JULIE A. ROBINSON, District Judge.
This matter comes before the Court on appeal from the bankruptcy court's October 4, 2010 Order Overruling Joint Objection to Homestead Exemption filed by appellants Michael and Connie Wolters and the Chapter 7 Trustee Eric C. Rajala ("Appellants" or "Wolters"). The bankruptcy court's order overruled the Wolters' objection to the homestead exemption filed by Debtors Bennie Arthur Lakey, Sr., and Geral Dine Lakey ("Appellees" or "Lakeys"). For the reasons explained in detail below, the Court affirms the bankruptcy court's order.
The Appellees have elected to have the appeal heard by this Court.
On appeal from the bankruptcy court, the district court sits as an appellate court.
On August 7, 2009, the Lakeys filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy and claimed a homestead exemption for their home in Lenexa, Kansas (the "Sunset Property"). The Wolters and the Trustee filed an objection to this homestead exemption under 11 U.S.C. § 522(o). The bankruptcy court held a four day evidentiary hearing on the matter. In overruling the objection, the bankruptcy court found that (1) the Wolters failed to meet their burden to prove grounds justifying piercing the corporate veil of Colony North Homes, Inc.—the Lakey-owned entity that constructed the Wolters' home—to make the Wolters creditors of the Lakeys; and (2) even if the Wolters were creditors of the Lakeys, the timing of the Lakeys' homestead acquisition did not show that the Lakeys acquired or encumbered their homestead with the intent to hinder, delay or defraud the Wolters or any other creditors.
Although the parties have not stipulated to the facts in this case, they have acknowledged that for the most part, the "facts are not in dispute."
Debtors Bennie Lakey and Geral Lakey filed for bankruptcy on August 7, 2009. Mr. Lakey built upper-end homes and enjoyed a good reputation in his field for over thirty years. According to his banker, Lakey-built homes consistently sold over their appraised value because of their high quality. The Lakeys resided in Kansas City, Missouri, and Mr. Lakey conducted business predominantly in the Kansas City North area. Mr. Lakey used a number of business entities to conduct his business. These entities included Colony North Homes, Inc., Colony North Construction, Inc., The Lakey Co., Inc., Lakey Design Build, Inc., Lakey Custom Building, Inc., L & L Development, Inc., 6000 N. Oak, Inc., Lakey Enterprises, Inc., Petra Properties, Inc., Pinnacle Properties I, Inc., Tremont Manor Development Co., Inc., and Quality Plus Homes, Inc. Each business had a purpose: some were holding companies, some acquired real estate, some developed subdivisions and built homes.
In the late 1990s and early 2000s, the Lakey entities began to struggle financially. The Lakey companies collectively suffered six-figure losses each year for several years in the late 1990s. Mr. Lakey thought he saw better business opportunities across the state line in Kansas. By 2001, the Lakeys decided to move to Kansas.
On August 1, 2001, the Wolters entered a construction contract with Lakey-owned
The state court proceeding and the arbitration were contentious. The Wolters were completely dissatisfied with their windows and refused to allow Colony North Homes to attempt to remedy their other complaints. Colony North Homes adamantly maintained that the windows were not defective and that all other complaints could be remedied for approximately $7000. After another home builder was chosen as the arbitrator, Colony North Homes sought to have him disqualified because he was a competitor of Mr. Lakey. The request was ultimately denied on August 15, 2003, and the bankruptcy court found that arbitration began in February 2004.
Also in February 2004, Mr. Lakey took steps to merge Colony North Homes, a Missouri corporation, with Lakey-owned Colony North Construction, a Kansas corporation. Mr. Lakey intended to use Colony North Construction to begin building in Kansas. However, on October 4, 2004, Colony North Construction fdba Colony North Homes filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, faulting the Wolters litigation for its demise. A few days later in October 2004, the arbitrator issued a $600,000 award against Colony North Homes. Colony North Homes attempted to have the arbitration award declared void for having been entered in violation of the stay. The bankruptcy court found that the award was not entered in violation of the automatic stay, and that even if it were, the Wolters were granted retroactive and prospective relief to seek confirmation of the award in state court. In January 2005, Colony North Homes moved to vacate the arbitration award, alleging the arbitrator was biased against Mr. Lakey, but the state court ultimately confirmed the award in September 2007. The Wolters sued Mr. Lakey in November 2007, seeking to pierce Colony North Homes' corporate veil. The Wolters added Mrs. Lakey as a defendant in March 2009.
Mr. Lakey testified that he fought the arbitration award on principle because he thought the arbitrator, as a competitor, was biased against Mr. Lakey. Mr. Lakey spent his personal funds for Colony North Homes' legal fees. Mr. Lakey testified he could not believe and never expected the arbitrator to enter an unexplained $600,000 award against Colony North
Colony North Homes was created in September 1998 to construct homes in the Northland.
Colony North Homes kept formal corporate records, minutes, financial statements, and tax returns. The financial statements show sloppy accounting, and the balance sheets usually did not balance; however, Colony North Homes was a separate and distinct entity from the Lakeys. Except for the $315,000 loan to shareholders, which was documented and repaid, the record does not contain any evidence the Lakeys used Colony North Homes' assets for personal expenses. The bankruptcy court found that there was no evidence of comingled assets, improper dividends, or improper siphoning
There is no evidence that Mrs. Lakey was involved in Colony North Homes other than as a stockholder. Wolters testified he never had any business dealings with Mrs. Lakey. He barely knew her. There is no evidence Mrs. Lakey exerted any control over Colony North Homes or participated in its business.
In 2004, Mr. Lakey began winding down many of his businesses in preparation for retirement. The Lakeys reduced the number of entities they owned from ten to four. The Colony North Homes merger with Colony North Construction was part of the restructuring.
In May 2001, The Lakey Company purchased a lot on 139th Terrace in Kansas for the construction of the Lakeys' personal retirement home. In October 2001, The Lakey Company purchased an option to buy another Kansas lot known as the Sunset Property. The Sunset Property ultimately became the Lakeys' homestead and is the subject of this objection. With the Sunset Property, The Lakey Company optioned
On February 14, 2002, the Lakeys moved into a home on 141st Street located directly behind their 139th Terrace construction site. Mr. Lakey testified he originally intended the 139th Terrace home to be a $1.3 million custom-build. However, over the summer of 2002, the Lakeys became dissatisfied with the location. The Lakeys thought the neighbor complained excessively about their construction and feared the relationship would never be friendly. Mr. Lakey decided to finish the home for sale rather than as his personal residence.
In August 2002, the Lakeys decided to develop the Sunset Property for their personal retirement home instead. On September 3, 2002, The Lakey Company borrowed $980,000 from North American Savings Bank ("NASB") to begin construction. A year later, on September 30, 2003, the Lakeys purchased the Sunset Property from The Lakey Company and titled it in their names. The Lakeys paid $1.67 million in cash. Of the purchase price, $1,109,892.50 paid off the construction loan to NASB. Mr. Lakey testified he did not remember exactly where the cash came from, but he believed he cashed in certificates of deposit from seven banks and drew from his cash deposits with NASB.
Mr. Lakey testified the reason he purchased a Kansas homestead for cash was because he and his wife wanted to live closer to family, and Mr. Lakey had promised Mrs. Lakey a mortgage-free home in retirement. Brad Lee, a former NASB banker who managed the Lakey relationship, and NASB internal emails dating from August 2002, corroborated Mr. Lakey's testimony.
The Lakeys' primary lender was NASB. Several Lakey-owned entities borrowed money from NASB to acquire real estate and to finance construction projects. The Lakeys personally guaranteed $2 to $4 million in loans as a matter of course. The loans were also secured by the real estate developments they financed. Lee testified Mr. Lakey and his companies were longtime clients who were well-regarded both at the bank and in the community. The Lakeys consistently maintained cash deposits with NASB in the million dollar range, making them attractive borrowers. The Lakeys maintained high liquidity between 1998 and 2003; however, when Lee heard the Lakeys were moving to Kansas, he thought the move could be a precursor of bankruptcy. Still, in 2004, the Lakeys and Lakey-owned entities averaged $1.3 million in bank deposits. In December 2005, the Lakeys had over $500,000 in the bank.
In February 2007, the Lakeys and NASB wrapped up their lending relationship and the Lakeys surrendered $1.6 million in real estate by deed in lieu of foreclosure.
Between 2002 and 2006, the Lakeys and Lakey-owned entities began to sell assets
In December 2004, just days after the Lakeys failed to have the arbitration award declared void in Colony North Homes' bankruptcy, the Lakeys purchased whole life insurance policies for $600,000. The Lakeys included a $35,000 deduction on their 2005 tax return for money spent on "protection of assets." The bankruptcy court found that prudent business persons, including those who are financially successful, consult with professionals regarding the protection or, in essence, the retention of assets to provide financial security for their families. The Lakeys' conversions of non-exempt assets to exempt assets, including the homestead, occurred at least two years before the Wolters' assertion of any personal liability for corporate debts against Mr. Lakey via a lawsuit filed in November 2007.
In 2008, the Lakeys forgave a five-year-old $100,000 note payable from the Lakeys' church. Mr. Lakey testified the note was always meant as a charitable contribution. Mr. Lakey structured it as a note to obtain a tax deduction in the year of his choice rather than the year of the donation.
By the time they filed for bankruptcy, the Lakeys claimed $1,757,261.12 in exempt assets, including just over $1 million as their homestead exemption. Their homestead was and remains encumbered with a reverse mortgage, which had a balance of about $360,500 in secured debt as of the petition date. The Lakeys listed $2,400 a month in Social Security income, but claimed monthly expenses totaling $5,523. The Lakeys' Schedule J neglected to include approximately $25,000 in real estate taxes the Lakeys owe annually. The Lakeys pay their day-to-day living expenses with either credit cards or draws on the reverse mortgage. The parties presented no evidence that any surviving Lakey-owned entities have any value or assets.
The Appellants argue that the bankruptcy court committed three major errors in finding that the Wolters were not creditors of the Lakeys' bankruptcy estate and that the Lakeys were entitled to their homestead exemption under 11 U.S.C. § 522(o). First, they argue that the bankruptcy court erred as a matter of law in applying Kansas law rather than Missouri law in determining whether to pierce Colony North Homes' ("CNH") corporate veil. Second, they argue that the bankruptcy court erred by ignoring uncontroverted facts that, pursuant to Missouri law, lead to the inevitable conclusion that the Wolters were creditors of the Lakeys. Finally, they argue that if the bankruptcy court had properly determined that the Wolters were creditors of the Lakeys, then it would have reached the conclusion that the Debtors put their non-exempt assets into their Sunset Property with intent to hinder, delay and defraud both the Wolters and
Appellants argue that the bankruptcy court erred as a matter of law in applying Kansas, rather than Missouri, law to determine whether to pierce CNH's corporate veil.
Appellants cite Missouri's tripartite test, as set forth in its leading case, Collet v. American National Stores, Inc.,
The Lakeys argue that Missouri's three part test is embodied in the eight factors used by the bankruptcy court and its review of the broad factors supports the same conclusion under Missouri law. The Appellants acknowledge the overlap between both, but focus on the second prong of the Collet test and argue that the bankruptcy court should have found that CNH's undercapitalization satisfied this prong.
Appellants argue that the bankruptcy court erred when it concluded that CNH was adequately capitalized. They argue that Missouri courts give more weight to undercapitalization, noting that Missouri courts routinely pierce the corporate veil of undercapitalized corporations because "undercapitalization is circumstantial evidence of an improper or reckless disregard for the rights of others."
There must be some evidence to support an inference of fraudulent intent from undercapitalization, and even under Collet, some evidence of improper motive is required to satisfy one of the elements necessary for piercing the corporate veil. Courts have used the term "undercapitalization" as a sort of proxy for the second element of the Collet formulation—improper motive.
The whole purpose of asking whether a corporation is "properly capitalized," is to determine its "financial responsibility."
If a corporation is financially responsible, whether by means of insurance or otherwise, the policy behind the second part of Collet is met.
In this case, although CNH may appear to have been undercapitalized in the accounting sense, there is no evidence of improper motive in setting up the corporation, in the sense of either knowingly or recklessly establishing it without the ability to pay potential judgments. CNH's federal tax returns showed that, except for 2003, the company was regularly losing money; its balance sheets did not tie-in year to year and did not balance; and both
The fact that the Wolters were unable to collect on their unforeseeable arbitration award does not furnish support for an inference of improper motive. CNH had sufficient funds to operate for eight years and until the dispute with the Wolters, the Lakey entities had only experienced typical disputes that any builder would routinely face. There was no history or pattern of dissatisfaction by CNH's customers. The Wolters' dispute proved to be an anomaly only after CNH could not remedy or ultimately pay an unusually high damage award. Mr. Lakey testified that he could not believe and never expected the arbitrator to enter an unexplained $600,000 award against CNH. "[U]ndercapitalization does not simply mean that a company might not have ready cash on hand in whatever amount a plaintiff thinks is necessary to satisfy that plaintiff's damage claims."
The Appellants' allegations that the Lakeys took actions that were imprudent or did not make good business sense are also insufficient. Errors in business judgment do not furnish support for an inference of improper purpose.
The Appellants allege that stripping assets to avoid the demands of creditors can satisfy the second element of Collet. The bankruptcy court found that the record showed no improper siphoning of funds or assets; that not one CNH asset was traced to the Lakeys' homestead; and that the Lakeys did not use corporate funds to pay their personal debts. The bankruptcy court found that the Wolters did not prove that Mr. Lakey improperly took money or assets out of CNH to thwart the Wolters' claim. The bankruptcy court found that the only loan to the Lakeys as shareholders in the amount of $315,000 was repaid. The bankruptcy court found that in 2003 the Lakeys loaned CNH $678,000, which netted the corporation approximately $365,000. The Wolters dispute this finding, arguing that the $678,000 amount was a cumulative loan amount based on the life of the company, not representative of loans only made in 2003. Appellants allege that the bankruptcy court erred because CNH's general ledger indicated that the Lakeys only loaned it $88,000 in 2003, although there were promissory notes totaling $118,000 for that year.
Appellants concede that with regard to the general ledger, the bankruptcy court stated that it was "not inclined to give more weight to these documents than the tax returns that were prepared by Keller & Owens and filed with the federal government."
Regardless of whether or not the bankruptcy court erred in finding that the loan transactions occurred in 2003 only or over the life of the corporation, as a result, $465,000 of liabilities went to CNC when it merged with CNH in February 2004. The bankruptcy court found that Mr. Lakey was listed as a creditor owed $486,000 in CNC's bankruptcy. Basically, Appellants' argument for improper siphoning is based on the Lakeys' reduction of the amount of their outstanding loan to CNH. They note that: "Loans from Shareholders at 12-31-2001 of $755,764
Even if this reduction qualifies as "siphoning," it still must be shown to be improper. The bankruptcy court specifically found that "[t]here is no evidence of co-mingled assets, improper dividends, or improper siphoning of corporate funds or assets. On balance, the record shows money flowed from the Lakeys personally, into the corporation, ultimately culminating in a six-figure loss to the Lakeys."
The bankruptcy court concluded the discussion by finding that it was "not seeing anything nefarious."
Appellants also argue that the bankruptcy court erred in failing to find that the Lakeys were alter egos of CNH, again asserting their arguments for a finding of undercapitalization and improper siphoning. These issues have already been addressed, and the bankruptcy court further found that CNH observed corporate formalities and there was no evidence of abuse of the corporate form. There were no facts showing deception. The bankruptcy court did not err in finding that the Wolters failed to meet their burden to prove that the Lakeys used CNH as a sham corporation to defraud them.
To prevail on an objection to the homestead exemption under 11 U.S.C.
The objecting party bears the burden of proof by a preponderance of the evidence.
The bankruptcy court, noting that the determination is a fact-intensive inquiry, set forth the various indicia of fraud, and held that the indicia and factors enumerated were not exhaustive and that the question is ultimately whether the debtor is fraudulently attempting to thwart his creditors rather than make an honest attempt to repay them. The bankruptcy court considered the various factors in light of the facts in this case, and held that the Appellants did not meet their burden of proving intent to hinder, delay or defraud a creditor.
The bankruptcy court found that the Lakeys were already planning to move to Kansas in May 2001, before the Wolters signed their construction contract with CNH in August 2001. By August 2002, Mr. Lakey told NASB of his intention and NASB was helping him finance the construction of the Sunset Property. Mr. Lakey testified that the reason he purchased a Kansas homestead for cash was because he and his wife wanted to live closer to family, and he had promised Mrs. Lakey a mortgage-free home in retirement.
Appellants suggest that Mr. Lakey's intent is suspect because he doubled the value of his homestead when he went from the $800,000 home on 139th Terrace to the $1.67 million Sunset Property. However, Lakey testified that he originally intended the 139th Terrace home to be a $1.3 million
Appellants also argue that the Lakeys delayed the arbitration in order to give them more time to acquire their new homestead. The bankruptcy court found that CNH sought to have the arbitrator disqualified because he was Mr. Lakey's competitor. Appellants also suggest that the Lakeys' acquisition of the Sunset Property was a "plan to put as much money as they possibly could into a homestead, ride out the problems with Wolters and then downsize their lavish house to a home that could be supported with their existing finances."
Appellants also argue that the bankruptcy court erred by ignoring material, uncontroverted facts relating to Mr. Lakey's intent based on his knowledge of problems with the Wolters' house. They allege that the bankruptcy court erred by failing to admit the engineering reports that detailed problems with their home.
Appellants also attempt to show intent to hinder or delay creditors by arguing that there was no business purpose for the merger of CNH and CNC, therefore CNC was a sham with no other purpose than to hinder or delay creditors. The bankruptcy court found that CNH's merger with CNC was part of the restructuring that was done when the Lakeys began winding down many of their businesses in preparation for retirement. Appellants have the burden of proof and fail to show how the merger with CNC shows intent to hinder or delay creditors.
The bankruptcy court conducted a four day trial with substantial exhibits and the opportunity to assess the credibility of witnesses, resulting in a fifteen page opinion. The bankruptcy court was able to observe the testimony of both of the Lakeys and found that testimony credible. This Court cannot find that the bankruptcy court erred in finding that the Appellants did not meet the required burden of proof on their objection to the Lakeys' homestead exemption under 11 U.S.C. § 522(o).