Pending before the Court are all of the defendants’ motions to dismiss this adversary proceeding brought by the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors (the “Committee”) (ECF Doc. #’s 11, 16, 21, 24, 27, 31). Repeat corporate bankruptcies, sometimes by the same debtor and sometimes by a successor entity, particularly under current economic conditions, are, unfortunately, not uncommon. This case stands out, however, by the rapidity with which the debtors here, successors through a chapter 11, section 363 purchase in July 2008 of the Steve & Barry’s women’s clothing business for $163 million, subject to various adjustments (Compl. ¶¶ 30, 42), descended into their own chapter 11 cases in November 2008. The debtors’ filing here was followed immediately by a court-approved going-out-of-business sale and the shuttering of 153 stores that the debtors’ business plan had hoped to maintain, with the resulting loss of many jobs. The debtors are hopelessly insolvent. At the time of the chapter 11 filings, debtors had $90 million of first lien debt, $75 million of second lien debt, and over $5.4 million in unsecured debt from their 30 largest unsecured creditors. (ECF Doc. # s 31 (Affidavit of Richard A. Sebastiao Pursuant to Local Bankruptcy Rule 1007-2) and 46 (Consolidated List of Creditors Holding the Thirty Largest Unsecured Claims Against The Debtors).) At the present time the debtors are, or are close to, administratively insolvent.
As explained below, Steve & Barry’s assets were acquired from the Stone Barn LLC Chapter 11 estate by a group of private equity investors, and a firm specializing in the liquidation of retail stores, as well as by several owners of the Stone Barn LLC debtors. Initially capitalized by $225 million, including a $125 million first lien loan provided by Abelco Finance LLC (“Abelco”), an affiliate of Cerberus, a $75 million loan provided by a subordinated second lien facility from Defendant BH S & B Finco, LLC (“Finco”), and $25 million in equity from defendant BHY S & B Holdco LLC (“Holdeo”). (See Compl. ¶¶ 31, 35.) In three months of operation, in August, September and October, 2008, the acquired business rapidly burned through its available capital and the new owners declined to invest additional funds. This bankruptcy case followed.
The Committee commenced this adversary proceeding against the entities and individuals that were involved in the purchase and short-lived operations of the debtors, seeking to recover money for the estate, based on claims of piercing the corporate veil, breach of fiduciary duty and equitable subordination or recharacterization. The defendants have all moved to dismiss the Complaint. One thing that stands out here is the absence of any allegation that, during the debtors’ short-lived and rapid path to bankruptcy, any of the defendants did anything to recover the money they invested or loaned to the debtors. In other words, the defendants too lost a lot of money as this venture failed.
For the reasons explained below, with the exception of the equitable subordination claim against defendant Finco, the Court concludes that the Complaint must be dismissed with prejudice. With respect to the equitable subordination claim against Finco, the Complaint is dismissed with leave to amend within 30 days of entry of this Opinion and Order.
BACKGROUND
The facts below are taken from the Complaint (ECF Doc. # 1) and the origi
A. The First Bankruptcy and Sale of Steve & Barry’s
This case arises out of the Bankruptcy Code § 363 sale of the bankrupt Steve & Barry’s line of clothing stores and the subsequent bankruptcy filing by the purchaser, Holdings, and its operating subsidiaries (together with Holdings, the “Debtors”). See In re: Stone Barn Manhattan, LLC, Case No. 08-12579, ECF Doe. # 628 (Bankr.S.D.N.Y. August 22, 2008) (Grop-per, J.). Steve & Barry’s sold licensed university apparel and lifestyle brands, private label casual clothing and accessories for men, women and children, and exclusive celebrity branded lines of apparel and accessories. (Compl. ¶ 25.) At the time it filed for bankruptcy on July 9, 2008, Steve & Barry’s, through its parent corporation, S & B Industries, Inc., operated 276 stores. (Id.) Steve & Barry’s filed for bankruptcy due to a liquidity crisis caused by a host of reasons, including: delayed store openings, delayed receipts of tenant allowances, and reduced borrowing capacity arising from inventory appraisal reductions, all exacerbated by the instability in the credit markets. (Id. ¶ 27.)
On August 21, 2008, Holdings purchased a majority of the assets and liabilities of S & B Industries, Inc. in a § 363 sale in the Steve & Barry’s bankruptcy proceeding. (Id. ¶ 24.) The purchase price for the acquisition was $163 million, subject to various adjustments. (Id. ¶ 30.) The Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York approved the sale in an order on August 22, 2008. (Id. ¶ 24.)
B. The Formation of Holdings and Its Corporate Structure
Defendant Teitelbaum formed Holdings on behalf of defendants Bay Harbour Management LC, Bay Harbour Master Ltd., Trophy Hunter Investments, Ltd., and BH S & B, Inc. (collectively, “Bay Harbour”) for the purposes of entering into the Asset Purchase Agreement with S & B Industries on July 28, 2008. (Compl. ¶ 28; Da-han. Aff., Ex. I, ¶2.) According to the Complaint, Holdco was formed by Bay Harbour to serve as a holding company for Holdings and was Holdings’s sole managing member; Holdco was eventually replaced by Intermediate Holdco, against
Intermediate Holdco was later interposed as an intermediate entity between Holdco and Holdings, with the same managerial powers as Holdco. {Id. ¶ 49; Da-han Aff. Exs. I, S and E; Einstein Aff., Ex. A.) However, according to the original and Amended and Restated, and Second and Third Amended and Restated LLC Agreements of Holdings, the sole initial member of Holdings was Bay Har-bour Holdings LLC (“Bay Harbour LLC”), which remained the sole member until August 22, 2008. (original LLC Agreement of Holdings, Dahan Aff., Ex. I; Amended and Restated LLC Agreement of Holdings, Einstein Aff., Ex. A.) There are contradicting statements in the Second and Third Amended and Restated LLC Agreement of Holdings as to when Intermediate Holdco became the sole managing member of Holdings. According to the Second Amended and Restated LLC Agreement of Holdings, on August 22, 2008, Bay Harbour LLC “contributed, conveyed, assigned, transferred, and delivered to ‘Holdco’ [defined therein as ‘BHY S & B Holdco LLC’] 100% of [its] membership interests of [Holdings],” pursuant to a “certain Contribution Agreement.” (Second Amended and Restated LLC Agreement of Holdings, Dahan Aff., Ex. S.) However, the Third Amended and Restated LLC Agreement of Holdings indicates that on August 22, 2008, Bay Har-bour LLC “contributed, conveyed, assigned, transferred, and delivered to ‘Holdco’ [defined therein as ‘S & B Intermediate Holdco LLC’] 100% of [its] membership interests” in Holdings, making ‘Holdco’ the sole managing member of Holdings, pursuant to a “certain Contribution Agreement” but also, that “on October 9, 2008, ‘Holdco’ as the sole managing member of [Holdings], contributed, conveyed, assigned, transferred, and delivered to “Intermediate Holdco” [also defined as ‘S & B Intermediate Holdco LLC’] 100% of its membership interests in Holdings as the sole member of the Company, pursuant to a “certain Contribution Agreement.” ” (Dahan Aff., Ex. E.) In the Complaint, plaintiff alleges that Intermediate Holdco was interposed as an “intermediate holding Debtor of the Debt- or” on or about October 14, 2008. (Compl. ¶ 49.) Furthermore, the Second Amended and Restated Limited Liability Company Agreement of Holdings also indicates that the sole Member of the Company is Holdco; whereas the Third Amended and Restated Limited Liability Agreement of Holdings indicated that the sole Member of the company is Intermediate Holdco. (Dahan Aff., Exs. S and E, at 2.) Accordingly, there appears to be a factual issue as to identity of Holdings’s management from August 22, 2008 to October 14, 2008.
Section 3.12(g) of Holdco’s LLC Agreement states that “[n]o Manager shall be liable to the Company or any Member or Economic Owner for monetary damages for breach of fiduciary duty as a Manager; provided that the foregoing shall not eliminate or limit the liability of a Manager: (i) for any breach of such Manager’s duty of loyalty to the Company or its Unitholders (as such duty is modified pursuant to the terms of this Agreement); (ii) any acts or omissions that constitute fraud, willful misconduct, bad faith or gross negligence in the conduct of such Manager in his capacity as a Manager of the Company, or (iii) for any transaction from which such Manager derived an improper personal benefit.” (Einstein Aff., Ex. B.) Similarly, Section 7 of the Holdings LLC Agreements provides, in each agreement with the exception of the original LLC Agreement of Holdings:
(Einstein Aff. Ex. A; Dahan Aff. Exs. S and E.)
Defendants Andrew Todd and Gary Sugarman were President and Chief Operating Officer of Holdings. (Compl. ¶ 76.) Hal Kahn was hired as the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Holdings in the latter half of October, 2008. (Id. ¶ 58.) The consulting firm of JH Cohn, retained by Teitelbaum, performed Chief Financial Officer (CFO) services for Holdings. (Id. ¶ 60.)
Holdings was capitalized by a $125 million short-term loan from Abelco, payable on demand (“Abelco Loan”), 2 and $100 million in capital contributions. (Id. ¶ 31.) The $100 million capital contributions came from the following sources: $35 million from Bay Harbour; $35 million from various entities affiliated with York Capital Management, all of whom are defendants (“York”); $10 million each from the Steve & Barry’s co-founders, defendants Steven Shore and Barry Prevor (for a total of $20 million); and $10 million from defendant Hilco SB LLC (“Hilco”), a company that had initially sought to acquire Steve & Barry’s inventory for liquidation purposes, but was persuaded to join in the bid in exchange for the right to handle liquidation of the stores Bay Harbour did not intend to keep. (Id. ¶¶ 32-33.)
At Bay Harbour’s direction, Holdco contributed $25 million of the $100 million directly to Holdings, and contributed $75 million to its affiliate, defendant Finco, that in turn entered into a second lien facility with Holdings in the same amount, junior only to the Abelco Loan.
(Id.
¶ 35.) Holdco had a seven-member of board of managers, consisting of two representatives from Bay Harbour (defendants Teitelbaum and Scott Sozio (“Sozio”)
3
); two representatives of York (defendants
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C. Holdings’ Business Operations
At the time it was formed, Holdings had the following business plan:
• Operate 153 stores on a going-forward basis, and liquidate the remaining stores
• Renegotiate the leases for the going-forward stores
• Replace senior management
• Procure new and fresh merchandise for the going-forward stores
• Improve profitability through more tiers of pricing
• Increase the percentage of merchandise representing celebrity licensed apparel
• Improve the frequency of inventory turnover
• Reduce fixed and operating costs
• Move to a “piece pick” method of shipping inventory from Steve & Barry’s distribution center
• Improve the computer systems
(Compl. ¶ 37.) The most critical element of the business plan was to obtain new and fresh merchandise for the going-forward stores. (Id. ¶ 38.) Holdings estimated that it would need in excess of $100 million in merchandise for this purpose. (Id.) The plan was to acquire the necessary merchandise from the following sources:
• $32 million held at port on account of the Steve & Barry’s bankruptcy case
• $25 million from domestic sources
• $20 million ready to be shipped from overseas
• $15 million in materials purchased by vendors but not yet manufactured
• $15 million in inventory from liquidating stores
(Id. ¶ 39.) In addition, Holdings was to consolidate fresh inventory into going-forward stores and stale inventory to liquidating stores. (Id. ¶¶ 40-41.) However, of the $225 million total capitalization of Holdings, only $40 million was set aside for inventory purchases. (Id. ¶ 42.)
D. Holdings’ Performance Between Closing and Bankruptcy
After the purchase of Holdings and the implementation of the business plan, things almost immediately went sour for the Steve & Barry’s brand. In September and October 2008, sales were less than anticipated. Specifically, the Committee alleges that the following failures on the part of management contributed to the deterioration of Holdings:
• Failure to obtain new merchandise necessary to drive sales
• Failure to accomplish timely and effective transfer of merchandise from liquidating stores to going-forward stores
• Failure to timely and appropriately transfer merchandise from Holdings’s distribution center to individual stores, resulting in insufficient merchandise and poor selection
(Id. ¶ 46.) As a result, sales at liquidating stores were less than anticipated. (Id. ¶ 47.)
Things moved rapidly downhill from there. On October 14, 2008, the Abelco Loan was converted to a revolving loan. (Id. ¶ 49.) The same day, Abelco reduced the value of its loan, resulting in a sweep of $28.5 million from Holdings’s cash accounts. (Id. ¶ 50.) At the same time, York and Bay Harbour prohibited Holdings from ordering new merchandise for the Spring 2009 season. (Id. ¶51.) By early November 2008, Bay Harbour and York concluded that Holdings needed additional capital to survive, but refused to provide it. (Id. ¶¶ 52-53.) At about that same time, Bay Harbour and York prepared for Holdings’s bankruptcy filing, which occurred on November 19, 2008.
E. Bay Harbour’s and York’s Management of Holdings
From the beginning, the Committee alleges that Bay Harbour and York effectively treated Holdings as an extension of themselves.
(Id.
¶ 56.) It notes that no board meetings were ever held, that Holdings was run by a “consensus” of the Bay
Further, the Committee alleges that Holdings had no CEO (except for Bay Harbour, which acted as a de facto CEO) until Hal Kahn was hired in late October 2008, and that even then Kahn had no real authority. (See Id. ¶¶ 57-59.) In addition, the Committee alleges that Bay Harbour, with the consent of York, exercised strict control over the expenditure of funds by Holdings’s management, through JH Cohn. (Id. ¶ 60.) With Bay Harbour effectively running the show, the Committee alleges that Holdings was not adequately capitalized for its own financial needs and for risks to its business plan. (Id. ¶ 62.)
There was a reason for this management style, according to the Committee. Specifically, the Committee alleges that Bay Harbour and York had a secret back-up plan to liquidate Holdings in December 2008 if sales did not go well in September, October, and November 2008. (Id. ¶ 63.) They never informed Holdings’s management, Shore, or Prevor of the plan. (Id. ¶¶ 66-67.) In furtherance of that plan, Bay Harbour and York failed to authorize any substantial expenditures to acquire merchandise for the Spring 2009 season. (Id. ¶ 64.) In addition, Bay Harbour and York caused Holdings to continue to incur obligations to creditors without disclosing to creditors that no funds were being expended to continue as a going concern past year-end. (Id. ¶ 65.)
F. Causes of Action
The Committee alleges that the above facts support four causes of action against the defendants:
First, the Committee alleges that Bay Harbour’s and York’s domination and control of Holdings via Holdco harmed Holdings and the estate and gives rise to a claim of piercing the corporate veil. The Committee therefore argues that Bay Har-bour, York, and the individual employee defendants of Bay Harbour and York (Teitelbaum, Sozio, Medeiros and Dinan, collectively, the “Bay Harbour and York Employee Defendants”) should be liable for the debts and obligations of the debtors.
Second,
the Committee alleges that Holdco, the indirect parent of Holdings (the sole managing member of which, as of August or October 2008, as noted
supra,
was Intermediate Holdco, the direct child of Holdco), as well as the Bay Harbour and York Employee Defendants, breached their duties of care, loyalty, and good faith to Holdings. Specifically, the Committee alleges that the Bay Harbour and York Employee Defendants (apparently as members of the Board of Managers of Holdco, which allegedly owed fiduciary duties to Holdings, as the direct parent of Intermediate Holdco and the indirect parent of Holdings, though it is not at all clear from the Complaint) breached their duties of care to Holdings by: (1) removing Shore and Prevor from management and failing to engage a CEO and CFO until it was too late to help the company, even though they knew that Steve & Barry’s was poorly managed; (2) failing to plan on Abelco demanding full payment of its loan; (3) failing to plan for an inventory shortfall, even though they had no basis to
Third, the Committee alleges that Andrew Todd and Gary Sugarman, Holdings’s President and Chief Operating Officer, respectively, breached their fiduciary duty of care to Holdings in three ways: (1) failing to plan for a possible shortfall in inventory; (2) failing to plan for acquiring merchandise held at ports and failing to plan coherently for any possible delay; and (3) failing to plan for moving inventory between going-forward and liquidating stores. (Id. ¶ 77.)
Fourth, the Committee brings an action against Finco, Bay Harbour, York, Hilco, Shore, and Prevor to equitably subordinate, or, in the alternative, to recharac-terize the $75 million Finco loan as an equity contribution. The Committee alleges that the loan was a “sham,” because it actually represented the equity contributions of Bay Harbour, York, Hilco, Prevor, and Shore to Holdco. (Id. ¶¶ 80-81.) The Committee notes that Finco was not in the business of lending money, there was no commercial basis for Finco to lend money to Holdings, there was no negotiation over the terms of the loan, and there were no regular repayments of principal because everyone knew Holdings lacked the ability to repay the loan. (Id. ¶¶ 82-84.) In addition, the Committee alleges that because Bay Harbour and York effectively controlled Finco, they were insiders to the loan.
G. Procedural Background
The Committee filed the Complaint on April 6, 2009. All of the defendants moved to dismiss the Complaint with prejudice. The Court heard oral argument on September 8, 2009 and took the matter under submission. For the reasons explained below, the Complaint is dismissed with prejudice with respect to all causes of action, except for the equitable subordination claim against Finco, which is dismissed with leave to amend within 30 days of entry of this Opinion and Order.
DISCUSSION
A. Standard on a Motion to Dismiss
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8(a)(2) requires a complaint to contain “a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief.” To survive a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss “a complaint must contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.”
Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
— U.S. -,
Following the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
courts use a two-prong approach when considering a motion to dismiss.
See, e.g., Weston v. Optima Commc’ns Sys., Inc.,
No. 09 Civ. 3732(DC),
Courts do not make plausibility determinations in a vacuum; it is a “context-specific task that requires the reviewing court to draw on its judicial experience and common sense.”
Id.
at 1950. A claim is plausible when the factual allegations permit “the court to draw the reasonable inference that the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged.”
Id.
at 1949. Meeting the plausibility standard requires a complaint to plead facts that show “more than a sheer possibility that a defendant has acted unlawfully.”
Id.
(quoting
Twombly,
In deciding a motion to dismiss, a court may consider documents that are integral to the complaint.
Roth,
Here, the LLC Agreements are integral to the Complaint; furthermore, the plaintiff acknowledges that the Court may consider the LLC Agreements in deciding the motions to dismiss. (See Pi’s. Mem. in Opp’n to Defs.’ Mot. to Dismiss, ECF Doc. #41, hereinafter “Plaintiffs Opposition”, at 2.)
When documents contain statements that contradict allegations in a complaint, the documents control and the court need not accept as true the allegations in the complaint.
Roth,
B. Choice of Law
Since Holdings, Holdco and most of the other corporate entities here are based in Delaware, Delaware law applies to the veil-piercing and fiduciary-breach claims.
See Fletcher v. Atex, Inc.,
C. Piercing the Corporate Veil
1. Standard
In general, the corporate form is sacrosanct and courts will not disturb it to hold shareholders of a corporation, or members of an LLC, liable. “There is, of course, no doubt that upon a proper showing corporate entities as between parent and subsidiary may be disregarded and the ultimate party in interest, the parent, be regarded in law and fact as the sole party in a particular transaction.”
Pauley Petroleum Inc. v. Continental Oil Co.,
Under Delaware law, to pierce the corporate veil and establish alter-ego lia
With respect to the first factor, determining whether the parent and subsidiary acted as a single economic entity, courts look to numerous factors, identified by the Third Circuit in
United States v. Pisani,
With respect to the second factor required to pierce the corporate veil — a showing of unfairness or injustice — while a showing of fraud is not necessary, “the requisite injustice or unfairness ... is also not simple in nature but rather something that is similar in nature to fraud or a sham.”
Foxmeyer,
Furthermore, at the motion to dismiss stage, it is insufficient to make con-clusory “[a]llegations of mere domination or control by one entity over another.... Rather, the extent of the domination and control must preclude the controlled entity from having legal or independent significance of its own. There must be an abuse of the corporate form to effect a fraud or an injustice- — some sort of elaborate shell game.”
Off. Comm. of Unsecured Creditors v. Beckoff (In re RSL COM PRIMECALL, Inc.),
2. How Many Veils Must Be Pierced?
As a threshold matter, the Court must consider
how many
veils the Committee has to pierce to reach Holdings’s parents and their officers and directors at Bay
On the other hand, courts in other contexts, such as collapsing fraudulent conveyance claims, indicate that a bankruptcy court should not elevate form over substance, and have refused to permit the corporate structure to stand in the way of a finding of liability, particularly if the defendant had knowledge of the fraud.
See, e.g., Sunbeam,
Since, as discussed below, the Committee has not adequately pled a veil-piercing theory with respect to Holdings — and cannot plead it under any circumstances, dictating a dismissal with prejudice — the Court does not have to reach the question whether the Committee would have to pierce each veil separately. Under these circumstances, for the reasons explained below, the veil-piercing claim is dismissed with prejudice.
The Committee argues that the following allegations in the Complaint support a finding that Bay Harbour and York, through Holdco, totally dominated Holdings and treated Holdings as a mere instrumentality: (a) Holdings was inadequately capitalized; (b) corporate formalities were not observed in that Holdings had no management or board of directors; and (c) Holdings functioned as a fagade for Bay Harbour and York. (Compl. ¶¶ 55-69.) Evaluating each of these allegations separately shows that they are insufficient to pierce the corporate veil.
a. Inadequate Capitalization
The Committee argues that Holdings was inadequately capitalized from its inception, since Holdings’s business plan required the purchase of $100 million of merchandise, but Holdings only had $40 million in unencumbered cash on-hand. The Committee argues that this supports an inference that Holdings was established for a sham purpose and its corporate veil should be pierced.
As an initial matter, undercapi-talization is rarely sufficient to pierce the corporate veil, because otherwise “the veil of every insolvent subsidiary or failed start-up corporation could be pierced.”
RSL,
The Committee concedes in the Complaint that Holdings was established for a legitimate business purpose. (See Compl. ¶ 28 (Holdings was established “for the purpose of entering into the APA, liquidating a portion of Steve and Barry’s retail stores, and continuing to operate the remaining stores and related business as a going concern”).) Therefore, the defendants argue, even if the allegations regarding undercapitalization were true, it could not support the inference that Holdings was formed for an illegitimate business purpose, because such an inference would be contradicted by the Complaint itself. Further, the defendants argue that the allegations in the Complaint could not support a finding of undercapitalization in any event, because Holdings was initially capitalized with $225 million, with $55 million cash on-hand to operate its business ($40 million for inventory, plus a $15 million cash-cushion).
The Committee responds by arguing that the undercapitalization test focuses on unencumbered assets, not just cash available on hand.
See
1 William Meade Fletcher, Fletcher Cyc. of the Law of Private Corp. § 41.33 (2009);
Cent. Ill. Carpenters Health & Welfare Trust Fund v. Struben,
The Court need not reach the question whether Holdings was adequately capitalized, because it finds that the allegations in the Complaint do not support a finding that Holdings was established as a sham entity. As noted above, the Complaint concedes that Holdings was initially a legitimate business. Therefore, even if it were true that Holdings was inadequately capitalized at the time, it could not support the inference that Holdings served an illegitimate purpose. In addition, the under-capitalization would be insufficient to pierce the corporate veil for the same reason articulated by Judge Gropper in
RSL:
it is a rare instance that the veil should be pierced because of undercapitalization, because otherwise every insolvent subsidiary would have its veil pierced.
RSL,
b. Failure to Observe Corporate Formalities
The Committee alleges that Holdings failed to observe certain corporate formalities, further supporting piercing the corporate veil, including that Holdings had no Board meetings. (Compl. ¶ 57.) Though the Committee failed to mention it, Holdings had a single Manager at all times— Bay Harbour, Holdco and then Intermediate Holdco; however, the Holdings LLC Agreements, which, as noted supra, the Court is considering for purposes of the motions to dismiss, make this clear. (See Dahan Aff., Exs. I, S and E; Einstein Aff., Ex. A.) Furthermore, though the Committee failed to point it out, the Holdings LLC Agreements provide that each respective Manager had “all of the powers and authority of a managing member under the [Delaware Limited Liability Company] Act, including, without limitation all necessary authority to conduct the business of the [c]ompany, to open bank or brokerage accounts, to place orders for the purchase or sale of securities, to exercise all rights with respect thereto and to enter into and execute and deliver agreements and other instruments on behalf of the [e]ompany.” Id.
The Committee, did, however, allege that Holdings had no CEO until a few weeks before the bankruptcy filing; its CFO was a consulting firm reporting directly to the Bay Harbour and York members of Holdco’s Board; all major (and many minor) strategic and financial decisions were made by Bay Harbour and York directly; and Holdings’s management was generally kept in the dark. (Compl. ¶¶ 58-61; 63-67.) As a result of these allegations, and the fact that there were no Board meetings, the Committee argues that Holdings’s corporate independence was illusory and was interposed to protect Bay Harbour and York from the consequences of their own actions.
While Bay Harbour and York put a lot of stock in the fact that Holdings was an LLC, and so corporate formalities need not be observed, “emerging caselaw illustrates that situations that result in a piercing of the limited liability veil are similar to those that warrant piercing the corporate veil.”
NetJets Aviation, Inc. v. LHC Commc’ns, LLC,
It is well-established that wholly-owned subsidiaries may share officers, directors and employees with their parent, without requiring the court to infer that the subsidiary is a mere instrumentality for the parent and without requiring the court to conclude that those officers and directors were not functioning properly.
See Milner v. TPAC LLC (In re Ticketplanet. com),
That Holdings’s parents retained decision-making authority is also insufficient to pierce the corporate veil. “Since courts generally presume that the directors are wearing their ‘subsidiary hats’ and not their ‘parent hats’ when acting for the subsidiary ... it cannot be enough to establish liability here that dual officers and directors made policy decisions and supervised activities at the facility.”
Id.
at 69-70,
At the same time, in
Valley Finance, Inc. v. United States,
cited by the district court in
Golden Acres, Inc.,
the corporation was solely owned by a single individual, who made all major corporate decisions, there was doubt as to whether a Board of Directors existed for part of the corporation’s existence, the Board “played no meaningful role,” directors met infrequently and approved corporate decisions and policies without discussion or question, but the individual owner also used corporate funds and staff for his own private purposes, the court permitted veil-piercing.
Valley Finance, Inc. v. United States,
Here, Holdings is an LLC, not a closely held corporation. Furthermore, even though at all relevant times the only Manager of Holdings was the direct parent, Intermediate Holdco, or the indirect parent, Holdco, and thus, there was no board of managers, at least one court has determined that the lack of officers and directors in a subsidiary LLC is not a “persuasive veil-piercing factor.”
Capricorn Investors III, L.P. v. Coolbrands Intern., Inc.,
Other allegations made by the Committee do not support an inference that Holdings did not observe corporate formalities. None of the allegations suggest impropriety or abuse of the corporate form. The failure to hold board meetings does not support piercing, because under the DLLCA, Holdings did not have to hold board meetings or observe other formalities. Indeed, it is not at all odd that a board meeting was not held in Holdings’s brief life between the August 2008 acquisition and the November 2008 bankruptcy.
The remaining allegations with respect to the officers of Holdings' — that Holdings lacked a CEO until a few weeks before the bankruptcy filing, that CFO functions were outsourced to a company that reported directly to Bay Harbour, and that management was generally kept in the dark — are either (1) not required under the DLLCA, and so are insufficient to support a finding of total domination and control sufficient to pierce the corporate veil, or (2) too conelu-sory to survive a motion to dismiss. In short, the Committee has failed to plead adequate facts supporting an inference that Holdings’s failure to observe corporate formalities is so severe as to overcome the presumption that it was independent from its parents.
c. Whether Holdings Was a Faqade for Its Parents and Equity and Fairness Require Piercing the Corporate Veil
Finally, the Committee alleges generally that Holdings was but a mere fagade for Bay Harbour and York to achieve a quick profit while protecting themselves from a downturn by secretly planning to liquidate as quickly as possible should things go wrong. 8 The Committee appears to make this allegation to comply with both factors required to pierce the veil — that there was a “single economic entity,” and an “overall element of fraud or injustice.”
Under Delaware law, the corporate veil will be pierced only if the defendants used the corporate structure itself to further the fraud or injustice; the “underlying cause of action, at least by itself, does not supply [it].”
Foxmeyer,
The Committee’s allegations here are virtually identical to the allegations that numerous courts have found insufficient and dismissed. For example, in
RSL,
the plaintiffs relied on the following factors to argue that the corporate subsidiary was a sham and that its corporate veil should be pierced: (1) the subsidiary was undercapitalized and insolvent since its inception; (2) there was significant overlap in management between the parent and the subsidiary; (3) directors of the parent had ownership interests in the subsidiary; (4) the subsidiary never had a sustainable financial business, and was reliant on the parent for financing; (5) the parent provided managerial services and its officers directed the day-to-day operations of the subsidiary, exercising “de facto” or “effective control” over the affairs of the subsidiary and its directors; and (6) the subsidiary served as a tool to further the interests of the defendants.
RSL,
Judge Gropper pointed out that there was no “de facto control” of the subsidiary by the parents to pierce the veil because “at least several directors for [the subsidiary] were not directors of either [parent].”
Id.
at *14 (citing
see Odyssey Partners, L.P. v. Fleming Cos., Inc.,
Similarly, in
Trevino,
conclusory allegations that (1) a subsidiary was not wholly independent of its parent, (2) that it was under the utter and complete domination and control of its parent, and (3) that it was formed for the purpose of facilitating the parents’ business and limiting their liability were found insufficient to survive a motion to dismiss, because they did not show how the defendants abused or caused in an injustice with the use of the corporate form.
Trevino,
These cases all show that allegations such as the Committee’s here are insufficient to survive a motion to dismiss, because even if true they would not rise to the level of injustice or fraud that would justify disregarding the corporate form. Here, the Committee merely alleges “deception of creditors concerning the Debt- or’s plans and prospects for operating as a going concern.” (Compl. ¶ 68.) In addition, the Complaint’s allegations — specifically, that Holdings was formed for a legitimate business purpose and that it had $55 million in cash-on-hand to fund operations — undermine any veil-piercing claim the Committee could come up with. Therefore, the veil-piercing claim is dismissed with prejudice. 9
Even if the Committee has pleaded facts sufficient to overcome dismissal of its piercing claim, it cannot adequately plead facts required for breach of fiduciary duty claims. The Committee alleges two counts of breaches of fiduciary duties. First, the Committee alleges that Holdco and the Bay Harbour and York Employee Defendants breached their duties of care, loyalty, and good faith to Holdings. 10 Second, the Committee alleges that Sugarman and Todd, Holdings’ President and COO, breached their duties of care to Holdings. 11 The Court takes each cause of action in turn.
1. Standard for Breach of Fiduciary Duty Causes of Action Under Delaware Law
“The directors of Delaware corporations have a triad of primary fiduciary duties: due care, loyalty, and good faith.”
Emerald Partners v. Berlin,
2. Breach of Fiduciary Duties by the York and Bay Harbour Employees
a. The Bay Harbour and York Employee Defendants Do Not Owe A Fiduciary Duty to Holdings
Absent a provision to the contrary, “the manager of an LLC owes the
At the same time, “[p]arent corporations do not owe [wholly-owned] subsidiaries fiduciary duties. This is established Delaware law.”
Trenwick Am. Lit. Trust v. Ernst & Young LLP,
b. The Court May Arguably Consider Exculpatory Provisions at the Motion to Dismiss Stage
The Holdco Operating Agreement contains an exculpatory provision, which exculpates Holdco’s directors from liability based on a breach of fiduciary duty of care.
12
Under § 102(b)(7) of the
Delaware courts have found that the standard in Delaware for breach of the duty of care is “gross negligence,” and, thus the Exculpatory Clauses in the Hold-co and Holdings LLC Agreements would not apply to eliminate the duty of care.
See Brehm v. Eisner,
c. Even if the Bay Harbour and York Employee Defendants owe fiduciary duties to Holdings, the Committee has not adequately pled breaches of fiduciary duties of care or loyalty
i. Duty of Care
“The fiduciary duty of due care requires that directors of a Delaware corporation use that amount of care which ordinarily careful and prudent men would use in similar circumstances, and consider all material information reasonably available in making business decisions, and that deficiencies in the directors’ process are actionable only if the directors’ actions are grossly negligent.”
In re Walt Disney Co. Deriv. Litig.,
“In order for plaintiffs’ duty of care claims to survive a motion to dismiss, they must sufficiently plead facts which if true would take defendants’ actions outside the protection afforded by the business judgment rule.”
Crescent Mach I Partners L.P. v. Turner,
Still, “[t]he protection of the business rule can only be claimed by disinterested directors whose conduct otherwise meets the tests of business judgment”; accordingly, “a director can neither appear on both sides of a transaction nor expect to derive any personal financial benefit from it in the sense of self-dealing, as opposed to a benefit which devolves upon the corporation or all stockholders generally.”
Musicland,
“Alternatively, a plaintiff may overcome the presumption that directors and officers acted on an
informed basis
by establishing that a decision was the product of an irrational process
or
that directors failed to establish an information and reporting system reasonably designed to provide the senior management and the board with information regarding the corporation’s legal compliance and business performance, resulting in liability.”
Stanziale,
For example, in
Crescent Mach I Partners L.P.,
the court found that the business judgment rule was not violated where the board of directors approved a financial advisor’s evaluation of the fairness of a merger, even though the advisor was a managing director of an entity that was compensated to evaluate the merger.
Crescent/Mach I Partners, L.P.,
In
Stanziale,
the court, applying Delaware law, found that the plaintiff failed to overcome the good faith prong of the business judgment test for alleged breaches of fiduciary duties against officers and directors of an airline where “[the directors] declined] to repair [airline’s airplanes’] jet engines and instead replacing them with new engines.”
Stanziale,
Here, even if the Exculpatory Clauses did not defeat the duty of care claim, and even assuming that the York and Bay Harbour Employee Defendants owed such a duty to a wholly-owned subsidiary, the Complaint does not raise a plausible inference that the Bay Harbour and York Employee Defendants breached their duties of care. Here, the Committee has failed to allege that the Bay Harbour and York Employee Defendants were interested in the alleged wrongful transactions: there are neither allegations they were on both sides of any transaction, nor allegations they expected to derive a personal financial benefit from any transaction, as opposed to a benefit devolving upon Holdings or all Members (i.e., Holdco or Intermediate Holdco). Furthermore, the Committee has not demonstrated that the Bay Harbour and York Employee Defendants failed to act (1) in good faith; (2) in the honest belief that the action was in the best interest of the corporation; or (3) on an informed basis.
Specifically, the Committee alleges that the wrongful “transactions” constituting breaches of fiduciary duties by the Bay Harbour and York Employee Defendants
None of these allegations indicate that the Bay Harbour and York Employee Defendants were standing on both sides of any transaction; if anything, the very fact that the Committee alleges the Bay Har-bour and York Employee Defendants “failed to requir[e]” certain activities of Holdings’ officers and failed to engage certain officers indicates that the Committee is alleging that the Bay Harbour and York Employee Defendants should have been on both sides of the transactions. Accordingly, the only claim in which the Committee arguably alleges the Bay Harbour and York Employee Defendants were on both sides of the transaction, by removing Pre-vor and Shore from Holdings’s management, cannot stand either. Also, as Hold-co was the sole Member and sole Manager of Holdings at some point, the Holdings’s LLC Agreements contemplated that the Bay Harbour and York Employee Defendants would be permitted to remove individuals from Holdings’s management.
Furthermore, none of the Committee’s allegations indicate that the Bay Harbour and York Employee Defendants expected to derive personal financial benefits from any transaction, as opposed to benefits devolving upon Holdings or all members (i.e., Holdco or Intermediate Holdco); the Bay Harbour and York Employee Defendants would not benefit if Abelco demanded payment of all or part of its loan, nor would they benefit individually by failing to provide merchandise for the Fall 2008 or Spring 2009 season in Steve & Barry’s stores.
Furthermore, the Committee has faded to allege that the alleged wrongful transactions could be explained by nothing other than “bad faith,” or that the decisions were not made on an “informed basis.” While there may have been no board meetings, Holdings had a very limited existence. There is nothing to indicate the Bay Har-bour and York Employee Defendants were making decisions with inattention or such that the only explanation for such decisions was “bad faith.” The Complaint merely alleges that the Bay Harbour and York Employee Defendants failed to
Furthermore, there are explanations other than “bad faith” for the Bay Har-bour and York Employee Defendants’ alleged failure to engage a CFO and delay engaging a CEO “until it was too late to effect any meaningful management change prior to bankruptcy,” and for removing Shore and Prevor from any management position; namely, the limited requirements of the DLLCA with respect to board meetings and the necessity of a board generally, and the fact that the Bay Harbour and York Principals did not desire to continue Steve & Barry’s as a going concern.
Accordingly, even if the Bay Harbour and York Principals owed Holdings a duty of care that was not eliminated by the relevant Exculpatory Provisions, the Committee has failed to successfully allege, and cannot allege, that the Bay Harbour and York Principals breached that duty to Holdings, and to the extent the Committee alleges a breach of the fiduciary duty of care against the Bay Harbour and York Principals, that claim is dismissed with prejudice.
ii. Duty of Loyalty 14
“[T]he duty of loyalty mandates that the best interest of the corporation and its shareholders takes precedence over any interest possessed by a director, officer or controlling shareholder and not shared by the stockholders generally.”
Cede & Co. v. Technicolor, Inc.,
To allege a breach of the duty of loyalty, the Committee must “plead facts demonstrating that a majority of a board that approved the transaction in dispute was interested and/or lacked independence,” which is similar to the showing
“The classic example that implicates the duty of loyalty is when a fiduciary either appears on both sides of a transaction or receives a personal benefit not shared by all shareholders.”
CVC Claims,
With respect to the breach of fiduciary duty of loyalty, the Complaint is similarly deficient. The only allegation in the Complaint that the Bay Harbour and York Employee Defendants breached their duties of loyalty to Holdings is contained in ¶ 73:
[T]he Bay Harbour and York Board Members breached their duties of loyalty and good faith by directly intervening in the provinces of management, acting as CEO, failing to authorize necessary expenditure of monies, and instead operating the Debtor [Holdings] as an instrumentality of Bay Harbour and York, as set forth above, to the detriment of the Debtor and its creditors, and for the purposes of benefiting Bay Harbour and York.
(Compl. ¶ 73.) This allegation is concluso-ry and should be disregarded. As discussed infra with respect to the good faith element of overcoming the business judgment rule presumption, there are no allegations of specific facts that raise a plausible inference that Bay Harbour and York either sat on both sides of a transaction or received a benefit not shared by the other Holdings’s members, especially since at all relevant times, Holdco or Intermediate Holdco was the only member of Holdings. Furthermore, there is no allegation of any “dishonest purpose or moral obliquity” that would constitute bad faith. The breach of fiduciary duty of loyalty claim must therefore be dismissed. In any event, because the Committee cannot pierce the corporate veil to reach the Bay Harbour and York Employee Defendants, they cannot be found to owe fiduciary obligations to Holdings. Therefore, the cause of action against the Bay Harbour and York Employee Defendants for breach of fiduciary duty is dismissed with prejudice.
The Committee alleges that Sugarman and Todd, Holdings’s President and Chief Operating Officer, breached their fiduciary duty of care to Holdings. The Committee admits in its opposition papers that it asserts these claims because it “feels duty bound” to do so, even though it believes Sugarman and Todd “worked largely at the beck and call of Bay Harbour and York.” In response, Sugarman and Todd first challenge the Committee’s standing to bring this cause of action against them, and secondly assert that they should be protected by the business judgment rule.
a. Standing
Sugarman and Todd first challenge the Committee’s standing to assert breach claims against Holdings’ former executives. Sugarman and Todd contend that because the cause of action is derivative in nature, the Committee must have been a creditor at the time it was asserted, which it has not pled in the Complaint. The Committee points to the Stipulation and Order Concerning the Investigation, Assertion and Prosecution of Certain of the Debtor’s Claims, which provides that the Committee is authorized to investigate, assert, commence, and prosecute any and all claims on behalf of the Debtors. (ECF Doc. # 286 ¶ 1.) “The claim for breach of fiduciary duty is derivative under Delaware law, and constitutes property of the estate under 11 U.S.C. § 541.”
Music-land,
In
Musicland,
Judge Bernstein pointed out that “[t]he Delaware Supreme Court has indicated, in
dicta,
that the business judgment rule applies to officers
qua
officers to the same extent as directors,” and found that, particularly where both parties agreed, corporate officers owed a fiduciary duty to their entity.
Musicland,
However, as with the claims against the Bay Harbour and York Employee Defendants, the Committee has failed to show how Sugarman’s and Todd’s conduct, even if as alleged is true, would give rise to liability for breaching their duties of care. The Committee has also failed to plead around the business judgment rule. The Committee alleges three principal failures on the part of Sugarman and Todd. First, it alleges that they should have known that there was no sound basis for assuming that inventory could be liquidated and did not plan for a possible shortfall. (Compl. ¶ 77(a).) Second, the Committee alleges that they failed to prepare a coherent plan for timely acquiring merchandise for Fall 2008 and to plan for the possibility that merchandise could be delayed.
(Id.
¶ 77(b).) Third, the Committee alleges that they did not adequately plan for moving merchandise between liquidating and going-forward stores.
(Id.
¶ 77(c).) For the same reasons discussed
supra
with respect to the Bay Harbour and York Employee Defendants, these allegations are all failures of business judgment, and do not overcome the presumption that Sugarman and Todd acted “(1) in good faith; (2) in the honest belief that the action was in the best interest of the corporation; or (3) on an informed basis.”
See, e.g., Crescent Mach I Partners L.P.,
E. Equitable Subordination and Re-characterization
Finally, the Committee alleges that the Finco loan should be equitably subordinated, or, in the alternative, recharacterized as an equity contribution. The Committee asserts the cause of action against Finco, Bay Harbour, York, Hilco, Shore, and Pre-vor. Bay Harbour, York, Shore, Prevor, and Hilco were investors in Holdco, who in turn directed $75 million to Finco. Finco in turn loaned the $75 million to Holdings as a second lien loan. It is this loan that the Committee seeks to subordinate or recharacterize as an equity contribution. The Committee alleges that the loan was a sham; that it represented the equity contributions of Bay Harbour, York, Hilco, Prevor, and Shore; that those parties understood that the purpose of the loan was to disguise the equity contributions; that Finco was not a lender; that there was no commercial negotiation, regular payments of principal, and no interest payments; that Bay Harbour, York, and their representatives effectively controlled Finco at the time of loan; and that by exercising such control, Bay Harbour and York acted as insiders. (Compl. ¶¶ 79-86.)
Even though the Committee asserts a single cause of action for both, equitable subordination and recharacteri-zation are actually two separate causes of action.
See Adelphia Commc’ns Corp. v. Bank of America, N.A. (In re Adelphia Commc’ns Corp.),
1. Equitable Subordination and Re-characterization Claims Against Bay Harbour, York, Hilco, Shore, and Prevor
As a threshold matter, equitable subordination and recharacterization require filing a proof of claim: “[i]f a creditor has not filed a claim, there is nothing to subordinate nor any case or controversy to resolve.”
O’Connell v. Arthur Andersen LLP (In re AlphaStar Ins. Group Ltd.),
The Committee seems to concede this point, arguing only that they are necessary parties to the cause of action under Fed.R.Civ.P. 19(a) (made applicable to adversary proceedings by Fed. R. Bankr.P. 7019).
(See Hr’g Tr.
158:25, Sept. 8, 2009, ECF Doc. # 52.) Fed.R.Civ.P. 19(a)(1)(B) provides that required parties are those without whom “the court cannot accord complete relief among existing parties” or those who “claim[ ] an interest relating to the subject of the action and [who are] so situated that disposing of the action in the person’s absence may: (i) as a practical matter impair or impede the person’s ability to protect the interest; or (ii) leave an existing party subject to a substantial risk of incurring double, multiple, or otherwise
Bay Harbour, York, Hilco, Shore, and Prevor are not indispensable parties within the meaning of Fed.R.Civ.P. 19(a). Since Finco, Holdings, and Holdco were the only signatories to the Finco loan, the court can grant complete relief without any additional parties.
See Philips Credit Corp. v. Three Cities FM Inc.,
Here, while Bay Harbour’s, York’s, Shore’s, Prevor’s, and Hilco’s money ended up partially in the Finco loan, that loan was an entirely separate transaction. These individuals are not necessary parties for determining whether the loan should be subordinated or recharacterized. The Committee provides no authority for the proposition that passive investors a tier removed from a lending party are indispensable to a claim for equitable subordination or recharacterization and essentially conceded at oral argument that adding Bay Harbour, York, Shore, Prevor, and Hilco to the equitable subordination and recharacterization claims did not matter to it economically. (Hr’g Tr. 158:16-25, Sept. 8, 2009, ECF Doc. # 52.) Accordingly, the equitable subordination and recharacteri-zation claims against Shore, Prevor, York, Bay Harbour, and Hilco are dismissed with prejudice. The Court will therefore only analyze the equitable subordination and recharacterization claims against Fin-co.
2. Equitable Subordination and Re-characterization claims against Finco
a. Equitable Subordination against Finco
The Bankruptcy Code itself does not delineate the standard for equitable subordination under Bankruptcy Code § 510(c), which just permits a court to subordinate allowed claims “under principles of equitable subordination.” 11 U.S.C. § 510(c)(1). Rather, courts look to the three factors set out by the Fifth Circuit in
Benjamin v. Diamond (In re Mobile Steel Co.),
i. Inequitable Conduct
To satisfy the first prong of the test, a court must find (1) fraud, illegality, or breach of fiduciary duty, (2) undercapi-talization, or (3) control or use of the debt- or as an alter ego for the benefit of the claimant.
See AlphaStar,
When the defendant is an insider, his conduct is subject to greater scrutiny.
See AlphaStar,
ii. Injury to Creditors or Unfair Advantage to the Claimant
The second prong requires a finding that the claimant’s conduct injured the debtor or its creditors, or resulted in an unfair advantage to the claimant. Under this prong, “that claim is subordinated only to the extent necessary to offset the harm which the bankrupt and its creditors suffered on account of the inequitable conduct.” Id. This sets the “limit of the remedy regardless of the nature of the claimant’s conduct.” Id.
iii.Not Inconsistent with the Bankruptcy Code
Finally, subordination cannot be inconsistent with the Bankruptcy Code. “This element recognizes that the doctrine is not a mechanism to be used by courts to alter the statutory scheme in an effort to reach a result the court considers more equitable than the distribution scheme provided for in the Bankruptcy Code.” Id.
Application of these three factors is fact-intensive and so a motion to dismiss may not necessarily be granted, even where the defendants are non-insiders.
Adelphia,
b. Equitable Recharacterization against Finco
“Recharacterization is appropriate where the circumstances show that a debt transaction was actually an equity contribution
ab initio.” Bayer Corp. v. MascoTech, Inc. (In re AutoStyle Plastics, Inc.),
Courts analyzing recharacteri-zation claims balance the factors laid out by the Sixth Circuit in
AutoStyle,
With respect to the first factor, “[t]he issuance of a stock certificate indicates an equity contribution; the issuance of a bond, debenture, or note is indicative of a bona fide indebtedness.”
Stinnett’s Pontiac Serv., Inc. v. Commissioner,
Furthermore, with respect to the seventh factor, the presence of a security for the loan is a strong indication of indebtedness. Id. at 752. Regarding the eighth factor, the corporation’s ability to obtain financing from outside lenders, “[t]he fact that no reasonable creditor would have acted in the same manner is strong evidence that the advances were capital contributions rather than loans.” Id. Under the tenth factor, if the funds were used to acquire capital assets, it takes on the character of an equity contribution. Id. Lastly, with respect to the eleventh factor, the presence or absence of a sinking fund, “[t]he failure to establish a sinking fund for repayment is evidence that the advances were capital contributions rather than loans.” Id. at 753. If the loan is secured by a lien, however, there is no need for a sinking fund. Id.
Here, the Committee fails to plead, or simply cannot plead almost any of the AutoStyle factors with respect to Finco. 18
i. The names given to the certificates evidencing the indebtedness
Finco and Holdings executed formal loan documents entitled “Subordinated Second Lien Financing Agreement.”
19
Accordingly, under
Stinnett’s Pontiac Serv., Inc. v. Commissioner
and
AutoStyle,
the Committee cannot plead facts showing that this factor weighs in favor of recharacterization.
AutoStyle,
ii. The presence or absence of a fixed maturity date and schedule of payments
The Finco Loan had a fixed maturity date: August 26, 2010.
(See
Financing Agreement § 1.01; § 2.03(a), Swanson Dec. Ex. 3 (outstanding principal due on the scheduled maturity date).) Under
Au-toStyle,
the Committee cannot plead facts showing that this factor weighs in favor of
in. The presence or absence of a fixed rate of interest and interest payments
The loan had a fixed interest rate: 15%, with interest accruing and being capitalized on the first of each month. (See Financing Agreement § 2.04(a), Swanson Dec. Ex. 3.) The Committee cannot plead facts showing that this factor weighs in favor of recharacterization.
AutoStyle,
iv. Source of repayments
Finco contends that since the loan was secured by Holdings’s assets and was an independent obligation of Holdings, repayment did not depend on the success of the business. Still, these are the same facts that the Sixth Circuit in AutoStyle found could be sufficient to recharacterize the debt as equity. The Committee has adequately pled that the source of repayments was expected to be Holdings’s earnings, and this weighs in favor of recharacterization.
v. The adequacy or inadequacy of capitalization
The analysis here is largely the same as under the piercing the corporate veil. As noted
supra,
the Committee has not pled sufficient facts to demonstrate that Holdings was undercapitalized. Courts should not put too much emphasis on this factor, in any event, because all companies in bankruptcy are in some sense undercapitalized.
See In re Lifschultz Fast Freight,
vi. The identity of interest between the creditor and a stockholder
The Committee has not alleged that the loan from Finco was in proportion to Fin-co’s equity interest in Holdings; there was merely an allegation that “[a]ll of the $75,000,000 purportedly loaned by Finco to the Debtor represented the equity contributions of Bay Harbour, York, Hilco, Pre-vor and Shore to Holdeo,” and “Bay Har-bour, York, Hilco, Prevor and Shore all understood that the purpose of the Finco Loan was to disguise 75% of their equity contributions as a second lien loan.” (Compl. ¶¶ 81, 83.) Accordingly, the Committee fails to plead facts showing that this factor weighs in favor of recharacterization.
AutoStyle,
vii. The security, if any, for the advances
Here, the loan was secured by, among other things, Accounts, Books, Inventory, money, and Cash and Cash Equivalents; thus, there is a strong indication of indebtedness. (Cyrulnik Dec., Ex. A at ¶ 2.)
See AutoStyle,
viii. The corporation’s ability to obtain financing from outside lending institutions
The Committee has alleged that Holdings was unable to obtain financing from any other source. (Compl. ¶ 84.) The allegation is conclusory, however, and is be
ix. The extent to which the advances were subordinated to the claims of outside creditors
The Finco Loan was junior to the Abelco Loan, but was senior to the claims of other creditors. This weighs in favor of a finding of indebtedness. The Committee cannot plead facts showing that this factor weighs in favor of recharacterization.
x. The extent to which the advance was used to acquire capital assets
Here, the Complaint alleges that Holdings used the funds to purchase inventory and to maintain cash reserves. (Compl. ¶ 42.) The Committee cannot plead facts showing that this factor weighs in favor of recharacterization.
AutoStyle,
xi. The presence or absence of a sinking fund to provide repayments
This factor is irrelevant.
AutoStyle,
In all, the Committee has pled facts supporting one of the
AutoStyle
factors, the source of repayments factor. This is not a “meaningful subset” of the
AutoStyle
factors that could survive a motion to dismiss.
Adelphia,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons discussed above, the Court dismisses with prejudice the piercing the corporate veil claim against the Bay Harbour and York Defendants, as well as against Teitelbaum, Sozio, Medei-ros and Dinan. The Court also dismisses with prejudice the breach of the fiduciary duties of care and loyalty against Holdco, Teitelbaum, Sozio, Medeiros and Dinan with prejudice, as well as the breach of the fiduciary duty of care claims against Todd and Sugarman. In addition, the equitable recharacterization claims against Finco, Shore, Prevor, York, Bay Harbour, and Hilco, and the subordination claims against Shore, Prevor, York, Bay Harbour and Hilco, are dismissed with prejudice. However, the Court dismisses the Committee’s claim for equitable subordination against Finco without prejudice, with leave to amend the Complaint within 30 days.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Collectively, the original, first, Second and Third Amended and Restated LLC Agreements of Holdings will be referred to as the "Holdings LLC Agreements.” The LLC Agreements are attached as Exhibit I to the Affidavit of Israel Dahan in support of Defendants Bay Harbour Master Ltd., Trophy Hunter Investments Ltd., BH S & B Inc., Bay Harbour Management LLC, Douglas Teitel-baum ("Teitelbaum”) and Scott Sozio (“So-zio”)'s Motion to Dismiss (ECF Doc. # 26, hereinafter "Dahan Aff.”), Exhibit A to the Affidavit of Joseph H. Einstein in support of Defendants Gary Sugarman ("Sugarman”) and Andrew Todd (“Todd”)'s Motion to Dismiss (ECF Doc. # 13, hereinafter “Einstein Aff.”), Exhibits S and E to the Dahan Aff., and Exhibit 2 to the Declaration of Richard P. Swanson in support of the motion of Defendants James G. Dinan, Luis Medeiros and York Capital Management, L.P. (together with YSOF S & B Investor, LLC, York Special Opportunities Fund, L.P. and York Special Opportunities Feeder Fund (Cayman), L.P., the “York Defendants”) Motion to Dismiss (hereinafter “Swanson Dec.”), respectively. None of the defendants have attached to their moving papers any LLC agreement governing Holdings's alleged direct parent, BHY Intermediate Holdco LLC ("Intermediate Hold-co”). Accordingly, the Court has not considered any LLC agreement of Intermediate Holdco.
. Bay Harbour's plan was to quickly repay the Abelco Loan and refinance it. (Id. ¶ 43.) Otherwise, Bay Harbour and Abelco agreed that the loan would be converted to a revolving loan that would be reduced to $105 million 90 days after closing; to $85 million 121 days after closing; and $65 million from the 150th day to maturity. {Id. ¶ 44.) In addition, the parties agreed that the revolving loan was subject to a further reduction equal to the lesser of 70% of the domestic eligible inventory or 80% of the appraised net orderly liquidation value of inventory. (Id. ¶ 45.)
. Together, the "Bay Harbour Employee Defendants.”
. Together, the “York Employee Defendants.’’
. Bay Harbour noted in its motion to dismiss that two of the corporate entities which veils Bay Harbour alleges the Committee is seeking to pierce are organized in Florida and the Cayman Islands. (Mem. of Law in Supp. of Defs.’ Bay Harbour Master Ltd.’s, Trophy Hunter Investment Ltd.'s, BH S & B Inc.’s, Bay Harbour Management LC’s, Douglas Teitelbaum’s and Scott Sozio’s Mot. to Dismiss the Compl. (hereinafter, "Bay Harbour Memorandum”), at 13.) Even assuming that the Committee has to pierce those corporate veils as well, Bay Harbour concedes that Florida and Cayman law do not differ materially from Delaware law in any relevant respect. The Court therefore relies on Delaware law in rendering this Opinion. Id.
. The other cases cited by the defendants either did not address the question directly,
see In re Greater Southeast Cmty. Hosp. Corp. I,
. While Delaware and not New York law is applicable here, other courts have found there is little difference in applicable veil-piercing standards between the two states. While New York courts disregard a party's corporate veil "reluctantly,” as in Delaware, a cor
. Simply going out of business, even if caused by malfeasance, is not enough to support piercing.
See Cuthill v. Kime (In re Evergreen Sec., Ltd.),
. Another line of Delaware cases permits veil-piercing in the parent-subsidiary context based on agency theory.
Trevino,
. While the Committee alleges that Holdco owed Holdings duties of care, loyalty, and good faith (Compl. ¶ 71), and it argues in its opposition papers that Holdco breached those duties, it does not plead any allegations of a breach in the Complaint. It is well settled that a party may not amend its complaint by virtue of its opposition papers.
Wright
v.
Ernst & Young LLP,
. As with Holdco, even though the Committee alleges that Todd and Sugarman owed Holdings separate duties of care, loyalty, and good faith, the Committee only pleads a breach of the duty of care. The Court therefore only considers that cause of action.
. As noted
supra,
Section 3.12(g) of Holdco’s LLC Agreement states that "[n]o Manager shall be liable to the Company or any Member or Economic Owner for monetary damages for breach of fiduciary duty as a Manager; provided that the foregoing shall not eliminate or limit the liability of a Manager: (i) for any breach of such Manager’s duty of loyalty to the Company or its Unitholders (as such duty is modified pursuant to the terms of this Agreement); (ii) any acts or omissions that constitute fraud, willful misconduct, bad faith or gross negligence in the conduct of such Manager in his capacity as a Manager of the Company, or (iii) for any transaction from which such Manager derived an improper personal benefit.” (Einstein Aff., Ex. B.) Similarly, Section 7 of the Holdings LLC Agreements provides, in each agreement with the exception of the original LLC Agreement,
. Section 18-1101 of the DLLCA similarly permits members or managers to adopt provisions eliminating or limiting “any and all liabilities for breach of contract and breach of duties (including fiduciary duties) of a member, manager or other person to a limited liability company or to another member or manager or to another person that is a party to or is otherwise bound by a limited liability company agreement” with the exception of liability for "any act or omission that constitutes a bad faith violation of the implied contractual covenant of good faith and fair dealing.” Del.Code Ann. tit. 6, § 18-1101(e). Even creditors may be "otherwise bound” by an LLC agreement that expressly waives fiduciary duties as between the LLC's members.
See North American Catholic Educational Programming Foundation, Inc. v. Gheewalla,
. Although the Committee invokes the duty of good faith as separate from the duty of loyalty, under Delaware law, the duty of loyalty is subsumed within the duty of good faith.
See, e.g., Nagy v. Bistricer,
. The Complaint here only asserts claims belonging to the Debtors; it does not purport to assert direct claims of the creditors. Furthermore, though the Committee did not plead that Holdings was insolvent or in the "zone of insolvency” at the time of the alleged breaches of fiduciary duties, even if Holdings was insolvent or in the "zone of insolvency” at the time of the alleged breaches, creditors cannot bring direct (as opposed to derivative) claims for breach of fiduciary duties against the directors of a corporation.
Gheewalla,
. All of the Committee’s allegations regarding domination and control were with respect
. There are some courts that have found that because the authority to recharacterize debt as equity is not found in the Code, the court lacks power to do so.
See, e.g., In re Pacific Express, Inc.,
. While the Committee did not explicitly incorporate or rely on the Finco loan documents in its complaint, the Court should consider it in determining whether the Committee adequately pled the
AutoStyle
factors.
See Food Mgmt.,
. The Finco Financing Agreement was attached as Exhibit 3 to the Swanson Dec., and the Finco Security Agreement is attached as Exhibit A to the Declaration of Owen L. Cy-rulnik in support of Defendants Holdco and Finco's Motion to Dismiss the Complaint (hereinafter, "Cyrulnik Dec.”).
