Posts Tagged ‘South Florida’

What constitutes a transfer “for value?

November 2011

International Management Associates, LLC, and several related entities (the “Debtors”) were operated as the instruments of a Ponzi scheme. A receiver ultimately filed voluntary petitions in the bankruptcy court seeking relief for each of the Debtors under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code.

The Trustee then instituted a number of adversary proceedings in the bankruptcy court seeking to avoid and to recover distributions that had been made to the investors in the Debtors. The Trustee claimed that transfers to the investors prior to the collapse of the Ponzi scheme were “fraudulent transfers”. The investors asserted an affirmative defense claiming that the transfers were “for value.” The Trustee moved for partial summary judgment. The bankruptcy court denied the motion, effectively upholding the availability of the investors’ affirmative defense.

The Debtors were formed purportedly to manage and operate them as hedge funds, each of which was structured either as a limited liability company or a limited partnership. In reality, the Debtors were used to operate a fraudulent Ponzi scheme whereby capital contributions made to the Debtors by later equity investors were used to repay earlier investors more than their investments were actually worth, as well as fictitious profits. This was done to perpetuate the illusion that the Debtors had positive investment gains, to keep existing investors from seeking recovery of their equity investments, and to induce prospective investors to make new equity investments.

The Court’s acceptance of that assumption should not be interpreted as a ruling on any factual or legal matter other than the “for value” issue of law: the sole issue argued and before us.

Each of the investor defendants made a capital contribution through execution of a limited liability company agreement, a limited partnership agreement, and/or a subscription agreement with one or more of the Debtors such that each investor defendant held an equity interest in one or more of the Debtors, denominated as a membership unit or limited partnership interest. At some point during the operation of the Ponzi scheme, each investor defendant received one or more transfers of property from one or more of the Debtors, representing returns of principal and/or purported profits on their equity investments.

With respect to Ponzi schemes, transfers made in furtherance of the scheme are presumed to have been made with the intent to defraud for purposes of recovering the payments.

However a transferee with an affirmative defense where the transferee acts in good faith and “[gives] value to the debtor in exchange for such transfer . . . .” The term “value” is defined to include “satisfaction or securing of a present or antecedent debt of the debtor.”

In the case of Ponzi schemes, the general rule is that a defrauded investor gives “value” to the Debtor in exchange for a return of the principal amount of the investment, but not as to any payments in excess of principal.

Any transfers over and above the amount of the principal — i.e., for fictitious profits — are not made for “value” because they exceed the scope of the investors’ fraud claim and may be subject to recovery by a plan trustee.

The Trustee hangs his hat on a line of cases holding that transfers to redeem an equity investment in an insolvent entity (initially made free of fraud) cannot constitute a transfer “for value.

In each of these decisions, investors exchanged shares of stock for other security interests, notes, or real property, all at a time when the corporations were insolvent. The courts held that the exchanges constituted fraudulent transfers because the stock returned to the corporations as part of the exchange was, at that time, virtually worthless due to the corporate insolvency.

The Trustee contends that these decisions should apply here because the Debtors were all insolvent at the time the transfers to the investor defendants were made, and any such transfers served only to redeem their worthless equity interests. The court disagreed, and found the argument to be unpersuasive for the simple reason that none of these decisions involved Ponzi schemes. Stated differently, none of the stockholders in those cases were fraudulently induced into making their initial investments so that none possessed fraud claims that would be satisfied in whole or in part by virtue of the later transfers.

 

Sidney Turner

www.SidneyTurnerllc.com

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How Important is a Date?

November 2011

Herbert A. Allen, the chief executive of the powerful investment bank, Allen & Company, was accused of forging his dying cousin’s signature to protect a family ranch from his cousin’s creditor.

Excelsior Capital, the creditor — which filed the complaint in Federal District Court in Manhattan — claims that Herb Allen and his cousin Terry Allen Kramer, a well-known Broadway producer, forged the signature of C. Robert Allen III, the first cousin of Herb and the brother of Terry.

The signature in question resulted in a transfer of Robert Allen’s minority interest in an Allen family ranch in Arizona into a limited liability company. By moving the families’ interests in the property into an L.L.C., the lawsuit said, the Allen’s thus could protect the property from Excelsior Capital, a commercial lender that had a $25 million judgment against Robert Allen.

Robert Allen, 80, died on March 9, 2011, after a lengthy illness, at St. Francis Hospital on Long Island. He had been at the hospital since Feb. 25, according to hospital records. The notarization of Robert Allen’s signature states that he signed the document in Manhattan on March 2, 2011, at the offices of Allen & Company on Fifth Avenue.

Thus giving rise to the claim of forgery. Good try but bad execution.

Sidney Turner

www.SidneyTurnerllc.com

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Shareholder of Corp A Cannot Seek Dissolution of Corp B

October 2011

Court rules that shareholder of Corporation A cannot utilize de facto merger doctrine to seek dissolution of Corporation B.

The petitioner in this case sought to dissolve a corporation of which, he was not a shareholder on the theory that it had entered into a de facto merger with another corporation in which he held a 25% stock interest. A New York Supreme Court dismissed the petition, noting that the petitioner cited “no authority that would allow a court to utilize the doctrine of de facto merger to shift his shareholder interest in one corporation to another corporation for the purpose of forced dissolution of the new corporation.”

 

 

Sidney Turner

www.SidneyTurnerllc.com

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Interim Injunction Restraining Directors

September 2011

A Manhattan Supreme Court granted an interim injunction restraining directors of a Delaware corporation from committing acts that constitute grounds for dissolution.  The unusual preliminary injunction in a dispute between two shareholders of a New York based Delaware Corporation, requiring that the directors “not commit acts that constitute grounds for dissolution under NY law, and that corporate records are made available.  The question is how does a director comply with an injunction against “oppression” of a minority shareholder?

 

 

Sidney Turner

www.SidneyTurnerllc.com

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Tax dischargeable in bankruptcy.

September 2011

Did you know it is not uncommon for taxpayers seeking bankruptcy advice about tax liabilities to be told that taxes are not dischargeable? However, while generally they are non dischargeable such statements are incorrect. While there are a number of complex rules that need to be satisfied, taxpayers should know that Federal Income Taxes may be dischargeable if the tax liability satisfies the Bankruptcy code requirements.
Generally, taxpayers may discharge federal income taxes, depending on the age of the debt. Thus, they may be dischargeable in a Chapter 7 if ALL of the following criteria are met.

1. The tax is paid toward a year for which a tax return is due more than 3 years prior to the filing of the bankruptcy petition.
2. A tax return was filed more than two years prior to the filing of the bankruptcy petition.
3. The tax was assessed more than 240 days prior to the filing of the bankruptcy petition.
4. In addition, the tax must not be due to a fraudulent tax return and the taxpayer has not attempted to evade or defeat the tax.

The taxpayer who contemplates bankruptcy should consult with a professional who understands the nuances of the dischargeability of taxes as provided under the bankruptcy code. Because there are so many timing rules that have to be complied with, the timing of filing the bankruptcy petition is crucial in order to obtain the desired fresh start through the bankruptcy process.

Sidney Turner

www.SidneyTurnerllc.com

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An SPE is a legally distinct entity with a limited life

September 2011

An SPE is a legally distinct entity with a limited life, usually an LLC, created to carry out a narrow pre-defined activity or series of transactions for a “sponsor” company. SPEs can serve legitimate business purposes by raising capital for their sponsors and by isolating and homogenizing cash flows and business risks of a specific asset class. SPEs are also used frequently for tax purposes, especially for cross-jurisdictional tax planning and for optimally allocating tax benefits among investor classes.

 

General Growth Properties, Inc., which filed the largest real-estate Chapter 11 case in U.S. history. In connection with approving the debtor-in-possession financing facility, Judge Gropper permitted affiliated debtors to use excess cash collateral from bankruptcy-remote special purpose entities which, to the surprise of many market participants, were included in the Chapter 11 proceedings.

In connection with seeking approval of the Company’s proposed debtor-in-possession facility (the “DIP Facility”), the Company also sought use of cash collateral from separately organized subsidiary bankruptcy-remote special purpose entities (“SPEs”). The property owned by each of these SPEs was intended to secure only the obligations of the pre-petition lenders to the SPE owning the property (the “SPE Lenders”). Arguing that the value of the collateral in certain of the SPEs is sufficient to protect the interests of the SPE Lenders, the Company proposed that excess cash collateral from rents be made available to support the DIP Facility.

Several pre-petition agents for the SPE Lenders (the “Pre-Petition SPE Agents”) filed objections to the Company’s proposed DIP Facility on behalf of the SPE Lenders. The Commercial Mortgage Securities Association and the Mortgage Bankers Association also filed an amici curia brief with the court addressing the implications of the proposed use of cash collateral on commercial real estate finance.

 

Sidney Turner

www.SidneyTurnerllc.com

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Condo community turns to bankruptcy to remain solvent

September 2011

This is a great article by Daniel Vasquez  a Sun Sentinel Columnist about a subject close to my heart.  I have been talking about this for years. This shows how you can get an out of control situation back under control through the power of bankruptcy court.  I will send more later. Enjoy Daniel’s article

Sidney Turner

www.SidneyTurnerLLC.com

Daniel Vasquez

Daniel Vasquez

Palm Beach County condo community is turning to an unusual solution to deal with foreclosure-related problems that are sapping its finances: Bankruptcy court. The approach, experts say, could point the way for other condo and homeowner communities struggling with financial problems because owners can’t pay monthly assessments.

In 2010, The Spa at Sunset Isles — with 232 units in Royal Palm Beach — was facing several common problems confronting South Florida communities. It had a large number of homeowners falling into foreclosure and unable to make mortgage or maintenance payments. Banks were reluctant to take title to “underwater” properties worth less than the mortgages owed. Last year nearly half of the owners — 104 — were in foreclosure and 160 had stopped paying maintenance fees.

Last summer the community had a bank balance of about $25,000 and was $126,000 in debt to vendors and creditors. It had to raise monthly assessments from an average of about $358 per month to $400 per month — depending on size of each home — and required owners to pay special assessments.
So to get out of financial trouble, the Spa’s board decided to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in August 2010 in the United States Bankruptcy Court in the Southern District of Florida West Palm Beach Division, said John T. Kinsey, the association’s attorney.

“This is new legal ground,” he said. “We have done our research and believe this is the first condo bankruptcy case of its kind in the nation.” Kinsey was joined in representing the association by Boca Raton attorney Bradley S. Shraiberg, who also specializes in bankruptcy law.

Fast forward to today: The community has emerged from Chapter 11 and now has more than $490,000 in its bank accounts and the board hopes to drop monthly assessments from a current average of $400 to $251 in 2012. John Bazos, president of the condominium association, said the board also plans to make capital improvements to the property, including repairing roads and fixing a broken water fountain at the entrance.

“The community had a complete turnaround from being destitute to being prosperous,” Bazos said. “The result is increasing the real estate value because the financial strength we were able to gain via the legal avenues of Chapter 11.”

The community still faces financial difficulties because of the downturn in the market and the region’s pressing foreclosure problems. Five years ago, a two-bedroom, two bath home in the community sold for about $280,000. Today a similar home sells for around $45,000, say board members. But Kinsey said the bankruptcy filing saved the community from financial disaster.

Kinsey said the Spa’s board had to pay about $1,000 in court fees to file for bankruptcy and accrued about $50,000 in legal fees in the process.

By filing for bankruptcy protection in federal court, the community obtained court orders requiring banks to begin paying monthly assessments to the association and take title of homes in foreclosure, Kinsey said. Once the banks take title to units, they are required by Florida law to pay the monthly assessments for those units. And while most people think of financial reorganization under Chapter 11 as being only for major corporations, such as automobile companies and major airlines, condo and homeowners communities are also entitled to file for bankruptcy.

Some of the Spa’s homes had been locked in foreclosure proceedings for as long as 36 months, which meant that the association was unable to collect assessments from previous owners that had defaulted on mortgages or from the banks that hold the mortgage notes.

Florida laws could not achieve the same results, Kinsey said, because the statutes do not require banks to pay assessments before they take title nor require them to foreclose on a particular deadline. But in bankruptcy court, Chief Judge Paul G. Hyman had the authority to make the banks involved start paying the association their share of monthly assessments.

That’s because bankruptcy laws allow any entity that pays to maintain a bank’s collateral to recover its costs. In this case, the board was paying to maintain the common areas of the homeowners community, which are tied contractually to home loans in a shared community and considered part of the bank’s collateral. The next step was Hyman’s order, handed down in February, which enabled the association to force the banks to take title to units independent of their mortgage foreclosure actions.

“The association had to file Chapter 11 in order to accomplish any and of this,” Kinsey said. So far one bank has complied with Hyman’s orders and the association has begun filing lien foreclosure suits against the rest, Kinsey said.

Bazos said the community’s budget and morale are in the best shape in years.

“Our owners are very happy because their properties are standing on financially sound ground and the properties are easier to sell because you don’t have an association that is in default and you have an association that is able to make improvements to the property.”

dvasquez@tribune.com or 954-356-4219 or 561-243-6686. Daniel Vasquez‘ condo column runs Wednesdays in Your Money and at SunSentinel.com/condos. Check out Daniel’s Condos & HOAs blog for news, information and tips related to life in community associations at SunSentinel.com/condoblog. You can also read his consumer column Mondays in Your Money and at sunsentinel.com/vasquez.

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Did you know Phantom Income in Shareholder Buy-Out Agreement

September 2011

 Phantom Income in Shareholder Buy-Out Agreement

If you have recently been bought out and received a Schedule K-1 tax form from your old company for last year that allocates to a substantial net income sum that you never received. Isn’t it outrageous, that former business partners are shifting taxes on earnings that stayed with the company for their benefit?

If as the selling shareholder, member or partner did not foresee the possibility of a positive net income allocation for that portion of the tax year preceding the buy-out’s effective date, and did not negotiate a tax payment distribution in the buy-out agreement to the extent of any non-distributed allocation of net income, you are likely to be writing a bigger check to Uncle Sam.

For example a firm of four brothers organized as a corporation which, as is typically done, elected for pass-through partnership tax treatment as a subchapter “S” corporation. The plaintiff was a 25% shareholder of the corporation. The majority shareholders filed a dissolution proceeding which was resolved by a stipulation and order of settlement. Under the stipulation, plaintiff received $150,000 in exchange for surrendering his interests in the corporation.

A follow-up lawsuit was triggered by plaintiff’s receipt the next year of an allegedly “untruthful” K-1 from his former firm allocating $75,000 net income to the plaintiff, which plaintiff denied receiving. Plaintiff sued his former firm and his three brothers individually, alleging that the $75,000 was allocated to him to lower their own personal tax liabilities; that prior to plaintiff’s departure in 2007, the firm routinely made distributions to cover the partners’ personal taxes; and that the defendants were liable for the $25,000 in additional taxes owed by plaintiff on his reported K-1 income.

The plaintiff moved for partial summary judgment against the firm defendants, for a determination that they are obligated to reimburse plaintiff for the personal taxes due on the $75,000 he never received, based on a provision in the 2007 stipulation of settlement in the dissolution case:

“Upon surrender by [plaintiff] of his shares of stock in the respondent [firm] . . . the respondent will hold plaintiff harmless for any liability for the payment of taxes or other debts of the respondent which exist December 31, 2007.

The court rejects plaintiff’s reliance on the provision and denies his motion. The hold-harmless provision, the court writes,

“does not support plaintiff’s interpretation that the defendants agreed to pay his personal income taxes. The settlement agreement was made within the context of a corporate dissolution proceeding and the “taxes” clearly refer to corporate, not personal, taxes.”

 

Sidney Turner

www.SidneyTurnerllc.com

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Did you know about issues involving business entity ownership interests?

September 2011

1)   Inadequate and defective documentation of ownership interest in a business is an all too common feature of closely held businesses and, after a dispute arise, litigation over an assert claim by adversely effected business partner’s standing (right) to sue is challenged.

The reasons for this state of affairs are many and diverse, e.g.: The owners lack a sophisticated understanding of the legal formalities involved in an ownership interest in the chosen form of business entity. The owners are unable or unwilling to spend the money for necessary legal and accounting services. The owners are family members or long-time friends who trust one another and believe they don’t need any written agreement or certification of ownership interests.

The usual issue is whether the complaining party ever became a shareholder or, if the case involves a limited liability company, ever held a membership interest. This type of dispute has been the subject of many disputes. However many variations arise.

 

2)    A Manhattan Supreme Court granted an interim injunction restraining directors of a Delaware corporation from committing acts that constitute grounds for dissolution.  The unusual preliminary injunction in a dispute between two shareholders of a New York based Delaware Corporation, requiring that the directors “not commit acts that constitute grounds for dissolution under NY law, and that corporate records are made available.  The question is how does a director comply with an injunction against “oppression” of a minority shareholder?

  

3)    Court rules that shareholder of Corporation A cannot utilize de facto merger doctrine to seek dissolution of Corporation B. The petitioner in this case sought to dissolve a corporation of which, he was not a shareholder on the theory that it had entered into a de facto merger with another corporation in which he held a 25% stock interest. A New York Supreme Court dismissed the petition, noting that the petitioner cited “no authority that would allow a court to utilize the doctrine of de facto merger to shift his shareholder interest in one corporation to another corporation for the purpose of forced dissolution of the new corporation.”

Sidney Turner

www.SidneyTurnerllc.com

 

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Do you understand the nuances of the dischargeability of taxes?

September 2011

It is not uncommon for taxpayers seeking bankruptcy advice about tax liabilities to be told that taxes are not dischargeable. However, while generally they are non dischargeable such statements are incorrect . While there are a number of complex rules that need to be satisfied, taxpayers should know that Federal Income Taxes may be dischargeable if the tax liability satisfies the Bankruptcy code requirements:
There are two primary types of bankruptcy available for individuals: liquidation under Chapter 7 and Chapter 13. For individuals with significant debts above the statutory limits in these types of bankruptcy there is the availability of chapter 11. In a Chapter 7, also commonly known as “liquidation” all of taxpayers’ assets and liabilities are administered by the bankruptcy court. Except to the extent of exempt assets as provided under applicable law, all of taxpayer’s assets are liquidated and distributed to creditors pursuant to the bankruptcy code. At the end of the process, the taxpayer is allowed to keep the exempt assets and have certain debt discharged. On the other hand, in a Chapter 13, also known as “wage earner” payment plan, the bankruptcy court may require that payments be made to the IRS given its priority status as a creditor; or as a general unsecured creditor if the IRS fails to file a tax lien to “perfect” its secured interest against the taxpayer’s assets.

Generally, taxpayer may discharge federal income taxes, depending on the age of the debt. Thus, they may be dischargeable in a Chapter 7 if ALL of the following criteria are met.

1. The tax is for a year for which a tax return is due more than 3 years prior to the filing of the bankruptcy petition;
2.A tax return was filed more than two years prior to the filing of the bankruptcy petition;
3.The tax was assessed more than 240 days prior to filing of the bankruptcy petition;
4.In addition, the tax must not be due to a fraudulent tax return, nor did the taxpayer attempt to evade or defeat the tax.

The taxpayer who contemplates bankruptcy should consult with a professional who understands the nuances of the dischargeability of taxes as provided under the bankruptcy code. Because there are so many timing rules that have to be complied with, the timing of filing the bankruptcy petition is crucial in order to obtain the desired fresh start through the bankruptcy process.

 

Sidney Turner

www.SidneyTurnerllc.com

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