Michael G. Williamson, Chief United States Bankruptcy Judge.
In the 1993 movie classic, Groundhog Day, Phil Connors, a Pittsburgh television weatherman played by Bill Murray, finds himself living the same day over and over again. After begrudgingly making the trip from Pittsburgh to Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania to cover the annual Groundhog Day festivities, Connors gets stuck in a blizzard on his way out of town and is forced to stay the night in Punxsutawney. When Connors awakens the next day, it is Groundhog Day again, which he is forced to relive over and over. The rest of the movie finds Connors desperately trying to break the Groundhog Day time loop:
Nearly six years ago, Schron woke up to find himself ensnared in state court proceedings supplementary that three probate estates initiated to collect on billions of dollars of empty-chair verdicts against Trans Health Management, Inc. ("THMI"), one of the Debtors in this case.
The only way for the Court to break this loop is to enjoin the Probate Estates from pursuing claims that were or could have been litigated against Schron in this Court. An injunction is necessary to protect this Court's final judgment in Schron's favor. Absent an injunction, the Probate Estates will ignore this Court's rulings and use repetitious state court litigation against Schron to extract a settlement out of him. Moreover, the injunction was an integral part of the Court's finding that nearly $24 million in settlements—which brought an end to exceedingly complex litigation that has involved 25 lawsuits (including adversary proceedings) and 15 appeals before 11 courts and 17 judges in five states over 11 years—are fair and equitable. Accordingly, for the reasons discussed below, the Court has enjoined the Probate Estates from pursuing any claims against Schron arising out of the same nucleus of facts in their adversary complaint in this proceeding.
Rubin Schron is, by all accounts, an extremely wealthy real estate investor from New York. In 2002, Schron's lawyer (Leonard Grunstein) and investment banker (Murray Forman) convinced Schron to fund the acquisition of 120 nursing homes from Integrated Health Services ("IHS"),
The Probate Estates claim the March 2006 transaction was an elaborate "bust-out" scheme intended to thwart their efforts to collect on personal injury claims they had filed against THMI. At the time of the March 2006 transaction, three of the Probate Estates had sued THMI and its former corporate parent, Trans Healthcare, Inc. ("THI"), for injuries that allegedly occurred at nursing homes THI owned and THMI managed.
After three of the Probate Estates obtained $1.2 billion in default judgments against THI and THMI,
After this involuntary bankruptcy case was filed, the Court enjoined the Probate Estates from pursuing their state court proceedings supplementary to collect the THI and THMI judgments from Schron.
In all, the Trustee and Probate Estates sued seventeen Defendants: THI Holdings (which owned THI Baltimore); five entities referred to as the "GTCR Group" (THI Holdings' principal shareholder); Ned Jannotta (a GTCR principal who approved the March 2006 transaction); General Electric Capital Corporation, Ventas Limited, and Ventas Realty (THI's major secured lenders who allegedly consented to the transaction); FLTCH (which acquired THI Baltimore's stock); FAS (which ultimately ended up with THMI's assets); Forman and Grunstein (who owned FLTCH); THI Baltimore (which was acquired by FLTCH); Fundamental Long Term Care, Inc. (which acquired THMI's stock); and Schron.
The initial complaint contained the following 22 claims for relief: substantive consolidation; breach of fiduciary duty (two counts); aiding and abetting a breach of fiduciary duty (four counts); successor liability; piercing the corporate veil (two counts); alter ego (three counts); fraudulent transfer (eight counts); and conspiracy to commit fraudulent transfer. Of the 22 initial claims, eight were asserted against Schron.
Initially, the Trustee and Probate Estates sued Schron for aiding and abetting breach of a fiduciary duty, successor liability, piercing the corporate veil, alter ego liability, fraudulent transfer, and conspiracy to commit a fraudulent transfer.
Unsuccessful on their initial claims against Schron in this forum, the Probate Estates attempted to circumvent this Court's preliminary injunction and pursue its collection efforts against Schron back in state court, where, suffice it to say, they have had more success. In particular, this Court previously allowed three Probate Estates (the Estates of Townsend, Sasser, and Jones) to pursue their underlying negligence claims against THI in state court since those claims had not gone to trial prepetition.
Under this "real party in interest" theory, Schron is supposedly liable for the Townsend judgment because he (1) entered into a January 5, 2012 settlement agreement with others involved in the March 2006 transaction to ensure THI was defended in the underlying negligence claims; and (2) contributed money to that defense. In Sasser, the Sasser Estate sought to add Schron as a defendant before trial on the same theory. This Court enjoined the Probate Estates' efforts to add Schron as a defendant in the Townsend and Sasser cases under the "real party in interest theory" because they violated the Court's preliminary injunction.
In their second amended complaint, the Probate Estates asserted seven claims for relief against Schron: three claims it previously asserted against him (alter ego, aiding and abetting a breach of fiduciary duty, and constructive fraud claims) and four new claims (abuse of process, conspiracy to commit abuse of process, negligence, and avoidance of postpetition transfer claims).
At the conclusion of trial,
The mediation was largely a success. It originally produced two settlements: one was an $18.5 million settlement among the Trustee, Probate Estates, FLTCH, FAS, THI Baltimore, Forman, and Grunstein (and others);
The sole non-settling Defendant was Schron. Not only did Schron refuse to settle, but he opposed the various settlements with the other Defendants unless
Literally minutes after the Court concluded announcing its oral ruling against the Trustee and Probate Estates on all but one count, the Townsend Estate made an ore tenus motion to lift the Court's preliminary injunction so it could pursue its "real party in interest" theory in state court.
In addition to pursuing their real party in interest theory in Townsend and Sasser, the Probate Estates have indicated at various stages of this proceeding that they intend to continue pursuing the state court proceedings supplementary against Schron in Jackson, Webb, and Nunziata, which were stayed by this Court's preliminary injunction. At one point, the Probate Estates also threatened to sue Schron for RICO violations in New York district court. In short, the Probate Estates have threatened to sue Schron on claims that were or could have been litigated in this forum.
This Court ultimately entered an injunction in Schron's favor.
This Court's authority to enjoin the Probate Estates from pursuing claims in state court is prescribed in the All Writs Act, which "codifie[s] `the long recognized power of courts of equity to effectuate their decrees by injunctions or writs of assistance.'"
At a minimum, this Court has authority to enjoin the Probate Estates from pursuing claims it already decided in order to protect the judgment it entered in Schron's favor.
The Court concludes it is appropriate to enjoin the Probate Estates from asserting any claims against Schron that this Court has already decided—i.e., claims for aiding and abetting breach of a fiduciary duty, successor liability, piercing the corporate veil, alter ego liability, fraudulent transfer, conspiracy to commit a fraudulent transfer, abuse of process, conspiracy to commit an abuse of process, and negligence—to protect its judgments. There is no question these claims would be barred by res judicata if the Probate Estates attempted to reassert them in state court. To be sure, Schron could assert res judicata as a defense if the Probate Estates reassert their dismissed claims in state court.
But the relitigation exception was intended to alleviate successful federal litigants like Schron from having to go through that ordeal:
The Probate Estates chose this forum when one of them filed this involuntary bankruptcy case. And they were given ample opportunity to pursue all of their claims against Schron in their chosen forum. Despite years of discovery, however, the Probate Estates could not allege a single plausible claim for relief against Schron.
The Probate Estates have justified this facially obvious forum shopping by contending that, by pursuing their proceedings supplementary in Jackson, Webb, and
For one, the Probate Estates' attempt to pursue proceedings supplementary in Nunziata belies their entire argument. After all, THI is not even a defendant in Nunziata. Only THMI is. So how could the Nunziata proceedings supplementary relate to THI in any way? For another, the Probate Estates are not, as they imply, pursuing THI in the proceedings supplementary. They are pursuing Schron on the same claims, arising out of the same facts, as those in this proceeding. The only purported difference is they are attempting to collect on the judgment against THI, as opposed to the same judgment against THMI. But even if there is some distinction between collecting on the THI judgment as opposed to the THMI judgment entered in the same case, that distinction is meaningless because the Probate Estates sought to hold Schron liable for both judgments in this proceeding by seeking a declaration that he is THI's alter ego and that he is liable for THI's debts under a successor liability theory.
If this Court's final judgment in favor of Schron is to mean anything, then this Court must enjoin the Probate Estates from pursing the same claims they alleged against Schron in their complaint, which were presented to and decided by this Court. The state court proceedings supplementary, wherever they are pending, involve the same claims this Court already decided. For that reason, the Probate Estates are enjoined from pursuing the state court proceedings supplementary or otherwise pursuing the same claims this Court already decided.
The problem is that enjoining the Probate Estates from pursuing claims this Court actually considered and disposed of is not sufficient. It is obvious that the Probate Estates will attempt to circumvent any injunction under the "relitigation exception," which would only apply to claims actually litigated, by recasting their dismissed claims under a new theory that was not actually litigated. In fact, the Probate Estates have already attempted to recast their abuse of process, conspiracy to commit abuse of process, and negligence claims under a "real party in interest theory" in state court—in defiance of this Court's injunction—after this Court dismissed their initial claims. More recently, the Townsend Estate has sought a writ of mandamus from district court ordering this Court to remand the Townsend case back to state court. So there is no question the Probate Estates will attempt to assert claims against in Schron in state court based on the same nucleus of operative facts in their complaint.
The Court's authority to enjoin the Probate Estates from litigating claims that have not actually been decided by this Court is limited to cases where a state court's exercise of jurisdiction over a case would "seriously impair the federal court's flexibility and authority to decide" the federal court case.
That case involved complicated and protracted class-action litigation between a funeral insurance provider and certain policyholders. The parties litigated the case for seven years—in state and federal court—before reaching a settlement that affected the rights of 300 funeral home owners and one million policyholders.
On appeal, the Eleventh Circuit upheld the district court injunction under the "in aid of jurisdiction" exception to the Anti-Injunction Act. In doing so, the Battle court rejected the notion that the "in aid of jurisdiction" exception applies only to in rem cases.
In particular, the Battle court noted that the district court judgment resolved seven years of litigation over complicated antitrust issues.
Four years later, the Eleventh Circuit reached a similar conclusion in Wesch v. Folsom.
This case, although not involving a class action or multi-district litigation, falls squarely within the Eleventh Circuit's decisions in Battle and Wesch. What started off as six negligence or wrongful death lawsuits has morphed into 25 lawsuits (including adversary proceedings) and 15 appeals before 11 courts and 17 judges in five states over 11 years. When this case was filed, it quickly became apparent the Probate Estates and Trustee were pursuing identical claims against identical parties arising out of the same nucleus of operative facts—i.e., the March 2006 transactions—in more than one forum (state court, district court, and bankruptcy court). In an effort to avoid the possibility of inconsistent results, this Court ordered the Probate Estates and Trustee to bring all of their claims here since this was the one Court that had jurisdiction over all those claims.
This Court (and others) have devoted years of time and effort to this exceedingly complex litigation. In this Court, alone, there have been nearly 100 days of hearings resulting in at least 21 reported decisions. The complaints in this proceeding, which totaled nearly 300 pages and contained more than 1,600 numbered paragraphs, alleged 32 claims for relief against 17 parties.
In approving the four settlements, the Court concluded there was really no question they were fair and equitable to the settling parties and in the best interests of the bankruptcy estate.
Schron and the other settling Defendants previously bargained for the right to have FAS defend THI and THMI against the Probate Estates' claims in state court. As this Court has pointed out several times, that defense was intended to serve as an outer firewall to protect Schron and others from liability. If THI or THMI was not liable for negligence in the first place, then Schron and others would not be liable on any fraudulent transfer, alter ego, or other theory. Schron personally paid $200,000 for that outer firewall. But under the approved compromises, THI's state-court receiver and FAS withdrew their defenses of the claims against THI, destroying the outer firewall, and THI's receiver stipulated to the entry $65 million in judgments against THI, which has resulted in $49.5 million in judgments against THMI under the terms of a previous Court-approved compromise.
The compromises plainly state the Probate Estates intend to pursue collection of those judgments against Schron, and Schron's only recourse in the event he is somehow found liable is to pursue indemnification or contribution claims against FAS (one of the few Defendants who would have potentially been liable), which is proposing to pay all of its money ($18.5 million) to fund the compromise and get out of this proceeding and case. So the Probate Estates' intent to pursue collection against Schron in state court on its "real party in interest" or other theory unduly prejudices Schron. By granting the injunction in Schron's favor, however, the Court has eliminated the prejudice to him.
It is worth noting, although not a requirement for entering an injunction under the "in aid of jurisdiction" exception, that the injunction does not harm the Probate Estates. The injunction only bars the Probate Estates from bringing claims arising out of the same nucleus of operative facts in their complaint. Those are claims that the Probate Estates have had every opportunity to bring here, as evidenced by the 300-page complaint and 32 claims for relief the Probate Estates filed here.
The analogy to Groundhog Day in this proceeding breaks down in one crucial respect: In Groundhog Day, the loop is finally broken when Connors uses his experiences reliving the same day over and over to better himself. Here, it is the Probate Estates that are learning from their experiences. But not for the better. Here, the Probate Estates are using their experience to perpetuate the loop until Schron capitulates
The only way the loop will be broken here is for the Court to use its authority under the Anti-Injunction Act's "relitigation" and "in aid of jurisdiction exceptions" to enjoin the Probate Estates from relitigating claims that were or could have litigated here. When the time loop is finally broken in Groundhog Day, Phil Connors happily remarks, after looking outside and noticing the Groundhog Day crowds are gone, "Today is tomorrow." For Schron, the repeated claims arising out of the same alleged "bust-out" scheme are finally gone. This litigation loop is finally broken. For Schron, today is tomorrow.