Michael A. Fagone, United States Bankruptcy Judge.
On November 19, 2019, the Court conducted a consolidated evidentiary hearing on three matters: (i) Count I of the Debtor's complaint against Bayview Loan Servicing, LLC ("Bayview") in Adversary Proceeding No. 17-2065 [AP Dkt. No. 51]; (ii) the Debtor's objection to Bayview's claim [Dkt. No. 111], Bayview's response [Dkt. No. 114], and the Debtor's reply [Dkt. No. 118]; and (iii) confirmation of the Debtor's Second Amended Plan of Reorganization [Dkt. No. 154] and Bayview's objection to that plan [Dkt. No. 181]. During the hearing, the Debtor and Bayview agreed on the terms of a modified plan and they asked the Court to enter an order confirming the plan, as modified. That order has since been entered. See [Dkt. No. 259]. In light of the consensual resolution of the disputed confirmation issues, the Court is left to determine the claim objection in the chapter 11 case and the remainder of the Debtor's complaint in the adversary proceeding (namely, Count I, in which the Debtor asks the Court to determine that Bayview holds no claims against the Debtor, its property, or the estate, and to disallow any claims that Bayview may assert). Because both of these matters seek the same relief, this order will be entered on the docket in the chapter 11 case and on the docket in the adversary proceeding. For ease of reference, the Court will refer to Count I of the adversary proceeding and the Debtor's objection to claim in the chapter 11 case collectively as the "Objection to Claim." After the hearing on November 19, the Court entered an order permitting Bayview to amend its proof of claim to correct the amount of prepetition
By the Proof of Claim, Bayview asserts a claim against the Debtor's estate secured by a mortgage (the "Mortgage") on real property of the Debtor in Kittery Point, Maine (the "Property"). The Mortgage attached to the Proof of Claim reflects a transfer of certain rights from the Debtor to Middlebury Equity Partners ("MEP") in 2005 in exchange for a loan evidenced by a promissory note in the face amount of $600,000 (the "Note"). The Note and an assignment of the Mortgage from MEP to Bayview are also attached to the Proof of Claim and, together with the Mortgage, form the basis of Bayview's claim.
In the adversary proceeding, the Debtor asserts that the Note and Mortgage are unenforceable because (a) the Debtor did not exist when those documents were executed, and (b) no consideration was exchanged for the execution of the Note and Mortgage. In the chapter 11 case, the Debtor asserts that Bayview's claim should be disallowed due to a failure of consideration —a theory the Debtor seeks to distinguish from the lack of consideration theory advanced in the adversary proceeding. Specifically, the Debtor alleges that MEP promised to pay off Wells Fargo's prior mortgage on the Property in the amount of $550,000 and to disburse $39,835 to the Debtor in exchange for the rights the Debtor granted to MEP in the Note and the Mortgage—i.e., the right to repayment of the $600,000 loan and an interest in the Property securing that right of repayment. The Debtor alleges that MEP could have performed these promises at any time prior to the commencement of the chapter 11 case, but never did.
To support these allegations, the Debtor points to, among other things, the following documents (all of which were admitted in evidence at the hearing):
Neither the Bankruptcy Code nor the Bankruptcy Rules establish particular burdens of proof for claims or claim objections. See
The Debtor may overcome the presumptive validity of the Proof of Claim by producing "substantial evidence." See
Here, it is unnecessary to plumb the exact contours of the substantial evidence standard because regardless of how it may be defined, the standard was not met. The evidence offered by the Debtor was designed to bolster its theories that Bayview's claim is unenforceable due to a lack, or a failure, of consideration. As the Court concluded during the hearing, that line of attack—and all of its many iterations —is doubly foreclosed: first, by the Delinquency Repayment Agreement ("DRA") executed by the Debtor and Bayview in 2009 [Jt. Ex. C] and the waivers in that document explicitly acknowledging the validity of the Note, the Mortgage, and the debt; and second, by the preclusive effect of the final order in the state court action between the Debtor and Bayview concerning the validity of the Note and Mortgage [Jt. Ex. E].
These conclusions depend, in part, on the events that gave rise to the DRA and the state court litigation, which can be stitched together by resort to the parties' stipulation [Dkt. No. 243] and the evidence admitted during the November 2019 hearing. Before the Debtor acquired the Property, it was owned by James Austin. [Stip. ¶ 2.] In 2003, Mr. Austin granted a mortgage on the Property to Wells Fargo to secure a note in the amount of $550,000. See [Jt. Ex. B]. Later, in March 2005, Daniel Systo signed the Note and Mortgage, ostensibly on behalf of the Debtor, although the Debtor had not been formed as a legal entity and did not own the Property when the documents were signed. In April 2005, the Debtor was formed as an entity, the Note and Mortgage were acknowledged, and the Mortgage was assigned to Bayview. [Stip. ¶¶ 3-5.] The following month, Mr. Austin transferred the Property to the Debtor. [Stip. ¶ 6.]
In June 2005, Bayview purchased the Note and the Mortgage from MEP for approximately $600,000. [Stip. ¶ 7.] The deed by which the Debtor acquired the Property was recorded in 2006. [Stip. ¶ 8.] The following year, the Mortgage and the
At some point, the Austins became members of the Debtor, though it is not clear how that transpired. See [Stip. ¶ 23]. Mrs. Austin became a manager of the Debtor in January 2009, [Stip. ¶ 23], and shortly after that, the Debtor executed the DRA, see [Jt. Ex. C]. By doing so, the Debtor agreed:
[Jt. Ex. C ¶ 14.] The DRA also included a so-called "savings clause" acknowledging that the Debtor's rights and remedies under the Mortgage would not be diminished or released by virtue of the DRA. [Jt. Ex. C ¶ 15.]
After the execution of the DRA, Bayview dismissed its foreclosure complaint against the Debtor. [Stip. ¶ 18.] The Debtor made payments on the Note for a time but later stopped and then sued Bayview in Maine Superior Court seeking a declaratory judgment that the Note and the Mortgage were invalid. See [Jt. Ex. D]. In 2016, the Superior Court granted summary judgment to Bayview, concluding that the DRA was valid and that the releases in it extinguished the Debtor's cause of action to invalidate the Note and Mortgage due to a lack of consideration.
A "judgment rendered in a state court is entitled to the same preclusive effect in federal court as it would be given within the state in which it was rendered."
In this case, each of the various the legal theories supporting the Objection to Claim are foreclosed by claim preclusion. The Debtor and Bayview were involved in the litigation in the Maine state courts and are again embroiled in litigation here. There can be no question that there is a valid final judgment in the state court action. Application of the third element of claim preclusion is only slightly less straightforward. In the litigation before the Maine Superior Court, the Debtor challenged the validity of the Note and Mortgage on the grounds that consideration was lacking at the outset of the transaction because MEP did not advance any funds in exchange for the Note. See [Jt. Ex. D p. 6]. When it awarded summary judgment to Bayview, the Superior Court determined that attack was barred by the DRA. The Debtor now seeks to challenge the enforceability of the Note and Mortgage on the grounds that consideration was lacking at the outset of the transaction and that consideration later failed. The lack of consideration theory was actually litigated in state court and may not be relitigated here. The failure of consideration theory is also barred because it could have been litigated in state court. The Debtor asserts that it could not have litigated this question in state court because, at the time of that litigation and until the petition date, MEP could still have performed its obligation to advance funds. [Dkt. No. 118 p. 2.] This contention lacks merit. The "basic wrong" for which the Debtor sought relief in state court was the alleged failure to advance funds in exchange for the Note. With the failure of consideration theory, the Debtor seeks relief for that same "basic wrong" arising out of the same set of facts. The timing of the alleged failure is not as significant as the Debtor believes. Both theories relating to consideration allege a breach of the same term of the Note—the obligation to advance funds in exchange for the Debtor's promise of repayment—and the same conduct —a failure to advance funds, at the time of the transaction or any time thereafter. Cf.
During the evidentiary hearing on the Objection to Claim, the Debtor asserted that Bayview does not qualify as a holder in due course and, as such, cannot collect on a note for which no funds were ever advanced. Bayview's status as a holder in due course was raised in the state court action, and the Superior Court determined that it was unnecessary to resolve the issue in light of the waiver contained in the DRA. [Jt. Ex. D p. 8]. In the course of the consolidated hearing in this Court, the Debtor also claimed, for the first time, that the so-called "savings clause" clause in the DRA should permit the Debtor to press its failure of consideration claim.
The Proof of Claim sets forth the following components of Bayview's claim:
Principal $550,045.37 Interest Through June 22, 2017 $217,296.81 Default Interest Through June 22, 2017 $212,989.37 Escrow Advances $8,671.06 Late Charges $2,365.41 Corporate Advances: Attorney Fees, $248,758.29 Property Inspection Fees, & Court Costs Total Debt $1,240,126.31
[POC No. 2-2.]
During the consolidated hearing, the parties asked the Court to determine the amount of Bayview's allowed secured claim under 11 U.S.C. § 506, as of November 19, 2019. See also [Dkt. No. 259, ¶ I(A)]. Under 11 U.S.C. § 506(b), the holder of an allowed secured claim may recover postpetition interest and reasonable postpetition fees and expenses provided for under the agreement that gave rise to the claim to the extent that the claim is secured by property with a value greater than the amount of the claim. See
As of November 19, 2019, a payoff statement for the Debtor's obligation to Bayview reflected the components of Bayview's claim as follows:
Principal $550,045.37 Interest Through November 19, 2019 $310,029.68 Default Interest Through November 19, 2019 $305,722.24 Escrow Advances $7,361.85 Late Charges $2,365.41 Corporate Advances: Attorney Fees, Property $460,008.29 Inspection Fees, & Court Costs Total Debt $1,635,532.84
[Def. Ex. 6.] The payoff statement did not include certain legal fees that Bayview incurred from October 1, 2019 to November 19, 2019. After the hearing, Bayview filed affidavits showing that, in that time period, it incurred attorney fees and expenses of $6,563.80 for its representation by Bernstein Shur and $31,236.10 for its representation by Drummond & Drummond. [Dkt. No. 255 & 256.]
Between the petition date and November 19, 2019, interest and default interest continued to accrue on the Debtor's obligation. Despite the Debtor's suggestions to the contrary, the parties' contractual agreements about the interest rate and the default interest rate "presumptively apply" in determinations under section 506(b) "so long as [those agreements] are enforceable under state law and equitable considerations do not dictate otherwise[.]"
Between the petition date and November 19, 2019, Bayview also continued to incur legal fees and costs defending the Note and Mortgage in the state court, the chapter 11 case, and the adversary proceeding. The Note provides that Bayview may recover costs and reasonable legal
[Jt. Ex. A-1.]