This appeal stems from the bankruptcy of International Administrative Services, Inc. (“IAS” or the “Debtor”). The Debt- or’s stock trustee (the “Trustee”), acting on behalf of the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors (the “Committee”) filed an adversary proceeding against IBT International, Inc. (“IBT”) and Southern California Sunbelt Developers, Inc. (“SCSD”) to recover assets that had been fraudulently transferred from the Debtor to IBT and SCSD. The bankruptcy court entered judgment in the adversary proceeding in favor of the Trustee. IBT and SCSD appealed to the district court, which affirmed the judgment, and the Defendants then appealed to this Court. IBT and SCSD raise four grounds for error *695 that would require reversal: (1) that the statute of limitations prevented an extension of the time for bringing the action by either court order or equitable tolling; (2) that the avoidance action was improperly brought because the Trustee did not first avoid the transfer to the initial transferees; (3) that the Trustee improperly traced the funds sought to be recovered; and (4) that the bankruptcy court incorrectly calculated pre-judgment interest against the Defendants. For the reasons set forth below, we disagree with the Defendants’ assignments of error, and affirm the judgment of the bankruptcy court.
I. Facts
IAS specialized in marketing financial advice to unsophisticated consumers through a barrage of seminars and late night infomercials. A leviathan in the world of get-rich-quick schemes, IAS guaranteed customers increased wealth, provided they followed the company’s financial strategies, which were contained in IAS publications. The trap, however, was that to be privy to this valuable information, a customer had to first purchase a membership and then pay a substantial amount in annual dues. Essentially, IAS promoted a gamble-free method of getting rich, once, of course, customers paid IAS, received the publications, and meticulously followed the instructions.
Charles Givens founded IAS in 1986, and was the company’s sole shareholder. He servеd as an officer and director until 1991 or 1992, although management continued to look to Givens for guidance after his departure. As the visible voice of IAS, Givens traveled extensively, promoting his “wealth without risk” plan. A dynamic and compelling speaker, Givens persuaded audiences to buy expensive memberships in IAS, and those numbers swelled to over 250,000.
Sheer numbers, however, do not validate a theory absent empirical evidence, and doubt soon fell upon the legitimacy of the IAS. financial advice. A majority of the information was neither novel nor covert— most of it was readily available and comprised common-sense business practices. Other advice, such as encouraging customers to cancel uninsured motorist coverage on their vehicles, raised more red flags.
In 1991, several members initiated lawsuits against IAS and Givens, challenging the practicality of their advice. On the advice of IAS, several customers dropped their uninsured motorist coverage, only to be involved in serious car crashes with uninsured drivers, and leaving them with uncompensated losses. The customers sued IAS for giving them the detrimental advice. Eventually, eleven similar lawsuits were filed throughout the country, seeking a large amount in damages.
Another layer was added to IAS’ troubles when the SEC targeted Givens and IAS as part of a securities fraud investigation in connection to a real estate venture. IAS’ problems grew when the attorney generals of several states launched major investigations involving IAS’ failure to pay the state sales tax generated at seminars around the country. Finally, the Federal Trade Commission aimed its sights at the company’s business practices.
IAS vigorously defended the lawsuits and government investigations, but it was clear that IAS’ exposure to liability in these cases exceeded $10 million. As a preemptive method of preserving both his and IAS’ wealth, Givens retained the services of attorney David H. Tedder (“Ted-der”), his law firm, and his company, The Institute for Asset & Lawsuit Protection, to formulate a plan that would shield the *696 assets from creditors. 1
Tedder moved to Florida in order to implement the IAS/Givens asset protection plan. First, assets were transferred to various Tedder-owned foreign and domestic entities. Tedder then recycled the assets through a tangled and complex web of multi-step international transactions. In total, Tedder transferred assets more than one hundred times among twenty-three different entities. Between January 1992 and 1996, Givens removed a treasure chest in excess of $50 million from IAS’ coffers; putting it out of the direct reach of IAS’ creditors.
On June 20, 1996, IAS filed a voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition, no doubt due in part to Givens and Tedder’s purge and plunder scheme. The U.S. Trustee appointed the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors (the “Committee”) to facilitate the IAS reorganization, which would seem plausible because Givens no longer managed the day-to-day affairs of the debtor. Unfortunately for the Debtor, Givens still played an active role in the company, which crippled IAS’ ability to investigate the suspect transfers without bias or influence.
The Committee soon discovered the existence of the Givens-IAS transfers, and with the goal of reorganization in mind, the Debtor assigned its right and duty to pursue any fraudulent transfer actions or avoidance claims to the Committee. 2 By September of 1996, the Trustee then began the unenviable task of unraveling the knotted trail of transfers. The Trustee’s ability to investigate the transfers was hampered by Givens and his associates, who, among other things, delayed document production, withheld discovery responses, and simply “lost” records of the asset transfers. As a result, the Trustee filed a motion to hold Givens, and the professionals assisting him in covering the tracks, in contempt of court. The bankruptcy court appointed a Special Master to oversee and administer discovery compliance.
The problems associated with discovery led to the Trustee’s inability to timely identify the long chain of transferees, and thus initiate any proceeding to avoid the transfers within the limitation period, which expired on June 20, 1998, two years after IAS filed for bankruptcy. The bankruptcy court granted the Committee’s request to extend the time to file avoidance actions through the time of a hearing by the Special Master on July 29, 1998, when the court would again consider any extensions based upon the progression of discovery.
As seems par for this case, discovery disputes continued, and the hearing in which the Special Master delivered his report was not concluded until September 3, 1998, more than one month after the deadline of the initial extension. At this hearing, the Special Master determined that the all-important transfer documents did not appear to have been “misplaced,” but, rather, that the items had been “deliberately and intentionally secreted” from the Trustee. Based upon these findings, the Trustee moved in open court to further extend the time to file avoidance actions. The oral motion was granted, and the *697 bаnkruptcy court entered a written order memorializing its ruling on September 17, 1998. That order extended the time period for the Trustee to file avoidance actions until February 10,1999.
On February 10, 1999, the Trustee filed this adversary proceeding against a list of defendants, including John Does. IBT and SCSD were not named parties until August 17, 1999, once the Trustee had traced IAS assets to them, and filed a first amended complaint. Count I of the complaint sought to avoid any transfer of an interest of the Debtor in property pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 544(b) and Florida Statutes §§ 726.105, 726.106, and 726.108, which permit avoidance of transfer made with the actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors. In Count II, the Trustee sought turnover of the property improperly transferred from the Debtor under 11 U.S.C. § 542(a).
The Trustee targeted IBT and SCSD because they received $1,050,000 from IAS, through several of Tedder’s intricate transfer devices. The exact route the money took, and the various stops it made, is a difficult road to follow. After essentially being laundered through the Tedder mechanisms, thе IAS money trickled down to the Van Dan Limited Partnership (“Van Dan”), which was a Nevada entity owned by Tedder. Van Dan transferred $50,000 of IAS money to IBT on May 11, 1993. Two days later, a Netherlands company, Eurokredit Finance S.A. (“Eurokredit”), transferred another $3,500,000 of IAS funds to an account held by H.D., Inc., an Isle of Mann corporation. On May 26, 1993, Eurokredit transferred an additional $3,350,000 of the Debtor’s funds to a second HD-held account. Tedder himself transferred $999,975 from the two HD accounts to a Van Dan account on July 1, 1993. Finally, on July 7, 1993, Tedder transferred $1,000,000 from Van Dan to IBT and SCSD. Consequently, between the May 11 and July 7, 1993, transfers, IBT and SCSD received $1,050,000 in Debtor-derived funds.
The money trail does not end there, however. On August 20, 1993, IBT transferred its share of the $1,050,000 to SCSD. IBT and SCSD are related construction/real estate development companies owned by Dan Baer, one of Tedder’s business associates. SCSD used the money to purchase a commercial office condominium development known as the John Wayne Office Guild (the “Guild”), in Orange County, California. As to the Guild proрerty, the Trustee alleged that the monies which bought the property were fraudulent transfers originating from IAS, and were subject to avoidance. The Trustee sought recovery of IBT and SCSD’s interest in the Guild as property of the Debtor’s bankruptcy estate, not just the money judgment.
The bankruptcy court held a three-day trial on the issues. At the trial, the Trustee presented a thorough tracing analysis, highlighting that the assets obtained by IBT and SCSD had originated with IAS and were then transferred to Tedder’s entities under the auspices of his asset protection plan. The evidence at trial demonstrated the complex and intentionally insidious nature of the plan, and illustrated the difficulty the Trustee experienced in investigating the multi-transaction scheme.
The removal of IAS’ funds was not accomplished in one fell swoop. Rather, the Trustee identified several different avenues used by IAS, Givens, and his professional advisors to extract company funds. Millions of dollars filtered through a collection of foreign jurisdictions, allowing Ted-dеr to invest monies for Givens without the hassle of company creditors or the relevant taxing authorities. The detours that *698 the IAS funds took ranged from “leasing” Givens’ services to IAS for a paltry annual sum of $4.8 million to converting $19 million of IAS’ non-exempt liquid assets into creditor-proof exempt assets via the purchase of phony annuities to simply giving $3.5 million to a Tedder company that promised to stabilize IAS’ income, but instead canceled the contract without returning the funds. Eventually, between the siphoning of the funds and blanket liens that Tedder’s companies acquired on IAS’ assets and future income, all of IAS’ resources were encumbered and beyond the reach of creditors.
Based upon the evidence, the bankruptcy court entered a money judgment for the Trustee, and against IBT and SCSD in the amount of $1,679,251.30, which included interest. 3 IBT and SCSD appealed to the district court, which affirmed the bankruptcy court’s ruling. The Defendants then filed the instant appeal.
II. Discussion
A Standard of Review
Our Court has jurisdiction over this matter under 28 U.S.C. § 158(d). “As the ‘second cоurt of review of a bankruptcy court’s judgment,’ ” we independently examine the factual and legal determinations of the bankruptcy court and employ the same standards of review as the district court.
In re Issac Leaseco, Inc.,
B. Statute of Limitations and the Filing of the Complaint
One of the primary issues of the appeal concerns whether the Trustee let the limitations period run prior to filing suit. IBT and SCSD argue that the statute of limitations set forth in 11 U.S.C. § 546(a)(1) had lapsed before the Trustee filed this adversary proceeding on February 10, 1999. Count I of the complaint seeks avoidance of the transfer to IBT and SCSD under § 544(b), and is limited by 11 U.S.C. § 546(a), which provides that:
An action or proceeding under section 544, 545, 545, 547, 548, or 553 of this title may not be commenced after the earlier of—
(1) the later of—
(A) 2 years after the entry of the order of relief; or
(B) 1 year after the appointment of election of the first trustee ...
Because there was no statutory trustee 4 appointed in this case, the statute of limi *699 tations would have run two years after the filing of the bankruptcy case — June 20, 1998. Three days before the limitations was set to run, the bankruptcy court entered an order extending the time until a hearing by the Special Master on July 29, 1998. Due to the ongoing discovery disputes, that hearing was not held until September 8, 1998. On September 17, 1998, the bankruptcy court entered a second order, granting a further extension of the time for filing an adversary action through February 10,1999.
The Defendants’ four-pronged attack on the extension of the statute of limitations consists of: (1) that the bankruptcy court did not have the power to extend the § 546(a) period; (2) that the bankruptcy court’s extension of the § 546(a) period was inoperative because of the “gap” period between the orders extending the limitations period; 5 (3) that the doctrine of equitable tolling should not apply to the adversary proceeding; and (4) that the § 546(a) enlargement orders were ineffective against IBT and SCSD.
There is the threshold matter of whether the bankruptcy court had any authority — either by its own order or the doctrine of equitable tolling — to enlarge the § 546(a) period for commencing avoidance actions. The Defendants suggest that rather than a statute of limitations, § 546(a) operates as a jurisdictional bar, and point to Bankruptcy Rule 9006(b), which does not specifically provide for enlargement of time period created by statute, as opposed to those created by the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure or a court order. We find no merit in this argument. Rule 9006(b) states:
[W]hen an act is required or allowed to be done at or within a specified period by these rules or by a notice given thereunder or by order of court, the court for cause may at any time in its discretion ... order the period enlarged.
Although “by these rules ... or by order of court” does not explicitly encompass statutory timeframes, it does bring all of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure under its umbrella. Not surprisingly, this would include Rule 7001, which defines an adversary proceeding as one “to recover money or property” and Rule 7003, which governs the commencement of adversary proceedings. To read a jurisdictional bar into § 546 would lead to absurd results, and the Defendants did not cite any authority for such a proposition. Therefore, § 546 is indeed a statute of limitations, subject to waiver, equitable tolling, and equitable estoppel.
See In re Rodriguez,
While we think a bankruptcy court has the discretion to extend the filing period for an adversary proceeding, that resolution is only the tip of the iceberg. It is undisputed that the Trustee filed the adversary proceeding within the § 546(a) period, as extended by the bankruptcy court’s second order. The controversy lies with the so-called “gaps” between the orders that extended the time period, and whether the extension was fixed by date or reference to a hearing. Namely, the ambi *700 guity arose out the June 17 enlargement order, which provided for an extension of the § 546(a) limitations period “through the time of the hearing by the Special Master on July 29, 1998.” This hearing was then continued until September 3 due to the protracted discovery disagreements. At the September 3 hearing, the judge granted an oral motion to extend the § 546(a) period through February 10, 1999. The bankruptcy court memorialized this extension by written order on September 17,1998.
The Defendants maintain that the effective words of the bankruptcy court’s first enlargement order were “July 29, 1999” rather than the reference to the “hearing set before the special master.” Further, the second order was docketed fifteen days after the oral ruling, and was not entered nunc pro tunc. Given these inherent ambiguities, the bankruptcy court declined to rest its opinion solely on its own orders, although it eventually determined that the Trustee timely filed the complaint.
We think that the bankruptcy court’s orders did indeed extend the limitations period, albeit not in a seamless fashion. In its Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, the bankruptcy court noted that “[without question, [it] intended the limitations period of Section 546(a) to extend through February 10, 1999.” Such a statement demonstrates the clear purpose of the bankruptcy court, even where an order does not. Where an order is ambiguous, “its extent must be determined by what preceded it and what it was intended to execute.”
Union Pacific Railroad Co. v. Mason City & Fort Dodge Railroad Co.,
There is also the matter of the alleged gap between September 3 and September 17, where the bankruptcy court orally granted a second extension at the hearing of the Special Master, but did not enter a written order until September 17. In this instance, the time at which the written order was entered by the court and file-stamped by the clerk is irrelevant to the time of its effectiveness. “A judgment is not what is entered but what was directed by the court ... In the very nature of things, the act must be perfect before its history can be so; and the imperfection or neglect of its history fails to modify or obliterate the act.”
In re Ackermann,
In an abundance of caution, we will not limit our analysis of the limitations period to the bankruptcy court’s orders. Rather, we will also reach the question of whether the Trustee demonstrated an equitable basis for extending the limitations period. Where, despite the exercise of due diligence, a trustee fails to timely bring an avoidance action due to fraud or extraordinary circumstances beyond the trustee’s control, equitable tolling prevents the expiration of § 546(a)’s limitations period.
In re Levy,
The equitable tolling doctrine most often applied is that enunciated in
Holmberg v. Annbrecht,
Generally, two types of cases give rise to the equitable principles of tolling where the plaintiff cannot timely commence an action because of a defendant’s affirmative or negligent conduct.
In re Pomaville,
Thus, in the instant case, the Trustee must demonstrate either that he acted with due diligence to discover the negligently concealed fraud or that one of the parties involved in the alleged fraud took positive steps to conceal the transfers.
In re Naturally Beautiful Nails, Inc.,
The bankruptcy court found that the Trustee succeeded under both tests, observing that the Trustee “workеd long and hard to discover all the intricacies of IAS’ and Givens’ asset diversion plan.” We agree. The Trustee hired a forensic accountant to assist in piecing together the jigsaw puzzle of transfers. Although the Trustee identified some of the initial transfers early in the case, it took months to assemble and ascertain the different mechanisms at work behind the IAS transfers.
To further complicate the Trustee’s attempts to ferret out the details of the asset diversion plan, the Debtor and Givens went to extreme lengths to hide their activities. The case was replete with discovery violations, mostly in the form of the Debtor and its associates’ refusals to supply the Trustee with critical and important documentation. Thé appointment of a Special Master and his concluding report demonstrate the deliberate and intentional attempts to obscure the true nature of the asset transfers. The documents that evidenced a money trail from IAS to IBT and SCSD were not produced until after Sеptember 3, 1998. Without that information, it would have been careless, and perhaps malpractice, for the Trustee to file this adversary proceeding prior to the delivery of these documents. As such, we conclude that the Trustee did not obtain actual knowledge of the cause of action until after September 3, 1998, at which time the limitation period of Section 546 began to run. The February 10, 1999 complaint was timely filed. Moreover, even if the concealment was negligent or inadvertent, and we are not in the least convinced that it was, the bankruptcy court was right to find that the Trustee “acted with exemplary diligence given the complexities of this case.”
As a final challenge to the enlargement of the § 546(a) statute of limitations, the Defendants argue that the bankruptcy court’s orders do not apply to them. The second enlargement order encompassed potential adversary proceedings against certain limited partnerships and “any other entity (including individuals) which holds or held, either directly or indirectly, assets for the benefit of Charles J. Givens or members of his family.” IBT and SCSD contend that the order could not apply to them because they do not hold any such interests. The record, however, demonstrates otherwise.
The evidence at trial established that Tedder and Givens orchestrated an elaborate operation that filtered money directly from IAS to IBT and SCSD. Tedder and Dan Baer — the owner of both Defendants — initiated various business ventures together and collaborated on a variety of investment programs and seminars. In their business dealings, Baer managed the day-to-day activities and Tedder arranged for financing. Moreover, the Guild project, where the Defendants eventually put the IAS funds, was one of many invest *703 ments Tedder made within the confines of the asset dissipation plan. Finally, evidence demonstrated that Baer knew that Guild funding originated with IAS and Givens.
The second enlargement order pertained to those that held assets either “direсtly or indirectly.” The Defendants’ possession of IAS funds falls squarely within that description. The money moved through a chain from IAS and Givens to Tedder and his entities to Baer and his entities, the Defendants. As joint venture partners, Baer was to renovate and manage the Guild project, while Tedder secured and supplied financing. Tedder clearly knew the source of the funds, and the bankruptcy court charged Baer with this knowledge as well. IBT unquestioningly accepted the money, no strings attached. Baer knew that IAS was not an equity participant in the project, but no one signed a promissory note. Rather, Tedder incredibly supplied $1.050 million free and clear of any debt. IBT and SCSD cannot escape liability'on the notion that Charles Givens did not directly hand them a fist full of cash or write a million-dollar check. Simply put, the Defendants were subject to the terms of the bankruptcy court’s second enlargement order.
C. Avoidance of the Initial Transfer
Defendants argue next that the Bankruptcy Code requires that the Trustee first avoid the transfers to the initial transferees before he has a cause of action against the subsequent transferees. In fraudulent transfer actions, there is a distinction between avoiding the transaction and actually recovering the property or the value thereof.
In re Burns,
Title 11 U.S.C. § 550(a) details the scope of recovery:
to the extent that a transfer is avoided under section 544 ... the trustee may recover for the benefit of the estate property transferred, or if the court so order, the value of such property, from- — •
(1) the initial transferee of such transfer or the entity for whose benefit such transfer was made; or
(2) any immediate or mediate transferee of such initial transferee
As § 550(a) indicates, once a transaction has been avoided, the bankruptcy estate may recover from: (a) the initial transferee; (b) the party for whose benefit the initial transfer was made; and/or (c) any subsequent transferee.
In re Int’l Mgmt. Assoc.,
The crux of the Defendants’ argument is that the Trustee failed to first sue the initial transferees, Tedder’s law firm and a Tedder entity named Texas International Personnel Corporation (“TIPCO”), before asserting the claims against IBT and SCSD, the subsequent transferees. If, as the Defendants contend, the money first filtered from IAS to Tedder and TIPCO, then the Trustee must first avoid this initial transfer. Accordingly, and as the Defendants’ argument goes, pursuant to Section 550 of the Bankruptcy Code, the Trustee cannot pursue subsequent transferees without avoiding that initial transfer.
Section 550(a) plainly states that “to the extent that a transfer is
avoided
under section 544 ... of this title.” (emphasis added). Defendants primarily rely upon
In re Trans-End Technology, Inc.,
Although the Defendants also rely on the
Slack-Homer
decision, we must mention what the dissenting judge so neatly pointed out. Namely, that there were no other cases to support the majority’s decision, and instead listed several cases that did not preclude recovery from the subsequent transferee because the trustee did not go against the initial transferee.
The strict interpretation of § 550(a) produces a harsh and inflexible result that runs counterintuitive to the nature of avoidance actions. If the initial transaction must be avoided in the first instance, then any streetwise transferee would simply re-transfer the monеy or asset in order to escape liability. The chain of transfers would be endless. Nevertheless, this re- *705 suit presents a bit of a quandary. There are two approaches that achieve the end, and we must determine which is the most sound, both legally and logically, for this case.
Several courts, including a bankruptcy court from this Circuit, have advocated the “avoidable” view of § 550(a).
See In re Advanced Telecomm. Network, Inc.,
Since the conduit notion is the law in this Circuit, we will address it first. As with the instant case, a plaintiffs ability to make a case under § 550, may be compromised by the characterization of a potential defendant as an initial, immediate, or mediate transferee. In re
Advanced Telecomm. Network, Inc.,
Thus, courts have created a more malleable approach to § 550(a), recognizing that such a “mere conduit” cannot be considered an “initial recipient” for purposes of an avoidance action.
In re Chase & Sanborn Corp.,
Thus, a legal fiction is created, and the logical flow of the “mere conduit” rule is that the party who receives the property from the conduit is likely to be considered the “initial transferee,” albeit several steps removed. The mere conduit rule is used most frequently in situations where banks act as an intermеdiary in transferring assets.
See In re Erie Marine Enterprises, Inc.,
In order for this exception to apply, then, we must determine whether Givens, Tedder, TIPCO and HAC are merely conduits of the IAS funds, and whether IBT and SCSD are the resulting “initial transferees.” As we read it, the conduit rule presumes that the facilitator of funds acts without bad faith, and is simply an innocent participant to the underlying fraud.
See In re Machinery & Steel Service, Inc.,
These initial transferees do not conjure images of well-intentioned, but gullible, parties who mistakenly fell victim to a massive conspiracy between the Debtor and the Defendants. To the contrary, these entities had intimate and thorough knowledge of the transactions and their desired effect. Money changed multiple hands, twenty-three entities filtered IAS funds away from creditors. Tedder and Givens were the architects of a masterful plan aimed at diluting IAS’ coffers and lining their own pockets. To hold them to be innocent parties would contravene the character of a fraudulent transfer action, the purpose of which is to expose fraudulent dealings. As such, we cannot deem Givens, HAC, and TIPCO as “mere conduits” who naively transferred funds to Van Dam who then transferred the same funds to IBT and SCSD. This case does not merit the “mere conduit” distinction that we carved out in Chase & Sanborn or Nordberg.
Notwithstanding our analysis of the application of the conduit rule, the Trustee’s case does not fail. The more tenable result in this case is that the Trustee may simultaneously avoid a transfer under § 544 and seek recovery under § 550.
Richmond Produce,
The court in
Richmond Produce
affirmed the bankruptcy court’s decision permitting the trustee to recover a fraudulent transfer from a mediate transferee, irrespective of whether the trustee had sued the initial transferee of the relevant property. In the case at bar, the bankruptcy court adopted the
Richmond Produce
analysis: Under § 550, “once a trustee proves that a transfer is avoidable ... he may seek to recover against any transferee, initial or immediate, or an entity for whose benefit the transfer is made.”
Id.
at 463. An interpretation of Section 550 mandating actual avoidance of initial transfers, “conflates Chapter ll’s avoidance and recovery sections.”
Richmond Produce
further clarified that the language “to the extent that” simply appreciates “that transfers sometimes may be avoided only in part, and that only the avoided portion of a transfer is recoverable.”
Id.
(citing
In re Sufolld, Inc.,
In the instant case, the bankruptcy court agreed with Richmond Produce, noting:
Nothing in the language of Section 550 requires a plaintiff in a fraudulent transfer adversary proceeding to avoid the transfer received by the initial transferee before continuing with avoidance actions down the line of transfers. Cer *707 tainly, the plaintiff can pursue the initial transferee, but the plaintiff is not obligated to do so. The plaintiff is free to pursue any of the immediate or mediate transferees, and nothing in the statute requires a different result.
Although this interpretation treats IBT and SCSD as subsequent transferees, the distinction between initial transferee and mediate transferee for avoidance purposes is irrelevant. The Defendants need only be transferees. In order to incur liability as a transferee, a party must have exercised a degree of dominion and control over the property transferred, or held some sort of beneficial right in it.
In re Paramount Citrus, Inc.,
We think this interpretation is correct. We emphasize that this ruling does not erode the conduit theory. Rather, it accommodates a case involving a multitude of patently fraudulent transfers. Not all cases can conveniently be characterized as involving a “conduit” in order to reach property from later transfers. Thus, the decision today allows a more pragmatic and flexible approach to avoiding transfers; for if the Bankruptcy Code conceives of a plaintiff suing independently to avoid and recover, then bringing the two actions together only advances the efficiency of the process and furthers the “protections and forgiveness inherent in the bankruptcy laws.”
In re Waldron,
We are mindful that our reading of § 550(a) does not embrace a strict construction. We believe, however, that it does address the ambiguity of the words “to the extent that a transfer is avoided.” Because those words are ambiguous, it is appropriate to look beyond the plain language of the statute.
See United States v. DBB, Inc.,
D. Tracing of Funds
IBT and SCSD also argue that the Trustee failed to trace every penny deposited into the Van Dan accounts and transferred to IBT. Because the transactions associated with this case are numerous and difficult, we find it necessary to re-examine the chain of IAS funds to IBT: As part of the deferred compensation scheme, whereby IAS leased Givens’ services from two of Tedder’s entities, HAC Administrative Finance, (“HAC”) and TIPCO, IAS transferred funds to TIPCO and TIPCO then transferred monies to HAC. HAC, in turn, transferred the IAS funds to Eurok-redit. Eurokredit then passed funds to Tedder’s H.D., Inc. From H.D., Inc., the funds went to Van Dan, yet another of Tedder’s companies. Finally, Tedder moved the funds from Van Dan to IBT. IBT and SCSD stipulated that IBT received $1,050,000 from these transfers, and admitted that IBT subsequently transferred the funds to an account held by SCSD to purchase units in the Guild. The Defendants contend that the monies sought by the Trustee have been commingled with unrecoverable monies. Furthermore, according to the Defendants, any funds included in the report for transfers occurring before June 20, 1992, are unreachable because of the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act’s four-year statute of limitations. Finally, the Defendants point out that $659,000 of the money came from an entity called CJGO Canada, and not the Debtor.
In an action seeking recovery, the plaintiff has the burden of tracing funds it claims to be property of the estate.
First Fed. of Michigan v. Barrow,
The evidence demonstrates that the funds used to purchase the Guild property originated in H.D., Inc. and Van Dan accounts, and the monies in those accounts originated with the Debtor. Tedder and Givens cycled substantial amounts of money through nearly two dozen entities on a regular basis. During that time, IAS’ debt increased in lock-step with Givens’ burgeoning treasure chest, all in an effort to
*709
hide assets from creditors. That money eventually found its way to IBT and SCSD. “It is undeniable that equity will follow a fund through any number of transmutations, аnd preserve it for the owner as long as it can be identified.”
Bridge,
Furthermore, we find no merit in the Defendants’ argument that the monies the Trustee seeks to recover have been commingled with funds that are not recoverable due to the operation of Florida’s fraudulent transfer law. Under 11 U.S.C. § 544, a transfer may only be avoided within four years of the filing of bankruptcy petition per Fla. Stat. § 726.110(1). What Defendants fail to recognize is that the second clause of Fla. Stat. § 726.110(1), provides an exception to the general limitations period, where the claimant could not reasonably have discovered the relevant transfers. In such a case, avoidance actions may be brought for one year from the time the plaintiff discovers or reasonably could have discovered the fraudulent transfers. The overwhelming evidence demonstrates the pervasive fraud that took place in this case, which essentially paralyzed the Trustee’s attempts to undo the tangled mess of transfers. Given the situation, the exception applies, and all transfers relevant to the Guild purchase were properly avoidable.
The Defendants’ last stand with respect to challenging the avoidance of the transfers is the argument that some $659,000 of the funds that the Trustee sought for recovery came from a source other than the Debtor — CJGO Canada. Again, we harken back to the bankruptcy court’s conclusion that “the funds involved in the fraudulent transfer ... did not originate from any of Tedder’s other clients or from Givens’ other businesses. The money came from IAS alone.” The Defendants have the burden of demonstrating clear error in this factual finding,
In re JLJ, Inc.,
E. Prejudgment Interest
As a final matter, we address whether the bankruptcy court improperly charged interest from the time of the transfers to the Appellants, August 20, 1993, rather than from the time the Appellants were actually named in the complaint, August 17, 1999. Ordinarily, the allowance of prejudgment interest and the fixing of the time from which interest shall accrue are discretionary with the court.
Industrial Risk Insurers v. M.A.N. Gutehoffnungshutte GmbH,
Although the Bankruptcy Code does not explicitly provide for prejudgment interest, it has become a common practice, especially when transfers have been made with the actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors.
See Matter of Texas Gen. Petroleum Corp.,
Our Circuit’s precedent holds that “prejudgment interest is not a penalty, but compensation to the plaintiff for the use of funds that were rightfully his.”
Industrial Risk Insurers,
III. Conclusion
Based upon the foregoing reasons, we find that the Trustee timely filed the adversary proceeding, that the Trustee simultaneously could avoid the transfer and recover from the mediate transferees, that the Trustee fully satisfied his burden of tracing the Debtor’s funds, and that the bankruptcy court properly awarded prejudgment interest from the date the Defendants received the fraudulently transferred funds. Accordingly, we AFFIRM the decisions of the bankruptcy and district courts.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Tedder held himself out as an expert in asset protection, and lectured on related strategies.
. Ultimately, the Debtor's reorganization efforts failed, and IAS eventually filed a liquidating plan, which included a provision creating the Stock Trustee, the plaintiff in the adversary proceeding. The plan granted the Stock Trustee the power to investigate, commence, and prosecute all avoidance and fraudulent transfer adversary proceedings, such as this one.
. The bankruptcy court also entered judgment against another defendant, Kevin McCarthy, in the amount of $1,288,534.30, but he neither attended trial nor presented any defense on his behalf. McCarthy is not a party to this appeal.
. Although Northen is referred to as the "Trustee,” his title is that of "stock trustee,” *699 which is not the statutory trustee described in § 546(a)(1)(B).
. IBT and SCSD contend that there is a 57-day gap between the expiration of the first extension, July 29, and the hearing by the Special Master, on September 3. The Defendants further argue that another fourteen-day gap exists between the September 3 hearing and the day the final extension was actually ordered, September 17.
. The issue here is not whether § 546(a) is a statute that is subject to equitable tolling. Instead our focus is whether there is evidence to equitably toll the statute of limitations.
. As a reviewing court, we should not restrict ourselves to examining a particular statutory-provision in isolation when determining whether Congress has specifically addressed the question at issue. The meaning, or lack thereof, of certain words or phrases may only come to light when placed in the appropriate context. It is a "fundamental canon of statutory construction that the words of a statute must be read in their context and with a view to their place in the overall statutory scheme.”
FDA v. Brown & Williamson To
*708
bacco Corp.,
