Case Information
*1 Before BENTON, SHEPHERD, and KELLY, Circuit Judges.
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KELLY, Circuit Judge.
*2 A group of investors appeals after the district court affirmed the bankruptcy [1] court’s finding that funds the investors transferred to Tri-State Financial, LLC (TSF) [2]
are part of TSF’s Chapter 7 bankruptcy estate. We affirm.
I. Background
After Tri-State Ethanol (TSE) filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, a group of investors (Omaha Group) formed TSF, a shell corporation designed solely to finance TSE’s continued operations until a Chapter 11 plan could be approved. Omaha Group transferred $2 million to TSF; TSF then transferred nearly $800,000 of those funds to TSE and $1.19 million to one of TSE’s vendors. TSE subsequently converted its bankruptcy case into one under Chapter 7, and TSF filed claims seeking to recover the $2 million from TSE. TSF’s claim to the nearly $800,000 was treated as a first-priority administrative claim, and its claim to the remaining $1.19 million was treated as a general unsecured claim subordinated to all other unsecured claims. The administrative claim was approved, and TSE’s trustee paid the nearly $800,000 to TSF.
*3 TSF later filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, and its trustee was able to recover the $1.19 million from TSE. Omaha Group informed TSF’s trustee the funds were not part of TSF’s bankruptcy estate, and demanded their return. TSF’s trustee initiated this adversarial proceeding to determine whether the $1.19 million is part of TSF’s bankruptcy estate. Omaha Group argues the funds are not estate property because TSF was merely holding them in trust. TSF’s trustee and Centris Federal Credit Union (Centris) assert the funds are part of the bankruptcy estate. [3]
They also contend that various Omaha Group investors have released any claims they may have had to the funds, and that Omaha Group should be judicially estopped from claiming any interest in them.
United States Bankruptcy Judge Timothy J. Mahoney held a hearing at which various TSF business records were introduced. James Jandrain, who is Chairman of TSF’s Board of Managers and an Omaha Group investor, testified that Omaha Group transferred the funds to TSF with the understanding they would be held in trust. Two TSF bookkeepers testified that TSF was formed for the sole purpose of funding TSE while it was in bankruptcy. A forensic accountant opined that the funds should have been treated as equity. Judge Mahoney found that TSF held the $1.19 million in trust, and thus, that the funds were not part of its bankruptcy estate.
Centris and TSF’s trustee appealed to the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel (BAP),
which reversed and remanded the case for further proceedings. In re Tri-State Fin.,
LLC,
Omaha Group appealed to the BAP, arguing that Judge Hastings had erred by
revisiting Judge Mahoney’s factual findings, and had thereby exceeded the scope of
the BAP’s mandate and violated the law-of-the-case doctrine. Omaha Group also
took issue with the fact that Judge Hastings had made factual findings without first
certifying her familiarity with the record and giving the parties an opportunity to
recall witnesses whose testimony was both material and disputed, a procedure
required of successor judges under Fed. R. Civ. P. 63 and Fed. R. Bankr. P. 9028.
The BAP agreed that Judge Hastings had not complied with Rules 63 and 9028, and
remanded the case with instructions to comply with those rules on remand. In re Tri-
State Fin., LLC,
On remand, Judge Hastings entered an order certifying her familiarity with the
record and directing the parties to identify any witnesses they sought to recall. No
one took advantage of that opportunity. Judge Hastings then entered an order in
which she again concluded that Omaha Group had not shown that the funds were held
in a trust, and that the $1.9 million was thus part of TSF’s bankruptcy estate. In re
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Tri-State Fin., LLC,
II. Discussion
First, Judge Hastings did not exceed the scope of the BAP’s mandate by
revisiting Judge Mahoney’s factual findings. “The issue of whether the bankruptcy
court exceeded the mandate . . . on remand is a question of law subject to de novo
review.” In re Usery,
Judge Hastings also did not abuse her discretion by declining to apply the law-
of-the-case doctrine. “Law of the case is a doctrine of discretion, and thus, we review
for an abuse of discretion a lower tribunal’s decision not to defer to previous rulings
in the same case.” Estrada-Rodriguez v. Lynch,
Finally, Judge Hastings did not clearly err in finding that Appellants failed to
show, by clear and convincing evidence, that TSF held the funds in trust. We review
the bankruptcy court’s findings of fact for clear error and its legal determinations de
novo. In re Vote,
“Under 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(1), the bankruptcy estate is comprised of ‘all of the
debtor’s legal and equitable property interests that existed as of the time that the
bankruptcy petition is filed.’” In re Webb,
The record contains some evidence that TSF held the funds in a trust. Jandrain testified that the Omaha Group investors intended that TSF hold the funds in trust. The bookkeepers testified that TSF was created solely to operate as a conduit to fund TSE during its Chapter 11 bankruptcy. And TSF’s general ledger shows that it treated the $2 million from Omaha Group differently than it treated capital contributions it received from other investors. Thus, the record contains some support for Judge Mahoney’s conclusion that the funds fell outside of TSF’s bankruptcy estate.
However, Judge Hastings’s conclusion that the funds were not held in trust also finds support in the record. None of the documentary evidence specifically refers to a trust, defines the duties of a trustee, or identifies TSF as a trustee. Judge Hastings correctly recognized that Jandrain’s testimony was self-serving, as he was both the Chairman of TSF’s Board and an Omaha Group investor. There is also substantial evidence that Omaha Group initially intended the funds to be a capital contribution, and that Omaha Group and TSF later treated them as a loan. Initially, TSF’s general ledger reflects that it treated the $2 million as equity. And the forensic accountant testified that the $2 million should have been treated as equity. Other facts tend to show a creditor–debtor relationship: TSF agreed to pay Omaha Group interest on the $2 million, TSF paid Omaha Group investors more than $450,000 in loan interest expenses they incurred in the transfer, and TSF retained $10,000 in interest the funds earned while deposited in its account.
Moreover, TSF filed its claim to the $2 million in TSE’s bankruptcy case in its
own name—as opposed to Omaha Group’s name or on behalf of its investors—and
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emails between Jandrain and TSF’s attorney reveal that this decision was deliberate.
In fact, in an email to TSF’s attorney, Jandrain wrote, “Omaha Group loaned $2.0M
(not a capital contribution) [to TSF] during [TSE’s] bankruptcy.” Omaha Group was
notified of—and did not object to—TSF’s claim to the $2 million in the TSE case.
None of its investors filed individual claims. Several Omaha Group investors then
participated in a meeting at which they were told the $2 million “was going to be
converted to equity upon confirmation of [TSE’s] reorganization plan” but “[w]hen
the plan was not approved, the money remained as a loan.” When its administrative
claim was approved, TSF deposited the nearly $800,000 into its own account and
later disbursed it to Omaha Group investors only. A letter accompanying those
disbursements stated: “Any unpaid portion of our $2,000,000 loan that is not paid
from [TSE’s] trustee will eventually be paid to us by [TSF].” For these reasons,
among others, substantial evidence supports Judge Hastings’s conclusion that the
funds were most likely intended to be a capital contribution, but were ultimately loan
proceeds. “A factual finding supported by substantial evidence, as well as a [trial]
court’s choice between two permissible views of the evidence, are not clearly
erroneous.” Richardon v. Sugg,
III. Conclusion
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
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Notes
[1] The Honorable Judge Robert F. Rossiter, Jr., United States District Judge for the District of Nebraska.
[2] The Honorable Shon Hastings, United States Bankruptcy Judge for the District of North Dakota, sitting by designation.
[3] Centris has a security interest in all TSF assets.
[4] We thus need not reach the release or estoppel issues.
