KAREN S. JENNEMANN, Bankruptcy Judge.
Defendants are the settlor and beneficiaries of a trust established by Hazel Belotti in 1993. Ms. Belotti and all beneficiaries of the trust are now deceased. The trustee, Soneet Kapila, seeks to recover profit payments made from the debtors to the trust as fraudulent transfers under § 548 of the Bankruptcy Code.
The personal representative of the defendants has moved to dismiss the claim, arguing the trustee failed to file the fraudulent transfer claim against the last living defendant's probate estate within the one-year statute of limitations period as required by California probate law. The trustee, who filed a claim two years after the death of the last living defendant, argues the personal representative failed to timely inform her of the death and, therefore, could not file a claim within the one-year period. Because California has a firm one-year deadline to file a claim in probate, notwithstanding a creditor's lack of notice of a defendant's death, defendants' motion to dismiss is granted.
Debtor, Louis J. Pearlman, along with some of his co-debtor companies—Trans Continental Airlines ("TCA"), Trans Continental Records ("TCR"), and Louis J. Pearlman Enterprises ("Enterprises")—bilked thousands of investors out of hundreds of millions of dollars through the perpetration of different Ponzi schemes. One was known as the "Employee Investment Savings Account" (the "EISA Program"), under which TCA raised over $300 million from hundreds of investors nationwide. Pearlman, his broker intermediaries, and others at TCA allegedly promised investors above-market rates of return for their investments and that their investments were FDIC insured. Neither representation was true. Instead, Pearlman and his cronies pocketed much of the investment funds and used new investments to repay, or to pay interest to, prior investors in the EISA Program.
Before she died in 1995, Hazel Belotti ("Peggy") established the Roy and Peggy Belotti Trust (the "Trust") and began investing money in the EISA Program. Hazel's two sons, Grant Allen Belotti and George Daniel Belotti, were the named beneficiaries of the Trust. The sons retained the EISA investments after Hazel's death, and, between March 2003 and July 2007, the Trust withdrew $333,792.78 in profits it earned from the EISA Program. Grant Allen Belotti died on August 12, 2007. On March 30, 2009, two months before George Daniel Belotti's death,
Defendant has filed a motion to dismiss the trustee's complaint, alleging the trustee failed to timely file the claim in any of the decedent's probate estates within one year and, as a result, the trustee is barred from any recovery,
The trustee argues § 366.2(a) does not apply because the trustee filed the fraudulent conveyance action before George's death, not after. Therefore, according to the trustee, the one-year limitations period is irrelevant. The trustee also claims that, even if the one year limitations period applied, he could not have filed a timely claim because George's personal representative did not advise the trustee of George's death until April, 2011, almost two years after George died.
In California, when a defendant who is the subject of a creditor's claim dies, the personal representative of a defendant's estate is responsible for providing notice of the death to all known or reasonably ascertainable creditors within the later of: "four months after the date letters [of administration] are first issued" or "thirty days after the personal representative first has knowledge of the creditor."
Lack of notice, however, does not toll a creditor's obligation to re-file a claim against a decedent's probate estate. Contrary to the trustee's contentions, upon a defendant's death, a creditor who has a pending claim against a defendant is required to re-file the claim against the defendant's probate estate.
When a personal representative fails to notify a creditor of a defendant's death, as here, it has a trickle-down effect in a creditor's ability to file a timely claim against a defendant's probate estate. The first time the trustee became aware of George's death was through defendant's motion to dismiss filed in April, 2011, nearly a year after the trustee's time to file a claim in George's estate had expired.
The trustee did not file the fraudulent conveyance action against any defendant's probate estate within the one-year time limit, and now is forever barred from bringing any claim against a beneficiary of the estate. Defendants' motion to dismiss is granted. This adversary proceeding is dismissed with prejudice.
DONE AND ORDERED.