Weisfelner v. Fund 1 (In re Lyondell Chemical Co.)
This text of 503 B.R. 348 (Weisfelner v. Fund 1 (In re Lyondell Chemical Co.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Chapter 11
DECISION AND ORDER ON MOTIONS TO DISMISS
ROBERT E. GERBER, UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE:
Table of Contents
Facts.. .355
Discussion ... 356
I. Effect of Section 546(e) ... 358
A. Section 546(e)s Applicability to Individual Creditors State Law Claims... 358
B. Preemption.. .359
1. Express Preemption... 361
2. Field Preemption.. .361
3. Conflict Preemption... 363
(a) Conflict Preemption: the Impossibility Branch.. .363
(b) Conflict Preemption: the Obstacle Branch .. .364
(i) Conflict Preemption General Principles.. .364
(ii) The Totality of Congressional Intent...364
(iii) Section 546(e) Intent.. .369
(iv) The Barclays Decision.. .373
II. Funds to Stockholders Not Property of the Debtor?... 379
III. Conduits, Nominees, Non-beneficial Holders... 381
[353]*353IV. Ratification by LBO Lender Creditors? ...383
V. Intentional Fraudulent Transfer Claims... 385
A. Failure to Allege Fraudulent Intent on Part of Board of Directors... 386
B. Failure to Allege Which Debtor Made the Transfer.. .389
C. Facts Supporting Intent to Hinder, Delay or Defraud... 389
D. Plausibility.. .391 Conclusion .. .391
In late December 2007, Basell AF S.C.A. (“Basell”), a Luxembourg entity controlled by Leonard Blavatnik (“Blavatnik”), acquired Lyondell Chemical Company (“Lyondell”), a Delaware corporation headquartered in Houston — forming a new company after a merger (the “Merger”), LyondellBasell Industries AF S.C.A. (as used by the parties, “LBI,” or here, the “Resulting Company”),1 Lyondell’s parent — by means of a leveraged buyout (“LBO”). The LBO was 100% financed by debt, which, as is typical in LBOs, was secured not by the acquiring company’s assets, but rather by the assets of the company to be acquired. Lyondell took on approximately $21 billion of secured indebtedness in the LBO, of which $12.5 billion was paid out to Lyondell stockholders.
In the first week of January 2009, less than 13 months later, a financially strapped Lyondell filed a petition for chapter 11 relief in this Court.2 Lyondell’s unsecured creditors then found themselves behind that $21 billion in secured debt, with Lyondell’s assets effectively having been depleted by payments of $12.5 billion in loan proceeds to stockholders, who, under the most basic principles of U.S. insolvency law, are junior to creditors in right of payment.3
This adversary proceeding is one of three4 now in the federal courts that were [354]*354brought by trusts created for the benefit of Lyondell unsecured creditors to assert any legal claims that might have merit as a consequence of the LBO, the Merger and related transactions or incidents. In this adversary proceeding, which was removed by the defendants from state court, the LB Creditor Trust (the “Creditor Trust”) asserts state law constructive fraudulent transfer claims with respect to the LBO as the assignee of such claims from Lyondell creditors. The Creditor Trust seeks to recover, from the Lyondell former stockholders who received the largest payments,5 approximately $6.3 billion in payments that were made to them as transferees incident to the LBO. The fraudulent transfer claims here are asserted only under state law, and not under any provision of the Bankruptcy Code.
Since the early days that LBOs came into common use, it has been recognized that LBOs are subject to fraudulent transfer laws, and that when an LBO renders a debtor insolvent or inadequately capitalized, a court can, subject to applicable defenses, grant injured creditors relief.6 Here, whether the evidence will establish that Lyondell was rendered insolvent or inadequately capitalized as a consequence of the LBO is a matter yet to be decided, and likely to be subject to debate, since Lyondell’s misfortune took place at the time of the worst financial meltdown since the Great Depression. But a large num[355]*355ber of principally institutional stockholder defendants here (collectively, the “Mov-ants”) seek dismissal of this case before reaching the insolvency issues. They move for dismissal of the claims on five grounds — contending, in the most far reaching of their arguments, that after a company files for bankruptcy, stockholder recipients of proceeds of leveraged buyouts are immunized from constructive fraudulent transfer claims by the Bankruptcy Code’s section 546(e) safe harbor, even when the constructive fraudulent transfer claims are not brought by a trustee under the Bankruptcy Code, and instead are brought on behalf of individual creditors under state law.
While the Movants recognize that the Bankruptcy Code says nothing about cutting off rights asserted solely under state law, or preempting them, they argue that the Code’s section 546(e) nevertheless applies, and also that state law rights are preempted by implication.
The Court cannot agree. Rather, it agrees with the recent holdings in the Tribune Company Fraudulent Conveyance Litigation'
Facts
It is unnecessary, for the purposes of this decision, to discuss the underlying allegations in the depth that would be required in the related Blavatnik action. The Creditor Trust here seeks to recover (but only from those receiving payments in excess of $100,000)9 approximately $6.3 billion of the $12.5 billion that Lyondell former stockholders received incident to the LBO and Merger. The Creditor Trust is the assignee of claims assigned to it as a consequence of Lyondell’s reorganization plan by creditors holding unsecured trade claims, funded debt claims, and senior and subordinated secured deficiency claims.10
The Creditor Trust alleges that $12.5 billion in payments to former Lyondell Shareholders was made without reasonable value in return — in fact, that “the Shareholder Defendants gave nothing in return.”11 The Creditor Trust then alleges that the $12.5 billion paid to stockholders pursuant to the Merger rendered Lyondell insolvent and with unreasonably small capital, having been financed by the incurrence of secured debt that Lyondell reasonably should have believed it would be unable to pay as such debt became due.12
[356]
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Chapter 11
DECISION AND ORDER ON MOTIONS TO DISMISS
ROBERT E. GERBER, UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE:
Table of Contents
Facts.. .355
Discussion ... 356
I. Effect of Section 546(e) ... 358
A. Section 546(e)s Applicability to Individual Creditors State Law Claims... 358
B. Preemption.. .359
1. Express Preemption... 361
2. Field Preemption.. .361
3. Conflict Preemption... 363
(a) Conflict Preemption: the Impossibility Branch.. .363
(b) Conflict Preemption: the Obstacle Branch .. .364
(i) Conflict Preemption General Principles.. .364
(ii) The Totality of Congressional Intent...364
(iii) Section 546(e) Intent.. .369
(iv) The Barclays Decision.. .373
II. Funds to Stockholders Not Property of the Debtor?... 379
III. Conduits, Nominees, Non-beneficial Holders... 381
[353]*353IV. Ratification by LBO Lender Creditors? ...383
V. Intentional Fraudulent Transfer Claims... 385
A. Failure to Allege Fraudulent Intent on Part of Board of Directors... 386
B. Failure to Allege Which Debtor Made the Transfer.. .389
C. Facts Supporting Intent to Hinder, Delay or Defraud... 389
D. Plausibility.. .391 Conclusion .. .391
In late December 2007, Basell AF S.C.A. (“Basell”), a Luxembourg entity controlled by Leonard Blavatnik (“Blavatnik”), acquired Lyondell Chemical Company (“Lyondell”), a Delaware corporation headquartered in Houston — forming a new company after a merger (the “Merger”), LyondellBasell Industries AF S.C.A. (as used by the parties, “LBI,” or here, the “Resulting Company”),1 Lyondell’s parent — by means of a leveraged buyout (“LBO”). The LBO was 100% financed by debt, which, as is typical in LBOs, was secured not by the acquiring company’s assets, but rather by the assets of the company to be acquired. Lyondell took on approximately $21 billion of secured indebtedness in the LBO, of which $12.5 billion was paid out to Lyondell stockholders.
In the first week of January 2009, less than 13 months later, a financially strapped Lyondell filed a petition for chapter 11 relief in this Court.2 Lyondell’s unsecured creditors then found themselves behind that $21 billion in secured debt, with Lyondell’s assets effectively having been depleted by payments of $12.5 billion in loan proceeds to stockholders, who, under the most basic principles of U.S. insolvency law, are junior to creditors in right of payment.3
This adversary proceeding is one of three4 now in the federal courts that were [354]*354brought by trusts created for the benefit of Lyondell unsecured creditors to assert any legal claims that might have merit as a consequence of the LBO, the Merger and related transactions or incidents. In this adversary proceeding, which was removed by the defendants from state court, the LB Creditor Trust (the “Creditor Trust”) asserts state law constructive fraudulent transfer claims with respect to the LBO as the assignee of such claims from Lyondell creditors. The Creditor Trust seeks to recover, from the Lyondell former stockholders who received the largest payments,5 approximately $6.3 billion in payments that were made to them as transferees incident to the LBO. The fraudulent transfer claims here are asserted only under state law, and not under any provision of the Bankruptcy Code.
Since the early days that LBOs came into common use, it has been recognized that LBOs are subject to fraudulent transfer laws, and that when an LBO renders a debtor insolvent or inadequately capitalized, a court can, subject to applicable defenses, grant injured creditors relief.6 Here, whether the evidence will establish that Lyondell was rendered insolvent or inadequately capitalized as a consequence of the LBO is a matter yet to be decided, and likely to be subject to debate, since Lyondell’s misfortune took place at the time of the worst financial meltdown since the Great Depression. But a large num[355]*355ber of principally institutional stockholder defendants here (collectively, the “Mov-ants”) seek dismissal of this case before reaching the insolvency issues. They move for dismissal of the claims on five grounds — contending, in the most far reaching of their arguments, that after a company files for bankruptcy, stockholder recipients of proceeds of leveraged buyouts are immunized from constructive fraudulent transfer claims by the Bankruptcy Code’s section 546(e) safe harbor, even when the constructive fraudulent transfer claims are not brought by a trustee under the Bankruptcy Code, and instead are brought on behalf of individual creditors under state law.
While the Movants recognize that the Bankruptcy Code says nothing about cutting off rights asserted solely under state law, or preempting them, they argue that the Code’s section 546(e) nevertheless applies, and also that state law rights are preempted by implication.
The Court cannot agree. Rather, it agrees with the recent holdings in the Tribune Company Fraudulent Conveyance Litigation'
Facts
It is unnecessary, for the purposes of this decision, to discuss the underlying allegations in the depth that would be required in the related Blavatnik action. The Creditor Trust here seeks to recover (but only from those receiving payments in excess of $100,000)9 approximately $6.3 billion of the $12.5 billion that Lyondell former stockholders received incident to the LBO and Merger. The Creditor Trust is the assignee of claims assigned to it as a consequence of Lyondell’s reorganization plan by creditors holding unsecured trade claims, funded debt claims, and senior and subordinated secured deficiency claims.10
The Creditor Trust alleges that $12.5 billion in payments to former Lyondell Shareholders was made without reasonable value in return — in fact, that “the Shareholder Defendants gave nothing in return.”11 The Creditor Trust then alleges that the $12.5 billion paid to stockholders pursuant to the Merger rendered Lyondell insolvent and with unreasonably small capital, having been financed by the incurrence of secured debt that Lyondell reasonably should have believed it would be unable to pay as such debt became due.12
[356]*356As noted above, the claims here are asserted solely under state law.13 As relevant here, the Creditor Trust’s claims are not asserted in any way under the Bankruptcy Code, under its sections 548 (by which the trustee can assert, for the benefit of the estate, a federal cause of action to avoid fraudulent transfers); 544 (by which the trustee has a federal right to assert, for the benefit of the estate, state law causes of action to avoid fraudulent transfers); 550 (which provides a right of recovery for transfers avoided under, inter aim, sections 548 or 544) or otherwise.
Before this action was commenced, the Court confirmed Lyondell’s plan of reorganization (the “Plan”). Among other things, the Plan provided for the creation of a trust to initiate or continue litigation at one time belonging to the bankruptcy estate. The Plan also provided for certain claims that the Lyondell estate could assert on behalf of its creditors to be abandoned to another trust for the benefit of Lyondell creditors.
The Plan defined “Abandoned Claims” as “the claims and causes of action brought on behalf of the Debtors’ estates pursuant to section 544 of the Bankruptcy Code against former shareholders of Lyondell Chemical.”14 The Plan further provided:
On the Effective Date, the Abandoned Claims shall be discontinued by the Debtors without prejudice and the Debtors shall be deemed to have abandoned, pursuant to section 554 of the Bankruptcy Code, any and all right to further pursue Abandoned Claims. Upon the effectiveness of the aforesaid discontinuance and abandonment, each holder of Allowed 2015 Notes Claims, General Unsecured Claims, and holders of the Deficiency Claims ... shall contribute to the Creditor Trust any and all State Law Avoidance Claims. The Creditor Trust shall be authorized to prosecute the State Law Avoidance Claims that are contributed to the Creditor Trust... .15
The Creditor Trust then brought the state law avoidance claims in New York Supreme Court. One month later, a group of defendants (principally investment banking houses, brokerage firms and other financial institutions) represented by Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP (“WilmerHale”), which has taken the lead in the defense of this adversary proceeding, filed a notice of removal to the district court, thereby removing this action from state court to federal court. No motion for remand was filed. The case was then referred to this Court under the district court’s standing order of reference.
Discussion
The Movants seek dismissal16 on five asserted grounds — that:
[357]*357(1) (a) the state law fraudulent transfer claims may not be brought by reason of section 546(e) of the Bankruptcy Code, and (b) such claims are preempted by the federal Bankruptcy Code;
(2) the Creditor Trust cannot recover because the transferred funds were not property of the Debtors;
(3) many of the Shareholder Defendants were merely nominees, non-beneficial holders, or conduits;
(4) the Creditor Trust lacks standing to sue on behalf of the lenders, who must be found to have ratified the transfers in question; and
(5) the Creditor Trust has failed to satisfactorily plead its claims for intentional fraudulent transfer.
For reasons set forth below:
(1) The Court rejects the Movants’ contentions (a) that section 546(e) applies to fraudulent transfer claims brought by or on behalf of creditors under state law, and (b) that state law fraudulent transfer claims are preempted by section 546(e) or otherwise under federal law.
(2) The Court rejects the Movants’ contention that the Creditor Trust cannot recover by reason of the assertion that the transferred funds were not property of the Debtors. The Creditor Trust has satisfactorily alleged facts plausibly supporting a conclusion that the LBO (under which Lyondell incurred debt, and Lyondell assets were pledged, with the intent that loan proceeds go to Lyondell stockholders) was a unitary transaction that should be collapsed, for analytical purposes, to correspond to its economic substance and to the intent of those who allegedly structured the LBO in that fashion.
(3) The Court agrees that nominees, non-benefieial holders of Lyondell stock, and conduits through which consideration passed cannot be held liable. To the extent any defendant here was merely a conduit through which LBO proceeds passed to another, or otherwise was not an ultimate beneficial recipient of the LBO proceeds, the claims against it must be dismissed.
(4) The Court agrees with the Mov-ants’ contention that the LBO secured lenders (whose rights to avoid fraudulent transfers were also assigned to the Creditor Trust) must be deemed to have ratified the transfers here. To the extent that relief is sought here on behalf [358]*358of entities that were LBO lenders themselves, the Movants’ motion is granted.
(5) Though it disagrees with several of the Movants’ points with respect to the allegations of intentional fraudulent transfer, the Court agrees that the allegations were deficient. But as it is possible that the deficiencies may be addressed, the Court is dismissing the intentional fraudulent transfer claims with leave to replead.
I.
Effect of Section 54.6(e)
In the first of their five arguments, the Movants argue that the Creditor Trust’s state law claims must be dismissed because similar constructive fraudulent transfer claims brought under the Bankruptcy Code would have to be dismissed, by reason of the safe harbor applicable to federal constructive fraudulent transfer claims under Bankruptcy Code section 546(e). That argument is asserted at two levels. The Movants first argue that section 546(e) provides a substantive defense to the individual creditors’ purely state law claims that have been asserted here, as it would to federal claims brought under sections 544 or 548 of the Bankruptcy Code. The Movants then argue that by reason of the states’ failure to include a similar safe harbor in their own legislation, the states’ similar but not congruent constructive fraudulent transfer avoidance statutes are preempted and hence invalid. In each respect, the Court cannot agree.
A. Section 546(e)’s Applicability to Individual Creditors’ State Law Claims
The first contention requires only brief discussion. The Tribune court found section 546(e) inapplicable to state law claims brought on behalf of individual creditors, and this Court does too. As the Tribune court observed, any analysis of the extent to which section 546(e) would also proscribe state law constructive fraudulent transfer claims starts with what Congress said.17 Section 546(e) provides that “the trustee may not avoid a transfer”18 Congress did not make section 546(e) applicable to claims by or on behalf of individual creditors. And as the Tribune court likewise observed, quoting Hartford Underwriters,19 if Congress intended section 546(e) to be more broadly applicable, “it could simply have said so.”20
The Irving Tanning court held likewise. There, as here, a litigation trust asserted fraudulent transfer claims after a failed LBO. The trust did so in two capacities: (1) as here, as the assignee of individual creditors,21 and (2) (and unlike here), as [359]*359the assignee of the estate.22 The defendants moved to dismiss the complaint, arguing, among other things, that section 546(e) barred even the claims that were asserted solely on behalf of individual creditors under state law. The Irving Tanning court denied their motion. In its dictated opinion, it held:
It is alleged that the Plaintiff is the Trustee under the Debtor’s Plan of Reorganization, with two hats. One, as-signee of creditors by agreement of the creditors and court approval of the Plan and, two, that the trustee, the liquidating trustee, is the successor in interest to the debtor in possession or the statutory trustee.
The Defendants would have it that these are mutually exclusive roles. I hold otherwise. I believe that the liquidating trustee, as assignee of creditors, may assert these actions, and that being so, that 546(e) does not apply.23
While the Movants spend 10 pages in their brief arguing the matter as if sections 544 and 548 — and hence section 546(e) — apply to this case, this is not a case about sections 544 and 548. The Creditor Trust’s claims are not asserted under those provisions. The claims here are not being asserted on behalf of the estate; they are asserted on behalf of individual creditors. Here there is no statutory text making section 546(e) applicable to claims brought on behalf of individual creditors, or displacing their state law rights, by plain meaning analysis or otherwise. Like the Tribune and Irving Tanning courts, this Court cannot conclude that section 546(e) covers individual creditors’ fraudulent transfer claims.
B. Preemption
The Court then turns to the Mov-ants’ contention that section 546(e) preempts state constructive fraudulent transfer laws. Consistent with the thoughtful decision in Tribune,24 this Court likewise concludes that the state law constructive fraudulent transfer laws here are not preempted.
“As every schoolchild learns, our Constitution establishes a system of dual sovereignty between the States and the Federal Government.”25 “Federalism, central to the constitutional design, adopts the principle that both the National and State Governments have elements of sovereignty the other is bound to respect.”26
From the existence of two sovereigns— the federal government and the states— follows the possibility that state and federal laws can be in conflict or at cross-purposes.27 The Supremacy Clause provides a clear rule that federal law “shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or [360]*360Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding.”28 “Under this principle, Congress has the power to preempt state law”;29 state laws that conflict with federal laws are “without effect.”30
But whether Congress has actually preempted state law is not infrequently debatable. The Supremacy Clause and the Nation’s federal system “contemplate ... a vital underlying system of state law, notwithstanding the periodic superposition of federal statutory law.”31 Despite the “sweeping language” of the Supremacy Clause, “courts do not readily assume preemption. To the contrary, ‘in the absence of compelling congressional direction,’ courts will not infer that ‘Congress ha[s] deprived the States of the power to act.’ ”32
Preemption determinations are guided by two “cornerstones” of the Supreme Court’s preemption jurisprudence.33 First, “the purpose of Congress is the ultimate touchstone in every pre-emption case.”34 Second, “[i]n all pre-emption cases, and particularly in those in which Congress has ‘legislated ... in a field which the States have traditionally occupied,’ ... we ‘start with the assumption that the historic police powers of the States were not to be superseded by the Federal Act unless that was the clear and manifest purpose of Congress.’ ”35 Federal courts rely on the presumption against preemption because respect for the states as “independent sovereigns in our federal system” leads those courts to assume that “Congress does not cavalierly pre-empt state-law causes of action.”36
For these reasons, the party asserting that federal law preempts state law bears the burden of establishing preemption.37
[361]*361“Congress may manifest its intent to preempt state or local law explicitly, through the express language of a federal statute, or implicitly, through the scope, structure, and purpose of the federal law.”38 Thus, preemption may be express or implied. Implied preemption, in turn, may be of two types, “field preemption” and “conflict preemption,” each as explained below.
The Court considers each of those three possibilities39 in turn.
1. “Express” Preemption
Congress may, if it chooses, identify state laws that it considers to be inconsistent with federal goals. And if it does so by statutory enactment, any such state laws must fall. “There is no doubt that Congress may withdraw specified powers from the States by enacting a statute containing an express preemption provision.” 40
But there is no contention in this case that Congress expressly preempted state fraudulent transfer laws in any respect that applies here.41 There is no contention that Congress enacted legislation declaring what the Movants here effectively ask the Court to determine — that Congress preempted state fraudulent transfer statutes to the extent that they were not drafted in the same terms the federal statutes were.
The Court cannot find that Congress expressly preempted any state law causes of action for fraudulent transfers, or, especially, those in instances where the states’ laws were simply not congruent with federal ones.
2. “Field” Preemption
Field preemption occurs when Congress has manifested an intent to “occupy the field” in a certain area, as evidenced by “a scheme of federal regulation so pervasive as to make reasonable the inference that Congress left no room for the States to supplement it, or where an Act of Congress touches a field in which the federal interest is so dominant that the federal system will be assumed to preclude enforcement of state laws on the same subject.”42
Here the Court cannot make such a finding. Congress has not evidenced any intention to wholly occupy the fields of avoidance or recovery of fraudulent transfers.43 To the contrary, the states and [362]*362federal government have long had a shared interest in protecting the legitimate desire of creditors to be repaid, and in avoiding transactions parting with debtor property for inadequate consideration when such comes at creditors’ expense.
States have had fraudulent conveyance avoidance and recovery statutes since the time of the Revolutionary War (when states enacted their own versions of the English Statute of 13 Elizabeth), and especially since 1918, with the proposal of the Uniform Fraudulent Conveyance Act, which was thereafter adopted in 26 states, and whose provisions were later incorporated into the Federal Bankruptcy Act.44 Rights under the state statutes could, and often would, be brought by creditors under state law, without the need for the commencement of proceedings in bankruptcy.
Federal bankruptcy laws have existed, though with periods during which no federal bankruptcy statute was in place, since 1800.45 During the years during which federal bankruptcy statutes were in place, they coexisted with the fraudulent transfer statutes of the states. Section 544 of the Code, which provides trustees with avoidance remedies available to creditors under state law (derived from a similar provision under § 70e of the now-superseded Bankruptcy Act),46 evidences quite the opposite of a federal intention to wholly occupy the avoidance action field. Rather, it allows state rights of action to continue, and provides bankruptcy trustees (and those, like debtors in possession, with the rights of trustees) with state law remedies in addition to those (such as under section 548 of the Code) arising under federal law.47 State and federal fraudulent [363]*363transfer recovery schemes have coexisted, with the federal statute availing trustees of state remedies, for 75 years, since 1938 amendments to the former Bankruptcy Act enacted a new § 70e to the Act, providing trustees with state law rights supplementing the relatively narrow federal rights then existing under Bankruptcy Act § 67.48
As is apparent from the above, the states have regulated fraudulent transfers for far longer than the federal government has, and Congress left that regulation in place when it enacted the Chandler Act amendments to the former Bankruptcy Act in 1938. It cannot be said that there was or is any Congressional intent to occupy the fraudulent transfers remedies field — or “to preclude enforcement of state laws on the same subject.”49
8. “Conflict” Preemption
Conflict preemption, by contrast, occurs when “state law ‘actually conflicts with federal law,’ including where ‘it is impossible for a private party to comply with both state and federal requirements, or where state law stands as an obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of the full purposes and objectives of Congress.’”50 The Court must consider the Movants’ contentions in each respect.
(a) Conflict Preemption: the Impossibility Branch51
While the Supreme Court once endorsed a narrow view of the “impossibility” branch of conflict preemption, in recent years it has applied a more expansive analysis, and “found ‘impossibility’ when ‘state law penalizes what federal law requires,’ or when state law claims ‘directly conflict’ with federal law.”52 But “[e]ven understood expansively, ‘[ijmpossibility preemption is a demanding defense,’ ” and the Second Circuit will not easily find a conflict that overcomes the presumption against preemption.53
In MTBE, the Second Circuit could not find a conflict overcoming the presumption against preemption, and here this Court cannot find such a conflict either. Federal law does not require stockholders to sell [364]*364their stock, in LBOs or otherwise. State fraudulent transfer laws do not forbid a stockholder from receiving payment in exchange for its stock, even when payment comes pursuant to an LBO; they merely provide that if that stockholder effectively was unjustly enriched at the expense of creditors because the debtor was insolvent, the money must be paid back.
Importantly, the state transfer laws said to be preempted do not regulate conduct; they do not require anyone to do anything. In the LBO context, state fraudulent transfer laws do no more than attach consequences to past conduct, and grants rights of action to those — unpaid creditors — who have been injured thereby.
The Court cannot find a basis for conflict preemption under the impossibility branch here.
(b) Conflict Preemption: the Obstacle Branch
(i) Conflict Preemption General Principles
As explained by the Supreme Court in Arizona and by the Second Circuit in MTBE, the second branch of conflict preemption — the obstacle analysis — comes into play “when state law is asserted to ‘stand[ ] as an obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of the full purposes and objectives of Congress.”’54 “It precludes state law that poses an ‘actual conflict’ with the overriding federal purpose and objective.”55
Importantly for the purposes of this analysis:
The burden of establishing obstacle preemption, like that of impossibility preemption, is heavy: “[t]he mere fact of ‘tension’ between federal and state law is generally not enough to establish an obstacle supporting preemption, particularly when the state law involves the exercise of traditional police power.” ... [FJederal law does not preempt state law under obstacle preemption analysis unless “the repugnance or conflict is so direct and positive that the two acts cannot be reconciled or consistently stand together.”56
Thus “the conflict between state law and federal policy must be a sharp one.”57
In the Movants’ reply brief (the first in which the exact basis for their preemption contentions is fleshed out), they clarify that it is the obstacle branch on which they rely.58 But like the Tribune court,59 this Court cannot find a basis for conflict preemption under the obstacle branch either.
(ii) The Totality of Congressional Intent
Consistent with the principle that the key to preemption is the intent of Congress,60 this Court, like the Tribune court, looks to that intent61 — mindful, as [365]*365the Supreme Court and the Second Circuit have held, that one must look to the “full purposes and objectives of Congress.”62 In doing so, a court must look not only at Congress’ intent with respect to section 546(e), but also to the remainder of Congress’ intent with respect to bankruptcy policy. The Congressional intent underlying section 546(e) is part, but much less than all, of the necessary inquiry.
The fact (quite obvious to those in the bankruptcy community) that there are many competing concerns addressed in bankruptcy policy was recognized in Tribune. Even while noting legislative history and caselaw referring to it stating that Congress enacted Section 546(e) to “protect the nation’s financial markets from the instability caused by the reversal of settled securities transactions,”63 the Tribune court continued:
However, Congress pursues a host of other aims through the Bankruptcy Code, not least making whole the creditors of a bankruptcy estate. It is not at all clear that Section 546(e)’s purpose with respect to securities transactions trumps all of bankruptcy’s other purposes.64
The Tribune court continued:
To the contrary, Congress has repeatedly indicated that it did not enact Section 546(e) to protect market stability to the exclusion of all other policies.65
Exemplifying this, the Tribune court pointed out that even after having been asked to do so, Congress failed to expressly preempt state law constructive fraudulent transfer claims.66 The Tribune court further observed that “tellingly, Congress chose not to extend Section 546(e) to [state law constructive fraudulent transfer] claims filed before bankruptcy or to intentional fraudulent conveyance claims brought after a bankruptcy filing, even though these types of claims pose the very same threat to the stability of securities markets.”67 And it understandably observed that:
Obviously, Congress has struck some balance between various policy priorities, which means that it has determined that fraudulent conveyance actions are not necessarily and in all cases “repugnant” to the interest of market stability.68
It concluded that it was “not authorized to upend Congress’ balance between the operation of state and federal law, even if [366]*366doing so would clearly benefit investors and markets.”69
Additionally, the Tribune court made still one more powerful point. It saw that Congress had demonstrated elsewhere in the Bankruptcy Code that it knew how to — and was willing to — expressly preempt an individual creditor’s state law claims.70 In the 1990s, Congress concluded that its desire to facilitate charitable contributions trumped its desire to maximize the extent to which creditors were repaid. To that end (along with amending sections 544 and 548 of the Code to prevent a trustee from recovering charitable gratuitous transfers), Congress then expressly preempted state fraudulent transfer laws that would permit individual creditors to recover with respect to such contributions so long as the contributions did not exceed the Congressionally prescribed amount.71 But Congress enacted no similar provision to preempt state fraudulent transfer laws in other respects, before then or thereafter.
The Supreme Court has noted, as the Tribune court recognized, that “[t]he case for federal pre-emption is particularly weak where Congress has indicated its awareness of the operation of state law in a field of federal interest, and has nonetheless decided to stand by both concepts.”72 The Tribune court recognized that, and then focused on Congress’ express preemption of state fraudulent transfer law with respect to charitable contributions and Congress’ failure to provide for express preemption of state fraudulent transfer law in any other respect. From that, the Tribune court properly concluded:
This is powerful evidence that Congress did not intend for Section 546(e) to preempt state law.... Congress’s explicit preemption of all creditors’ state-law claims in one section of the Code undermines the suggestion that Congress intended to implicitly preempt state-law claims only two sections later.73
This Court agrees with the Tribune preemption analysis for those reasons, and others as well. In one of its leading bankruptcy opinions, the Supreme Court has reminded those considering bankruptcy issues that statutory construction is a “holistic endeavor,”74 and the Second Circuit has held likewise.75 That is “especially true of the Bankruptcy Code.”76 As the Second Circuit, speaking through Judge [367]*367Feinberg, observed in another of its bankruptcy cases:
It is clear that the “starting point in every case involving construction of a statute is the language itself. But the text is only the starting point,” especially when the language is ambiguous. The Supreme Court has thus explained in interpreting other sections of the Bankruptcy Code that “we must not be guided by a single sentence or [part] of a sentence, but look to the provisions of the whole law, and to its object and policy.”77
The Second Circuit’s instructions in that regard necessarily must apply not just to construction of the Bankruptcy Code, but also to any consideration of Congressional intent. In any implied preemption analysis, one cannot properly look at the purposes of section 546(e) alone; one must also consider the remainder of the Code’s “object and policy.”
Congressional intent underlying the bulk of bankruptcy policy precedes the enactment of section 546(e) by nearly 200 years, going back to the first federal bankruptcy statute in 1800. Importantly, Congress evidenced the intent to utilize avoidance actions to protect the creditors of estates from dissipation of assets without appropriate consideration in the Chandler Act amendments to the then-existing Bankruptcy Act of 1898.78 Congress continued them when it enacted the modern Bankruptcy Code in 1978.79
As noted in the very first chapter of Collier, speaking to an overview of the Bankruptcy Code, chapter 5 — in which avoidance actions and the section 546(e) safe harbor are both addressed — avoidance actions have an important purpose in bankruptcy:
In order to vindicate the Bankruptcy Code’s policies of ratable and equitable distribution of a debtor’s assets to and among similarly situated creditors, the Code permits the estate representative to avoid various types of transactions. Principal among these avoiding powers, found in chapter 5 of the Code, are the strong arm power of section 544, the preference provision of section 547, the fraudulent transfer provision of section 548 and setoff provision of section 553.80
As the Tribune court recognized, federal law seeks to achieve a host of federal objectives and policy priorities, as does the Bankruptcy Code itself. Federal objectives and policy priorities embodied within the Bankruptcy Code include (in addition to “making whole the creditors of a bankruptcy estate,” as noted by the Tribune court,81 and protecting markets from systemic risk), the protection of creditors from transfers from insolvent estates, and respect for contractual, capital structure and statutory priorities in distributions from debtors’ assets.
Those federal policies also include principles noted in Jewel Recovery, L.P. v. Gordon,82 in the Northern District of Texas, and in one of the most important of the Adler Coleman cases, here in the Southern District of New York83 — with each recall[368]*368ing the Supreme Court’s 1945 holding in Young v. Higbee Co.
In Chapter 5 of the Bankruptcy Code, Congress determined that certain categories of transfers, otherwise permitted under non-bankruptcy law, could be avoided, and the property or its monetary value recovered by a bankruptcy trustee for the benefit of all creditors. Congress determined that a few individuals should not be allowed to benefit from transfers by an insolvent entity at the expense of the many.85
Similarly, citing Jewel Recovery and Young v. Higbee, the Adler Coleman court observed
[T]he underlying philosophy of the Bankruptcy Code and SIPA [the Security Investor Protection Act] establishes certain equitable principles and priorities designed to maximize assets available for ratable distribution to all creditors similarly situated. To this end, the rules seek to prevent unjust enrichment and to avoid placing some claims unfairly ahead of others by distinguishing transactions truly entered in good faith and for value from those somehow induced and tainted by preference, illegality or fraud.86
Thus federal policies also include — in addition to protecting markets from systemic risk — the avoidance of insolvent entities’ transfers, for the benefit of all creditors, when they come at the expense of the creditor community. As the National Bankruptcy Conference (“NBC”)87 observed in Congressional testimony, when Congress was considering the Pub.L. 105-183 amendments to the Code, discussed above, under which state fraudulent transfer laws were expressly preempted with respect to charitable contributions, there is a:
[LJongstanding bankruptcy policy — inherited by this nation at its founding and dating back to England’s Statute of Elizabeth, enacted in 1571 — that insolvent debtors should not be able to evade their financial commitments by making gifts.88
[369]*369Important federal policies also include that of the traditional priority of creditors of insolvent companies over those companies’ stockholders, as implemented by the absolute priority rule, which has been an element of U.S. insolvency law for over a hundred years89— and which has provided, at least since the Supreme Court’s 1913 decision in Boyd (if not also the Supreme Court’s 1899 decision in Louisville Trust), that any plan of reorganization in which “stockholders [a]re preferred before the creditor, [is] invalid.” 90 The Second Circuit recognized this principle, and applied it, in its well-known Iridium decision,91 citing, among other authorities, Boyd.92 As Iridium holds, the absolute priority rule has importance even outside of decisions as to whether to confirm reorganization plans. It is the “most important factor” that must be considered in any settlement where absolute priority rule considerations appear.93
Presumably Congress could, if it wanted, determine that its interest in protecting markets (or market participants, which is not the same thing), should trump the historical priority of creditors over stockholders, and all of the other historic concerns noted above. Congress then could provide for express preemption of state law constructive fraudulent transfer claims, just as it did with respect to charitable gifts. But Congress did not do so, even though its enactment of section 544(b)(2) makes clear that it was well aware of that option.
(Hi) Section 516(e) Intent
Moreover, even if the policies underlying section 546(e) were the only federal policies to be implemented, they would not require a finding that state constructive fraudulent transfer laws are repugnant to federal law, at least in a situation like this one.
Understanding the Congressional purpose underlying the present section 546(e) requires an understanding of the concerns that led to it. No provisions protecting margin payments or settlement payments from avoidance existed under the former Bankruptcy Act.94 And in the Ira Haupt-[370]*370case95 (a Chapter XI case under the former Act), a bankruptcy trustee of commodity broker Ira Haupt brought suit against a commodities exchange and commodities clearing association to recover for alleged fraudulent conveyances of margin payments on cottonseed oil futures. The Ira Haupt court denied the defendant clearing association’s motion for summary judgment,96 making the clearing association — a market middleman97 — potentially liable for massive liability.
“[I]n response” to Ira Haupt and similar caselaw,98 Congress included a section 764(c) as part of the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978, which became the modern Bankruptcy Code.99 Section 764(c), which was applicable only in commodity broker liquidation cases under subchapter IV of chapter 7, prohibited a trustee from avoiding a transfer that was a margin payment or a deposit with a commodity broker or forward contract merchant, or that was a settlement payment by a clearing organization. Its purpose was to facilitate pre-petition transfers, promote customer confidence in commodity markets, and ensure the stability of the commodities markets.100
In 1982, section 764(c) was repealed and a section 546(d) was enacted, which became section 546(e) after further amendments in 1984.101 Congress did so to expand the concepts underlying former section 764 to make them applicable to the securities markets as well as to the commodities markets.102
But the purposes of each — protections of the markets, and brokers and clearing organizations — were the same, as can be seen by comparing the legislative history from 1978 and 1982.103 In the 1978 Legislative Interchange, reported in the Congressional Record, Senator Mathias sought and obtained Senator DeConcini’s confirmation that the intent of section 764 was “to provide that margin payments and settlement payments previously made by a bankrupt to a commodity broker, forward contract merchant and by or to a clearing organization [were] nonvoidable transfers [371]*371by the bankrupts [sic ] trusteef.]”104 Senator Mathias observed that the new sections 764(d) and 548(d)(2) would “substantially reduce[ ] the likelihood that the bankruptcy of one customer or broker will lead to the bankruptcy of another broker or clearinghouse.”105 He considered this provision (along with related provisions that would impose limits on stays on the transfers or liquidations of commodity contracts by exchanges or clearing organizations) to be an “important protection[ ] to these dynamic markets which are vital to our Nation’s economy.”106
The purpose of the 1982 amendment adding protections for the securities markets — beyond the commodities markets— was the same. As stated in the 1982 House Report:
The commodities and securities markets operate through a complex system of accounts and guarantees. Because of the structure of the clearing systems in these industries and the sometimes volatile nature the markets [sic], certain protections are necessary to prevent the insolvency of one commodity or security firm from spreading to other firms and possibly threatening the collapse of the affected market.
The Bankruptcy Code now expressly provides certain protections to the commodities market to protect against such a “ripple effect.” One of the market protections presently contained in the Bankruptcy Code, for example, prevents a trustee in bankruptcy from avoiding or setting aside, as a preferential transfer, margin payments made to a commodity broker (see 11 U.S.C. Sec. 764(c)).
The thrust of several of the amendments contained in H.R. 4935 is to clarify and, in some instances, broaden the commodities market protections and expressly extend similar protections to the securities market.107
Section 546(e)’s purpose in protecting markets was recognized by the Second Circuit in its well known decision in Enron,
Constructive fraudulent transfer cases can fall in different places along the spectrum of federal concerns. At one end of the spectrum, where safe harbors are at least arguably essential, are actions against exchanges or clearing institutions, as in Ira Haupt,113 where the denial of summary judgment in favor of the New York Produce Exchange’s clearing association inspired Congress to enact the first safe harbor to legislatively overrule Ira Haupt.
At the other extreme, where safe harbors are at least arguably absurd, are LBOs and other transactions involving privately held companies where the stock is not even traded in the financial markets.115 Granting relief to injured creditors in cases of that character could not seriously be argued to create systemic risk. But there is nevertheless a caselaw split — driven by different views as to whether section 546(e) is indeed unambiguous,116 and whether application of its literal text would lead to absurd results117 — as to whether they nevertheless fall within section 546(e)’s scope. Transactions whose reversal would not create systemic risk arguably also include LBO payments to [373]*373stockholders at the very end of the asset transfer chain, where the stockholders are the ultimate beneficiaries of the constructively fraudulent transfers, and can give the money back to injured creditors with no damage to anyone but themselves.
Deciding where to draw the line in balancing the needs of the markets, on the one hand, and creditors, on the other, is the job of Congress.
Protecting the financial markets is not necessarily the same thing as protecting investors in the public markets, even if they happen to be stockholders who are major investment banks. Focusing on that distinction, the NBC has advocated Congressional legislation amending the safe harbors so as to keep the safe harbors in place where necessary to protect the markets (ie., to protect the nation’s financial system from ripple effects or other systemic risk) but not go beyond that to also protect those who claim protection here — beneficial holders of securities at the end of the asset dissipation chain.118
Nothing in the legislative history of the existing law evidences a desire to protect individual investors who are beneficial recipients of insolvents’ assets. The repeatedly expressed concern, by contrast, has been that of protecting market intermediaries and protecting the markets — in each case to avoid problems of “ripple effects,” 119ie., falling dominos. Thus, at least in the context of an action against cashed out beneficial holders of stock, at the end of the asset dissipation chain, state law fraudulent transfer laws do not “stand as an obstacle” to “purposes and objectives of Congress” — even if one were to ignore the remainder of bankruptcy policy and focus solely on the protection against the “ripple effects” that caused section 546(e) to come into being.
(iv) The Barclays Decision
Finally, the Movants call this Court’s attention to another district court decision in this district, Whyte v. Barclays Bank.
In the subsequent written decision, the Barclays court explained the reasons for the earlier order:
In sum, the Court, confirming its “bottom-line” Order, holds that where, as here, creditors’ claims are assigned along with Chapter 5 federal avoidance claims to a litigation trust organized pursuant to a Chapter 11 plan, the section 546(g)[125] “safe harbor” impliedly preempts state-law fraudulent conveyance actions seeking to avoid “swap transactions” as defined by the Code.126
The Movants ask this Court to regard Barclays as persuasive authority127 with respect to the Movants’ 546(e) defense to the claims asserted here. For a number of reasons, the Court cannot do so.
Preliminarily, the Tribune court found Barclays “readily distinguishable”128 when Barclays was brought to the Tribune court’s attention, and the Tribune court was right in doing so. As the Tribune court observed, the SemGroup reorganization plan had provided for a single trust to serve in the capacity of both the bankruptcy trustee and the representative of outside creditors.129 The Tribune court considered that significant. It read the Barclays court as having “reasoned that, because Section 546(g) barred SemGroup-as-trustee from avoiding these transactions, to allow SemGroup-as-creditor — itself a ‘creature of a Chapter 11 plan’ — to avoid the transaction ‘by way of a state [375]*375fraudulent conveyance action would stand as a major obstacle to the purpose and objectives of the prohibition in Section 546(g).”130 The Tribune court paraphrased the Barclays court — fairly, in this Court’s view — as having reasoned that:
In essence, SemGroup could not simply take off its trustee hat, put on its creditor hat, and file an avoidance claim that Section 54 6(g)prohibited the trustee from filing.131
The Tribune court contrasted its own situation:
By contrast, the Individual Creditors here, unlike SemGroup, are not creatures of a Chapter 11 plan, and they are in no way identical with the bankruptcy trustee; as a result, there is no reason why Section 546(e) should apply to them in the same way that Section 546(g) applied to SemGroup.132
Here too, Barclays is distinguishable for the reasons set forth in the italicized language.133 In this case, estate claims and creditor claims are not being asserted by the same trust, and the Creditor Trust is not also asserting claims on behalf of the Lyondell estate. Rather, the plaintiff Creditor Trust here holds only creditor claims — with respect to which the estate abandoned section 544 rights the estate had to assert on behalf of creditors generally — and the creditors who owned the underlying avoidance claims contributed them to the Creditor Trust. The matter [376]*376here is analytically the same as the situation in Tribune, where individual creditors asserted their claims personally.
But more fundamentally, the Court must say that it has reservations as to the correctness of the “bottom-line” judgment in Barclays, and especially the Barclays reasoning. Respectfully, the Court considers the Barclays analysis to be less thorough than that of Tribune, and considers a number of the elements of the Barclays analysis to be flawed.
Preliminarily, the Barclays court declined to apply the usual presumption against implied preemption134 as directed by the Supreme Court in Lohr and Wyeth,135 and the Second Circuit in Smokeless Tobacco and MTBE.
Given the elemental nature of fraudulent transfer law, however, there was no preemption intended, and states (as well as the federal government) continued to adapt parts of fraudulent transfer law for their own purposes. Fraudulent transfer law is, for example, the ancestor of many related common law and statutory doctrines we now take as blackletter law. It is, for example, one of the reason [sic] there are statutes [377]*377restricting when a corporation may declare dividends on its stock, and is at the root of tort concepts of successor liability. It is the direct ancestor of bulk transfer laws as well as the absolute priority rule in bankruptcy reorganizations.139
Countervailing considerations of bankruptcy policy (discussed in Tribune and above, but not addressed by the Barclays court) have likewise been elements of federal policy for far, far longer.140
Then, the Barclays analysis failed to acknowledge or comply with the Supreme Court’s directive that courts considering matters of implied preemption under the “obstacle branch” consider the “full purposes and objectives of Congress,”141 which, as the Tribune court noted, include “a host of other aims through the Bankruptcy Code.”142 The Barclays court appears to have given no consideration to any Congressional objectives other than protection of the financial markets — including, as noted above, longstanding and fundamental principles that insolvent debtors cannot give away their assets to the prejudice of their creditors. The Barclays court drew conclusions based on a view of the “obvious purpose” of section 546(g) without likewise considering the “obvious purpose” of other key elements of bankruptcy policy. It is difficult to see how the Barclays court could appropriately analyze these issues without attention to the other historic concerns.143
Then, the Barclays court appears to have accepted, without further analysis, [378]*378the defendants’ contention in that case that voiding the payments would “inevitably create” disruption to the markets144 — a matter that is of particular concern when the Movants here ask this Court to apply the Barclays analysis to also avoid transfers to stockholders at the end of the asset dissipation chain, which at least seemingly would not involve systemic risk concerns. Protecting market participants is not the same as protecting markets; if protecting the former were deemed to be desirable, Congress could elect to do so, but that would be a matter for express preemption, and not an implied preemption that is only judicially inferred. There is of course a possibility that evidence in Barclays ultimately might prove out the Barclays court’s concerns (at least in the context of swap transactions),145 but it is difficult to see how such a determination could be made under Rule 12(b)(6). And if that premise were true, consideration of any such adverse effects would then have to be considered in the context of the other bankruptcy policies in play, to determine whether, as the Circuit has held, “the repugnance or conflict is so direct and positive that the two acts cannot be reconciled or consistently stand together.”146
Looking at Barclays as a whole, it appears to be driven largely by the consequences of a legislative terrain in which there are similar, but not congruent, federal and state fraudulent transfer statutes, and the Barclays court’s recognition that state law might permit a recovery on behalf of creditors when federal law would not. Recognition of the consequences of a ruling is hardly inappropriate, but in this Court’s view, considerations of potentially different results cannot trump application of the standards articulated in Arizona, MTBE, Smokeless Tobacco and similar cases.147
Thus, like the court in Tribune, the Court rules that state law constructive fraudulent transfer claims brought on behalf of individual creditors are not impliedly preempted, by section 546(e) or otherwise.148
[379]*379 II.
Funds to Stockholders Not Property of the Debtor?
In their second principal point, the Movants then argue that the Creditor Trust’s claims fail as a matter of law because the Creditor Trust seeks to avoid transfers of funds that “merely passed through the Debtors to the beneficial holders of the Lyondell stock and never became property of any Debtor.”149 The Court disagrees.
The premise of the Movants’ argument seemingly is that the transfers of cash came from the LBO lenders through their paying agent to Lyondell stockholders; did not involve the Debtors’ own, pre-existing assets; and thus “did not cause any injury to the Debtors’ creditors.”150 The Court finds these contentions, and particularly the last of them, puzzling, to say the least. As plausibly alleged by the Creditor Trust — if not also conceded — Lyondell’s pre-existing assets were pledged as collateral for the LBO Lenders’ loans. And loan proceeds, whose payment was secured by Lyondell’s assets, by liens that would place the LBO Lenders ahead of preexisting unsecured creditors, then went to the stockholders.
The Creditor Trust asks this Court to initially focus on two separate “value transferring” transactions 151 — the transfer of the value of Lyondell’s assets to the Lenders in the form of liens securing the financing, and the transfer to stockholders of the proceeds of the loans secured by Lyondell’s assets.152 The Creditor Trust then asks the Court to focus on its allegation — that is plausible, in this Court’s view — that the two transactions were envisioned and must be considered together, as a means of withdrawing the equity that previously existed in Lyondell’s property, transferring it to Lyondell’s stockholders, and replacing the underlying equity that supported unsecured debt with more senior secured debt.
This allegation — which must be proven, of course, but which at least seemingly is supported by the underlying transaction documents themselves — is indeed, as the Creditor Trust asserts, a garden variety application of fraudulent transfer doctrine to LBO transactions.153 Courts analyzing the effect of LBOs have routinely analyzed them by reference to their economic substance, “collapsing” them, in many cases, to consider the overall effect of multi-step transactions. The shorthand for that is “Collapsing Doctrine,” an expression famil[380]*380iar to most in the commercial bankruptcy community.
Collapsing is routinely used in the analysis of LBOs as fraudulent transfers. As the Second Circuit has observed:
It is well established that multilateral transactions may under appropriate circumstances be “collapsed” and treated as phases of a single transaction for analysis under the UFCA [Uniform Fraudulent Conveyance Act], This approach finds its most frequent application to lenders who have financed leveraged buyouts of companies that subsequently become insolvent. The paradigmatic scheme is similar to that alleged here: one transferee gives fair value to the debtor in exchange for the debtor’s property, and the debtor then gratuitously transfers the proceeds of the first exchange to a second transferee. The first transferee thereby receives the debtor’s property, and the second transferee receives the eonsider-ation, while the debtor retains nothing.154
The Second Circuit had noted the same principles two years earlier, in another fraudulent transfer case, Orr v. Kinderhill Corp.
Likewise, in the recent decision in this District in Tronox,159 the court held once again (there in the context of a statute of limitations determination), that fraudulent conveyances had to be “examined for their substance, not their form.”160 The Tronox court, quoting the Second Circuit’s decisions in Orr and HBE Leasing, and the bankruptcy court decision in this district in Sunbeam,
Similarly, as a consequence of the pledge of Lyondell’s assets, the Creditor Trust has at least plausibly alleged that Lyondell was truly prejudiced by a transaction that was assertedly a transfer between third parties.163
The Court is also unpersuaded by the Movants’ contention that an “application of funds” provision — requiring LBO loan proceeds to be used solely for the purpose of the LBO — denied Lyondell control over the use of proceeds, precluding a finding of Debtor control over the borrowed funds. Lyondell had the control over its collateral before it pledged it to the LBO Lenders. And in any event, limits on the application of funds would be an element of the form of the transaction, which at most might be argued to a trier of fact in an effort to show that the substance was something different than that alleged by the Creditor Trust. That, of course, is a matter inappropriate for consideration under a Rule 12(b)(6) motion. In fact, the Movants’ contentions as to the use of the funds (along with the Movants’ related contention that “the Debtors would not have received the funds in the first place”)164 address ex-dentiary facts that, if proven, might support the Creditor Trust’s assertion that there was an intent to effect a unitary transaction.
All of this is not to say, of course, that the LBO here necessarily must be collapsed. It is to say merely that the Creditor Trust has plausibly alleged facts under which it might be. The Movants’ motion to dismiss insofar as its rests on the notion that Lyondell failed to part with value as part of the LBO is denied.
III.
Conduits, Nominees, Non-beneficial Holders
In their third principal point, the Movants seek to dismiss claims asserted against Defendants that were sued as conduits or as mere “holders,” and not beneficial owners, of Lyondell stock — with the latter including, most obviously, depositories or nominees. In this respect the Mov-ants are quite right, and the claims against any such entities must be dismissed.
In fraudulent transfer actions asserted under federal law, where recovery of transferred property or its value is sought under section 550 of the Code, recovery may be obtained from an entity [382]*382that is an “initial transferee,” or an entity for whose benefit such transfer was made. A similar rule applies when that recovery is sought under state law.165 But while “initial transferee”166 is not defined in the Bankruptcy Code or any state analogs, it does not include those who are not beneficial owners. Under federal and state law alike, an allegedly fraudulent transfer may not be recovered from a defendant who was a mere conduit in the transfer.167 As the Second Circuit observed in Finley Rumble, “[e]very Court of Appeals to consider this issue has squarely rejected a test that equates mere receipt with liability, declining to find ‘mere conduits’ to be initial transferees.”168 The Second Circuit went on to hold that “[w]e join these other circuits in adopting the ‘mere conduit’ test for determining who is an initial transferee under § 550(a)(1).”169
While the Court assumes that the Creditor Trust did the best it could in carving out from its list of defendants those who were not beneficial holders, it appears that the Creditor Trust was not fully successful in this regard. This Court’s experience170 has taught it that publicly traded securities are frequently held by depositories, in “street name” or otherwise by those who are not the underlying beneficial holders,171 and that payments could well have been sent to institutions who then transmitted those payments further on. Presumably the Creditor Trust’s efforts did not fully succeed; otherwise, a motion would not have been brought on these grounds.
In instances in which recipients of LBO payments were either conduits who passed those payments on to others, or who were “holders” of the stock (e.g., as nominees or depositories) but not the beneficial owners, they cannot be held liable as recipients of fraudulent transfers. Claims against con[383]*383duits and any holders who were not beneficial holders are dismissed.
TV.
Ratification by LBO Lender Creditors?
The Movants’ fourth principal contention is that the Creditor Trust lacks standing to sue on behalf of the LBO Lenders, whose rights to recover on fraudulent transfer claims were likewise assigned to the Creditor Trust along with those of trade creditors and bondholders. The Movants argue principally that the LBO Lenders must be deemed to have ratified the transfers incident to the LBO as a matter of law,172 and that the Creditor Trust accordingly lacks standing to assert claims on their behalf. While the Court does not see the deficiency as one of standing,173 it agrees with the underlying point, and holds that to the extent the Creditor Trust asserts fraudulent transfer claims as the assignee of LBO lenders, such claims must be dismissed.
As the Movants properly point out,174 courts in this Circuit — including the Second Circuit — have held that creditors who are participants in an alleged fraudulent transfer, or who have ratified it, cannot then seek to have that transfer avoided.175 The rubrics under which that conclusion has been reached have varied slightly — “ratification,” “consent,” “estop-pel,” or “material participa[tion] in the transaction” — but the underlying point is the same. Creditors who authorized or [384]*384sanctioned the transaction, or, indeed, participated in it themselves, can hardly claim to have been defrauded by it, or otherwise to be victims of it.176
The Creditor Trust understandably does not dispute that defenses to claims against an assignor are also valid against an as-signee. It also does not appear to dispute the underlying legal proposition argued by the Movants — that a creditor that ratifies a fraudulent transfer cannot then argue that the fraudulent transfer should be avoided. The Creditor Trust argues, instead, that the matter of ratification is an affirmative defense177 and that it raises issues of fact — and that for each of these reasons, the defense cannot be considered on a motion under 12(b)(6). The Court is unable to agree with either contention.
First, the fact that ratification is an affirmative defense does not mean that it can never be considered on a motion to dismiss. The Second Circuit has repeatedly noted that a complaint can be dismissed for failure to state a claim pursuant to a Rule 12(b)(6) motion raising an affirmative defense “if the defense appears on the face of the complaint.”178 And the Creditor Trust itself recognizes that an affirmative defense can be decided on a motion to dismiss if the defense is obvious from the pleadings and papers before the court.179 In fact, this Court has noted that principle in unrelated proceedings in the Lyondell chapter 11 case.180
Then, while factual issues might exist if any LBO Lender’s participation in the financing were not apparent from the LBO documents, the Court may review and rely on the LBO documents in ruling on the sufficiency of the Complaint, since they were relied on by the Creditor Trust in drafting it.181 The Court has difficulty [385]*385seeing how the Creditor Trust could plausibly be alleging that any LBO Lender was ignorant of the fact that it was lending for the purpose of financing an LBO, and that LBO proceeds would then go to stockholders — especially since, as the Movants have pointed out in a different context (discussed in Section II above) the loan documents required loan proceeds to be used for that purpose.
That is more than sufficient to establish the requisite participation and ratification, which in the context here, requires no more than that knowledge. While more nuanced knowledge might be necessary to establish ratification in other contexts, it is more than sufficient here for the LBO lenders to have known — as the documents themselves establish — that they were lending for the purposes of an LBO, and that the proceeds of their loans were going to stockholders.
While most claims on behalf of creditors other than LBO Lenders survive under this Court’s rulings, claims on behalf of LBO Lenders cannot.182
V
Intentional Fraudulent Transfer Claims
In their fifth and final point, the Mov-ants ask this Court to dismiss the Creditor Trust’s intentional fraudulent transfer claims. Though the Movants’ contentions are not formally broken down, they effectively assert four alleged deficiencies: (1) failure to allege fraudulent intent on the part of Lyondell’s board of directors, as contrasted to its senior management; (2) failure to allege which debtor made the transfer; (3) failure to allege facts supporting intent to hinder, delay or defraud creditors; and (4) that the claims are implausible.
For reasons discussed below, the Court does not agree with all of the Mov-ants’ contentions in this regard. But the deficiencies are sufficiently material to require that the intentional fraudulent trans[386]*386fer claims now be dismissed. As it is possible that the deficiencies may be addressed, the Court is dismissing the intentional fraudulent transfer claims with leave to replead.
A. Failure to Allege Fraudulent Intent on Part of Board of Directors
Relying on the principal of law that corporations can merge only with the approval of their boards of directors,183 and the Creditor Trust’s many allegations relating to Board consideration and ultimate approval of the LBO,184 the Movants argue in substance that because the Creditor Trust’s allegations of fraudulent intent rest on the intent of Lyondell CEO Dan Smith and other officers — and assertedly allege no facts establishing scienter on behalf of board members other than Smith — the intentional fraudulent transfer allegations are legally insufficient.185 In opposition, the Creditor Trust contends that the intent of Smith and other officers must be imputed to Lyondell (without inquiry into the mindset of Lyondell directors other than Smith)186 and that this is enough. Each contention, in the Court’s view, fails to appropriately address the underlying legal principles.
It is fundamental, of course, that under the law of Delaware (under which Lyondell was organized), corporate decisions to merge or to engage in LBOs require consideration and approval by the corporation’s board of directors.187 But while the Court recognizes the role the Board should have exercised in connection with the LBO (and allegations in the Complaint that Lyondell’s board considered the proposed merger at several meetings before approving it), the Court finds the Movants’ argument still to be too simplistic. The Movants’ argument effectively disregards any influence on the Board that Smith and others may have exercised. It also disregards the appropriate legal test, discussed below.
By the same token, the Court finds the Creditor Trust’s position — that under “ordinary agency principles,”188 the conduct of CEO Smith and others helping him can be automatically imputed, without consideration of their influence on the Board’s decision — to be too simplistic here as well. As a very general matter it is true, as the Creditor Trust states in a brief in Blavatnik,189 incorporated by reference [387]*387in this case, that “the transferor [in a fraudulent transfer case] is deemed to have the knowledge and intention of its directors, officers and other agents.” And the two cases the Creditor Trust cited, James River Coal and Anchorage Marina, did indeed say, respectively, that “the fraudulent intent of an officer or director may be imputed to the [d]ebtors for purposes of recovering an intentional fraudulent transfer,”190 and that “[i]n eases ... in which the [djebtor is a corporation^] the intent of the controlling officers and directors is presumed to be the [d]ebtor’s intent.”191
But neither of the quoted passages from James River Coal and Anchorage Marina addresses any necessary distinctions between officers and directors in instances where the distinctions matter. And the statements in James River Coal and Anchorage Marina must be read in context. In each of those cases, the issues here were not presented, and those courts did not need to focus on any applicable distinctions between officers, on the one hand, and directors, on the other. In James River Coal, the court understandably observed that “[a] corporation, being an entity created by law, is incapable of formulating or acting with intent.”192 And it was in that context that the James River Coal court went on to say that “[tjhus, for the purpose of recovering impermissibly transferred corporate assets and thereby facilitating creditor recovery, the intent of the officers and directors may be imputed to the corporation.” 193 Immediately thereafter, the James River Coal court noted allegations in the complaint before it that “the ‘Directors caused the Debtors’ ” to make the challenged transfers — and went on to say that “the fraudulent intent of the Directors may be imputed to the Debtors,” and that the fraudulent intent of certain insiders there, “as Directors,” could also be imputed to the debtors for the purposes of the intentional fraudulent transfer claim.194 Thus, while James River Coal is plainly correct, it does not address the issue presented here.
Similarly, in the other decision cited by the Creditor Trust, Anchorage Marina, the court started, as did the James River Coal court, by noting once again that “in cases such as this one in which the Debtor is a corporation[,] the intent of the controlling officers and directors is presumed to be the Debtor’s intent.”195 And the Anchorage Marina court then went on to find, after trial — where each of the two defendants, who had authorized payments to themselves, were the stockholders and also directors
Other cases in which a natural person’s intent was imputed to a corporate trans-feror, considered by the James River Coal court but not by either of the two sides here, likewise addressed situations in which the natural person was either a director of the corporate transferor, had the ability in fact to influence the transfer, or both.198
The appropriate standard is, as the First Circuit articulated it in Roco Corp., whether the individual whose intent is to be imputed “was in a position to control the disposition of [the transferor’s] property.”199 Though the Roco Corp. court did not discuss at substantial length why it considered that standard to be the right one, that standard nevertheless makes sense; imputation of an officer’s intent is appropriate if, but only if, that intent has a material effect on causing the transfer.200
Here, however, the Creditor Trust relies on a species of automatic imputation, without the additional showing that is required [389]*389under Roco Corp. and common sense. As pleaded, the claims are now insufficient. If the Creditor Trust cannot plead facts supporting intent to hinder, delay or defraud on the part of a critical mass of the directors who made the decisions in question, the Creditor Trust must then allege facts plausibly suggesting that Smith (who was only one member of a multi-member Board) or others could nevertheless “control the disposition of [Lyondell’s] property” — by influence on the remaining Board members201 or otherwise. As the Complaint now lacks sufficient allegations of that character, the intentional fraudulent transfer claim must be dismissed.
As it is possible that this deficiency may be cured, the Court grants leave to re-plead.
B. Failure to Allege Which Debtor Made the Transfer
The Movants also argue that the Complaint fails to identify the Debtor or Debtors that made the transfers — referring instead to “an amorphous ‘LyondellBasell’ ... a vaguely defined term” 202 that was “defined broadly to include ‘LyondellBasell Industries AF S.C.A. (“LBI”), LyondellBa-sell Finance Company, Lyondell Chemical Company,’ and ‘many of the respective direct and indirect subsidiaries of LBI and Lyondell, including all of Lyondell’s major operating subsidiaries.’ ”203
This contention appears to have been addressed by the Creditor Trust, to the extent it was addressed at all, merely by speaking of the various Lyondell affiliates in the aggregate.204
The Court believes, as discussed in Section II above, that collapsing doctrine could enable the Court to disregard corporate distinctions, and to look at the LBO as a whole. But the Creditor Trust must at the least identify in its Complaint the particular Debtors that are to be included as part of the collapsing analysis, and whose assets are alleged to have been transferred or subjected to liens. The Court agrees with the Movants that the intentional fraudulent transfer claim is presently deficient in these respects as well.
The intentional fraudulent transfer claim is dismissed for this additional reason. Once again, however, since it is possible that the deficiencies can be cured, leave is granted to replead.
C. Facts Supporting Intent to Hinder, Delay or Defraud
The Movants properly observe that under the law of either of the states whose [390]*390law the parties address, claims for intentional fraudulent transfer require the pleading of facts showing an “actual intent” to “hinder, delay or defraud creditors.” The Movants are also correct in noting that conclusory allegations are insufficient. But the Creditor Trust does not dispute those underlying principles. It contends instead that it has indeed alleged the necessary facts.
In some respects the Creditor Trust has, and in other respects it has not. The Creditor Trust has pleaded facts that, if proven, would suggest that Lyondell CEO Smith and senior management intended to secure a variety of benefits to themselves, as management and stockholders, which would result from Blavatnik’s acquisition of Lyondell, the merger of Basell and Lyondell, and the LBO from which those ends would be achieved.205 But the pleading of facts evidencing an intention to injure creditors or to recklessly disregard creditor interests — as contrasted to an intent to enrich oneself — is considerably thinner.
The intent element of an intentional fraudulent transfer claim “may be alleged generally so long as the plaintiff alleges ‘facts that give rise to a strong inference of fraudulent intent.’ ” 206 Additionally,
“in determining whether the pleaded facts give rise to a ‘strong’ inference of scienter, the Court must take into account plausible opposing inferences,” such that “a reasonable person would deem the inference of scienter cogent and at least as compelling as any opposing inference one could draw from the facts alleged.”207
Generally, in intentional fraudulent transfer cases as well as securities fraud cases, a “strong inference of fraudulent intent ‘may be established either (a) by alleging facts to show that defendants had both motive and opportunity to commit fraud, or (b) by alleging facts that constitute strong circumstantial evidence of conscious misbehavior or recklessness.’ ”208
The Movants are right in contending that the Complaint is nearly entirely constructive fraudulent transfer focused, and speaks of the effect of the LBO, as contrasted to its intent. The Movants are also right in contending that the Complaint is devoid of any allegations of facts supporting an intention to actually injure creditors (and in particular, to hinder delay and defraud them), as contrasted to allegations evidencing an intention on the part of Lyondell corporate officers to enrich themselves, whatever the consequences. The Complaint [391]*391charges, in substance, a reckless disregard of the consequences that such enrichment would have on creditors.
With respect to this additional asserted basis for dismissal, the facts pleaded to show motive are enough. The Complaint satisfactorily alleges a motive to commit fraud (on the part of Smith and any directors who were also stockholders), and alleges an opportunity for Smith and officers assisting him to advance the LBO process — part, but less than all, of the required showing. But the complaint would satisfactorily allege the ultimate opportunity to do the allegedly resulting damage only if influence on the Board could be shown. If (but only if) the Creditor Trust can show the requisite influence on the Board’s decision-making, discussed above, the Complaint need not be dismissed for failure to allege the requisite intent.
D. Plausibility
Finally, the Movants contend that “participation of the Lenders — major, sophisticated financial institutions, such as Citibank, Goldman Sachs, and Merrill Lynch — renders implausible any claim that the Merger was undertaken with knowledge that it would inevitably lead to Lyon-dell’s or Basell’s failure.” 209 This is the least persuasive of the Movants’ points. In light of the fees and other benefits associated with financing the LBO, and the obvious fact that, in the absence of avoidance, secured creditors would be paid before unsecured creditors would realize anything, the Creditor Trust’s allegations are not implausible. Additionally, though the Court, for reasons discussed above,210 would be reluctant to draw on its personal experience with LBOs and fraudulent transfer suits if the Supreme Court had not invited lower courts to do so, the Court’s experience tells it that LBOs much more than occasionally fail, and that their risks are well known211 The participation of major financial institutions does not, without more, render allegations of intentional fraud or recklessness implausible.
The Court declines to dismiss the intentional fraudulent transfer claims based on asserted implausibility.
Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above:
(1) The Movants’ motion to dismiss insofar as premised on the contentions that the Creditor Trust’s constructive fraudulent transfer claims
(a) are proscribed by Bankruptcy Code section 546(e), or
(b) are preempted by section 546(e) or otherwise by federal law,
is denied.
(2) The Movants’ motion to dismiss insofar as premised on the contention that that the Creditor Trust failed satis[392]*392factorily to allege a transfer of property by the Debtors is denied.
(3) The Movants’ motion to dismiss insofar as claims are asserted against entities that are conduits, nominees, or other non-beneficial holders is granted.
(4) The Movants’ motion to dismiss insofar as claims are asserted against LBO Lenders is granted.
(5) The Movants’ motion to dismiss Count II, alleging intentional fraudulent transfer, is granted. Leave to replead Count II is granted.
The Court’s Chambers will set an on-the-record status conference with the parties to address what needs to be done next.
SO ORDERED.
125. Section 546(g) provides, in substance, that notwithstanding sections 544 and 548, trustees and estate representatives cannot avoid prepetition transfers in connection with swap agreements. Like section 546(e), it is subject to an exception for transfers with actual intent to hinder, delay or defraud.
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
503 B.R. 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weisfelner-v-fund-1-in-re-lyondell-chemical-co-nysb-2014.