ORDER DENYING MOTION TO DISMISS [EOF No. 4]
JOHN K. OLSON, Bankruptcy Judge.
The Defendant has moved pursuant to Fed. R. Bankr.P. 7012, applying Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), to dismiss the Plaintiffs complaint seeking to recover alleged preferential transfers under 11 U.S.C. § 547. The Defendant argues that the Plaintiffs complaint fails to satisfy the heightened pleading standards of Twombly
& Iqbal
as interpreted by Caremerica.
For the following reasons, I find that the
Caremer-ica
interpretation of preference adversary pleading requirements has only been adopted in this district in-part, and I decline to adopt the
Caremerica
interpretation
in toto.
Because I find that the Plaintiffs complaint satisfies the heightened pleading standards of
Twombly
&
Iqbal,
the Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss
is denied.
Heightened Pleading in Preference Actions
Bankruptcy courts are in the early stages of applying
Twombly & Iqbal
to preference claims.
There are conflicting
rulings. The disagreement started with the heightened pleading requirements adopted by Judge Walsh in the District of Delaware.
In
Valley Media,
the court decided that a plaintiff bringing a preference claim must set forth certain facts to survive a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss,
inter alia:
(a) an identification of the nature and amount of each antecedent debt;
(b) an identification of each alleged preference transfer by (i) date, (ii) name of debtor/transferor, (iii) name of transferee, and (iv) the amount of the transfer.
Valley Media
was decided in 2003 and many courts, including a court within its district,
declined to follow its pleading requirements as too harsh in light of the
Conley v. Gibson
[355 U.S. 41, 78 S.Ct. 99, 2 L.Ed.2d 80 (2009)] regime.
But the court in
Caremerica
opined “that the decisions by the Supreme Court in
Twombly
and
Iqbal
breathe new life into the pleading requirements implemented in
Valley Media
for § 547 preference claims.”
Many courts continue to disagree with
Valley Media
and
Caremerica.
Treatment of the Valley Media/Caremer-ica Interpretation in This District
A recent decision by Judge Ray in this district facially appeared to adopt
Carem-erica
by stating, “[t]his Court agrees with and adopts the legal reasoning of the
Car-emerica
court.”
But the order goes on to qualify that statement: “[t]he Plaintiffs failure to adequately distinguish
identity
with respect to various obligors, guarantors, and transferors allegedly involved in the transactions with KeyBank is fatal to ... the Complaint.”
Judge Ray limited the application of
Caremerica
to the second of the pleading requirements: “an identification of each alleged preference transfer.”
Judge Ray’s April 16th order did not adopt
Caremerica’s
pleading standard
in toto.
My interpretation of Judge Ray’s April 16th order is supported by a later order in that same case. Judge Ray entered an order ruling upon the plaintiffs motion to,
inter alia,
clarify certain aspects of the court’s order granting motion to dismiss.
Judge Ray defined the limits of
Caremeri-ca’s
application by stating, “In dismissing the Complaint without prejudice, the Order agreed with and adopted
certain legal positions
stated in
Angell v. BER Care, Inc. (In re Caremerica, Inc.)
...”
The order goes on to state that the counts were dismissed under
Twombly
and
Iqbal
because of “[t]he Plaintiffs failure to adequately distinguish
identity
with respect to various obligors, guarantors, and transfer-ors allegedly involved in the transactions ...”
In other words, Judge Ray found that preference adversary complaints which fail to identify the source of an allegedly preferential transfer are inadequate under
Twombly
and
Iqbal.
This “amorphous payor problem” generally only rears its head in complex, jointly administered Chapter 11 cases where the debtors target a swath of allegedly preferential transferees.
I am confident that my colleagues in this district do not follow
Caremerica’s
heightened pleading interpretation
in toto,
but do agree with
Caremerica
on the amorphous payor problem. After Judge Ray clarified his position with respect to
Car-emerica,
he granted leave for the plaintiff to re-assert Count III because the “[p]laintiffs failure to identify the source of the funds allegedly transferred to KeyBank is not fatal to that cause of action.”
Because “the principal focus of the Order [granting the defendant’s motion to dismiss] was the Plaintiffs failure to identify which entities were the source of the funds allegedly paid to KeyBank,”
Count III was unaffected because it did “not seek the recovery of any funds transferred to Key-Bank.” It is clear that Judge Ray dismissed the preference counts because the plaintiff inadequately plead which debtor entities were alleged to have paid the defendant.
Conclusion
Judge Ray’s April 16, 2010 order in
Levitt and Sons
can only be read to adopt
Caremerica’s
heightened pleading interpretation
in toto
by taking a quote out of context: “This Court agrees with and adopts the legal reasoning of the
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ORDER DENYING MOTION TO DISMISS [EOF No. 4]
JOHN K. OLSON, Bankruptcy Judge.
The Defendant has moved pursuant to Fed. R. Bankr.P. 7012, applying Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), to dismiss the Plaintiffs complaint seeking to recover alleged preferential transfers under 11 U.S.C. § 547. The Defendant argues that the Plaintiffs complaint fails to satisfy the heightened pleading standards of Twombly
& Iqbal
as interpreted by Caremerica.
For the following reasons, I find that the
Caremer-ica
interpretation of preference adversary pleading requirements has only been adopted in this district in-part, and I decline to adopt the
Caremerica
interpretation
in toto.
Because I find that the Plaintiffs complaint satisfies the heightened pleading standards of
Twombly
&
Iqbal,
the Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss
is denied.
Heightened Pleading in Preference Actions
Bankruptcy courts are in the early stages of applying
Twombly & Iqbal
to preference claims.
There are conflicting
rulings. The disagreement started with the heightened pleading requirements adopted by Judge Walsh in the District of Delaware.
In
Valley Media,
the court decided that a plaintiff bringing a preference claim must set forth certain facts to survive a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss,
inter alia:
(a) an identification of the nature and amount of each antecedent debt;
(b) an identification of each alleged preference transfer by (i) date, (ii) name of debtor/transferor, (iii) name of transferee, and (iv) the amount of the transfer.
Valley Media
was decided in 2003 and many courts, including a court within its district,
declined to follow its pleading requirements as too harsh in light of the
Conley v. Gibson
[355 U.S. 41, 78 S.Ct. 99, 2 L.Ed.2d 80 (2009)] regime.
But the court in
Caremerica
opined “that the decisions by the Supreme Court in
Twombly
and
Iqbal
breathe new life into the pleading requirements implemented in
Valley Media
for § 547 preference claims.”
Many courts continue to disagree with
Valley Media
and
Caremerica.
Treatment of the Valley Media/Caremer-ica Interpretation in This District
A recent decision by Judge Ray in this district facially appeared to adopt
Carem-erica
by stating, “[t]his Court agrees with and adopts the legal reasoning of the
Car-emerica
court.”
But the order goes on to qualify that statement: “[t]he Plaintiffs failure to adequately distinguish
identity
with respect to various obligors, guarantors, and transferors allegedly involved in the transactions with KeyBank is fatal to ... the Complaint.”
Judge Ray limited the application of
Caremerica
to the second of the pleading requirements: “an identification of each alleged preference transfer.”
Judge Ray’s April 16th order did not adopt
Caremerica’s
pleading standard
in toto.
My interpretation of Judge Ray’s April 16th order is supported by a later order in that same case. Judge Ray entered an order ruling upon the plaintiffs motion to,
inter alia,
clarify certain aspects of the court’s order granting motion to dismiss.
Judge Ray defined the limits of
Caremeri-ca’s
application by stating, “In dismissing the Complaint without prejudice, the Order agreed with and adopted
certain legal positions
stated in
Angell v. BER Care, Inc. (In re Caremerica, Inc.)
...”
The order goes on to state that the counts were dismissed under
Twombly
and
Iqbal
because of “[t]he Plaintiffs failure to adequately distinguish
identity
with respect to various obligors, guarantors, and transfer-ors allegedly involved in the transactions ...”
In other words, Judge Ray found that preference adversary complaints which fail to identify the source of an allegedly preferential transfer are inadequate under
Twombly
and
Iqbal.
This “amorphous payor problem” generally only rears its head in complex, jointly administered Chapter 11 cases where the debtors target a swath of allegedly preferential transferees.
I am confident that my colleagues in this district do not follow
Caremerica’s
heightened pleading interpretation
in toto,
but do agree with
Caremerica
on the amorphous payor problem. After Judge Ray clarified his position with respect to
Car-emerica,
he granted leave for the plaintiff to re-assert Count III because the “[p]laintiffs failure to identify the source of the funds allegedly transferred to KeyBank is not fatal to that cause of action.”
Because “the principal focus of the Order [granting the defendant’s motion to dismiss] was the Plaintiffs failure to identify which entities were the source of the funds allegedly paid to KeyBank,”
Count III was unaffected because it did “not seek the recovery of any funds transferred to Key-Bank.” It is clear that Judge Ray dismissed the preference counts because the plaintiff inadequately plead which debtor entities were alleged to have paid the defendant.
Conclusion
Judge Ray’s April 16, 2010 order in
Levitt and Sons
can only be read to adopt
Caremerica’s
heightened pleading interpretation
in toto
by taking a quote out of context: “This Court agrees with and adopts the legal reasoning of the
Caremerica
court.” Read in its proper context (which includes the entirety of the April 16th order as well as the May 6th clarification order), it is clear that he did not adopt
Caremerica
in its entirety but merely agreed with
Caremerica
on the “amorphous payer problem.” The pleading requirements of
Caremerica
require more than the standard promulgated in
Twom-
bly
and
Iqbal
and the liberal pleading policy underlying the civil rules. I agree with
C.R. Stone
to the extent it rejects the
Caremerica & Valley Media
view:
While plaintiffs should be encouraged to provide specific information in support of their claims whenever possible, to require them to do so in their initial pleading in all cases, particularly with the specificity demanded by
Valley Media,
is in this court’s view inappropriate and unnecessarily harsh. The fact that Bankruptcy Rule 7008, which contains special pleading requirements in certain adversary cases before bankruptcy judges, fails to provide any such additional requirements for preference actions indicates it was intended that the adequacy of pleadings in such actions be judged under the notice pleading standard of Civil Rule 8(a)(2), which requires only a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief. So long as the defendant is provided fair notice of what the plaintiffs claim is and the grounds upon which it rests, the complaint should not be dismissed for failure to state a claim. Further elaboration, if required, may be obtained through the discovery process.
This view is consistent with my own experience in asserting and defending against preference claims during my thirty years as a bankruptcy lawyer: so long as the complaint makes clear who transferred what to whom and when, a preference defendant will have enough information to mount whatever defenses may be available. To require more is to mandate pedantry and to return federal courts to the days of gotcha pleadings before the adoption of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
I further find that under no reasonable interpretation of
Twombly
and
Iqbal
is a plaintiff required to negate affirmative defenses (arising under § 547(c) or otherwise) in its complaint. The Plaintiffs complaint states a preference claim with sufficient particularity to plausibly entitle the Plaintiff to relief under the heightened pleading standards of
Twombly
&
Iqbal,
and it is accordingly ORDERED that the Defendant’s motion to dismiss at ECF No. 4 is DENIED.