Woods & Erickson, LLP v. Leonard (In Re AVI, Inc.)

389 B.R. 721, 59 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1753, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 1849, 50 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 39, 2008 WL 2503636
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJune 13, 2008
DocketBAP No. NV-07-1266-JuKPa. Bankruptcy No. 04-14779-LBR. Adversary No. 06-01121-LBR
StatusPublished
Cited by169 cases

This text of 389 B.R. 721 (Woods & Erickson, LLP v. Leonard (In Re AVI, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Woods & Erickson, LLP v. Leonard (In Re AVI, Inc.), 389 B.R. 721, 59 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1753, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 1849, 50 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 39, 2008 WL 2503636 (bap9 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

JURY, Bankruptcy Judge.

This appeal is from a $38,354.30 judgment rendered under 11 U.S.C. § 550(a)(1) and (2) 1 against a transferee of unauthorized postpetition transfers avoidable under § 549. During the postpetition period, appellant law firm, Woods & Erickson (“W & E”), received an unauthorized legal fee and later assisted the debtor in selling what it knew to be an undisclosed asset for $1 million and received some of the proceeds from the transferee for payment of further fees.

W & E, among other arguments, assigns error to the bankruptcy court’s ruling that a trustee may recover from a subsequent transferee under § 550 without having separately avoided the transfer to the initial transferee. This is a matter of first impression in the Ninth Circuit upon which two other circuits are divided. We hold that a trustee, subject to the requirement of establishing avoidance, may prosecute an action to recover from a subsequent transferee under § 550 without having earlier avoided the initial transfer. Additionally, the court did not err in rul *725 ing that it had jurisdiction and that W & E did not act in good faith without knowledge of avoidability of the several transfers. Accordingly, We AFFIRM.

I. FACTS

The debtor, AVI, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Air Vegas Enterprises, Inc. (“AVEI”), operated an air sightseeing business flying over the Grand Canyon. 2 It filed a chapter 11 case on April 30, 2004, in the face of apparent discord between James Petty, who owned forty-seven percent of AVEI, and Philip and Wayne Hoffman, who owned forty-nine percent. The debtor owed delinquent aircraft lease payments to Pacific Aircraft Finance, LLC (“PAF”), of which entity the Hoffmans were officers and directors.

Appellant W & E, which had represented both AVEI and debtor, with the assistance of attorney James Swindler, prepared debtor’s chapter 11 petition and schedules and represented debtor when they were filed. The schedules omitted debtor’s ownership of transferrable intangible Grand Canyon flight allocations issued by the Federal Aviation Administration. The certificate owned by debtor authorized it to conduct a total of 5927 commercial air tours in the Grand Canyon National Park Special Flight Rules Area during each calendar year.

On May 18, 2004, W & E moved to withdraw as attorney of record for debtor on account of a conflict of interest predating the filing of the chapter 11 case. The court authorized W & E’s withdrawal by order entered June 22, 2004. Thereafter, James Swindler and the firm of Allf Paus-tian & Szostek represented AVI.

Soon after the case was filed, PAF and the Hoffmans attacked debtor on several fronts. One theory involved PAF’s aircraft equipment lease rights under § 1110 3 with respect to nine C-99 Beech-craft aircraft. A global settlement was reached, whereby debtor had the choice of either curing the PAF lease defaults and continuing to operate or returning the aircraft to PAF and presumably going into liquidation mode. The settlement parties addressed potential dismissal of the case by providing that, as relevant here, PAF and the Hoffmans would “support” a request for dismissal if the aircraft were surrendered and certain payments made. 4

*726 Despite the settlement provision about dismissal, the motion to approve the compromise that was sent to all creditors, which the court approved on September 20, 2004, did not refer to the possibility of dismissal based on debtor’s surrender of the aircraft.

Without giving notice to PAF or anyone else, debtor’s attorney submitted a proposed order of dismissal, accompanied by a declaration of James Petty averring that the aircraft had been surrendered and the other conditions of the settlement satisfied. The court, without requiring notice to anyone and without assessing whether the interests of creditors and the estate favored conversion over dismissal, entered the order of dismissal on October 25, 2004.

After dismissal of debtor’s case, W & E assisted debtor in the sale of the flight allocations and related intangibles to Maverick Helicopters for $1 million without court authority in a transaction dated November 8, 2004. The transaction closed about November 22, 2004, and W & E was paid $32,808.78 for fees from the proceeds. 5

Prior to the sale, on November 4, 2004, PAF filed a motion seeking to have the dismissal vacated, asserting that the dismissal papers had amounted to a fraud on the court because notice to PAF had been intentionally omitted and the conditions of the settlement had not been satisfied, nor had the aircraft been surrendered within the meaning of the settlement agreement. 6 By operation of Rule 8002(b)(4), 7 this motion tolled the time in which to appeal the dismissal order. PAF’s motion was eventually granted on January 13, 2005, after the court concluded that the dismissal order was fatally defective for due process reasons. The order, which vacated and annulled the dismissal order and reinstated the case, was not appealed by W & E or anyone else.

W & E received notice of PAF’s motion challenging the dismissal on or about November 5, 2004. Nevertheless, W & E, which asserts that it took care to satisfy itself that the chapter 11 case was dismissed, proceeded to assist in the sale of the flight allocations.

After the dismissal order was annulled, appellee William A. Leonard became the chapter 11, and then chapter 7, trustee. He commenced an adversary proceeding against Maverick Helicopters to avoid the transfer of the flight allocations as an unauthorized postpetition transfer under § 549. Leonard v. Maverick Helicopters, Inc., Adv. No. 06-01122-LBR (filed April 28, 2006). Simultaneously with filing the Maverick Helicopters avoiding action, the trustee filed five other actions to avoid and recover various transfers, including the action against W & E that is the subject of this appeal. 8 A number of intertwined *727 counterclaims, cross-claims, and third-party complaints ensued.

Maverick Helicopters and Petty ultimately settled with the trustee as part of a larger settlement that included some, but not all, of the other parties. The settlement was reached in October 2007 and approved by the court as fair and equitable by order entered February 4, 2008. W & E did not participate in the settlement.

Before the trustee’s avoidance action against Maverick Helicopters was settled, the action against W&E proceeded to trial on the count to avoid transfers under § 549 and to recover under § 550.

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389 B.R. 721, 59 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1753, 2008 Bankr. LEXIS 1849, 50 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 39, 2008 WL 2503636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woods-erickson-llp-v-leonard-in-re-avi-inc-bap9-2008.