ORDER ADOPTING BANKRUPTCY JUDGE’S REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION; DISMISSING FIRST AMENDED COMPLAINT AS TO DEFENDANTS MICHAEL C. DAILY, TERRI DAILY WILCOX, AND LILI-PUNA DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION; AND DISSOLVING PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION THIRTY DAYS AFTER ENTRY OF ORDER
After reviewing Plaintiffs objections and Defendants’ response to those objections, the court ADOPTS the Bankruptcy Judge’s Report & Recommendation, and GRANTS the motions to dismiss Plaintiffs First Amended Complaint, with prejudice, as to moving Defendants Michael C. Daily, Terri Daily Wilcox, and Lilipuna Development Corporation. The court further orders that the preliminary injunction enjoining distribution of escrow monies belonging to Lilipuna Development Corporation and Lilipuna Venture, Inc., shall be dissolved 30 days after entry of this order if Plaintiff does not obtain an emergency order from the Ninth Circuit continuing the injunction.
BACKGROUND
On December 13, 1994, United States Bankruptcy Judge Lloyd King entered his Report and Recommendation on two motions by Defendants. Defendant Lilipuna Development Corp. (LDC) moved to dismiss Plaintiffs First Amended Complaint or, alternatively, for summary judgment. 1 Defendants Michael C. Daily and Terri Daily Wilcox also moved for dismissal or for partial summary judgment. Judge King recommended that Plaintiffs amended complaint be dismissed, with prejudice, as to the moving defendants, and also recommended dissolving an injunction enjoining the distribution of sales proceeds now held in an escrow account. On January 13,1995, Plaintiff filed its objections to Judge King’s Report and Recommendation. LDC filed a response to Plaintiffs objections on February 6, 1995.
FACTS
This lawsuit centers on a dispute over entitlement to proceeds of the sale of real property formerly owned by Defendant Lili-puna Associates (“Lilipuna”), a Hawaii limited partnership. 2 Defendant Lilipuna Venture, Inc., (LVI) is the general partner. Defendant LDC is a limited partner. Lilipuna deposited into an escrow account the share of the sales proceeds allocated to LVI, as general partner, and LDC, as a limited partner. The sales proceeds are currently held by the escrow agent, Defendant Title Guaranty Escrow Services, Inc., (“Title Guaranty”), which has been sued only as a stakeholder. As of April 21,1994, the escrow account held $334,-505, with interest accruing.
While the named plaintiff is The Estate of Sammy G. Daily, the real plaintiff in this case, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 704(1), is Daily’s bankruptcy trustee, Richard Kennedy. Daily, a well-known Hawaii real estate broker and developer, filed a voluntary petition for Chapter 11 reorganization on January 31,
The original complaint alleged that LVI and LDC were mere “alter egos” of Sammy G. Daily (“Daily”), that the purported stock ownership of LVI and LDC by Daily’s children was a legal fiction, and that as a result any distribution of sales proceeds by Lilipuna to LVI and LDC belonged to trustee Kennedy, as representative of Daily’s bankruptcy estate. After five years of motions and appeals, 3 this court dismissed the original complaint with leave to amend. Dismissal was ordered, in accord with Bankruptcy Judge King’s recommendations, because Hawaii state courts have not and are not expected to recognize “reverse alter ego” claims for relief. 4 See Proposed Report & Recommendation to the U.S. District Court, (“Report I”) November 12,1993, at 10-11. The complaint was also dismissed because it failed to name the shareholders of LDC and LVI as defendants, and as a result those shareholders had no opportunity to protect their shareholdings.
Most, if not all, of the shares of LDC and LVI are now owned by Daily’s children, Michael C. Daily (“Michael”) and Terri Daily Wilcox (“Terri”). Plaintiffs amended complaint alleges that Sammy Daily and his wife Margaret transferred “all or substantially all” of the stock of LDC and LVI to Michael and Terri in February 1988. The transfer of the LDC stock is a matter of serious disagreement. Michael and Terri contend that Daily and his wife never owned the LDC stock, and that the shares were transferred to them by a separate company, Sam Daily Realty, Inc. 5 For purposes of this motion to dismiss, the court assumes the truth of the amended complaint’s conclusory allegations.
Plaintiffs amended complaint also alleges that Daily and his wife transferred the stock of LDC and LVI to Michael and Terri for “no consideration or less than reasonably equivalent value and with the effect of hindering, delaying and defrauding Sammy G. Daily’s creditors.” The complaint does not seek to avoid those transfers. Instead, it seeks a declaration that LDC and LVI are alter egos of Daily and that any money from the sale of the Lilipuna property be held in “constructive trust” for the creditors of Daily’s bankruptcy estate. It also seeks an order requiring Title Guaranty to “turnover” to Daily’s bankruptcy trustee any money attributable to the sale of the Lilipuna property now being held in an escrow account.
The amended complaint added the shareholders of LDC and LVI as defendants. In addition to Michael and Terri, those defendants include Kevin Thomas Shannon, Frank Blazek, Harvey Hee, and Rania Michiyo Hee. From the amended complaint, it appears that Michael and Terri are the sole shareholders in LDC and the principal shareholders in LVI. The remaining defendants apparently retain few, if any, shares in LVI. Daily himself owned no shares in either corpora
On April 4,1994, Michael and Terri moved to dismiss or for partial summary judgment as to the claims against them in the amended complaint. The same day, LDC moved to dismiss or for summary judgment as to the claims against it, and additionally moved to remove the “preliminary injunction” freezing the funds in the Title Guaranty escrow account. The court referred the motions to Bankruptcy Judge King, under 28 U.S.C. 157(c)(1).
Judge King’s second Report and Recommendation (“Report II”) recommended this court grant the motions to dismiss. In brief, Report II concludes:
(1) State statutes of limitations barred Plaintiff from adding Michael and Terri as defendants to the amended complaint. By January 80,1989, at the latest, Plaintiff knew or should have known about the alleged fraudulent stock transfers, and thus the applicable statute of limitations expired in early 1991 — more than three years before the amended complaint was filed. The amended complaint did not “relate back” to the date of the original complaint, because there was no mistake as to the identity of the parties, and the doctrines of “equitable tolling” and “virtual representation” could not save Plaintiff;
(2) Plaintiffs attempt to state a claim based on reverse alter ego must fail, because no such claim has been or is expected to be recognized in Hawaii state courts. Moreover, even if such a claim might be recognized in general terms, it could not be made in this case because: a) Daily, the individual debtor whose debts would be paid from corporate assets, owns no shares of either LVI or LDC; and b) Michael and Terri, who effectively own all the shares of LVI and LDC, cannot be named parties to the amended complaint because of the statute of limitations; and
(3) The amended complaint fails to state a claim for imposing a constructive trust under Hawaii law.
In addition to recommending that the amended complaint be dismissed, with prejudice, as to Michael, Terri, and LDC, Report II also recommends dissolving the injunction enjoining distribution of monies in the escrow account and dismissing Title Guaranty as a defendant. Finally, Report II notes that its reasoning with regard to Michael and Terri applies equally to the other newly-named, individual defendants (Shannon, Blazek, and the Hees), and suggests this court order Plaintiff to proceed or dismiss as to those remaining defendants within a fixed period of time.
Plaintiff makes three general objections to Report II. In summary, Plaintiff argues:
(1) That applicable federal and state law allow a bankruptcy trustee for an individual debtor to institute reverse alter ego claims on behalf of the debtor’s estate for the benefit of its creditors. Specifically, Plaintiff contends that a bankruptcy trustee has standing to assert such a claim, despite seemingly contrary Ninth Circuit precedent, and that Hawaii state courts would “follow the prevailing trend in the law” and recognize the doctrine of reverse piercing a corporate veil;
(2) that a corporation’s individual shareholders need not be named as parties in an action to reach the corporation’s assets through reverse alter ego; and
(3) that the July 7, 1989, injunction be continued, presumably pending an appeal, in order to maintain the escrow account intact until there is a final judgment on the merits. 6
STANDARD OF REVIEW
After considering the bankruptcy court’s proposed findings and conclusions, the district court reviews
de novo
those matters to which any party has timely and specifically objected. 28 U.S.C. § 157(c)(1).
In re Mann,
I. Statute of Limitations Timebar
Plaintiff does not specifically object to Report II’s conclusion that the applicable statutes of limitations bar Plaintiff from adding Michael and Terri as defendants to the amended complaint. This court, having reviewed the authorities cited in that portion of Report II, adopts the finding that Plaintiff is time barred from adding Michael and Terri as defendants. Report II, at 5-14.
II. Plaintiffs Standing to Assert Alter Ego Claim
Plaintiff’s initial objection focuses on an issue that has provoked considerable comment and confusion among courts and scholars. 7 Generally, the question is whether a bankruptcy trustee, who is himself an alter ego, has standing to assert an alter ego claim against non-bankrupt third parties. At issue here is a single sentence in a Ninth Circuit opinion:
[N]o trustee ... has the power under ... the Code to assert general causes of action, such as [an] alter ego claim, on behalf of the bankrupt estate’s creditors.
Williams v. California 1st Bank,
In arguing that Daily’s trustee has standing to bring an alter ego claim in the Ninth Circuit, Plaintiff cites three recent cases that distinguish or reason around
Williams’
seemingly clear statement of law.
Kalb, Voorhis & Co. v. American Financial Corp.,
Plaintiffs argument also relies heavily on
Towe,
a recent Montana bankruptcy court decision.
Towe
similarly limits
Williams
to its facts, and then distinguishes “personal claims of creditors” (which a trustee has no standing to bring) from “allegations that could be asserted by any creditor” (which a trustee may bring as a representative of all creditors).
Towe,
It is true that
Williams
involved not an alter ego claim but rather a trustee’s lawsuit on behalf of the estate and its creditors against a bank that allegedly participated in
Moreover, even if this court assumes that the contested sentence in
Williams
is dicta or limited to that case’s facts, Plaintiff is not necessarily entitled to assert his reverse alter ego claim in this case. Under 11 U.S.C. § 541, the property of the bankruptcy estate includes all legal and equitable interests of the debtor at the commencement of the case. Whether rights belong to the debt- or or the individual creditors is a question of state law.
Kalb, Voorhis,
If there is no right to bring a claim under state law, then there is no cause to assert, as the court did in
Towe,
that “only the trustee could prosecute such action to recover assets for the estate.”
Towe,
Hawaii appellate courts have never considered reverse piercing of the corporate veil, not for the benefit of an individual’s creditors nor for the benefit of the shareholder himself.
12
The Hawaii Supreme Court has often repeated the “general rule that a corporation and its shareholders are to be treated as distinct legal entities.”
Chung v. Animal Clinic, Inc.,
This court also concurs with Judge King that Hawaii state courts would share the concerns expressed in
Cascade Energy & Metals Corp. v. Banks,
While there certainly were many more “innocent” shareholders in Cascade than in this case, Michael and Terri (the majority if not sole shareholders of LVI and LDC) face substantial prejudice if the corporate veils of LVI and LDC are pierced because of the alleged misconduct of their father, Daily. As previously discussed, Michael and Terri cannot be made parties to this action, and therefore cannot directly defend their interests against Plaintiffs charges. If Plaintiff succeeds here and the escrow funds are turned over to Daily’s estate, the value of Michael and Terri’s shares will effectively be wiped out. Plaintiff argues that Michael and Terri cannot be considered “non-culpable” shareholders, because they and Daily are members of the same family and the shares were improperly transferred for little or no consideration. Even assuming the truth of Plaintiffs allegations, Michael and Terri indisputably hold a legal interest in the LDC and LVI stock, and are entitled to defend that interest at least until a court rules that Daily is the equitable owner of the shares. 13
Plaintiff cites several bankruptcy court decisions in support of his contention that Daily need not be a shareholder, but only one of the eases involves a trustee’s reverse alter ego action through an individual debtor.
Towe,
Apparently realizing his weakness under Hawaii law, Plaintiff insists that the “prevailing trend” is for bankruptcy courts to recognize reverse alter ego claims even in jurisdictions where the state courts have not adopted the doctrine.
15
In re Elkay Industries, Inc.,
Since the avoiding powers of a trustee in bankruptcy, even those which rely on state law, are created by the Bankruptcy Code, see, e.g., §§ 544-49, cases allowing a trustee in bankruptcy to pursue reverse alter ego claims, without a state law basis, must be viewed with caution.
Report II, at 21 (emphasis added).
To summarize, while Plaintiff offers a plethora of cases in support of bits and pieces of his claim, he cites no authority that would allow a bankruptcy trustee to assert a reverse alter ego claim through the estate of an individual debtor where (1) the individual debtor owned no stock in the corporation to be pierced; (2) none of the corporation’s shareholders are allowed to defend the claim; and (3) state law has not recognized the reverse alter ego doctrine and is not expected to do so. Under these admittedly unusual circumstances, this court will not apply the theory here.
TV. Virtual Representation
Plaintiff argues that Michael and Terri need not be named as defendants in this action because of the principle of “virtual representation.” He contends that Michael and Terri have been “virtually represented” from the outset of this ease by LDC and LVI, and as shareholders they may have had an affirmative duty to intervene in this suit to protect their rights. The argument amounts to little more than a play on words.
Virtual representation, as defined by the Ninth Circuit, is a corollary principle to collateral estoppel and res judicata. A person technically not a party to a prior action may be bound by the prior decision if his interests are so similar to a named party’s that that party was his “virtual representative” in the prior action.
United States v. Geophysical Corp. of Alaska,
In Plaintiffs case, there is no “prior action” at issue, and the principles of collateral estoppel are premature, if not irrelevant. Theoretically, Plaintiff may seek to invoke the concept of virtual representation at some time in the future if he wants to bind Michael and Terri to a final decision in this case. For now, the virtual reality for Plaintiff is he should have named Michael and Terri as defendants five years ago.
V. Dissolution of Injunction
Initially, there is some confusion as to the nature of the September 25, 1992 court order 16 preventing Title Guaranty from disbursing the monies held in the escrow account. LDC calls it a “preliminary injunction” amounting to a prejudgment attachment of LDC’s and LVTs assets. Plaintiffs objections refer to it as a “stay order.” The order itself is titled “Preliminary Injunction,” and since it clearly was issued under principles of Fed.R.Civ.P. 65, this court will treat it as a preliminary injunction.
Plaintiff contends he is entitled to a continuation of the injunction pending appeal and a final judgment on the merits. In support he cites Fed.R.Civ.P. 62(d) and a line of cases following
DeBeers Consolidated Mines v. United States,
However, under Fed.R.Civ.P. 62(c), when an appeal is taken from an interlocutory or final judgment dissolving an injunction, the court in its discretion may suspend, modify, restore or grant an injunction during pendency of the appeal under terms the court considers proper to secure the rights of the adverse (non-appealing) party. This court construes Plaintiffs objection as
In the Ninth Circuit, a party seeking in-junctive relief must meet one of two tests:
Under the first, a court may issue a preliminary injunction if it finds: (1) the moving party will suffer irreparable injury if the injunctive relief is not granted; (2) the moving party will probably prevail on the merits; (3) in balancing the equities, the non-moving party will not be harmed more than the moving party is helped by the injunction; and (4) granting an injunction is in the public interest.
Alternatively, a court may issue a preliminary injunction if the moving party demonstrates either a combination of probable success on the merits and the possibility of irreparable injury or that serious questions are raised and the balance of hardships tips sharply in his favor. Under the last part of the alternative test, even if the balance of hardships tips decidedly in favor of the moving party, it must be shown as an irreducible minimum that there is a fair chance of success on the merits.
Stanley v. University of Southern California,
Plaintiff argues that he would suffer irreparable harm because the release and ultimate distribution of the escrow funds to LDC and LVTs stockholders would render defendants LDC and LVI insolvent and unable to satisfy any subsequent judgment. Plaintiff also contends that he would be required to “pursue multiple transferees in order to recover funds prematurely disbursed,” citing
Lynch Corp. v. Omaha National Bank,
As for Plaintiffs argument that LDC and LVI would become insolvent, the general rule is that injunctive relief is not appropriate when money damages are an adequate remedy at law.
Flynt Distributing Co., Inc. v. Harvey,
Plaintiff relies heavily on a recent Ninth Circuit decision,
In re Estate of Ferdinand Marcos Human Rights Litigation,
[A] district court has authority to issue a preliminary injunction where the plaintiff can establish that money damages will be an inadequate remedy due to impending insolvency of the defendant or that defendant has engaged in a pattern of secreting or dissipating assets to avoid judgment.
Marcos,
While the facts in this case are not nearly so dramatic, they do demonstrate an “impending insolvency” of LDC and LVI if escrow is released and the monies distributed to shareholders. Both LDC and LVI hold a single asset: the right to the Lilipuna sales proceeds now held by Title Guaranty. Both LDC and LVI have been non-operating corporations for several years, with no other apparent source of income to satisfy any future judgment against them. Therefore, under a broad reading of Marcos, it appears Plaintiff has established the sort of harm necessary to support a preliminary injunction. Viewed under the alternative test, the balance of hardships tips in favor of Plaintiff. The court recognizes that LDC, LVI, and their stockholders have been waiting more than five years for their share of the Lilipuna sale, but the funds remain safe in escrow, continue to earn interest, and any future judgment for Plaintiff likely would be uncol-lectible if the funds are released.
Nonetheless, there is yet a critical difference between
Marcos
and this case. In
Marcos,
the district court had found a “substantial likelihood” that plaintiffs would succeed on the merits, and in fact by the time the Ninth Circuit considered the injunction plaintiffs had prevailed on liability and been awarded substantial exemplary damages.
Id.
By contrast, here there is no substantial likelihood or probability that Plaintiff will prevail on the merits, given that Plaintiff has failed to survive a motion to dismiss. Even if the balance of hardships tips decidedly in favor of Plaintiff, he must show “as an irreducible minimum that there is a fair chance of success on the merits.”
Martin v. International Olympic Committee,
However, in light of the aforementioned potential hardships to Plaintiff, the court will exercise its discretion under Rule 62(c) to extend the injunction for Thirty {SO) days beyond the date of entry of this order. The extension is for the sole purpose of giving Plaintiff time to seek an emergency order from the Ninth Circuit under Rule 62(g) extending the injunction pending appeal. If no such order extending, granting or restoring the injunction is received within the 30-day period, the injunction will be dissolved.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, the court orders that Plaintiffs first amended complaint shall be dismissed, with prejudice, as to moving Defendants Michael C. Daily, Terri Daily Wilcox and Lilipuna Development Corp. The preliminary injunction enjoining distribution of the Lilipuna sales proceeds now held by Title Guaranty Escrow Service, Inc., shall be dissolved 30 days after entry of this order, unless Plaintiff obtains an emergency order from the Ninth Circuit continuing the injunction. When the injunction is dissolved, stakeholder Title Guaranty shall be dismissed as a defendant. The reasoning of this opinion applies equally to the non-moving defendants, and the court adopts Bankruptcy Judge King’s recommendation that Plaintiff be ordered to either proceed or dismiss as to the remaining defendants within 90 days from the date of this order.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The title of the amended complaint fails to name LDC as a party defendant. However, the parties clearly believe LDC is a defendant. LDC was named as a defendant in the original complaint, and recent pleadings following the amended complaint have added LDC to the title. To avoid confusion and unnecessary delay, the court will treat LDC as a properly named defendant.
. The property, known as "Bayview Ridge" and located in Kaneohe, Oahu, was sold for approximately $1.3 million to a third party not involved in this litigation.
.
See In re Daily,
. A reverse alter ego claim, also known as “reverse piercing the corporate veil,” involves a “corporate insider, or someone claiming through such individual, attempting to pierce the corporate veil from within so that the corporate entity and the individual will be considered one and the same.” 1 Fletcher Cyclopedia of Corporations, § 41.60 (1990 & Supp.1994). The doctrine has been asserted both for the benefit of shareholders and for the benefit of creditors seeking to impose liability for an individual's debts on corporations allegedly owned by that individual. It has been most frequently used by the government in tax evasion cases, in order to reach corporate assets for the obligations of an individual. Id.
.Sam Daily Realty, Inc. is also in Chapter 7 bankruptcy proceedings. Daily was the principal shareholder of the realty corporation. If it is indeed true that Sam Daily Realty, Inc., was the previous sole owner of LDC stock, then Plaintiff, as trustee of Daily's individual bankruptcy estate, would have no standing to attack transfers from the corporation to Michael and Terri.
. Defendant LDC’s response to Plaintiffs objections includes a request for Rule 11 sanctions against Plaintiff. Such a request is outside the scope of this court’s review of Judge King's Report and Recommendation under 28 U.S.C. § 157(c)(1).
. See, e.g., Stephen Boyce, Koch Refining and In re Ozark: The Chapter 7 Trustee’s Standing to Assert an Alter Ego Cause of Action, 64 Am. Bankr.L.J. 315 (1990); John Wilmore, The Bankruptcy Trustee: Can an Alter Ego Sue in Alter Ego, 65 S.Cal.L.Rev. 705 (1991); Mark Prager & Jonathan Backman, Pursuing Alter Ego Liability Against Non-Bankrupt Third Parties: Structuring a Comprehensive Conceptual Framework, 35 St. Louis U.L.J. 657 (1991).
. 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(1) provides that the bankruptcy estate includes “all legal or equitable interests of the debtor in property as of the commencement of the case.” 11 U.S.C. § 544 gives the trustee the rights and powers of a creditor who could have obtained a judicial lien, whether or not such a creditor actually exists, and additionally allows the trustee to avoid certain transfers of the debtor that are voidable under applicable law by a creditor holding an unsecured claim. 11 U.S.C. § 105 enables a bankruptcy court to apply equitable principles which are “necessary or appropriate” in a particular case to carry out provisions of the Bankruptcy Code.
. As several courts have noted, it initially seems incongruous that the trustee accedes to the remedy as a shareholder, then turns around and uses his predecessor’s past misdeeds to invoke an equitable remedy that ultimately benefits that shareholder’s creditors. However, the “piercing doctrine is neither innately pro-debtor nor pro-creditor, and the consequence of a loss of corporate assets to a shareholder’s creditors, standing alone, does not mean the remedy should not be applied.”
Schuster,
. Those commentators who argue that § 544(a) conceptually allows a trustee's alter ego claim agree that the trustee is granted only "the rights and powers that creditors could have asserted at state law." See, e.g., Boyce, 64 Am.Bankr.L.J. at 320 (emphasis added).
. The court notes that
if'
'reverse alter ego’ ’ was to be recognized in Hawaii, the equitable remedy arguably should belong
solely
to those particular
. All the reported Hawaii cases involve "conventional” alter ego claims, in which a creditor seeks to impose liability for a corporation's debts on one or more of the corporation’s individual shareholders.
. Plaintiff mischaracterizes Bankruptcy Judge King's report when he implies that Judge King recommended that this action must be dismissed
. The leading authority on corporation law appears to assume that shareholding is a necessary element for reverse alter ego in those jurisdictions where it has been recognized. 1 Fletcher Cyclopedia of Corporations § 41.70 (1990 & Supp.1994) ("Where a creditor proves that controlling shareholders organized or used the corporation to deceive or defraud personal creditors, the separate existence shall be disregarded and the corporation and the shareholders will be treated as one and the same.”) (emphasis added).
. Plaintiff also cites a recent Ninth Circuit tax case,
Towe Antique Ford Foundation v. Internal Revenue Service,
. The order was first issued on July 7, 1989, and continued in September 1991 and September 1992.
