Tomsic v. Sales Consultants of Boston, Inc. (In Re Salience Associates, Inc.)

371 B.R. 578, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 2251, 48 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 136, 2007 WL 1956704
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJuly 6, 2007
Docket19-10478
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 371 B.R. 578 (Tomsic v. Sales Consultants of Boston, Inc. (In Re Salience Associates, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tomsic v. Sales Consultants of Boston, Inc. (In Re Salience Associates, Inc.), 371 B.R. 578, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 2251, 48 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 136, 2007 WL 1956704 (Mass. 2007).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

HENRY J. BOROFF, Bankruptcy Judge.

Before the Court is a Motion for Summary Judgment, filed by the Defendant, Sales Consultants of Boston, Inc. (“SCB”). The motion is opposed by the Plaintiff, Tali A. Tomsic as Chapter 7 trustee of Salience Associates, Inc. (the “Trustee”; the “Debt- or”). The Trustee’s complaint seeks to avoid various transfers made by the Debt- or to SCB within one year of the filing of the Debtor’s bankruptcy petition and also *581 seeks payment for obligations that she alleges are owed to the Debtor by SCB. 1

I.FACTS & TRAVEL OF THE CASE

Prior to filing its Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition, the Debtor was a professional sales outsourcing company that provided sales teams and market launching services to other companies. SCB provides full-service staffing solutions for domestic and international companies. The Debtor was one of its customers. At all times relevant to the instant Motion for Summary Judgment, Robert G. Stockard (“Stockard”) served as the president of both SCB and the Debtor. SCB routinely procured employees for the Debtor in exchange for a fee, which was calculated as a percentage of the annual salary of the placed employee. 2 The Debtor also sublet a portion of its office space in Andover, Massachusetts to SCB.

The Debtor filed the instant Chapter 7 bankruptcy case on July 14, 2003. During the one-year period prior to the date of case commencement, the following transfers were made from the Debtor to SCB (collectively, the “Transfers”):

1. $7,000.00 on July 29, 2002
2. $2,000.00 on September 3, 2002
3. $30,000.00 on November 1, 2002
4. $18,000.00 on November 1, 2002
5. $6,250.00 on December 31, 2002
6. $12,500.00 on January 2, 2003
7. $20,000.00 on January 13, 2003
8. $18,125.00 on January 21, 2003
9. $3,125.00 on February 11, 2003
10. $42,600.00 on March 10, 2003
11. $22,750.00 on April 9, 2003
12. $26,400.00 on April 22, 2003
13. $45,000.00 on May 2, 2003
14. $35,000.00 on June 16, 2003
15. $1,000.00 on September 6, 2003 3

As part of their sublease arrangement, the Debtor and SCB shared some expenses, such as those related to insurance and the telephone system, for which the Debtor was reimbursed on a monthly basis by SCB. The Trustee claims that the amounts owed to the Debtor for the months of April through July of 2003, including those for rent, were unpaid. SCB disagrees.

On July 13, 2005, the Trustee filed the instant complaint, seeking to avoid each of the Transfers and seeking payment for the debts allegedly owed to the Debtor by SCB. After answering, SCB filed its Motion for Summary Judgment, denying all counts of the Trustee’s complaint and setting forth affirmative defenses to the § 547(b) preference claims, relying on § 547(c)(1) and (2). The Trustee filed her opposition to Stockard’s Motion for Sum *582 mary Judgment, but did not append any affidavits or any other evidence in support. After hearing, the matter was taken under advisement.

II. POSITIONS OF THE PARTIES

A. The Trustee

The Trustee maintains that SCB is an “insider” of the Debtor, given the fact that Stockard served as the president of both companies at all times relevant to the Transfers. Accordingly, the Trustee seeks to avoid, pursuant to § 547(b), 4 all of the Transfers that took place within one year of the date of case commencement.

The Trustee has a further theory as to some or all of the Transfers. She claims that the Debtor should not have been obligated to pay full commissions to SCB for long-term employees when their employment was known to be short-term. Accordingly, the Trustee argues that, at a time of its insolvency, the Debtor failed to receive reasonably equivalent value for the Transfers-which renders them fraudulent transfers recoverable pursuant to § 548(a)(1)(B) 5 and M.G.L. c. 109A § 5(a)(2). 6 Finally, the Trustee maintains that SCB would be unjustly enriched if not required to fulfill its obligations to the Debtor for rent and shared expenses in *583 curred during the four months prior to the Debtor’s bankruptcy case.

The foregoing claims are set forth in the Trustee’s complaint, but in her opposition to the Motion for Summary Judgment, the Trustee does little more than restate § 547(b) of the Bankruptcy Code and remark that “[t]he Complaint and Answer provide evidence of the elements of Section 547 of the Bankruptcy Code.” She adds, however, that “[w]ith respect to the rental payments and the defense of setoff, the documentation provided by [SCB] contains no information concerning the nature of [ ] approximately $36,000.00 in payments [that SCB made to the Debtor].” With respect to the § 547(c) defenses raised in SCB’s Motion for Summary Judgment, discussed infra, the Trustee first acknowledges that those defenses are provided under § 547(c)(1) and (2), and then suggests that the Debtor had not used the services provided by SCB prior to October of 2002 and that its use of SCB’s services cost the Debtor approximately $300,000.00 at a time when the Debtor was insolvent. She provides no further facts to support her opposition to the affirmative defenses raised by SCB, and none under oath.

B. SCB

SCB maintains that it is not an insider of the Debtor because, although Stockard was president of each company, he did not control the Debtor. In his affidavit submitted in support of the Motion for Summary Judgment, Stockard contends that, at all relevant times, the Debtor was controlled by a venture capital investor, Ticonderoga, Inc., with which he was never affiliated. He states that Ticonderoga controlled the Board of Directors (on which he held only one of five seats), as well as the Debtor’s policies and practices. Stockard maintains that he had no authority to control the Debtor to the advantage of SCB and that Ticonderoga mandated that any transaction between the two companies be “market competitive and at arm’s length.” SCB argues that because it-through its connection with Stockard-had no control over the debtor, it is not an insider of the Debtor and only the transfers that occurred within ninety days of the bankruptcy petition are at issue for the purposes of § 547(b).

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Bluebook (online)
371 B.R. 578, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 2251, 48 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 136, 2007 WL 1956704, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tomsic-v-sales-consultants-of-boston-inc-in-re-salience-associates-mab-2007.