Weakley Bayou, Incorporated

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Florida
DecidedDecember 20, 2022
Docket22-30583
StatusUnknown

This text of Weakley Bayou, Incorporated (Weakley Bayou, Incorporated) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weakley Bayou, Incorporated, (Fla. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA PENSACOLA DIVISION

In Re:

Weakley Bayou, Incorporated, Case No. 22-30583

Debtor.

FINAL ORDER GRANTING MOTION TO DISMISS (DOC. 69)

This chapter 11 bankruptcy case of Weakley Bayou, Incorporated (“Weakley Bayou” or “debtor”) is before the court on the motion to dismiss by movants Javan Montgomery, LPM3 Realty LLC, Lighthouse Property Management, LLC, and Safe Harbor Realty Management, LLC (collectively, “movants”). The motion has been fully briefed, and the court heard oral argument on the motion to dismiss at a hearing held on December 9, 2022. Having carefully considered the parties’ positions, the record, and applicable law, the court dismisses this bankruptcy case based on both bad faith and abstention.

Background1 Debtor owns an 84-unit apartment complex in Pensacola, Florida, “Aqua Porta Apartments.” The president and sole shareholder of debtor is Barbara Regan, who is 91 and lives in an assisted living facility. According to debtor, in May 2019 Barbara Regan rejected an offer from Javan Montgomery to purchase Aqua Porta Apartments for $3.5 million. Debtor contends that soon after – and without Barbara Regan’s knowledge – her nephew Lee Hagler and

1 These facts are mainly taken from debtor’s case management summary and the briefing of the parties. They are not findings of fact and are intended only to provide a brief background for the legal discussion that follows. 1 her cousin Lillian Scott entered into a “Lease with Option to Purchase Agreement” (docs. 12-1, 93-3) with Javan Montgomery and/or one or more of the movants for the lease-purchase of Aqua Porta Apartments and numerous other properties. Hagler and Scott purportedly did so by using a durable power of attorney in their favor by Barbara Regan. The lease-purchase agreement requires payments of $3,000 per month, with an additional $10,000 per month payment to go towards the purchase price of $3.5 million. Besides Aqua Porta Apartments, the purchase option includes about twenty properties located in Florida and Alabama. Some are owned by “Campsites, Inc.” and some are owned by Barbara Regan individually or jointly with James Regan. In its case management summary (doc. 66), debtor states that it “strongly believes that Mr. Montgomery, together with Lee Hagler and Lillian Scott (who has since passed away), acted

in concert to funnel money and property to Mr. Montgomery and his affiliates for shockingly low consideration.” (See id., at p.3). Starting in 2022, debtor began pursuing claims against the movants in various forums, including a complaint to the Florida Department of Professional and Business Regulation, Florida Bar complaints, and taking criminal action against Mr. Montgomery. On September 2, 2022, debtor, through attorney Gregory Wilhelm, filed a 95-page complaint in the Circuit Court of Escambia County, Florida. The complaint included counts against the movants and others for declaratory and injunctive relief, as well as the emergency appointment of a receiver, all pursuant to Florida state law. (See complaint, docs. 69-5, 93-2;

see also case management summary, doc. 66, at p.3). The state court at first granted the appointment of a receiver but orally set that ruling aside on September 12, 2022, finding that 2 debtor did not give the defendants adequate notice of the action before the appointment of a receiver. (See transcript of state court hearing, doc. 63-1). The next day, September 13, debtor filed this bankruptcy case through attorney Gregory Wilhelm, who signed the petition as “General Counsel” for debtor. Debtor filed a Notice of Voluntary Dismissal (doc. 69-6) of the state court complaint on September 19. Debtor’s stated reason for filing is “an apparent fraud perpetrated by Javan Montgomery and his affiliates against the [d]ebtor and its owner, Barbara Regan, in an effort to ‘purchase’ the [d]ebtor’s property, along with many other properties, for a severely low amount.” (See case management summary, doc. 66, at pp. 1-2). It “filed this case to provide itself with an opportunity to reorganize and investigate the wrongful actions of the [m]ovants.” (Debtor’s objection, doc. 93, at ¶25).

Debtor states that it will file “an adversary proceeding in this [c]ourt seeking a ruling, among other things, that the Lease Agreement is invalid and is void abinitio [sic]. The [d]ebtor intends on filing that adversary proceeding within the next two weeks because of the urgent nature of this matter.” (See case management summary, doc. 66, at pp. 3-4). Determination of the adversary proceeding will control the rest of the bankruptcy case: Regardless of the outcome of the dispute regarding the validity of the Lease Agreement, this [d]ebtor needs the protection of this [c]ourt to reorganize. In the event the Lease Agreement . . . is determined to be invalid, the [d]ebtor will regain actual possession of its property and will be able to properly reorganize. In the event the Lease Agreement is determined to be valid, the [d]ebtor will seek to reject the Lease Agreement in this [c]ourt. . . .

. . .

[E]ven in the event that the [c]ourt determines that the Lease Agreement is valid, the Lease Agreement can either be rejected pursuant to Section 365 of the Bankruptcy Code or avoided as a fraudulent transfer for lack of consideration. 3 (Debtor’s objection, doc. 93, at ¶¶ 4, 34). Debtor has not yet filed an adversary proceeding because it believed it imprudent to do so while the motion to dismiss was pending. Mr. Wilhelm, debtor’s representative at the meeting of creditors, testified that the state court defendants had requested a receiver bond of over $1 million: “We also discussed the concerns that we could not come up with that particular monies, and we figured that the only place, the only court that could provide the protection for the rights of debtors, bankruptcy court.” (See transcript of meeting of creditors, doc. 97-1, at 12:5-11). He also testified about debtor’s plan for reorganization: “Very very – it’s a very simple plan. Our goal is to go through an adversarial proceeding, get rid of this fraudulent documents through an adversarial proceeding.” (See id., at 13:5-12). Debtor has few creditors and none were pressing it at the time of filing.

Legal Discussion Movants request dismissal of this chapter 11 bankruptcy case under Bankruptcy Code §§ 1112(b) and 305(a)(1). Code § 1112(b) states in pertinent part that “the court shall . . . dismiss a case under this chapter . . . for cause . . . .” Code § 305(a)(1) governs abstention and states in pertinent part that “[t]he court . . . may dismiss a case . . . at any time if . . . the interest of creditors and the debtor would be better served by such dismissal . . . .” The court addresses each section below.

4 Dismissal under Bankruptcy Code § 1112(b) Bad faith constitutes “cause” to dismiss a chapter 11 bankruptcy case. See In re Outta Control Sportfishing, Inc., 642 B.R. 180, 183 (Bankr. S.D. Fla. 2022). There is no set test to determine “‘whether a debtor has filed a petition in bad faith.’” See id. (citation omitted). The determination “is subject to judicial discretion under the circumstances of each case” and is “made on a case by case basis . . . .” See id. (citations and quotation marks omitted). “In reviewing [c]hapter 11 cases alleged to have been filed in bad faith, courts look to all of the evidence and the totality of the circumstances to determine what is really happening, and the true intent and purpose behind the filing.” See In re Davis Heritage GP Holdings, LLC, 443 B.R. 448, 456 (Bankr. N.D. Fla. 2011); see also In re Outta Control Sportfishing, 642 B.R. at 183. Bankruptcy petitions “‘arising out of a two-party dispute do not per se constitute a bad-

faith filing by the debtor[].’” See In re Outta Control Sportfishing, 642 B.R.

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