Thomas B. McNamara, United States Bankruptcy Judge.
This is a true Shakespearean tragedy — but written in dry legal prose. The main character, Peter H. Blair, Sr., served as the patriarch of his family. Married to an
By the time his wife died, Peter H. Blair, Sr. was retired. He moved to a luxury retirement community but was very lonely. Enter Suella Crowley. She worked as a caregiver for his friend. He became enamored with her even though they didn't really know each other. He skipped the courting and moved to a surprise and unconventional proposal of marriage in March 2011. She had suffered some hard times including several divorces and debt. They came from very different backgrounds and circumstances. He promised to take care of her financially and otherwise. She agreed and felt like Cinderella. They started to plan their life together.
When they informed Peter H. Blair, Sr.'s three children, there were no "congratulations" or "well wishes." There was only conflict. His eldest son seemed to despise her from the start. It got worse as their father professed his love and intention to support his fiancé. They investigated her and engaged in a campaign trying to convince their father not to marry her. She was not right for him, they thought. Perhaps he was deranged or mentally unstable? And, if their elderly father really was going to support her, well, then there would be less inheritance for them.
They investigated their father and accused him of misappropriating money from the trusts. Bitterly, he denied it; but he did all they asked. He transferred $4.5 million back to the trusts, he signed over a house to one son, and he resigned as co-trustee of the trusts allowing his children to manage them instead. He thought he bought peace by settling with his children and the trusts. He still had more than $700,000 in bank accounts plus another $6,000,000 in IRAs. Now, he could marry his new-found love and live his golden years. But he was wrong. Perhaps it was all preordained.
Peter H. Blair, Sr. started to make good on his promises to his fiancé. He gave her and her small printing company about $70,000. He started to pay her mortgage. They got married in September 2011. They remodeled her house to make it more comfortable for him. He moved in. And, then he paid off her entire mortgage: more than $350,000. He wanted her to be stress-free and financially secure. All the while, he continued to pay his other bills: rent (until he moved), country clubs, church pledges, life insurance, health insurance, credit cards, accountants, and attorneys.
Estranged from his children, he carried on his new life. But about a year later, one of his sons and the trusts made new demands against him. They accused him of mismanagement and breach of trust. They sued their father. The litigation was acrimonious. But, the trusts emerged victorious. In March 2015, they won a judgment in excess of $2.3 million against Peter H. Blair, Sr. It destroyed him. He filed for bankruptcy. And, then he died a broken man.
The Chapter 7 Trustee came in to pick up the pieces of what remained. The Debtor's children and the trusts filed 95% of the claims. There really were no other significant creditors. Armed with the fruits of the children's investigation of their father's financial affairs and the $2.3 million judgment, the Chapter 7 Trustee sued the Debtor's wife, Suella Crowley, and her printing company to recover money for the
Another year of litigation and the final act played out in this Court. A trial. The Court heard from an assortment of characters: Suella Crowley, one of the Debtor's sons, one of Suella Crowley's sons, an attorney, some friends, and an accountant. The Court listened to the lawyers and their arguments. And, now the final curtain closes. Although one party will win, and one will lose, the truth is a tragedy.
The Court has jurisdiction over this matter pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1334. The avoidance, fraudulent transfer, claim disallowance, and declaratory judgment causes of action are core proceedings under 28 U.S.C. §§ 157(b)(2)(A) (matters concerning administration of the estate), (b)(2)(B) (allowance or disallowance of claims against the estate), (b)(2)(H) (proceedings to determine, avoid, or recover fraudulent conveyances), and (b)(2)(O) (other proceedings affecting liquidation of assets of the estate). This Court also has jurisdiction over the declaratory judgment claim under 28 U.S.C. § 2201 et seq. Accordingly, the Court may enter final judgment on all causes of action and defenses in the Adversary Proceeding. Venue is proper in the Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1408 and 1409. All of the parties repeatedly have acknowledged and consented to the Court's exercise of jurisdiction and the propriety of venue in the Court.
The Debtor, Peter H. Blair (the "Debtor"), filed for protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code
About two years after the commencement of the Bankruptcy Case, on May 5, 2017, the Chapter 7 Trustee initiated this Adversary Proceeding against Suella M. Crowley ("Crowley"), the Debtor's widow, and First Class Printing, Inc. ("First Class"), an entity affiliated with Crowley.
Instead, on May 24, 2017, the Chapter 7 Trustee filed an Amended Complaint. (Docket No. 6, the "Amended Complaint.") The Amended Complaint is the operative pleading and is virtually identical to the Original Complaint except that the Chapter 7 Trustee added: (1) a series of new allegations concerning Crowley's home located at 2777 South Elmira Street, Denver, Colorado (the "Real Property"); and (2) a new cause of action for declaratory relief.
In the run-up to trial, the parties engaged in unusually extensive discovery skirmishes and motions practice including, motions to compel, motions to quash, a motion to seal documents, a motion to redact documents, motions for summary judgment, and motions to limit or exclude evidence. During the pre-trial jockeying, the Court made two key rulings on evidentiary issues that ultimately had an impact on the trial.
On June 13, 2018, the Court issued its "Order Regarding Defendants' Motion In Limine." (Docket No. 136, the "In Limine Order.") The Chapter 7 Trustee intended to rely heavily at trial in this Adversary Proceeding on certain factual findings
In Limine Order at 14. The Chapter 7 Trustee did not seek interlocutory appeal of the In Limine Order. So, the In Limine Order governed use of the Probate Judgment at trial.
The second important pre-trial evidentiary ruling concerned an expert witness. As set for the below, the Debtor's financial position (i.e., whether solvent or insolvent) at the time of the allegedly fraudulent transfers was an important issue in this Adversary Proceeding. See e.g., COLO. REV. STAT. § 38-8-105(2)(i) ("consideration may be given" to whether "the debtor was insolvent or became insolvent shortly after the transfer was made"). Accordingly, the Chapter 7 Trustee engaged Mark Dennis as an expert witness on solvency issues. Mark Dennis prepared an expert report opining that the Debtor was insolvent as of May 7, 2011. The Defendants sought exclusion of expert testimony from Mark Dennis under FED. R. EVID. 702 and seminal appellate precedent concerning expert witness issues: Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharm., Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 113 S.Ct. 2786, 125 L.Ed.2d 469 (1993) and Kumho Tire Co., Ltd. v. Carmichael, 526 U.S. 137, 119 S.Ct. 1167, 143 L.Ed.2d 238 (1999). The Chapter 7 Trustee contested such exclusion and requested an evidentiary Daubert hearing. After conducting a Daubert hearing, the Court entered its "Memorandum Opinion and Order Granting Defendants' Motion to Exclude Expert Testimony." Weinman v. Crowley (In re Blair), 588 B.R. 605 (Bankr. D. Colo. 2018) (the "Expert Exclusion Order"). The Court ruled:
Blair, 588 B.R. at 625. Subsequently, the Chapter 7 Trustee sought reconsideration of the Expert Exclusion Order and also appealed the Expert Exclusion Order to
So, as a consequence of the In Limine Order and the Expert Exclusion Order, the Chapter 7 Trustee proceeded to trial without the ability to rely on the factual findings contained in the Probate Judgment and without an expert witness on solvency issues.
The Court conducted a trial on the issues raised in the Amended Complaint and the Answer on August 6, 7, and 8, 2018. Prior to the trial, the parties submitted joint "Stipulated Facts and Exhibits."
At the conclusion of the evidence, both parties presented oral closing arguments. Subsequently, the record of the trial was transcribed.
Based upon the evidence presented at the trial and the Stipulated Facts and Exhibits, the Court makes the following findings of fact under FED. R. CIV. P. 52(a)(1), as incorporated by FED. R. BANKR. P. 7052.
The Debtor, Peter H. Blair, Sr., filed for bankruptcy in the twilight of his life — and then died a few months later.
The Debtor and Audrey Blair created a trust and sub-trusts to protect their wealth and ensure their estate plan: the Audrey R. Blair Revocable Trust, GST-Exempt Marital Trust, and Non-Exempt Marital Trust (together, the "ARB Trust").
The Debtor moved from the home he shared with his wife to a luxury retirement community in Denver, Colorado: Brookdale Parkplace ("Parkplace"). He rented a two-bedroom apartment for more than $8,000 per month.
Enter Suella Crowley. The Debtor first met Crowley in December 2009 when she was working at the Parkplace retirement community as a care giver for other residents.
Meanwhile, Crowley was somewhat unlucky in love. She married Bill Searles when she was only 19 years old. They had four children together but divorced after 15 years of marriage.
For about a year and a half, Crowley continued to work part-time as the care giver for a resident at Parkplace on the same floor as the Debtor. During that time, she met the Debtor occasionally. Since Crowley was providing exclusive care for someone else, her initial interactions with the Debtor were few — they exchanged pleasantries in the elevator, they saw each other from time to time in the lunch room, they bumped into each other occasionally in other locations.
But, it was a big surprise to Crowley when the Debtor proposed marriage to her almost out of the blue. The day was March 9, 2011. When Crowley arrived at work, her employer — a neighbor and friend of the Debtor — told her that the Debtor had asked to meet with Crowley.
Crowley hesitated at first and explained that she was separated from her husband (George Crowley), but not yet divorced. She indicated that she planned to get a divorce when she had enough money to go through the process. Not taking "no" for an answer, the Debtor asked Crowley if she would marry him if he paid for the divorce. Crowley said "Yes" and they hugged.
It was an unconventional and surprising proposal to say the least. But the Debtor made Crowley feel "like Cinderella."
Crowley committed that she would take care of the Debtor (who was 83 years old at the time) "physically and emotionally and spiritually" to the best of her ability.
Since Crowley had a comfortable home already (with a large backyard and pool), they agreed that the Debtor would pay off the mortgage for the Real Property as a gift and he would move into Crowley's house. The Debtor thought that would also make financial sense since he would no longer have to pay rent at Parkplace, which was more than $8,000 per month. And Crowley would have the security of owning the Real Property.
During the late spring and summer of 2011 and thereafter, the Debtor continually expressed his love for Crowley — privately and publicly. And, she reciprocated.
Perhaps not surprisingly given the depth of his feelings for Crowley, the Debtor made no secret that he intended to financially support Crowley and "to help her as much as he could."
In August 2011, Crowley moved into the Debtor's apartment at Parkplace on a temporary basis while they remodeled Crowley's house to better accommodate the Debtor.
Shortly after the Debtor's unconventional proposal to Crowley, he announced the engagement to his children. They were not pleased. There were no "congratulations" or "well wishes." Instead, the Debtor's children rejected Crowley almost from the get-go.
So, in the spring of 2011, Hy Blair started to pursue a "full-on investigation" of the Debtor and Crowley in order to stop the marriage.
Within a month of the Debtor announcing his intention to marry and support Crowley, his children invited him on a family vacation to Hawaii. But it was not a typical vacation. Instead, the Debtor's family staged a surprise multi-day "intervention" with the Debtor in an effort convince him that "[i]t was a big mistake" to marry Crowley.
The intervention having failed, the Debtor's children (led by Hy Blair) took another tack in an attempt to protect their own interests. The Debtor's family staged another meeting with him on May 11, 2011 in Stamford, Connecticut at the offices of the Blair & Potts law firm (the "May 2011 Meeting"). The Debtor, his three children, and Nancy Blair (an attorney at Blair & Potts) attended. Hy Blair surprised the Debtor at the meeting by accusing the Debtor of having improperly transferred money to himself from the ARB Trust.
The Chapter 7 Trustee contends that there was another important demand made at the May 2011 Meeting: a claim by the ARB Trust against the Debtor for an additional $1.1 million
The Court discounts Hy Blair's testimony on this crucial point. Throughout the trial, Hy Blair demonstrated his extreme animus — even blind hatred — toward Crowley and counsel for the Defendants. His testimony seemed colored by his admitted self-interest: Hy Blair, his siblings, and the ARB Trust stand to receive about ninety-five percent (95%) of any net recovery from Crowley and her business in this Adversary Proceeding. But, most importantly, the Court concludes that Hy Blair's testimony on this issue and many other issues lacks credibility because of repeated inconsistencies, contradictions, failures of recollection (when cross-examined during his deposition and at trial), and lack of corroboration.
When cross-examined about the May 2011 Meeting, Hy Blair admitted that the Debtor "did or agreed to do everything that you [Hy Blair] asked of him in Connecticut."
So, during his trial testimony Hy Blair testified inconsistently that during the May 2011 Meeting: (1) he had demanded that the Debtor return $1.1 million but the Debtor refused; (2) the Debtor did everything he requested (without any reference to an exception for the $1.1 million demand); (3) he demanded the Debtor return some unspecified amount of money since he did not find out a specific dollar amount until later; and (4) he demanded that the Debtor return $1.4 million (not $1.1 million) and the Debtor agreed. Harmonizing these accounts is impossible. At best, Hy Blair's testimony is an utterly contradictory mess. And, it wasn't only on this issue. Hy Blair repeatedly contradicted himself throughout the trial and testified differently in his deposition testimony.
Given the inconsistencies in Hy Blair's testimony, the Court has evaluated other evidence that might corroborate or contradict Hy Blair's story. None of the other participants in the May 2011 meeting testified. So, the Court is left to consider written records. A month and a half after the meeting, on July 1, 2011, Hy Blair wrote two lengthy letters to the Debtor.
In other words, Hy Blair made no suggestion in his correspondence that he had demanded $1.1 million or some other amount from the Debtor which the Debtor refused to pay. Instead, the tenor of the correspondence suggests that the Debtor did everything that was asked of him at the May 2011 Meeting: returning $4.2 million
Hy Blair wrote numerous other letters to the Debtor throughout the rest of the summer of 2011 and the ensuing months.
Further, the Debtor never acknowledged any such claim from the ARB Trust. In fact, the Debtor's own correspondence indicates that no additional demand for $1.1 million had been made by Hy Blair and refused at the May 2011 Meeting. For example, on March 9, 2012, the Debtor wrote an emotional letter to his son, Hy Blair chronicling the breakdown of their relationship:
It is apparent from the correspondence that the Debtor believed he had generously acceded to all of Hy Blair's requests at the May 2011 Meeting in order to buy peace and to "win approval" of Crowley. That is why he "went along with it."
Other testimony establishes that the Debtor believed that he had resolved everything at the May 2011 Meeting. For example, Karen Hart, a non-party witness, testified that the Debtor had told her that he thought he had "settled with his children and that he could just enjoy his life with Sue and get on with that."
Based upon the foregoing, including the contradictory nature of Hy Blair's testimony, the available documentary evidence (i.e., letters from both the Debtor and Hy Blair), and the testimony from multiple witnesses (Crowley, Todd Searles, Karen Hart, and Ester Larue), the Court finds that neither Hy Blair nor the ARB Trust made a demand to the Debtor for an additional $1.1 million (or $1.4 million) at the May 2011 Meeting. Instead, the Debtor's children requested that the Debtor: (1) transfer $4.5 million from his revocable trust back to the ARB Trust; (2) transfer a house in San Luis Obispo, California to Christopher Blair; (3) repay some other small amounts to the ARB Trust; and (4) resign as co-trustee of the ARB Trust. And, the Debtor satisfied all these requests. The Court finds that the Debtor was not on notice at any time between May 2011 and January 2012 that Hy Blair and the ARB Trust demanded anything more. The Debtor genuinely believed that he had settled with his children and the
After the May 2011 Meeting but before he married Crowley, the Debtor made a series of fairly modest transfers to Crowley — totaling just a little more than the Debtor paid for monthly rent to Parkplace. The Debtor transferred a total of $10,704.05 to Crowley by checks during the period from June 6, 2011 through August 30, 2011. The proven Cash Transfers are as follows:
Check Date Honored Date Transfer Amount 06/06/2011 06/06/2011 $ 1,020.00 06/23/2011 06/23/2011 $ 2,540.95 06/23/2011 06/23/2011 $ 2,500.00 07/09/2011 07/11/2011 $ 300.00 08/05/2011 08/08/2011 $ 2,500.00 08/20/2011 08/23/2011 $ 360.00 08/29/2011 08/30/2011 $ 1,484.00 __________ Total: $10,704.9590
Each of the checks was signed by the Debtor and drawn on the Debtor's bank account at Citywide Banks (Account No. XXX 8916). A few of the checks bear additional descriptions such as "Cash" and "Personal." Notably, the dollar amount does not match the Amended Complaint. In the Amended Complaint, the Chapter 7 Trustee asserted that the Debtor gave Crowley cash of "at least $8,144.00" in alleged fraudulent transfers.
Crowley testified that the Cash Transfers were "gifts" and that the Debtor was "very generous."
The Debtor transferred a total of $57,733.81 to First Class by checks during the same time period from June 6, 2011 through August 30, 2011. The Debtor was never an employee of First Class and never managed the entity. He was not an officer, director, or equity security holder of First Class.
Check Date Honored Date Transfer Amount 06/06/2011 06/06/2011 $11,800.00 06/14/2011 06/14/2011 $ 2,036.00 07/01/2011 07/01/2011 $18,372.24 07/20/2011 07/21/2011 $ 3,000.00 07/21/2011 07/22/2011 $ 1,000.00 08/05/2011 08/08/2011 $ 2,500.00 08/16/2011 08/16/2011 $ 3,000.00 08/17/2011 08/17/2011 $ 1,972.12 08/22/2011 08/23/2011 $14,053.45 __________ Total: $57,733.8195
Each of the checks was signed by the Debtor and drawn on the Debtor's bank account at Citywide Banks (Account No. XXX 8916). A few of the checks bear additional descriptions such as "Business Consulting," "Consulting," "Plumbing," and "All American, Nordstroms, Kendra." Again, the dollar amount does not match the Amended Complaint. In the Amended Complaint, the Chapter 7 Trustee asserted the Debtor made alleged fraudulent transfers to Crowley through First Class Printing in an amount of "not less than $55,761.99."
Crowley conceded in her testimony that First Class did not provide any material economic value to the Debtor in return for the Business Transfers.
The Chapter 7 Trustee does not allege that the Mortgage Payoff Transfers were fraudulent under the CUFTA. But the Chapter 7 Trustee contends that the Debtor's payments on the Real Property entitle the Chapter 7 Trustee to half of the Real Property. The evidence established that Crowley owned the Real Property for the last 21 years and is "the only person that's ever been on title [to the Real Property]."
The Debtor transferred a total of $356,052.05 — by check and wire transfer — to pay off the mortgage on the Real Property owned by Crowley before the Debtor moved in. The proven transfers by check are as follows:
Check Date Honored Date Transfer Amount Payee 06/03/2011 06/07/2011 $ 2,540.95 Litton Loan Servicing LP 07/19/2011 07/26/2011 $ 2,540.95 Litton Loan Servicing LP 08/22/2011 08/30/2011 $ 2,540.95 Litton Loan Servicing LP 09/29/2011 10/06/2011 $ 3,398.13 Ocwen103 11/12/2011 11/17/2011 $ 2,540.95 Ocwen 12/05/2011 12/13/2011 $ 2,540.95 Ocwen __________ Total: $16,102.88104
Each of the checks was signed by the Debtor and drawn on the Debtor's bank account at Citywide Banks (Account No. XXX 8916). A few of the checks bear additional descriptions such as "Payment" and "Suella Crowley." The Court accepts that the Chapter 7 Trustee proved a total of $16,102.88 in transfers by check from the Debtor to Crowley's mortgage lenders from June through December 2011. In her testimony, Crowley conceded that the transfers were for her benefit as the owner of the Real Property.
In addition to such transfers, the Chapter 7 Trustee also established that the Debtor paid Ocwen Loan Servicing LLC $339,949.17 by wire transfer from the Debtor's bank account at Citywide Banks (Account No. XXX 8916) on January 19, 2012.
After the Cash Transfers, Business Transfers, and Mortgage Payoff Transfers, Hy Blair and the Debtor's children continued to investigate the Debtor and his historical performance as co-trustee of the ARB Trust. Hy Blair testified that he didn't "get a handle on everything until late 2012."
So, on November 6, 2012, Hy Blair (on behalf of the ARB Trust) filed a "Petition for Accounting and Surcharge of Former Trustee Peter H. Blair, Sr." commencing the Probate Case against the Debtor.
According to the Claims Register, the following creditors filed claims against the Debtor's bankruptcy estate:
Claim No. Claimant Claim Amount No. 1 IRS $ 0.00 No. 2 Capital One Bank $ 2,492.70 No. 3 Audrey (Blair) Black $ 194,526.05 No. 4 Hy Blair $ 517,459.00114 No. 5 ARB Trust $3,464,699.00 No. 6 UST $ 975.54 No. 7 Blair Probate Estate $ 0.00 No. 8 Suella Crowley $ 210,587.76 No. 9 Portfolio Recovery Assoc. $ 757.88 _____________ Total: $4,391,497.93
In connection with his claims under the CUFTA, the Chapter 7 Trustee sought to establish that the Debtor was insolvent (or became insolvent) when the Cash Transfers and Business Transfers were made. COLO. REV. STAT. §§ 38-8-103 and 105(1)(b); see also Blair, 588 B.R. at 609 ("The Debtor's financial position ... at the time of the allegedly fraudulent transfers is a central issue in this Adversary Proceeding.") The Chapter 7 Trustee attempted to prove the Debtor's insolvency, at least in part, through use of expert testimony from an accountant, Mark Dennis. However, as previously noted, the Court excluded Mark Dennis as an expert witness primarily because he did not have adequate information or data and he failed to properly apply a reliable methodology to the facts and data. Blair, 588 B.R. at 616-25. Thus, the Chapter 7 Trustee proceeded to trial without any expert testimony.
Nevertheless, the Chapter 7 Trustee and the Defendants presented some evidence concerning the Debtor's financial condition during the summer and fall of 2011. The evidence was quite incomplete and limited.
The Chapter 7 Trustee and the Defendants introduced admissible evidence concerning only three categories of the Debtor's assets: (1) bank accounts; (2) IRA accounts; and (3) ownership of BOI. No witness testified that these were all of the Debtor's assets as of the summer of 2011.
During the period in which the Debtor made the allegedly fraudulent transfers, the Debtor had substantial assets in a combination of three financial institution accounts: UBS Account No. XXXX3623
Month UBS No. 3623 118 WF No. 3363 119 CW No. 8916 120 Total May 2011 $662,914.29 $ 56,650.07 Account not open. $719,564.36121 June 2011 $694,336.43 $ 501.00 $ 20,741.21 $715,578.64122 July 2011 $687,674.73 $ 276.21 $ 30,167.36 $718,118.30123 Aug. 2011 $659,017.78 $ 624.78 $ 21,656.27 $681,298.83124 Sept. 2011 $635,565.42 $ 1,013.35 $313,000.57 $949,579.34 Oct. 2011 $633,704.20 $ 1,361.92 $255,948.98 $891,015.10 Nov. 2011 $633,079.98 $ 1,710.49 $225,903.33 $860,693.80 Dec. 2011 $640,393.96 $ 2,059.06 $138,272.60 $780,725.62 Jan. 2012 (No evidence) $ 2,417.59 $102,138.03 (Incomplete evidence)
Accordingly, the Court finds that the Debtor had very substantial cash assets in the three financial institution accounts as shown on the preceding chart prepared by the Court based upon the account statements. As of the end of May 2011, the Debtor had at least $719,564.36 in the three financial institution accounts. By the end of December 2011, the Debtor had even more in such accounts than he had started with: $780,725.62. And, because the Defendants advocated for use of a "cost basis" for UBS No. 3623, the fair market value of the Debtor's bank accounts actually was materially higher.
In addition to the Debtor's bank accounts, the Debtor also held substantial additional assets in four Individual Retirement Accounts at UBS: UBS IRA Account No. XXXX3633 ("IRA No. 1"); UBS IRA Account No. XXXX3627 ("IRA No. 2); UBS IRA Account No. XXX3624 ("IRA No. 3); and UBS IRA Account No. XXX5364 ("IRA No. 4). The Defendants
For example, Exhibits P and Q both state that the aggregate "fair market value" or "monthly account balances" of IRA Nos. 1, 2, 3, and 4 was as follows:
Month Aggregate Balance January 2011: $5,859,681.42 February 2011: $6,029,966.69 March 2011: $5,859,681.42 April 2011: $6,029,966.69 May 2011: $5,859,681.42 June 2011: $6,029,966.69 July 2011: $5,859,681.42 August 2011: $6,029,966.69
The anomaly is apparent after scanning the numbers for just a moment. Heidi Mourning's summaries assert that the total "fair market value" of IRA Nos. 1, 2, 3 and 4 was $5,859,681.42 every odd month and $6,029,966.69 every even month over an eight-month analysis period. Since the four financial accounts held significant money market balances (generating interest) and equities (generating dividends and subject to daily price fluctuations) is seems wildly improbable that the value of IRA Nos. 1, 2, 3, and 4 could seesaw back and forth between identical numbers for the better part of a year. Perhaps not surprisingly, the underlying account statements (O-5, O-6, O-7, and 0-8) show that the summaries are wrong. So, the Court disregards Exhibits P and Q.
The Defendants did provide the voluminous underlying account statements for all of IRA Nos. 1, 2, 3, and 4. Accordingly, the Court has itemized the aggregate fair market value balances as follows based on the "closing account values" listed on the account statements:
Month IRA. No. 1 125 IRA No. 2 126 IRA No. 3 127 IRA No. 4 128 Total May 2011 $1,652,806.61 $2,228,844.80 $2,086,337.28 $121,146.38 $6,089,135.07 June 2011 $1,588,891.38 $2,151,605.80 $2,013,242.83 $118,318.23 $5,872,058.24 July 2011 $ 774,668.71 $2,826,344.54 $1,951,216.89 $114,375.38 $5,666,605.52 Aug. 2011 $ 675,927.86 $2,582,259.02 $1,758,208.11 $103,054.54 $5,119,449.53 Sept. 2011 $ 567,969.23 $2,290,766.92 $1,511,349.12 $ 89,867.12 $4,459,952.39 Oct. 2011 $ 654,797.34 $2,628,168.78 $1,646,277.62 $104,578.22 $5,033,821.96 Nov. 2011 $ 651,244.73 $2,632,133.22 $1,648,266.51 $104,940.89 $5,036,585.35 Dec. 2011 $ 614,966.54 $2,554,424.02 $1,581,152.17 $ 0.00 $4,750,542.73 Jan. 2012 $ 627,215.54 $2,624,088.55 $1,619,363.32 $ 0.00 $4,870,667.41
The Debtor wholly-owned BOI, an oil and gas company, between June 2011 and January 2012 (i.e., the period of the Cash Transfers, Business Transfers, and Mortgage Payoff Transfers).
The Defendants introduced an e-mail from Hy Blair, dated May 24, 2010, that states: "We have an engineering, computer program that generated [a] $4.8 million value [for BOI]...."
In terms of other evidence about the value of BOI, Hy Blair confirmed that the Debtor's equity in BOI was about $70,000 on a book value basis as of December 2010.
The Court received almost no admissible evidence concerning the Debtor's liabilities during the summer of 2011.
In his First Claim for Relief in the Amended Complaint, the Chapter 7 Trustee asserted that the Cash Transfers are recoverable from Crowley using the Chapter 7 Trustee's "strong arm powers" under 11 U.S.C. § 544 combined with Colorado's "actual fraud" statute: COLO. REV. STAT. § 38-8-105(1)(a). In his Fifth Claim for Relief, the Chapter 7 Trustee asserted that the Business Transfers are recoverable from First Class based upon the same statutes. Since the statutory framework is the same, the Court analyzes both the causes of action together.
Section 105(1)(a) of the CUFTA states:
COLO. REV. STAT. § 38-8-105(1)(a) (emphasis added).
The Colorado statute is virtually identical to the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act adopted in most States and very similar to Section 548(a)(1) of the Bankruptcy Code. See Lewis v. Taylor, 375 P.3d 1205 (Colo. 2016) ("CUFTA is nearly identical to the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act...."). From the historical perspective, the "actual intent to hinder, delay or defraud" text of Section 105(1)(a) of the CUFTA can be traced back centuries to the Statute of Elizabeth in medieval England. 13 Eliz. c. 5 (1570); see also BFP v. Resolution Trust Corp., 511 U.S. 531, 539, 114 S.Ct. 1757, 128 L.Ed.2d 556 (1994) (tracing United States fraudulent transfer law to England). The Statute of Elizabeth invalidated "covinous and fraudulent" transfers devised with "purpose and intent to delay, hinder or defraud creditors...." 13 Eliz. c. 5.
In legal vernacular, a cause of action for "actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud" commonly is referred to as a claim for "actual fraud." Coder v. Arts, 213 U.S. 223, 29 S.Ct. 436, 53 S.Ct. 772 (1909) ("This form of expression is familiar to the law of fraudulent conveyances, and was used at the common law, and in the statute of Elizabeth, and has always been held to
As the plaintiff, the Chapter 7 Trustee bears the burden to prove the Cash Transfers and Business Transfers were fraudulent under the CUFTA. Schempp v. Lucre Mgmt. Group, LLC, 75 P.3d 1157, 1165 (Colo. App. 2003) (Schempp II); Fifth Third Bank v. Morales, 2017 WL 6492108, at *2 (D. Colo. Dec. 19, 2017). But, actual intent" can be quite hard to prove. Fifth Third Bank, 2017 WL 6492108, at *2 ("`actual intent' under [CUFTA] is seldom susceptible to direct proof.") In this case, as in almost all cases alleging actual fraud, there is no direct "smoking gun" evidence that the Debtor had "actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud any creditor." For example, he did not announce aloud that he was making the Cash Transfers to Crowley and the Business Transfers to First Class for the express purpose of hindering, delaying, or defrauding anyone. And, he did not say such magic words in writing either.
Of course, that is not the end of the analysis. It is only the starting place. "Actual fraud" can be established circumstantially. And Section 105(2) of the CUFTA provides a menu of circumstantial "factors" that the Court may consider and states:
The foregoing often are referred to as "badges of fraud." Schempp v. Lucre Mgmt. Group, LLC, 18 P.3d 762, 764 (Colo. App. 2000) (Schempp I); Fifth Third Bank, 2017 WL 6492108, at *2-3. Just like the "actual intent to hinder, delay or defraud" language, many of the "badges of fraud" also can be traced back centuries to English law. Twyne's Case (1601) 76 Eng. Rep. 809; 3 Co. Rep. 80 b (identifying "signs and marks" of fraud and convicting Twyne "of fraud, and he and all the others of a riot").
Notably, Section 105(2) of the CUFTA makes clear that the Court has wide discretion. The Court "may" consider the listed factors as well as other indicia of
Regarding the first "badge of fraud" inquiry, the Cash Transfers were all made to Crowley after she and the Debtor were engaged but before they married. The Business Transfers were all made to First Class, a business owned and operated by Crowley, during the same time frame. But, were Crowley and First Class "insiders" of the Debtor? The answer lies within the definitions used in the CUFTA.
Section 102(8) of the CUFTA contains a definition of the term "insider":
COLO. REV. STAT. § 38-8-102(8) (emphasis added). As noted previously, the CUFTA is based on the model Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act promulgated by the National Conference of Commissions on Uniform State Laws. Lewis, 375 P.3d 1205. Section I(7) of the model Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act defines the term "insider" as follows:
The two definitions are nearly identical. But the Colorado legislature restricted the definition of "insider" under the CUFTA by substituting the word "means" in place of the word "includes."
Although the Colorado legislature chose to change only one word (switching the word "includes" to "means"), the change in verbs has substantive implications. As the United States Supreme Court has held repeatedly in construing a wide variety of statutes:
Helvering v. Morgan's Inc., 293 U.S. 121, 125 n.1, 55 S.Ct. 60, 79 S.Ct. 232 (1934); see also Burgess v. U.S., 553 U.S. 124, 131
Id. at 162, 132 S.Ct. 2156 (internal citations omitted).
Colorado law also makes the same distinctions between the words "includes" and "means." See Colorado Common Cause v. Meyer, 758 P.2d 153, 163-64 (Colo. 1988) ("The word `includes' has been found by the overwhelming majority of jurisdictions to be a term of extension or enlargement when used in a statutory definition."); Lyman v. Bow Mar, 188 Colo. 216, 533 P.2d 1129, 1133 (1975) ("the word `include' is ordinarily used as a word of extension or enlargement ... To hold otherwise here would transmogrify the word `include' into the word `mean.'"); People v. James, 40 P.3d 36, 47 (Colo. App. 2001) (making the distinction between the words "means" and "includes" in Colorado statutes); Dawson v. State Comp. Ins. Auth., 811 P.2d 408, 409 (Colo. App. 1990) ("[T]he phrase `means and includes' is self-contradictory inasmuch as the term `means' restricts and the term `includes' extends the meaning....").
So, under the plain meaning of Section 102(8) of the CUFTA, the term "insider" is restricted exclusively to those narrow categories of persons that are listed. The first category includes a "relative of the debtor." COLO. REV. STAT. § 38-8-102(8)(a)(I). Section 102(12) of the CUFTA defines that term:
COLO. REV. STAT. § 38-8-102(12).
Based upon such definition, as of the summer of 2011, Crowley did not qualify as a "relative" of the Debtor. All the Cash Transfers and Business Transfers were made before the Debtor married Crowley. So, she was not a "spouse" and not related by blood to the Debtor. And, First Class, as a company, was not a relative of the Debtor. Turning to the other exclusive categories of "insiders" listed in Section 102(8) of the CUFTA, neither Crowley nor First Class qualify as "insiders" under those provisions either because neither was: (1) a partnership in which the debtor is a general partner; (2) a general partner in such a partnership; or (3) a corporation of which the debtor is a director, officer, or person in control. COLO. REV. STAT. § 38-8-102(8).
As counsel for the Chapter 7 Trustee correctly argued, courts construing the Bankruptcy Code definition of the term "insider" uniformly have determined that the term should be given an expansive meaning beyond the statutory list of "insiders" under Section 101(31) of the Bankruptcy Code. Under the Bankruptcy Code, fiancés and even girlfriends or boyfriends frequently qualify as "insiders." But that is because the Bankruptcy Code definition is different and broader than the CUFTA definition. The Bankruptcy Code definition is virtually the same as the model Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act and uses "insider includes" rather than "insider means." 11 U.S.C. § 101(31).
Earlier this year, the United States Supreme Court explained that the use of the verb "includes" in the Bankruptcy Code definition is the key reason why the term "insider" must be interpreted to include categories beyond the statutory list (i.e. "non-statutory insiders"):
U.S. Bank N.A. v. Village at Lakeridge, LLC, ___ U.S. ___, 138 S.Ct. 960, 963-64, 200 L.Ed.2d 218 (2018) (emphasis added). See also, Weinman v. Walker (In re Adam Aircraft Indus., Inc.), 805 F.3d 888, 894 (10th Cir. 2015) ([T]he statutory categories of insiders "are illustrative rather than exhaustive, and thus, even someone not
Courts in those States that have adopted the model Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act definition of the term "insider" verbatim (i.e., "insider includes") also have determined that the scope of the term "insider" extends beyond the enumerated list in the model Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act to include non-statutory insiders. See e.g., Bloom v. Camp, 336 Ga.App. 891, 785 S.E.2d 573, 578 n.6 (2016) (under Georgia UFTA, same sex spouse joint tenant of debtor was insider even though Georgia did not recognize same sex marriage at the time); Grochocinski v. Zeigler (In re Zeigler), 320 B.R. 362, 376-78 (Bankr. N.D. Ill. 2005) (under Illinois UFTA, daughter and son in law of debtors were insiders); Gilchinsky v. Nat'l Westminster Bank N.J., 159 N.J. 463, 732 A.2d 482, 490 (1999) (under New Jersey UFTA, defendant was an insider even though she did not "technically" fall within list of enumerated insiders); Morris v. Nance, 132 Or.App. 216, 888 P.2d 571, 576 n.8 (1994) (under Oregon UFTA, former spouse of debtor was a non-statutory insider).
If the Court were construing the Bankruptcy Code definition of the word "insider" or the definition used in the model Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act, the Court would construe the term expansively and include "non-statutory insiders." Indeed, the Court would be bound to do so by appellate precedent. U.S. Bank, 138 S.Ct. at 963-64; Adam Aircraft Indus., 805 F.3d at 894; Carl Zeiss Meditec, 531 F.3d 1272; Kunz, 489 F.3d 1072. So, the Chapter 7 Trustee has a point. But, his argument is fatally flawed for the simple reason that it is not tethered to the actual text of the CUFTA. The text of the CUFTA is substantively different and more restrictive. This Court may not rewrite the statutory text enacted by the Colorado legislature. People v. Swain, 959 P.2d 426, 429 (Colo. 1998) ("If the [Colorado] General Assembly has defined a statutory term, a court must apply that definition.") Neither of the Defendants is an "insider" under the CUFTA definition.
The Debtor made the Cash Transfers to Crowley. The Court did not receive solid evidence concerning the use of the funds after the transfers. But one of the transfers (for $2,540.95) matched exactly with Crowley's mortgage payment on the Real Property. And, two of the other payment ($2,500) are of a very similar size. The Court infers that it is likely at least some of the Cash Transfers went to pay Crowley's mortgage on the Real Property. Certainly, there is no evidence that the Debtor kept control over such funds after making the transfers.
The Debtor made the Business Transfers to First Class. Crowley testified that, for the most part, the funds were used to pay corporate costs and expenses of the entity promptly after they were received. As with the Cash Transfers, there is no evidence that the Debtor kept control over the Business Transfers after making the transfers. Accordingly, this factor does not help the Chapter 7 Trustee.
Hiding transfers may be indicative of fraud. "This factor, by its plain language, addresses whether the transaction was concealed generally." Schempp II, 75 P.3d at 1162. In the Court's assessment, the Debtor did not conceal the Cash Transfers or Business Transfers from anyone. Instead, after the Debtor's engagement with Crowley, he was very upfront with everyone about his financial intentions. He made no secret that he intended to financially support Crowley and "to help her as much as he could."
The Chapter 7 Trustee argues that the Debtor concealed the Cash Transfers and
The Debtor had not been sued before the Cash Transfers and Business Transfers. The only evidence of a lawsuit is that Hy Blair and the ARB Trust initiated the Probate Case against the Debtor on November 6, 2012.
The Chapter 7 Trustee argued that prior to the Cash Transfers and the Business Transfers — during the May 2011 Meeting in Connecticut — Hy Blair had demanded that the Debtor pay an additional $1.1 million and that such demand constituted a threat of suit.
On the other hand, the documentary record negates Hy Blair's testimony. Hy Blair wrote many letters to the Debtor in the summer of 2011. But none of such correspondence ever mentioned an additional demand for $1.1 million that had been refused. Instead, the import of Hy Blair's contemporaneous correspondence was that his father had done everything that had been requested of the Debtor at the May 2011 Meeting. Similarly, the Debtor's correspondence with Hy Blair established that the Debtor thought he had settled any disputes with his children and the ARB Trust. He thought he had "bought peace." Four witnesses (Crowley, Todd Searles, Ester Larue, and Karen Hart) confirmed that the Debtor had told them that he believed he had settled any disputes at the May 2011 Meeting.
Notably, in his closing argument, counsel for the Chapter 7 Trustee acknowledged that the $4.5 million payment made by the Debtor as part of the May 2011 Meeting:
(Emphasis added.) The Chapter 7 Trustee's concession guts his argument that there was some lingering demand or claim constituting a threatened lawsuit at the May 2011 Meeting. The Court finds that the Debtor had no notice of any such thing. At the time he made the Cash Transfers and the Business Transfers, he thought he had resolved the demands made by his children and the ARB Trust. It turns out he was sadly mistaken; but he did not come to that realization until October 2012 — well after the Cash Transfers and Business Transfers. The Chapter 7 Trustee failed in his attempt to prove a lawsuit or threatened lawsuit before the Cash Transfers and Business Transfers.
The Chapter 7 Trustee and the Defendants provided only very incomplete information concerning the Debtor's assets during the summer of 2011. No witness, for either side, gave a complete listing of the Debtor's assets and the value of such assets. Similarly, no admitted exhibits itemized and valued all of the Debtor's assets. Since the Court only has an incomplete picture of the Debtor's assets, it follows that the Chapter 7 Trustee failed his burden to show that the Cash Transfers and Business Transfers constituted transfers of substantially all of the Debtor's assets.
Nevertheless, the Court has attempted to assess the incomplete information admitted at the trial. Section 102(2) of the CUFTA defines the "assets" that should be considered:
COLO. REV. STAT. § 38-8-102(2).
The Court received evidence concerning only three categories of the Debtor's assets: (1) bank accounts; (2) IRA accounts; and (3) ownership of BOI.
During the summer of 2011, the Debtor's "ending balances," "closing balances" or "cost basis totals" for UBS No. 3623, WF No. 3363, and CW No. 8916 ranged between $715,578.64 to $949,579.34.
In closing argument, the Chapter 7 Trustee stated that a "Credit Line Account Application and Agreement for Trust and Estate Accounts" (the "Credit Application") entered into evidence as Exhibit 17 proved that UBS had a lien on UBS No. 3623 in 2011. The contention is wrong. The Credit Application (which is extensively redacted) is an application made by the ARB Trust: "Audrey R. Blair Rev. Trust Peter H. Blair and Peter H. Blair, Jr. Trustees." The Credit Application refers to an ARB Trust "Variable Credit Line Account" and an ARB Trust "Fixed Credit Line Account." There is one "Collateral Account" identified apparently in the name of "Audrey R. Blair Rev. Trust Peter H. Blair and Peter H. Blair, Jr. Trustees." The account number has been redacted. The Debtor and Hy Blair signed the Credit Application as co-trustees of the ARB Trust on February 18, 2009. Suffice to say that nothing in the Credit Application shows that the Debtor pledged UBS No. 3623 as collateral to UBS.
To the extent that the Chapter 7 Trustee wished to argue that UBS No. 3623 should not count as the Debtor's asset in a solvency analysis, the Chapter 7 Trustee had the obligation to show that there was a valid lien against UBS No. 3623 and "the extent" to which UBS No. 3623 was encumbered. He did not do so.
During the summer of 2011, the Debtor's "closing account values" for the Debtor's IRA Nos. 1, 2, 3, and 4 ranged from $6,089,135.07 to $4,459,952.39.
The Debtor wholly-owned BOI, an oil and gas company, both before and after the Cash Transfers and Business Transfers. He did not divest himself of the entity. The Chapter 7 Trustee and the Defendants presented only very sketchy and incomplete information concerning the value of the Debtor's interest in BOI in 2011. The low end of the value range was $65,181.53 in equity based upon the book value from a December 2010 BOI Balance Sheet. However, in a 2010 e-mail from Hy Blair, he presented a $4.8 million valuation for BOI based upon a computer model. At this juncture, the Court need not decide the value of the Debtor's interest in BOI. It is enough to say that the Debtor's interest was at least $65,181.53 and that the Debtor retained such interest.
Based upon the foregoing, the Cash Transfers and the Business Transfers did not constitute transfers of substantially all the Debtor's assets. The Debtor retained significant assets after such transfers. Thus, the Chapter 7 Trustee failed to prove this "badge of fraud" factor.
The Debtor did not secretly leave Colorado after making the Cash Transfers and Business Transfers. Instead, he recommitted to staying in the Centennial State. He married Crowley who was a long-time Denver resident. Together, they remodeled a portion of the Colorado house that she had owned for more than two decades. And then the Debtor moved in with his new wife. He continued to live with her for the rest of his life. Suffice it to say that he did not abscond.
The Court already has determined that the Debtor did not conceal the Cash Transfers and Business Transfers. Further, he did not remove assets from the jurisdiction or conceal them either. Neither party provided the Court with a full inventory of the Debtor's assets at the time of the Cash Transfers and the Business Transfers — or afterward. Instead, the Court only received evidence about three categories of assets: bank accounts; IRA accounts; and the Debtor's ownership of BOI. The Debtor continued to wholly own BOI (which itself filed for protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code) until he died. The Court received no evidence suggesting that the Debtor concealed
"Reasonably equivalent value" under the CUFTA means some sort of economic benefit. Lewis v. Taylor, 427 P.3d 796, 799-800 (Colo. 2018) (construing "reasonably equivalent value" in economic terms); Schempp I, 18 P.3d at 765-66. It can encompass direct or indirect consideration. Fifth Third Bank, 2017 WL 6492108, at *4. While reasonably equivalent value is not "synonymous with market value," market value is a good yardstick by which to measure reasonably equivalent value. Schempp I, 18 P.3d at 765. How do the Cash Transfers and Business Transfers measure up?
Crowley confirmed that neither she nor First Class gave any economic benefit to the Debtor in return for the Cash Transfers and Business Transfers. She characterized the transfers as "gifts" that stemmed from their relationship. Throughout the trial, Crowley acknowledged repeatedly that she gave the Debtor only "love and affection" — which is a very important intangible value, but cannot be measured in economic terms. However, "[i]ntangible, non-economic benefits, such as preservation of marriage, do not constitute reasonably equivalent value." Fifth Third Bank, 2017 WL 6492108, at *4 (quoting In re Erlewine, 349 F.3d 205, 212 (5th Cir. 2003)); see also Tavenner v. Smoot, 257 F.3d 401, 408-09 (4th Cir.2001) ("[C]ourts have consistently held that a transfer motivated by love and affection does not constitute reasonably equivalent value for the purposes of 11 U.S.C. § 548.").
To her credit, Crowley has never suggested that she gave economic value to the Debtor in return for the Cash Transfers and Business Transfers. Instead, in closing argument, Crowley's counsel stated:
The Court agrees. Thus, the Chapter 7 Trustee proved this very important "badge of fraud" hands down.
The Debtor's financial condition is a key "badge of fraud" factor. Section 103 of the CUFTA defines the term "insolvent":
COLO. REV. STAT. § 38-8-103. As detailed previously, another statute explains the meaning of the term "assets." Section 102(2) of the CUFTA states that "`assets' means property of the debtor"; but the statutory definition excludes "[p]roperty to
The Court starts its analysis of this "badge of fraud" factor by considering whether a presumption of insolvency has arisen under Section 103(2) of the CUFTA — thus, potentially shifting the burden to the Defendants. To establish such a presumption, the Chapter 7 Trustee was required to prove that the Debtor was "generally not paying his debts as they become due" at the time of each of the Cash Transfers and Business Transfers. The Chapter 7 Trustee provided no such evidence. In fact, in a rare area of agreement, both Hy Blair and Crowley testified that the Debtor generally was paying his bills when they became due. The Debtor's bank account records confirm as much and detail all manner of monthly payments during the summer of 2011. The issue is so clear that the Chapter 7 Trustee effectively conceded the point by not arguing for such presumption.
Since no presumption of insolvency came into play, the Chapter 7 Trustee tried to demonstrate actual insolvency. The statutory definition of insolvency (i.e., "sum of the debtor's debts is greater than all of the debtor's assets at a fair valuation) is another way of saying that the fair value balance sheet method is required to show insolvency. CB Richard Ellis, Inc. v. CLGP, LLC, 251 P.3d 523, 532 (Colo. App. 2010) (identifying the balance sheet method for determining solvency under Colorado law). The CUFTA method of determining insolvency "mirrors the balance sheet test for insolvency under the Bankruptcy Code." Id. (quoting Krol v. Unglaub (In re Unglaub), 332 B.R. 303, 317 (Bankr. N.D. Ill. 2005)); see also Sharp v. Chase Manhattan Bank USA, N.A. (In re Comm. Fin. Serv. Inc.), 350 B.R. 520, 531 (Bankr. N.D. Okla. 2005) (accepting the fair value balance sheet method as the proper method for assessing solvency under the Bankruptcy Code). In fact, the CUFTA definition of the term "insolvent" is "derived from" the Bankruptcy Code. COLO. REV. STAT. § 38-8-103 cmt. 1. The balance sheet test for insolvency requires that the Court must determine "the `fair value' of [the debtor's] assets and the extent of its liabilities at the time of each contested transfer." CB Richard Ellis, 251 P.3d at 534 (quoting Sheffield Steel Corp. v. HMK Enter., Inc. (In re Sheffield Steel Corp.), 320 B.R. 423, 443 (Bankr. N.D. Okla. 2004)). To do this, there must be sufficient evidence so that the Court can "re-create the financial condition of [the debtor] at the time when the transfer[s] took place." CB Richard Ellis, 251 P.3d at 534 (quoting In re Pajaro Dunes Rental Agency, Inc., 174 B.R. 557, 591 (Bankr. N.D. Cal. 1994)).
The Chapter 7 Trustee failed to provide sufficient evidence to prove that the Debtor was insolvent in the summer of 2011 (let alone on the date of each specific alleged fraudulent transfer). On the assets side of the balance sheet the Court received evidence concerning only three categories of assets: (1) bank accounts; (2) IRA accounts; and (3) ownership of BOI. As previously explained, the Debtor's "ending balances," "closing balances" or "cost basis totals" for UBS No. 3623, WF No. 3363, and CW No. 8916 ranged between $715,578.64 to $949,579.34 during the summer of 2011. The Chapter 7 Trustee failed to show that UBS No. 3623 should have been excluded because it was "encumbered by a lien." Furthermore, the aggregate bank account balances appear to be understated since the Defendants proposed using "cost basis totals" rather than fair market values for UBS No. 3623. With respect to the IRA accounts, the "closing
At the end of it all, the Chapter 7 Trustee did not prove up the assets side of the balance sheet. The best the Court can conclude is that the Debtor had bank accounts worth in excess of $715,578.64 to $949,579.34, an interest in BOI worth a minimum of $65,181.53 (but probably much more), and perhaps other assets. Because the Chapter 7 Trustee did not prove the Debtor's assets during the relevant time period, he cannot show that the Debtor was insolvent.
Even though the Chapter 7 Trustee lost this "badge of fraud" factor for failure to prove the Debtor's assets, the Court also briefly addresses the liabilities side of the balance sheet. The Chapter 7 Trustee introduced no evidence of the Debtor's liabilities during the summer of 2011. And, because the Debtor was generally paying his current debts as they became due, it does not appear that the Debtor had any material creditors.
However, the Chapter 7 Trustee contends that somehow the $2,372,688.29 Probate Judgment entered against the Debtor on March 27, 2015 should fly back in time and be counted as a liability of the Debtor during the summer of 2011. This is hindsight nonsense. The Court already has determined that Hy Blair and the ARB Trust did not raise any additional claim for $1.1 or otherwise at the May 2011 Meeting. The first inkling the Debtor had that Hy Blair and the ARB Trust were demanding more was the "interim accounting" presented during October 2012 which then formed the basis for Hy Blair and the ARB Trust commencing the Probate Case on November 6, 2012. The Probate Case was hotly disputed and resulted in years of litigation before the Probate Court entered the Probate Judgment against the Debtor. Nevertheless, the Chapter 7 Trustee suggests that a contingent claim somehow should be included on the Debtor's balance sheet a year before it was first asserted and four years before the entry of judgment. This proposition is directly contrary to Colorado appellate precedent.
Colorado law on insolvency follows the generally accepted methodology for valuing contingent liabilities. Under the
CB Richard Ellis, 251 P.3d at 533-34. The Chapter 7 Trustee cannot refute the CB Richard Ellis holding. As of the time of the Cash Transfers and Business Transfers, no demand had been asserted against the Debtor and the Probate Case was not filed until more than a year later. The Chapter 7 Trustee introduced no evidence to show how the unasserted and contingent liability (eventually adjudicated in the Probate Case) should have been valued and discounted as of the summer of 2011. Accordingly, the Chapter 7 Trustee failed to prove the Debtor's liabilities.
The Debtor made the Cash Transfers and Business Transfers during the short time window between June 6 and August 30, 2011. This period follows closely after the May 2011 Meeting. As noted previously, the Chapter 7 Trustee argued that during the May 2011 Meeting, Hy Blair and the ARB Trust asserted a claim against the Debtor for $1.1 million, which the Debtor refused. The argument raises an interesting legal issue: Is a debt "incurred" simply by assertion of a demand? But, the Court need not delve too deeply into the legal part of the argument because it is contrary to the facts. The Court already has determined — and the Chapter 7 Trustee's counsel conceded in closing argument — that the May 2011 Meeting resulted in a settlement. The Debtor "bought peace" with his children by performing all that was asked of him. The Court scrutinized Hy Blair's inconsistent testimony and the documentary record (correspondence between the Hy Blair and the Debtor). The Court also considered the testimony of many other witnesses. Based upon such assessment, Court concluded that there was no additional demand for $1.1 million against the Debtor made at the May 2011 Meeting. The Debtor thought he has resolved all issues. Only afterward did he make the Cash Transfers and Business Transfers. So, he did not make the transfers right after incurring a substantial debt.
Then, more than another year passed before Hy and the ARB Trust asserted a new demand against the Debtor through the presentation of an "interim accounting" during October 2012. That led to filing of the Probate Case the following month. Many more years of contentious litigation followed before the Probate Court issued the Probate Judgment against the Debtor on March 27, 2015. The Cash Transfers and Business Transfers were not "shortly before" the new demand, the start of the Probate Case, or the Probate Judgment. Thus, the Chapter 7 Trustee failed to prove this "badge of fraud" factor.
As noted previously, the Court must engage in a holistic analysis to determine whether the Debtor made the Cash Transfers and the Business Transfers with "actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud" under Section 105(1)(a) of the CUFTA. Schempp II, 75 P.3d at 1161. The Chapter 7 Trustee provided no direct evidence of fraudulent intent. So, the Court turned to circumstantial evidence and considered the extensive list of "badges of fraud" contained in Section 105(2) of the CUFTA. Virtually all the "badges of fraud" negate a finding a fraudulent intent. Only a single factor favors the Chapter 7 Trustee — the Debtor did not receive reasonably equivalent value from Crowley and First Class in return for the Cash Transfers and Business Transfers. This "badge of fraud" factor is one of the most important of the statutory factors; but it is not dispositive.
In addition to assessment of the "badges of fraud" list, the Court also has considered the unique context of this case. Before making the Cash Transfers and Business Transfers, the Debtor settled (or at a
The counterpart to "actual fraud" is "constructive fraud." Constructive fraud connotes something less than actual fraud and does not require actual intent to defraud. See Neal v. Clark, 95 U.S. 704, 706-7, 24 S.Ct. 586 (1877) (distinguishing between actual fraud and constructive fraud). Instead, the statutory focus is on the debtor receiving less than reasonably equivalent value in exchange for the disputed transfer. As with the actual fraud claims, the Chapter 7 Trustee also bears the burden to prove the constructive fraud causes of action.
In his Second Claim for Relief in the Amended Complaint, the Chapter 7 Trustee asserted that the Cash Transfers were recoverable from Crowley using the Chapter 7 Trustee's "strong arm powers" under 11 U.S.C. § 544 combined with Colorado's "constructive fraud" statute: COLO. REV. STAT. § 38-8-105(1)(b). In his Sixth Claim for Relief, the Chapter 7 Trustee asserted that the Business Transfers are recoverable from First Class based upon the same statutes. Since the statutory framework is the same, the Court analyzes both the causes of action together.
Section 105(1)(b) of the CUFTA states:
Under the constructive fraud statute, the Court's analysis starts with the first requirement: lack of reasonably equivalent value. The Court already has determined that the Defendants did not provide reasonably equivalent value (i.e., economic value) to the Debtor in return for the Cash Transfers and the Business Transfers. See Lewis, 427 P.3d 796, 799-800; Schempp I, 18 P.3d at 765; Fifth Third Bank, 2017 WL 6492108, at *4. And, the Defendants candidly conceded the point.
Instead, the Chapter 7 Trustee relies on Subsection 105(1)(b)(II) of the CUFTA and asserted that the Debtor "intended to incur, or believed or reasonably should have believed that he would incur, debts beyond his ability to pay as they became due."
What evidence is there that in the summer of 2011 the Debtor intended to incur (or reasonably thought he would incur) debts that he could not pay after the Cash Transfers and Business Transfers? There is none. The Cash Transfers added up to only $10,704.95 whilst the Business Transfers totaled $57,733.81. Meanwhile, during the same period, the Debtor had about $715,578.64 to $949,579.34 (or more if UBS No. 3623 was valued at fair market value instead of only "cost basis") in liquid assets in his bank accounts (UBS No. 3623, WF No. 3363, and CW No. 8916). If he ever ran low, the Debtor had access to substantial additional exempt assets including about $4,459,952.39 to $5,872,058.24 in his IRA accounts (IRA Nos. 1, 2, 3, and 4). He continued to pay all his regular bills on time (i.e., charges for apartment rental, country club dues, telephone, cable, life insurance, health insurance, credit cards, attorneys, and accountants). The Cash Transfers and Business Transfers were a mere fraction of his available resources.
Blessed with such abundant financial resources, there also is no evidence that the Debtor intended to incur any new debt during the summer of 2011. Instead, he
After considering all the evidence, the Court concludes that the Chapter 7 Trustee failed to meet his burden to prove constructive fraud under Section 105(1)(b) of the CUFTA. The Defendants conceded that the Debtor did not receive reasonably equivalent value for the Cash Transfers to his fiancé and the Business Transfers to her company. But, the Chapter 7 Trustee failed to marshal evidence showing that Debtor intended to incur debt or reasonably thought he would incur debt that he could not satisfy.
The Chapter 7 Trustee's Third Claim and Seventh Claim are for "preservation of avoided transfers" under 11 U.S.C. § 551 which provides:
In his Third Claim in the Amended Complaint, the Chapter 7 Trustee requested that "[t]o the extent that any transfers of the Debtor's property to Ms. Crowley are avoided, including the Cash Transfers and Business Transfers, the avoided transfers are preserved...."
Avoidance of a transfer (such as an alleged fraudulent transfer) is a prerequisite for preservation under Section 551. In this case, the Court already has determined that the Chapter 7 Trustee failed his burden to establish both kinds of alleged fraudulent transfers (actual fraud and constructive fraud) with respect to the Cash Transfers and Business Transfers. Since the Court has not ordered avoidance of such transfers, the preservation claims under Section 551 also necessarily fail.
The Chapter 7 Trustee's Fifth Claim is for disallowance of Crowley's Claim No. 8 against the bankruptcy estate in the amount of $210,587.76. The asserted statutory basis for the Chapter 7 Trustee's position is 11 U.S.C. § 502(d) which provides:
As applied in this Adversary Proceeding, the predicate for the Fourth Claim is that Crowley already must have been adjudged liable for a fraudulent transfer under Section 544 and state law. Holloway v. IRS (In re Odom Antennas, Inc.), 340 F.3d 705, 708 (8th Cir. 2003);
Holloway, 340 F.3d at 708.
The Court has not found Crowley liable for any type of fraudulent transfer. The Court has not ordered Crowley to turn over any estate property. In fact, the Court determined that the Chapter 7 Trustee failed to prove his avoidance claims. Accordingly, the Section 502(d) claim disallowance cause of action also falls. Crowley's Claim No. 8 for $210,587.76 is not disallowed.
The Chapter 7 Trustee's last cause of action is for "declaratory relief" asserted for the first time in the Amended Complaint. In the Eighth Claim, the Chapter 7 Trustee alleged that "the Debtor held at least a one-half legal or equitable interest in the [Real] Property on the Petition Date as tenants-in-common with Ms. Crowley."
In the Amended Complaint, the Chapter 7 Trustee acknowledged that "the Debtor never held title to the Property."
The Chapter 7 Trustee's explanation, cursory as it was, appeared to provide at least some indication of his proposed legal theories. He jettisoned the original claim for "declaratory judgment." Instead, according to the Chapter 7 Trustee, the Eighth Claim became two new claims: (1) unjust enrichment; and (2) resulting trust. The Chapter 7 Trustee also contended that he was not trying to avoid the Mortgage Payoff Transfers under 11 U.S.C. § 544. Thus, he argued that the limitations period contained in 11 U.S.C. § 546 did not come into play. The Chapter 7 Trustee seemed to contend that the Eighth Claim was some sort of free form theory existing under 11 U.S.C. § 541 (governing "property of the estate") but entirely independent of 11 U.S.C. § 544 and 546 (governing strong-arm powers to bring state law avoidance actions and establishing the limitations period for avoidance actions"). Based upon the Chapter 7 Trustee's express argument that the Eighth Claim was not an avoidance action governed by Sections 544 and 546, the Court denied summary judgment.
Armed with this explanation supplementing the very sketchy allegations in the Eighth Claim, the Defendants tried for summary judgment again.
At trial, the Chapter 7 Trustee's Eighth Claim continued to change like the wind. Whereas the Chapter 7 Trustee previously
For both the Court and Crowley, pinning the Chapter 7 Trustee down to a specific legal theory was like squeezing jello. But, the Court determines from the final dialogue that the Chapter 7 Trustee expressly and definitively waived and abandoned any resulting trust theory of recovery for the Eighth Claim.
Given such waiver and abandonment, the Court need not adjudicate a resulting trust theory. And declaratory judgment is no longer in play either. Instead, what remains for decision is only the Chapter 7 Trustee's contention that Crowley was unjustly enriched. The Chapter 7 Trustee proposes a constructive trust remedy for such unjust enrichment. Furthermore, as the Chapter 7 Trustee has conceded, such claim falls within the ambit of Section 544(a) of the Bankruptcy Code.
In her Answer and throughout this litigation process, Crowley asserted the statute of limitations as a defense to the Eighth Claim. She stated the rationale succinctly as follows:
Crowley's reference to 11 U.S.C. § 546(a) is spot on. That statute is titled "Limitations on Avoiding Powers" and establishes a statute of limitation for certain actions by chapter 7 trustees:
Applying Section 546(a) to the Eighth Claim in this Adversary Proceeding is a rather simple exercise. The Bankruptcy Case has not been closed. The Chapter 7 Trustee was appointed on August 20, 2015 — so the one-year deadline after his
For reasons unknown, the Chapter 7 Trustee waited until almost the very end of the Section 546(a) limitations period to commence the Adversary Proceeding. He filed on May 5, 2017. So, he was timely with respect to those claims included in the original Complaint. However, the original Complaint was narrowly tailored to the Cash Transfers and Business Transfers only. The Chapter 7 Trustee made no factual allegations whatsoever concerning the Real Property or the Mortgage Payoff Transfers. He did not assert an Eighth Claim for declaratory judgment. All that came later in the Amended Complaint on May 24, 2017, which was a little more than two weeks after the expiration of the Section 546(a) statute of limitations. And, the Chapter 7 Trustee has never established or even argued that the Eighth Claim somehow should relate back to the filing of the original Complaint under FED. R. CIV. P. 15(c)(1), FED. R. BANKR. P. 7015, or otherwise. On its face, the brand-new allegations concerning the Real Property and the Mortgage Payoff Transfers do not arise out of "the conduct, transaction, or occurrence set out — or attempted to be set out — in the original pleading." See FED. R. CIV. P. 15(C)(1) and FED. R. BANKR. P. 7015.
How did the Chapter 7 Trustee respond to the statute of limitations argument? First, the Chapter 7 Trustee contended that the Eighth Claim was not an avoidance claim under Section 544 at all. Instead, he claimed to be standing in the Debtor's shoes and pursuing claims under Section 541, claims that the Debtor held when he filed his case. Thus, the Chapter 7 Trustee argued that Section 546 was not applicable. This worked temporarily while the exact nature of the Eighth Claim remained a mystery. Emboldened by having narrowly escaped defeat of his Eighth Claim, the Chapter 7 Trustee reversed course completely and declared: "The Trustee's unjust enrichment claim is properly construed as a claim on behalf of the Debtor's creditors pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 544(a)."
At this point, it is finally evident that the only theory being advanced by the Chapter 7 Trustee in the Eighth Claim is unjust enrichment and constructive trust under Section 544 and state law. So, by its express
Still, the Chapter 7 Trustee declined to admit defeat. Instead, he threw up a series of additional straw man arguments. The Chapter 7 Trustee's main response is that the unjust enrichment and constructive trust claim did not really expire before the Debtor filed for bankruptcy. Under Colorado law, "unjust enrichment is a form of relief in quasi-contract or contract implied in law [so] the time within which to assert such a claim ordinarily is assessed under the three-year statute of limitations for contract actions." Sterenbuch v. Goss, 266 P.3d 428, 437 (Colo. App. 2011). The Mortgage Payoff Transfers occurred between June 2011 and January 2012, which was more than three years before the Bankruptcy Case was filed. Thus, the unjust enrichment and constructive trust claim may have expired long before the bankruptcy. However, the Chapter 7 Trustee suggested that the expired unjust enrichment and constructive trust claim might be resurrected under Behrends, 2017 WL 4513071.
The Trustee's legal trial balloons are all very interesting. But they have nothing to do with Crowley's specific statute of limitations defense under Sections 544 and 546. Crowley is not arguing that the Chapter 7 Trustee's unjust enrichment and constructive trust claim expired before the bankruptcy (although the claim may very well be barred on that basis). Instead, Crowley makes only the simple point that whether lapsed or not before the bankruptcy, the Chapter Trustee had to bring the Eighth Claim by May 7, 2017 — and he did not. That is what the Section 546(a) demands.
The Chapter 7 Trustee's last pitch is that somehow 11 U.S.C. § 108(c) may toll the unjust enrichment and constructive trust claim. He asserts that because of Section 108(c): "the creditor's constructive trust claim — and by extension the Trustee's right to bring said claim under 11 U.S.C. § 544(a) — cannot expire until after the automatic stay has terminated,
(emphasis added). As the leading bankruptcy treatise observes, Section 108(c) "applies only to civil actions in courts on claims against the debtor, or against codebtors protected by the codebtor stay." Alan N. Resnick and Henry J. Sommer, 2 COLLIER ON BANKRUPTCY ¶ 108.04[1] (Lexis/Nexis 16th ed. Supp. 2018). The Chapter 7 Trustee is not suing the Debtor — after all he died years ago. The Chapter 7 Trustee's target is the Debtor's wife, Crowley. Plainly, Section 108(c) has no bearing whatsoever in this dispute.
In this Adversary Proceeding, the Chapter 7 Trustee waited too late to file the unjust enrichment and constructive trust claim (whether lapsed or not before the bankruptcy). Thus, the Eighth Claim is barred.
As set forth previously, the Chapter 7 Trustee added the Eighth Claim in the Amended Complaint and sought a "declaratory judgment" concerning ownership of the Real Property. The Chapter 7 Trustee never mentioned "unjust enrichment" or "constructive trust" in the Amended Complaint. But, now the Chapter 7 Trustee contends that Crowley was unjustly enriched by the Mortgage Payoff Transfers and a constructive trust should be imposed pursuant to which the Chapter 7 Trustee takes one-half of Crowley's house. Crowley has objected to the changes and the Court has effectively sustained her objections. But, even assuming that the Chapter 7 Trustee can change to a new theory so late in the litigation process, he failed to prove the Eighth Claim at trial.
Under Colorado law, a claim of unjust enrichment "is a judicially-created remedy designed to undo the benefit to one party that comes at the unfair detriment of another. Unjust enrichment is based on principles commonly associated with restitution." Lewis v. Lewis, 189 P.3d 1134, 1141 (Colo. 2008) (citations omitted). "Unjust enrichment is a form of quasi-contract or a contract implied in law" and is "an equitable remedy and does not depend on any contract, oral or written." Salzman v. Bachrach, 996 P.2d 1263, 1265 (Colo. 2000). In the case of City of Arvada v. Denver Health, the Colorado Supreme Court recently reconfirmed the elements of an unjust enrichment claim as stated in Lewis:
403 P.3d 609, 616 (Colo. 2017) (quoting Lewis, 89 P.3d at 1141); see also Salzman, 996 P.2d at 1266-67) (same); Sterenbuch, 266 P.3d at 437 (same).
"A constructive trust is a remedial device designed to prevent unjust enrichment." Mancuso v. United Bank of Pueblo, 818 P.2d 732, 737 (Colo. 1991). Technically, it is not a separate claim — although it is often pled that way. Cf. Behrends, 2017 WL 4513071, at *21 ("It is possible to view a request for a constructive
In this Adversary Proceeding, the Chapter 7 Trustee asserts that Crowley received a benefit at the Debtor's expense: the $356,052.05 Mortgage Payoff Transfers. The contention is self-evident and satisfies the first two elements of the unjust enrichment claim. So, it all comes down to the third element and the question: Were the Mortgage Payoff Transfers made in circumstances such that it would be unjust for Crowley to retain the benefit without repayment?
The Court determines that it would not be unjust for Crowley to retain the Real Property — the house that she has owned exclusively for at least 21 years — even though the Debtor paid off Crowley's lenders through the Mortgage Payoff Transfers between June 2011 and January 2012. The evidence established that the Debtor's action in paying off Crowley's mortgage was an extremely generous gift. He was never obligated (as a borrower or guarantor) on the note and mortgage associated with the Real Property. But he paid anyway. He did not take title to the Real Property because he did not want to do so. It was the Debtor's idea and intention to pay off the mortgage on the Real Property so that the Debtor and Crowley could "start their marriage off level" by eliminating Crowley's debts. The elimination of debts allowed Crowley to become financially secure so that the couple could live stress-free and "could go through this part of our life just enjoying each other." The Debtor asked Crowley to stop working so that she could be with him. She could not do so unless the Debtor paid her mortgage. Paying off the mortgage also was the Debtor's way of protecting Crowley in the event of his passing. Although the Debtor knew he was making a gift, the Debtor also thought it would make financial sense because the couple planned for him to move into the Real Property and thereafter save the very high monthly rent charged by Parkplace.
Colorado law suggests that a completed gift may not be recoverable under an unjust enrichment theory. In Berenergy Corp. v. Zab, Inc., 94 P.3d 1232 (Colo. App. 2004), the Colorado Court of Appeals explained:
Id. at 1238; see also Salzman, 996 P.2d at 1266 n.5 (allowing unjust enrichment claim but noting: "the trial court explicitly found that the contribution was not a gift ... and we are bound by that determination").
Construing Utah law, the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit relied on similar reasoning. Taylor v. Rupp (In re Taylor), 133 F.3d 1336, 1342 (10th Cir. 1998). In Taylor, a chapter 7 trustee brought an adversary proceeding against the debtor's spouse claiming that prepetition asset transfers were void or voidable as fraudulent conveyances and requesting imposition of a constructive trust on the spouse's home. The bankruptcy court imposed a constructive trust. The Tenth Circuit reversed the imposition of a constructive trust focusing on the nature of the disputed transaction — a gift:
Id. The appellate panel also noted the absence of any "badges of fraud," that the debtor was solvent, and "there was no indication that they were not paying their debts." Id. at 1343. The Taylor circumstances are very similar to this case and suggest the that it would be improper to impose a constructive trust against Crowley's Real Property.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Court is reticent to deny the unjust enrichment claim and constructive trust remedy in this Adversary Proceeding solely because the Mortgage Payoff Transfers were gifts. Certainly, viewing the situation from the Debtor's perspective (if he were alive today) suggests that it would be unlikely the Debtor could or would recover back the completed gifts he made three and a half years before his bankruptcy. But, a more fulsome consideration of the circumstances surrounding the Debtor's generous gift to Crowley seems prudent and warranted.
The Chapter 7 Trustee did not assert claims against Crowley for fraud or fraudulent conveyances in relation to the Mortgage Payoff Transfers. Perhaps because he did not sue on that basis, he did not establish that the Debtor or Crowley engaged in fraud. The evidence showed that during the period when the Mortgage Payoff Transfers were made (June 2011 through January 2012), the Debtor continued to have substantial assets including: (1) about $715,578.64 to $780.725.62 in his bank accounts (UBS No. 3623, WF No. 3363, and CW No. 8916); (2) about
As the Court considers whether it would be unjust for Crowley to receive the benefit of the Mortgage Payoff Transfers, the Court also is cognizant of the economic benefit that she provided. The Debtor and Crowley agreed that the Debtor would move into the Real Property with Crowley. Part of the idea was that the Debtor would save rent at Parkplace, a luxury building which cost more than $8,000 per month. The Debtor lived the last 43 months of his life with Crowley at the Real Property rent free. Applying the Parkplace rental rates, the Debtor saved at least $344,000 ($8,000 monthly rent X 43 months) because of the arrangement. The amount almost matches the Mortgage Payoff Transfers.
Short on facts helpful to his Eighth Claim, the Chapter 7 Trustee repeatedly referred to the Colorado Supreme Court's decision: Shepler v. Whalen, 119 P.3d 1084 (Colo. 2005). The Chapter 7 Trustee contended that Shepler was "directly on point" and presented "facts almost identical to the facts in this matter."
Shepler did not involve an unjust enrichment claim. Instead, the issue was fraudulent conveyance. The trial court "found that the transfer of funds ... was `fraudulent and done with intent to hinder, delay or defraud creditors of the debtor'...." Shepler, 119 P.3d at 1086. The Shepler debtor was indebted to numerous creditors. He "paid off the mortgage interest using money he owed to creditors, with the intention of defrauding those creditors." Id. at 1089. It is not surprising that the appellate court found the imposition of a constructive trust proper under such circumstances. Id. at 1089-90.
Those circumstances, however, are not present in this Adversary Proceeding. With respect to the Cash Transfers and Business Transfers, the Chapter 7 Trustee alleged actual fraud and constructive fraud. The Court rejected the Chapter 7 Trustee's claims. Regarding the Mortgage Payoff Transfers, the Chapter 7 Trustee did not allege or prove fraud of any type. And, whereas the debtor in Shepler had numerous creditors that he intended to defraud by using money he owed to them to pay off his wife's mortgage, in this dispute the Chapter 7 Trustee did not establish that the Debtor had any creditors when the Mortgage Payoff Transfers
Having considered the evidence and argument, the Court determines that the Chapter 7 Trustee failed to prove unjust enrichment and entitlement to a constructive trust remedy. To the contrary, it would be unjust to permit the Chapter 7 Trustee to take one half of Crowley's house.
For the reasons set forth above, the Court denies the Chapter 7 Trustee relief on all of the claims asserted in the Amended Complaint. Separately, the Court will enter Judgment against the Chapter 7 Trustee and in favor of Crowley and First Class. Accordingly, the Court:
ORDERS that all of the Trustee's Claims for Relief asserted in his Amended Complaint are DENIED;
FURTHER ORDERS that Judgment will enter in favor of Defendants Suella M. Crowley and First Class Printing, Inc. and against Jeffery A. Weinman, Chapter 7 Trustee;
FURTHER ORDERS that all pending motions in the Adversary Proceeding are denied as moot given such disposition; and
FURTHER ORDERS that all requests for attorney's fees and costs, if any, shall be made only consistent with, and within the time permitted by, FED. R. CIV. P. 54 as incorporated by FED. R. BANKR. P. 7054.
Trans. II at 156.
(emphasis added).
COLO. REV. STAT. § 38-8-102 cmt. 7 (emphasis added). The Official Comment for the CUFTA definition of "insider" is exactly the same as the Official Comment circulated with the model Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Law. As noted by the Chapter 7 Trustee, the Official Comment certainly suggests that the term "insider" under the CUFTA should be construed broadly and consistent with the Bankruptcy Code.
Ordinarily, under both Colorado and Federal law, the official commentary accompanying a statute is "instructive and persuasive in helping [] discern the meaning" of a statute. Green Tree Acceptance, Inc. v. Wyoming Nat'l Bank, 1 F.3d 1249, at *8 (10th Cir. 1993) (unpublished) (citing Int'l Minerals and Chemical Corp. v. Llano, Inc., 770 F.2d 879, 885 n.2 (10th Cir. 1985)); see also Miller v. Deutsche Bank Nat'l Trust Co. (In re Miller), 666 F.3d 1255, 1263 (10th Cir. 2012) (referring to official commentary to Colorado Uniform Commercial Code); Osborn v. Packard, 117 P.3d 77, 80 (Colo. App. 2005) ("The official commentary of the Uniform Arbitration Act on which the Colorado act is modeled clarifies that this section was intended....").
However, the issue is not so simple in this case because the Official Comment to Section 102 of the CUFTA is contrary to the text of the statute. The Official Comment references the Bankruptcy Code definition of "insider" and notes that "the word `includes' is not limiting." Based upon the broad nature of the term "includes", the Official Comment concluded that a long-term household companion may qualify as an "insider." However, the problem with this is obvious: the definition of the term "insider" in Section 102(8) of the CUFTA does not use the word "includes" at all. As discussed previously, the Colorado legislature departed from both the model Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Law, the Bankruptcy Code, and the similar statutes adopted in almost every other State by excising the word "includes" and narrowing the definition of the term "insider" by using the verb "means." So, the Official Comment is commenting on something that is not part of the Colorado statute at all. And the Official Comment is not the governing law — only the statute is. The Court rejects deference to the Official Comment to Section 102 of the CUFTA because commenting on something not in the statute is not "instructive or persuasive" in ascertaining the meaning of the statutory text.