Memorandum of Decision on Motion to Authorize Creditors’ Committee to Pursue Alter Ego and Avoidance Actions
The matter before the court is a motion by the debtor in possession, Landmark Fence Co, Inc., a California Corporation, to authorize the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors to pursue certain litigation rights which are asserted to be property of the estate: alter ego claims against the principal of the debtor, Robert Yanik, and certain avoidance actions. The request of the debtor to assign the estate’s rights to pursue avoidance actions to the Committee has not been challenged. However, the holder of the largest asserted unsecured claim against the debtor, a class of former employees of the debtor who were involved in class action litigation prior to the bankruptcy filing alleging wage and benefit violations (the Sahagun Creditors), objected to the assignment of the alter ego claims. The Sahagun Creditors assert that they hold the right to assert the alter ego claims because the claims are not general and therefore are not property of the estate.
This issue first arose before the court at the hearing on the Sahagun Creditors’ motion for relief from automatic stay on October 7, 2009, by which the Sahagun Creditors requested stay relief to pursue the state court litigation against the debtor and Yanik, including asserting the alter ego claims against Yanik. In denying the motion, the court made extensive comments on the record that the record before it showed that, by Sahagun Creditors’ own admissions in the state court proceeding, the alter ego claims were general claims and therefore were property of the bankruptcy estate under the holdings of
In re Folks,
At the stay relief hearing, the court devised a procedure by which the parties could seek a court determination as to the holder of the alter ego claims. That procedure resulted in this motion, by which the debtor, asserting that the alter ego claims are property of the estate, seeks authorization for the Committee to pursue them. The matter was properly noticed for hearing on November 18, 2009, with
Having reviewed the entire record before the court, which includes the briefs and evidence presented in support of and in opposition to the motion for relief from stay and the briefs and evidence presented in support of and in opposition to the motion for authorization to pursue the alter ego claims, the court grants the debt- or’s motion. This ruling is based not only on this written memorandum, but also on the statements on the record at both the October 7, 2009 hearing and the November 18, 2009 hearing. The opposing parties have not challenged the debtor’s right to assign any litigation claims of the estate to the Committee, the grounds for which were well briefed by the debtor in the moving papers, so the court will not address that issue further. The court concludes the facts and law support such authorization. The alter ego issue is addressed further briefly below.
The prevailing 9th circuit law is that a general alter ego claim against a corporation in bankruptcy is held by the bankruptcy estate if state law allows the corporation to bring such action against itself. In
Davey Roofing,
The 9th Cir. BAP in
In re Folks,
The Sahagun Creditors do not actively dispute this law, but assert that the claims which they hold, which arise out their employment by Landmark Fence,
The Sahagun Creditors have continually confused the acts which resulted in their injury and damages — the acts of the Corporation controlled by Yanik which did not pay them adequate wages and benefits— with the acts which resulted in the injury giving rise to the alter ego claims. Those acts, as alleged in their complaint and demonstrated by their summary judgment evidence, damaged the corporation as a whole, not individual creditors. As such, the alter ego claim is a general one and belongs to the estate.
A recent District Court case explained clearly this distinction. In
Ahcom, Ltd. v. Smeding,
Absent a unique injury arising from the same facts that are used to pierce the veil, facts giving rise to an alter ego theory could be used by any creditor to bring a claim for repayment against the debtor’s shareholders [citing Folks ]. Giving the trustee exclusive standing to bring this claim therefore “promotes equitable distribution and accords the Bankruptcy Code’s ultimate goal of balancing the equities and interest of all affected parties in a bankruptcy case.” Id. at *2
The injury alleged by the Sahagun creditors here is not the same one from which the alter ego claim arises. The injury causing the alter ego claim — the alleged self-dealing that Yanik did for himself, his wife, and his friendly employee/contractors — damaged all creditors.
For these reason's and all reasons stated on the record previously, the position of the Sahagun Creditors that the alter ego claims are individual and held by them alone is not supported by the facts before the court. The motion authorizing the Committee to pursue those claims is granted. The movant may present an appropriate order.
