MEMORANDUM
This cause of action involves $4.4 million worth of cranberries delivered by Plaintiff Hiller Cranberry Products, Inc. (“Hiller”), to Koplovsky Foods, Inc. (“KFI”). The cranberries were subsequently delivered by KFI to Clermont, Inc. (“Clermont”). Plaintiff has not received payment from KFI and KFI has not received payment from Clermont. 1 Plaintiffs complaint asserts actions under the Perishable Agricultural Commodities Act (“PACA”), misrepresentation, the Fraudulent Conveyance Act, and the Massachusetts Unfair Trade Practices Act against KFI, Cler-mont, and Edward M. Koplovsky. Plaintiff filed a motion seeking a preliminary injunction and writ of attachments against each of the defendants. The Court issued a Trustee Writ on March 11, 1998 against each of the defendants. The Court heard oral argument on March 26,1998 regarding the motion for a preliminary injunction and writ of attachments against each of the defendants. The Court heard further oral argument on April 2, 1998 regarding the potential liability of Clermont and Edward M. Koplovsky under PACA and as alter egos of KFI.
Pursuant to Rule 64 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the remedy of prejudgment attachment is available “under the circumstances and in the manner provided by the law of the state in which the district court is held.” In Massachusetts, the substantive standard and the procedure governing attachments are contained in Rule 4.1 of the Massachusetts Rules of Civil Procedure. It provides that an order approving attachment “may be entered only after notice to the defendant and hearing and upon a finding by the court that there is a reasonable likelihood that the plaintiff will recover judgment.” Mass.R.Civ.P. 4.1(c). That rule also requires the movant to submit affidavits setting forth “specific facts sufficient to warrant the required findings” based upon the affi-ant’s own information or belief. Mass. R.Civ.P. 4.1(c) & (h). “[T]he central question on the motion for approval of attachment is whether plaintiffs are likely to prevail on the merits and obtain damages in the necessary amount.”
Anderson Foreign Motors Inc. v. New England Toyota Distributor, Inc.,
Pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 65, plaintiff seeks a preliminary injunction against defendants restricting all transfer of assets except in the ordinary course of business. A party seeking preliminary injunctive relief must prove: (1) a substantial likelihood of success on the merits; (2) a significant risk of irreparable harm if the injunction is withheld; (3) a favorable balance of hardships; and (4) a fit (or, at least, a lack of friction) between the injunction and the public interest.
E.E.O.C. v. Astra USA, Inc.,
After review of the parties’ memoranda and oral arguments, the Court makes the following findings: (1) plaintiff has a reasonable likelihood of success on the merits against KFI under the contract for goods sold and delivered; (2) plaintiff has a reasonable likelihood of success on the merits against Clermont under the theory of reach and apply; and (3) plaintiff does not have a reasonable likelihood of success on the merits *160 under PACA or under an alter ego theory of liability against Clermont and Edward M. Koplovsky.
The Court issued an Order on April 9, 1998 2 granting a preliminary injunction against KFI and continuing the Writs of Attachment in the amount of $4,440,494.07 upon all assets of KFI. The Order also enjoined Reach-and-Apply Defendant Cler-mont from paying any amount due by it to KFI and enjoined KFI from receiving any of its approximately $10 million receivable from Clermont. The amount payable to KFI from Clermont is subject to an equitable attachment in favor of plaintiff in the amount of $4,440,494.07. The motion seeking a preliminary injunction and writ of attachments against Edward M. Koplovsky was not granted.
1. LIABILITY OF DEFENDANTS CLER-MONT AND EDWARD M. KOPLOV-SKY UNDER PACA
This motion raises a novel question regarding eligibility for trust protection under PACA, a statute which has been litigated only rarely in this Circuit. Plaintiff contends that Clermont is liable as a PACA broker holding plaintiff’s assets in trust under 7 U.S.C. § 499e(e). Plaintiff further argues that Edward M. Koplovsky is liable as a PACA trustee who owed plaintiff a fiduciary duty to protect the trust assets under 7 U.S.C. § 499b. A threshold requirement for a reasonable likelihood of success on the merits under PACA is plaintiff’s eligibility for PACA protection. Defendants argue that plaintiff is not entitled to trust protection because the Supply Agreement between plaintiff and KFI contained payment periods in excess of 30 days, in violation of regulations promulgated by the Secretary of Agriculture.
Section 499e(c)(3)(i) provides that the Secretary of Agriculture shall promulgate regulations providing the maximum time upon which parties may agree for payment and still have the benefit of PACA protection. The Secretary issued regulations that establish “the time prescribed by which payment must be made” under Section 499e(c)(3)(i) as between ten and twenty days, with ten days as the standard period. 7 C.F.R. § 46.2(aa). The regulations further provide, with respect to private agreements under Section 499e(c)(3)(ii), that “[t]he maximum time for payment for a shipment to which a seller, supplier, or agent can agree and still qualify for coverage under the trust is 30 days after receipt and acceptance of the commodities. ...” 7 C.F.R. § 46.46(e)(2).
The eligibility of PACA trust protections based on the terms of the maximum time for payment presents a question of first impression in this Circuit. All of the other circuits addressing the question have upheld the thirty-day maximum period for private agreements as being a permissible construction of the statute.
In re Altabon Foods, Inc.,
The facts in this case are that Hiller shipped $6,925,455.58 worth of cranberries to KFI between September 25, 1997 and November 25, 1997. The Supply Agreement provided that 75 percent of the purchase price was to be paid within ten days of delivery with the remaining 12.5 percent paid by January 1 of the following year and the balance no later than February 1 of the same year. KFI paid Hiller approximately $2.7 million on the Supply Agreement.
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The terms of the Supply Agreement allow one-quarter of the purchase price to be paid well in excess of the thirty-day maximum time for payment period established by 7 C.F.R. § 46.46(e)(2). These payment terms are much longer than the 45 to 60 days provided in the contract in
In re Altabon Foods
which the Ninth Circuit found constituted a waiver of trust protection. In re
Altabon Foods, Inc.,
II. LIABILITY OF CLERMONT AND EDWARD M. KOPLOVSKY UNDER ALTER EGO THEORY
Plaintiff argues that Clermont is liable as the alter ego of KFI and that the corporate veil of KFI should be pierced to hold Edward M. Koplovsky personally liable.
3
To support this contention, plaintiff must meet a very high standard.
American Home Assurance Company v. Sport Maska, Inc.,
The Court of Appeals for the First Circuit in
Pepsi-Cola Metropolitan Bottling Co. v. Checkers, Inc.,
A. Liability of Clermont
In support of the first prong of the My Bread test, the primary evidence which plaintiff relies upon is Edward M. Koplov-sky’s control of KFI and Clermont. It is undisputed that Edward M. Koplovsky is the dominant shareholder of KFI and Clermont and exercises pervasive control over both companies. These two factors alone, however, are not enough to support the alter ego theory.
Giuliano v. Nations Title, Inc.,
Plaintiff contends that Edward M. Koplovsky’s statements to plaintiff with respect to KFI’s intention to pay its outstanding invoices constituted misrepresentation and unfair trade practices. The alleged fraud must pertain to the intercorporate relationship, however,
Birbara,
As to the second prong of the
My Bread
test, plaintiffs argument that there was a “confused intermingling” of KFI’s and Cler-mont’s activities with “substantial disregard of the separate nature of the corporate entities” or “serious ambiguity about the manner and capacity in which the [two] corporations and their respective representatives [were] acting,” is similarly unpersuasive.
My Bread,
Plaintiff argues that KFI has no financial independence from Clermont. The Supply Agreement between KFI and plaintiff was for three years covering the period from 1996 through 1998. Plaintiff knew of KFI’s business relationship with Clermont. There is no evidence that at the time of the Agreement KFI was thinly capitalized or insolvent. In 1996, the first year of the Supply Agreement, KFI fully performed its financial obligations to plaintiff. In the second year of the Supply Agreement KFI paid $2.7 million to plaintiff during September and October of 1997. At the end of October 1997 KFI encountered financial difficulties after the precipitous decline in the price of cranberry juice concentrate. At this time KFI had an account receivable in excess of $10 million from Cler-mont, The precipitous market price reduction in cranberry juice concentrate resulted in a decrease in Clermont’s inventory which affected its bank line of credit and prevented its payment to KFI.
B. Liability of Edward M. Koplovsky
Although corporate and individual defendants present slightly different questions under the corporate disregard doctrine, this Circuit has applied the same analysis to both.
Birbara,
The primary evidence which plaintiff relies on to establish KFI as Edward M. Koplovsky’s alter ego is his pervasive control of KFI and Clermont and the historical business relationship between plaintiff and Edward M. Koplovsky. Edward M. Koplovsky is KFI’s corporate president and treasurer. Edward M. Koplovsky is Clermont’s corporate president and secretary. He owns eighty-five percent of the shares of Clermont stock. Edward M. Koplovsky transacted business with plaintiff as the president of KFI. The Supply Agreement specifically identifies KFI as the “buyer,” and Edward M. Koplovsky signed the agreement as President of KFI. He also signed the agreement separately, individually and as President of Clermont, for purposes of the non-solicitation provision only.
Plaintiff makes no claim that Edward M. Koplovsky siphoned away KFI’s assets for his own personal use. In contrast when the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit in Pepsi-Cola upheld a jury’s decision to pierce the corporate veil there was substantial evidence of misuse of corporate finds by the individual defendant for his personal use. Id. at 14-16.
Plaintiff argues that Edward M. Ko-plovsky fraudulently uses KFI to insulate himself and Clermont from liability. Plaintiff shipped $6.9 million worth of cranberries to KFI. KFI transferred the cranberries to Clermont for an account receivable. KFI made payments towards those invoices totaling $2.7 million to plaintiff before encountering any financial difficulty. The risk that a defendant without fraud and in the normal course of business operations may become unable to answer to a judgment is inherent in any civil litigation. The Court of Appeals for the First Circuit in
Miller v. Honda Motor Co.,
C. Review
In review, the majority of the
Pepsi-Cola
factors cut against piercing the corporate veil
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for both Clermont and Edward M. Koplov-sky.
Pepsi-Cola,
111. MISREPRESENTATION, UNFAIR TRADE PRACTICES, AND FRAUDULENT CONVEYANCE CLAIMS
The Court finds that plaintiff does not have a reasonable likelihood of success on the merits under the misrepresentation, unfair trade practices or a fraudulent conveyance claims against either Clermont or Edward M. Koplovsky. Plaintiff contends that Koplovsky misrepresented KFI’s intention as to payment of outstanding invoices. This alleged misrepresentation is also the basis of the unfair trade practices cause of action under Massachusetts General Laws ch. 93A. Any alleged misstatements made by Koplov-sky, which he vigorously disputes, were in his capacity as president of KFI. The Court has determined that Koplovsky is not personally liable for his acts as a corporate officer. Likewise the Court has ruled that Clermont is not liable as an alter ego of KFI.
In both papers and oral argument the parties appeared to have argued the liability of Edward M. Koplovsky solely under the alter ego theory. Distinct from the analysis under the alter ego theory, the Court finds that there is not a reasonable likelihood of success on the merits against Edward M. Koplovsky as an individual.
Bond Leather Co., Inc. v. Q.T. Shoe Mfg. Co., Inc.,
The specific dates of the deliveries of cranberries and statements of assurance by Edward M. Koplovsky are not detailed in the complaint nor supporting affidavits. It is clear that between September 25, 1997 and November 25, 1997 plaintiff delivered $6.9 million in cranberries to KFI and KFI made four separate payments totaling $2.7 million to plaintiff from October 4 to November 5, 1997. The last payment of $900,000 was made after the decline in market price for cranberry concentrate which parties agree was well known by October 31, 1997. In the week following November 5, Edward M. Koplovsky indicated that he was unsure whether KFI would be able to make future payments. It is very difficult to prove a defendant’s present intention relating to future conduct. This difficulty coupled with the undisputed fact that payments were made up and after the decline in market price weigh against a finding of a reasonable likelihood of success. Moreover, without the PACA claim there is no federal subject matter jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331 nor is there complete diversity under Section 1332 because plaintiff, KFI, and Edward M. Koplovsky are citizens of Massachusetts.
Plaintiff also contends that Edward M. Koplovsky made fraudulent conveyances of three parcels of property to third party entities in violation of Massachusetts General Laws ch. 109A, § 5(a). The Fraudu
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lent Conveyance Act furnishes an expeditious method whereby creditors may satisfy their claims, but it does not create claims.
Blumenthal v. Blumenthal,
CONCLUSION
All attachments previously approved by this Court against Clermont and Edward M. Koplovsky in favor of the plaintiff are dissolved, and all previously approved restraining orders and other injunctive relief against Clermont and Edward M. Koplovsky are vacated. The Court Order of Preliminary Injunction and Issuance of Attachment issued on April 9,1998 shall continue in effect. The Trustee Writ, approved and issued by the Court on March 11, 1998, shall continue in effect only against the Defendant KFI.
Notes
. KFI and Clermont are unable to pay for the cranberries at this time due to the precipitous decline in the price of cranberry juice concentrate.
. KFI and Clermont do not challenge this Order.
. The doctrine is known by various names, including "piercing the corporate veil,” "disregarding the corporate entity,” and the "alter ego" theories. This Memorandum uses these terms interchangeably for the general idea of going behind the corporate form, either to hold a corporate shareholder responsible for die acts or debts of a corporation or to hold one corporation responsible for the acts or debts of another corporation.
