CLAIRE V. EAGAN, District Judge.
Now before the Court are Defendant's Motion for Summary Judgment and Brief in Support Thereof (Dkt. # 23) and Plaintiffs' Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on the Issue of Whether the Transfer at Issue was Fraudulent (Dkt. # 27). The parties do not dispute that defendant Douglas Richardson embezzled a substantial amount of money from his employer, Smart Prong Technologies, Inc. (Smart Prong), and there is also no dispute that Richardson transferred his shares of Smart Prong stock back to Smart Prong immediately after his embezzlement was discovered. Plaintiffs are shareholders who allege that the transfer of shares was fraudulent under the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act, OKLA. STAT. tit. 24, § 112
Smart Prong employed Richardson as its chief financial officer (CFO) beginning on December 29, 2013. Dkt. # 23-1, at 1. Jim Weaver is the founder of Smart Prong and the chairman of its board of directors.
On December 16, 2015, the Missouri Securities Division (MSD) of the Office of the Secretary of State opened an investigation into Douglas A. Richardson, CPA, LLC and Richardson based on anonymous information that he was receiving large sums of money from Missouri residents, and the investigation revealed that Richardson embezzled approximately $4.5 million from Smart Prong.
In addition to Richardson's debt to Smart Prong, he also received loans from various shareholders of Smart Prong, including Dave Risi, Drinv LLC, and MCRA LLC, and plaintiffs claim that Richardson owes them $402,021.25 for unpaid loans.
On March 6, 2019, plaintiffs filed a petition in Tulsa County District Court seeking to set aside Richardson's transfer of stock to Smart Prong, and they seek a court order allowing them to levy on the shares. Dkt. # 2-1, at 12. Smart Prong removed the case to this Court on the basis of diversity jurisdiction. Richardson did not retain counsel to defend against plaintiffs' claims, and he has filed a
Summary judgment pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 56 is appropriate where there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
"When the moving party has carried its burden under Rule 56(c), its opponent must do more than simply show that there is some metaphysical doubt as to the material facts. . . . Where the record taken as a whole could not lead a rational trier of fact to find for the non-moving party, there is no `genuine issue for trial.'"
Smart Prong argues that it is a legitimate creditor of Richardson and, regardless of his fraudulent activities, the transfer of his Smart Prong stock back to the company was not improper under the UFTA. Dkt. # 23, at 8-9. Smart Prong claims that it accepted transfer of the stock in good faith for reasonably equivalent value, and the transfer is not voidable as to Smart Prong. Plaintiff responds that the stock transfer to Smart Prong was fraudulent, because Richardson has not received a reasonably equivalent value for the transfer and there is ample evidence that Richardson engaged in fraudulent conduct in his business relations with plaintiffs.
Under OKLA. STAT. tit. 24, § 116,
As to actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud a creditor, courts may consider the following factors to determine if a transfer was fraudulent:
OKLA. STAT. tit. 24, § 116(B). However, even if a debtor engaged in a fraudulent transfer, a transaction is not voidable against a transferee who "took in good faith and for a reasonably equivalent value . . . ." OKLA. STAT. tit. 24, § 120(A).
Many of plaintiffs' arguments concern Richardson's fraudulent conduct solely in relation to his dealings with plaintiffs, but Smart Prong does not dispute that Richardson engaged in this conduct. However, Smart Prong argues that plaintiffs' litigation with Richardson and his efforts to hide assets occurred more than 18 months after the stock transfer that is at issue in this case, and Smart Prong claims that there is no evidence that it was aware of Richardson's conduct in relation to plaintiffs when the stock transfer occurred. Dkt. # 32, at 3-4. Plaintiff has cited no authority suggesting that a debtor's post-transfer conduct has any bearing on whether the transfer between a debtor and a potentially good faith transferee is fraudulent under the UFTA. For the purpose of this Opinion and Order, the Court will assume that Richardson engaged in fraudulent acts in his business relations with plaintiffs, but this has little relevance to plaintiffs' UFTA claim against Smart Prong. Even if Smart Prong had been aware of Richardson's dealings with plaintiffs, it is undisputed that Smart Prong is a legitimate creditor of Richardson and it could take steps to collect on that debt. The Court will focus on the facts known or knowable to Smart Prong at the time the stock transfer was made in order to determine whether the transfer should be set aside under the UFTA.
Plaintiffs rely on the § 116(B) factors in an attempt to establish that the stock transfer between Richardson and Smart Prong was made with the intent to hide Richardson's assets from plaintiffs. Plaintiffs argue that Richardson was an insider when the transfer occurred, because Richardson had just resigned his position as CFO of Smart Prong. Dkt. # 27, at 9. The statute defines "insider" to include a "director, officer, or person in control" of a corporation. OKLA. STAT. tit. 24, § 113.7(4). However, it is undisputed that Smart Prong had discovered Richardson's misconduct and the transfer of his stock back to Smart Prong was intended to partially redress his debt to the corporation. Smart Prong and Richardson were in an adversarial position at the time of the transfer and, even if Richardson had just resigned as CFO as Smart Prong, he was not receiving preferential treatment due to his prior employment with Smart Prong. Plaintiffs also argue that Smart Prong threatened Richardson with suit in order to convince him to assign his stock to Smart Prong. Dkt. # 27, at 9-10. This argument is supported primarily by Richardson's failure to respond to a request for admission that Smart Prong "threatened [Richardson] with a lawsuit after [he] made the confession" concerning his fraudulent conduct. Dkt. # 26-1, at 8. Plaintiffs admit that Richardson's admission is not binding on Smart Prong, and there is no other evidence suggesting that Smart Prong threatened to sue Richardson before the stock transfer occurred. Even if this were true, Smart Prong would have had a legitimate basis to bring a lawsuit against Richardson and this would not have been an empty threat. The Court does not find that Richardson's alleged status as an insider or the possibility that Smart Prong threatened to sue Richardson have any tendency to show that the stock transfer was intended to defraud plaintiffs.
The primary argument between the parties is whether Richardson received "reasonably equivalent value" for the transfer of stock back to Smart Prong. Plaintiffs contend that Richardson transferred his shares of stock to Smart Prong without receiving anything of value. Smart Prong argues that Richardson owed a debt to Smart Prong and it was not required to pay him face value for the stock. Dkt. # 32, at 8. Instead, Richardson will receive a credit against his debt to Smart Prong when the shares are sold pursuant to the terms of the mitigation trust.
The Court finds that Richardson received a reasonably equivalent value for the shares of stock that he returned to Smart Prong following the discovery of his embezzlement. The UFTA defines "value" as the transfer of property to secure or satisfy an antecedent debt. OKLA. STAT. tit. 24, § 115.A. There is no dispute that Richardson owed an antecedent debt to Smart Prong at the time the transfer was made and, although the parties dispute the value of the stock, there is undisputed evidence that the eventual sale of the stock will be credited against Richardson's debt to Smart Prong. Plaintiffs claim that Richardson will receive nothing from the sale of stock due to the rescission of the settlement agreement, but this statement is not supported by any evidence and it is not a logical implication from the mere fact of the rescission of the Settlement Agreement. Plaintiffs complain that Smart Prong did not give any consideration for the transfer of Richardson's shares, but they do not explain what consideration other than an offset against Richardson's existing debt would be reasonable under the circumstances. The mitigation trust established by Smart Prong for the benefit of shareholders may also incidentally benefit Richardson, because he will likely receive a greater credit against his debt to Smart Prong than if the shares had been sold immediately upon transfer. The procedure used by Smart Prong to obtain the return of Richardson's shares of Smart Prong stock does not suggest that Smart Prong was attempting to defraud other creditors of Richardson and, in fact, plaintiffs will eventually receive some value once the shares are sold pursuant to the terms of the mitigation trust.
The Court will consider other statutory factors concerning the alleged fraudulent nature of the transfer at issue, even if the factors are not specifically addressed by the parties. Richardson did not retain control of the stock after it was transferred to Smart Prong, and the transfer was not concealed from shareholders. Weaver states that Smart Prong sent notice of Richardson's actions and the terms of the mitigation trust to shareholders, and Risi testified in his deposition that he received this notice from Smart Prong. Dkt. # 23-1, at 3; Dkt. # 23-2, at 5. The parties dispute whether the transfer of stock was for substantially all of Richardson's assets, but the parties have not provided sufficient evidence for a determination of this issue. Plaintiffs have alleged that Richardson engaged in actions to hide his assets, but there is no evidence that Smart Prong engaged in any conduct to conceal the stock transfer or to hide its own assets from shareholders. Richardson is currently in custody awaiting sentencing on federal charges of wire fraud and money laundering, and there is no danger that he will abscond.
The Court has considered the totality of the circumstances and finds no evidence suggesting that Richardson and Smart Prong engaged in a fraudulent transfer under the UFTA. Neither plaintiffs nor Smart Prong dispute that Richardson engaged in fraudulent conduct in relation to Smart Prong's investors, but there is no evidence that Smart Prong knew the extent of Richardson's conduct at the time the stock transfer occurred. Smart Prong was a good faith creditor of Richardson when the transfer occurred, and the stock is currently being held in a mitigation trust to maximize the benefit to Smart Prong's shareholders, including plaintiffs. This procedure will also have the incidental effect of maximizing the credit that Richardson will receive against the debt he owes to Smart Prong, and plaintiffs' assertions that Richardson has received nothing of value are meritless. This is not a case where a debtor engaged in a transfer to hide his assets from his creditors.