualified financing. At this time, Indeco had no employees on payroll and was pivoting to a new business focus. However, Indeco had received money for two offerings, a website named Crypto Launch and consulting agreements, and possessed the following technology: an application, a “tech stack,” an analytics engine, code on a block chain, and the Crypto Launch website. Mr. Levine

signed the convertible note on behalf of Indeco. A month later, March 2020, Mr. Levine ended the romantic relationship between he and Ms. Meador through email. Around this same time, Ms. Meador realized that she could not access Truth Tellers’s online banking account, but she could still access the other linked accounts. Ms. Meador asserted that, although she had made transfers into Truth Tellers’s account after the $50,000.00 in September 2019, when she reviewed the account in March 2020, she still expected to see her $50,000.00 in the account because

6 Their case was later converted to a Chapter 7 proceeding. 7 The Court notes that the initial transfer occurred on September 6, 2019. Truth Tellers’s bank account was opened on August 30, 2019. The date on the convertible note was likely a typographical error. the funds were intended for the documentary, which had yet to come to fruition. When she visited the bank in person, she discovered the funds were no longer there. About six months later, the underlying adversary proceeding ensued. B. Procedural Background

i. Underlying Bankruptcy Proceeding Mr. Levine and his wife, Monica Levine, filed a voluntary petition for bankruptcy pursuant to Chapter 13 of the bankruptcy code on December 13, 2019, which was docketed as 3:19-bk-1048.

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