The debtor sold a promissory note to appellant, Pacific Sports Section, Inc. (PSS). The bankruptcy court determined that the sale of the note constituted a constructively fraudulent transfer and allowed the Trustee to avoid and recover it for the benefit of the estate. PSS appeals that determination. We AFFIRM.
Lori Mac, Inc. (the Debtor) was in the business of servicing mortgages funded by the Federal National Mortgage Association (FNMA) and various credit unions, as well as originating mortgages that it then sold to other lenders. The Debtor received fees for originating loans and for collecting payments on mortgages and remitting them to the owners of the loans. However, the Debtor's expenses exceeded its income. It used money from its customers' loan payments to pay for operating expenses and eventually accumulated a significant liability to the lenders. On February 13, 2007, the Debtor filed a chapter 7 bankruptcy petition (the Petition Date). E. Lynn Schoenmann was appointed the bankruptcy trustee (the Trustee).
The Debtor was a wholly owned subsidiary of TIS Financial Services, Inc. (TISFS). Appellant PSS is also a subsidiary of TISFS. Lorraine Legg (Legg) is the President and Chief Executive Officer of TISFS, as well as of several other affiliated mortgage investment companies that seemingly share rental space in San Francisco with the Debtor. Legg also served as the Debtor's President and Chief Executive Officer. She is an officer of PSS.
On December 6, 2007, the Trustee initiated an adversary proceeding seeking to avoid and recover, under §§ 544, 548 and 550, two transfers it alleged were constructively fraudulent (the Adversary Proceeding). The first transfer involved a promissory note, known as the Ignacio Note, which is discussed more fully below. The second transfer involved a series of cash transfers made by the Debtor to TISFS. The bankruptcy court bifurcated the Adversary Proceeding into two phases, the first to address the transfer of the Ignacio Note; the second to address whether the Trustee could avoid the cash transfers made by the Debtor. This appeal concerns only the Ignacio Note.
In May 2001, Ignacio Properties LLC (Ignacio) and Legg executed a promissory note in the amount of $335,000 (the Ignacio Note). The Ignacio Note was secured by a second deed of trust on a shopping center in Novato, California, which was operated and managed by a subsidiary of TISFS.
In November 2004, Legg assigned the Ignacio Note to the Debtor. On January 31, 2007 (the Transfer Date), within two weeks of the Petition Date, the Debtor executed an Assignment of Mortgage, transferring the Ignacio Note and deed of trust to PSS. PSS paid $260,000
While there is no dispute that the Debtor's financial difficulties rendered it insolvent as of the Petition Date (its debts exceeded its assets), the parties dispute whether the Ignacio Note was transferred for reasonably equivalent value, and therefore, whether it constituted a constructively fraudulent transfer.
The Trustee contends that the Debtor received no consideration for the Ignacio Note. PSS, on the other hand, asserts that the consideration the Debtor received was a $260,000 reduction in a debt it allegedly owed to TISFS. PSS contends that the Debtor agreed to sell it the Ignacio Note in July 2006, and that PSS agreed to pay for the Ignacio Note in four installments between December 21, 2006, and January 31, 2007. ER 103. Because TISFS routinely paid various operating expenses for the Debtor, Legg believed that the Debtor owed TISFS more than $260,000. Therefore, she directed PSS to make the payments on the Ignacio Note to TISFS, rather than the Debtor, in order to satisfy the Debtor's debt to TISFS. As a result, PSS argues that the Debtor received reasonably equivalent value for the Ignacio Note. Thus, the central issue in this case is whether the Debtor did, in fact, owe an obligation to TISFS on the Transfer Date.
TISFS paid many of the Debtor's (and its other subsidiaries') operating expenses, including payroll, payroll benefits and rent for the San Francisco office (the Allocated Services). In turn, the Debtor made monthly payments to TISFS for its share of the Allocated Services. However, the Debtor paid separately the payroll for employees who worked solely for it, rather than those who worked for the Debtor as well as other TISFS subsidiaries (the Direct Services).
The Debtor maintained an accounting of payments for Direct Services and Allocated Services. Among those records, three were significantly relied on by the parties as evidencing whether the Debtor owed TISFS money at the Transfer Date: (1) a spreadsheet, which was allegedly a contemporaneously maintained "working document" that tracked the Debtor's Direct Services payments, the estimated Allocated Services payments, and payments received by the Debtor from TISFS (Trial Ex. 1 or the Spreadsheet); (2) a spreadsheet generated after the Petition Date that listed the Allocated Services paid by TISFS on behalf of the Debtor and its other subsidiaries (Trial Ex. 2 or the Alternate Ledger); and (3) the Debtor's contemporaneously maintained QuickBooks report, which tracked all payments made between TISFS and the Debtor (Trial Ex. 3 or the Ledger).
The bankruptcy court held a three-day trial on the first phase of the Adversary Proceeding. Subsequently, on December 21, 2010, the bankruptcy court issued its findings of fact and conclusions of law. The bankruptcy court found that according to the accounting records, the Debtor did not owe a debt to TISFS on the Transfer Date, but rather TISFS owed the Debtor over $1.7 million. The bankruptcy court's finding was based on its determination that TISFS' payments for Allocated Services were capital contributions to the Debtor (which did not create a debt obligation), and the subsequent payments made by the Debtor to TISFS were, therefore, loans.
The bankruptcy court entered a judgment on April 6, 2011, allowing the Trustee to avoid and recover the Ignacio Note under §§ 548 and 550 for the benefit of the Debtor's estate. PSS timely appealed.
The bankruptcy court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 157 (b) (2) (H), and § 1334. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 158.
Did the bankruptcy court err in finding that the Debtor did not receive any value for the transfer of the Ignacio Note, rendering it constructively fraudulent?
The bankruptcy court's findings of fact are reviewed for clear error, while its conclusions of law are reviewed de novo.
A finding is clearly erroneous if it is "illogical, implausible, or without support in the record."
Section 548 allows a trustee to avoid fraudulent transfers. Under this section, a bankruptcy court can set aside "not only transfers infected by actual fraud but certain other transfers as well, so-called constructively fraudulent transfers."
In order for the Trustee to avoid the transfer of the Ignacio Note to PSS, she was required to demonstrate that: (1) the Debtor had an interest in property; (2) a transfer of that interest occurred within two years of the filing of the bankruptcy petition; (3) the Debtor was insolvent at the time of the transfer or became insolvent as a result thereof; and (4) the Debtor received less than reasonably equivalent value in exchange for such transfer.
The bankruptcy court found that the Debtor received less than reasonably equivalent value in exchange for the transfer of the Ignacio Note. The bankruptcy court's decision on this issue centered on its finding that there was not an obligation owing by the Debtor to TISFS at the Transfer Date. The key finding in this regard was the bankruptcy court's determination that TISFS' payment of Allocated Services constituted capital contributions to the Debtor, which created no corresponding obligation on the part of the Debtor. Therefore, the bankruptcy court determined that the payments the Debtor remitted to TISFS on Allocated Services had to be accounted for as loans under accounting principles. As a result, the bankruptcy court found that the balances due and owing between TISFS and the Debtor as of the Transfer Date indicated that TISFS owed the Debtor more than $1.7 million.
PSS contends this finding is "unsupported by anything in the record." PSS asserts that the Spreadsheet and the Alternate Ledger demonstrated that the Debtor was obligated to pay TISFS for its own business expenses—the Allocated Services and Direct Services. PSS argues that TISFS only acted as a paymaster or conduit for paying those expenses. PSS asserts that the Spreadsheet and the Alternate Ledger demonstrated that TISFS' payments were not capital contributions but advances to the Debtor, which created an obligation the Debtor was required to repay. As a result, PSS argues that the Debtor owed TISFS an amount greater than $260,000 on the Transfer Date.
However, the bankruptcy court did not find the Spreadsheet, Alternate Ledger or Legg's testimony about the accounting credible. Instead, the bankruptcy court found the testimony of the Trustee's accounting expert (the Expert) persuasive. The Expert stated that, according to the Ledger, which was contemporaneously maintained by John Castello, the Chief Financial Officer for both TISFS and the Debtor,
TISFS' independent auditor confirmed the figures in the Ledger as fairly representing the balances due between the Debtor and TISFS. Legg and Castello both signed letters confirming the auditors' findings.
Nevertheless, PSS contends that the Ledger is inaccurate because it did not account for TISFIS' payment of Allocated Services. However, the Expert testified that the only Allocated Service item not provided on the Ledger was the rent, presumably, he opined, to minimize the gap in the Debtor's capital account that the Debtor was required to maintain for FNMA regulatory purposes. Indeed, the Expert opined that the practice of treating TISFIS' payments for Allocated Services as capital contributions would serve to increase the Debtor's capital account, something that was required since the Debtor's financial situation made it difficult for it to otherwise maintain the minimum capital requirements under FNMA regulations. Hr'g Tr. (Dec. 14, 2010) at 33-34.
It may have been plausible for the bankruptcy court to have inferred from the Alternate Spreadsheet and Legg's testimony that TISFS's payments for Allocated Services were advances that the Debtor was obligated to repay. However, it was also plausible for the bankruptcy court to infer that the Ledger, supported by the Expert testimony and audit letters demonstrated that the payments made by TISFS were capital contributions, and thus, did not create a debt obligation between the Debtor and TISFS. Because there were two plausible interpretations of the evidence, the bankruptcy court's finding that there was no obligation owing by the Debtor to TISFS on the Transfer Date is not clearly erroneous.
Accordingly, the bankruptcy court's finding that the Trustee proved the Debtor received less than reasonably equivalent value for the transfer of the Ignacio Note is not clearly erroneous.
For these reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the bankruptcy court allowing the Trustee to avoid and recover the Ignacio Note for the benefit of the estate.