Williams v. Pillar Capital Holdings, LLC (In Re Living Hope Southwest Medical Svcs, LLC)

450 B.R. 139, 2011 WL 887968
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Arkansas
DecidedMarch 14, 2011
DocketBankruptcy No. 4:06-bk-71484. Adversary No. 4:09-ap-7026
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 450 B.R. 139 (Williams v. Pillar Capital Holdings, LLC (In Re Living Hope Southwest Medical Svcs, LLC)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Pillar Capital Holdings, LLC (In Re Living Hope Southwest Medical Svcs, LLC), 450 B.R. 139, 2011 WL 887968 (Ark. 2011).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

JAMES G. MIXON, Bankruptcy Judge.

Renee S. Williams, the trustee in this Chapter 7 bankruptcy case, filed a complaint and two subsequent amended complaints against creditor Pillar Capital Holdings, LLC (Pillar) and its president, Jack Goldenberg. Pursuant to Section 549 of the United States Bankruptcy Code, the Trustee seeks to avoid certain unauthorized post-petition transfers from Living Hope Southwest Medical Services (Debtor) to the two defendants while the Debtor operated as a debtor-in-possession under Chapter 11.

The Defendants responded with an answer and counterclaim that Pillar extended post-petition loans to the Debtor to preserve the estate and is thus entitled to an administrative expense for the loans and also for payments to third parties to benefit the Debtor. The Defendants also counterclaimed for turnover of certain equipment valued at $38,734.77, which Pillar contends it purchased and provided to the Debtor as an accommodation.

After hearings on June 8 and June 29, 2010, in Texarkana and Little Rock, Arkansas, the Trustee and the Defendants requested by verbal motion that the Court conform the pleadings to the proof introduced at the trial. (Tr. at 120.) The Court granted the motions and subsequently took the matter under advisement.

This matter is a core proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(A) & (O) (2006), and the Court has jurisdiction to enter a final judgment in the case. The following shall constitute the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 7052.

FACTS

The Debtor filed for relief under the provisions of Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code on July 18, 2006, and the case was converted to Chapter 7 on August 15, 2008. The events relevant to the issues in this case occurred during the period from November 2007 through May 2008 while the Debtor was still operating as a Debtor in Possession. During the Debtor’s Chapter 11 phase, no plan of reorganization was ever confirmed.

During the relevant period, the Debtor provided inpatient psychiatric services at a 62-bed hospital in Texarkana, Arkansas, and outpatient services at various other locations in southern Arkansas. (Tr. at 84-85.) Kimbro and Alice Stephens principally owned the Debtor, and Jimmy Peabody served as comptroller of the Debtor.

Northern Health^re Capital (NHC) provided financing for the Debtor under a revolving line of credit and term loan that were secured by real estate and other assets of the Debtor. The Debtor’s total indebtedness to NHC, which was approximately $3,250,000.00, was personally guaranteed by the Stephens. (Pl.’s Ex. 22-B.) The Debtor operated pursuant to an *144 agreement under which all the Debtor’s collections were required to be deposited in a lockbox account to be swept daily by NHC.

In the latter part of 2007, Aaron Brand, a managing member of NHC, contacted Goldenberg about the possibility of acquiring an interest in the Debtor. Goldenberg is president and sole member of Pillar Capital, a limited liability company incorporated in New York that invests in bankrupt or financially distressed businesses. (Tr. at 10-11, 112-13, 117.) After an investigative trip to Texarkana in November 2007, Goldenberg commenced negotiations with Stephens and NHC to purchase an interest in the Debtor.

NHC wrote a March 12, 2008 letter to Kimbro Stephens and Goldenberg outlining the terms under which NHC would agree to modify its financing arrangement with the Debtor in connection with the Debtor’s contemplated reorganization plan. (Pl.’s Ex. 22-B.) The letter stated that all proposed terms were contingent on confirmation by NHC’s credit committee, that the letter was not a binding commitment by NHC to provide the proposed financing, and that the letter’s provisions could be superceded by subsequent “definitive documents.” (Pl.’s Ex. 22B.)

The letter further provided that Golden-berg would have the option to be admitted as an equal 50% member of Living Hope “at any time from the execution of definitive documents implementing the terms set forth in this Term Sheet until May 15, 2008. Commencing immediately upon the execution of definitive documents, Golden-berg will provide Living Hope a minimum of $250,000 line of credit which will be subordinated” to the amounts owed to NHC. (PL’s Ex. 22-B.) Goldenberg could be repaid for any extensions of credit from the Debtor’s available funds after the Debtor made required payments to NHC. Upon signing the letter agreement, Gold-enberg was required to provide NHC with a $25,000 non-refundable, good faith deposit.

NHC’s letter contained signature lines for Goldenberg, Kimbro Stephens, and a principal of NHC. The letter concluded by stating that the proposal would expire on March 12, 2008 if not signed by that date. The copy of the document admitted into evidence was signed only by Kimbro Stephens. However, Goldenberg paid NHC $25,000.00 by a check written on the account of National Mutual Inc., dated March 12, 2008, and signed by Goldenberg. The check bore the notation “Living Hope” in the memorandum line. (Pl.’s Ex. 22-C.) Goldenberg testified that, although the letter agreement was never finalized, he paid the money to NHC because of the provision in the letter that required it. (Tr. at 111-112.)

Despite the absence of a documented binding agreement with NHC and the Stephens, Goldenberg not only paid the fee to NHC but also proceeded to behave as if his option to invest in the Debtor remained viable. Goldenberg stated that NHC “had agreed to give me a due diligence period for two months.... I had an option to purchase an interest in the debtor post-due diligence if I was happy with what I saw.” (Tr. at 13.)

During this two-month period, Golden-berg made several trips to the Debtor’s location in Texarkana that he stated were aimed at conducting “due diligence” to determine if he would eventually become an investor in the company. At the same time, Goldenberg began making management decisions for the Debtor with regard to personnel matters and various aspects of the company’s financial operations.

By April 14, 2008, Kimbro Stephens formally announced to the Debtor’s employ *145 ees that Goldenberg “has agreed to come on board as our financial partner.” (PL’s Ex. 36.) This announcement was made despite the fact, as alleged by Goldenberg, that he had not finalized the letter agreement and was still conducting due diligence.

In the course of his involvement with the Debtor, Goldenberg addressed the Debtor’s habitual problem of overdrafts written on the payroll account. Golden-berg stated the overdrafts were caused, in part, by a two-day lag between the day employee paychecks were distributed on Wednesday and the subsequent wiring of NHC funds to the Debtor on Friday. (Tr. at 106.) He proposed that the Debtor open new debtor-in-possession accounts at HSBC Bank in New York, where Golden-berg and Pillar also banked, because the payroll checks would not clear as quickly as they did at the local Regions Bank in Texarkana. Goldenberg testified that he was not made a signatory on the new debtor-in-possession accounts.

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450 B.R. 139, 2011 WL 887968, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-pillar-capital-holdings-llc-in-re-living-hope-southwest-arwb-2011.