OPINION ON MOTION TO DISMISS
The defendants in this adversary proceeding move to dismiss certain of the claims asserted against them for failure to plead fraud with particularity pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure (“F.R.C.P.”) 9(b) and failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted pursuant to F.R.C.P. 12(b)(6), both made applicable to this adversary proceeding by Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure (“F.R.B.P.”) 7009 and 7012, respectively. The facts are drawn, as they must be on a motion of this sort, from the allegations of the complaint.
I. Background
On January 24, 1998, (the “commencement date”) Stratton Oakmont, Inc. (“Stratton”) filed a petition for reorganization pursuant to Chapter 11 of Title 11 of the United States Code (the “Bankruptcy Code”). Upon application of the Securities Investor Protection Corporation (“SIPC”), the District Court for the Southern District of New York stayed the Chapter 11 proceedings, appointed Harvey R. Miller, Esq. as the liquidation trustee (the “Trustee”) pursuant to the Securities Investors Protection Act of 1970 (“SIPA”) and removed the liquidation proceeding (“SIPA Proceeding”) to this court. In accordance with the statutory mandate, this SIPA proceeding is being conducted, to the extent not inconsistent with SIPA, as a liquidation proceeding under Chapters 1, 8, 5 and Subchapters I and II of Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code. See 15 U.S.C. § 78fff(b).
The Trustee commenced an adversary proceeding on May 13, 1998, against Daniel Porush and his wife, Nancy (collectively the “Porushes”); Jordan Belfort (“Bel-fort”) and his wife, Nadine (collectively the “Belforts”); Belfort’s father, Maxwell Bel-fort (“Maxwell”); JRB Group, Inc. (“JRB”), and RMS Network, Inc. (“RMS”). The gravamen of the Trustee’s Complaint is a fraudulent scheme principally orchestrated by Belfort and Porush, with the help of their wives and Belfort’s father, to strip Stratton and its creditors of whatever assets and income stream Stratton had to offer. Central to the Trustee’s theory are: 1) the “Stock Purchase” and “Non-Compete” Agreements (the “SP” and “NCP Agreements,” respectively) and the payments made to Belfort pursuant thereto (the “SP” and “NCP Payments”), and 2) the payment of excessive salaries and bo
The Complaint contains thirteen claims for relief. The first four are premised on actual and constructive fraud pursuant to New York Debtor and Creditor Law (“DCL”) §§ 270-281 and §§ 544(b) and 550(a) of the Bankruptcy Code. 1 The Fifth through Seventh Claims are for breach of fiduciary duty and are not the subject of these dismissal motions. The remaining five claims are grounded in common law or equity 2 or in § 720 of the New York Business Corporation Law (“BCL”), which allows recovery for breach of fiduciary duty. The Complaint seeks primarily to recover from the defendants the SP, NCP and S & B Payments as fraudulent transfers, and secondly, to recover damages for the losses incurred through the unlawful diversion of Stratton’s assets.
A. Stratton’s Management
Stratton, a general securities broker-dealer with executive offices in Lake Success, New York, was wholly-owned by its parent and alleged alter ego, RMS. See Adversary Proceeding Complaint, at ¶¶ 30-32 (all citations to the Complaint are referred to as “¶_”). RMS is a shell corporation with no other purpose than to own 100% of the shares of Stratton. ¶ 31. RMS and Stratton maintained the same office space, telephone lines, corporate records and documents, as well as the same officers, directors, and shareholders. ¶ 32. Up until March 10, 1994, both Porush and Belfort were officers and directors of Stratton and RMS 3 , (¶¶ 23, 25), holding the lion’s share of the RMS stock. ¶31.
Stratton was grossly mismanaged by Belfort and Porush, (¶¶ 41-45), leading to its insolvency. ¶41. In March 1992, the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) charged both of them, as principals of Stratton, with market manipulation and fraudulent acts and practices relating to the offer and sales of securities. ¶¶ 42-44. In 1993, Belfort and Porush decided to negotiate a Consent Order with the SEC (“SEC Consent Order”). ¶45. On August 13, 1993, Belfort resigned as President of Stratton and was immediately replaced by Porush. ¶46. Notwithstanding this resignation, Belfort continued to hold himself out and to receive compensation as an “officer” of Stratton. ¶ 51. He also remained a director of Stratton and, with Porush’s help 4 , authorized Stratton to pay himself large bonuses totaling over $1,400,-000 between late 1993 and early 1994, all of which are reflected in Stratton’s books and records. ¶¶ 47-48. While Porush scratched Belfort’s back, so the theory goes, Belfort scratched Porush’s by co-authorizing over $600,000 in bonuses payable to Porush during the same time period. ¶ 50.
By February 1994, the terms of the SEC Consent Order had been hammered out; Belfort would be barred from the securities industry for life and Porush was to be suspended from serving in' any su
B. The Alleged Fraudulent Transfers
With the knowledge of the impending SEC Consent Order and its effect, Porush and Belfort directed the preparation of the SP and NCP Agreements, (¶ 56), whose simultaneous execution was also part of the plan to strip Stratton of its assets. ¶¶ 10, 11. Both agreements were to be funded by Stratton. ¶ 12. On March 10, 1994, only one week before the SEC Consent Order was to become effective, Po-rush and Belfort entered into the SP and NCP Agreements. ¶ 61. The former provided that Belfort would sell his 47.5% of the common stock of RMS to Porush for $1,200,000 (plus- interest at 3.65%), which was to be paid in 36 equal monthly installments of $35,242.25 from March 15, 1994, to February 15, 1997. ¶ 57; see Exhibit A annexed to the Complaint. Porush then became the 95% shareholder of RMS. ¶ 31. The latter agreement was executed by Bel-fort, Porush and RMS and provided that RMS would pay Belfort and JRB (in the event of Belfort’s death) $180,000,000 for 1) a covenant not to compete with RMS for fifteen years and 2) a promise to introduce certain investment banking business to RMS. ¶ 58; see Exhibit A annexed to the Complaint. Under this second agreement, payments of one million dollars were scheduled to be made to Belfort every month beginning on March 15, 1994, and ending on February 15, 2009. ¶ 58. The Trustee treats the SP and NCP Agreements as the foundation of the defendants’ scheme to defraud and loot Stratton. Looking at everything accomplished by the simultaneous execution of and real parties in interest to both agreements, Porush gained complete control of Stratton by acquiring Belfort’s 47.5% share of RMS (because RMS owned 100% of Stratton) in exchange for having Stratton pay Belfort $1,200,000 up front and $180,000,000 over time.
Although RMS is the obligee under the NCP Agreement, the Trustee pleads that RMS was but a conduit since Stratton was advancing the needed funds to RMS to pay Belfort. ¶¶ 12, 13, 58, 74 and 76. It is also the NCP Agreement which, the Trustee maintains, if Stratton was not already insolvent, rendered Stratton insolvent. ¶¶ 13, 39. Stratton’s then corporate counsel advised Porush and Belfort that the agreements were defective and recommended that Stratton not enter into them. ¶ 59. Needless to say, in light of their execution, that advice was ignored. ¶ 60.
The Trustee alleges that these agreements were patently fraudulent and lacked consideration because they contained valuations of Stratton and RMS that were completely inconsistent and unrealistic. ¶¶ 63-64. The SP Agreement effectively valued RMS at $2,500,000, roughly twice what Porush paid Belfort for his 47.5% share in RMS. ¶ 64. Remembering that RMS owned 100% of the shares of Strat-ton and is allegedly the alter ego of Strat-ton, (¶31), a valuation of RMS is for all intents and purposes a valuation of Strat-ton. ¶ 64. The fraud alarm goes off, so the Trustee’s theory runs, when the valuation of RMS/Stratton under the SP Agreement is juxtaposed against the $180 million RMS and Porush agreed to pay Belfort for him not to compete with Stratton while Belfort was already incapable of competing with RMS because he was barred from the industry for life. ¶¶ 12, 64. The Trustee maintains that Belfort, Porush and Maxwell knew that there was no consideration for the SP and NCP Agreements. ¶¶ 65-68.
The Trustee alleges that Porush, at that point in full control of Stratton, paid him
C. Maxwell Belfort and Stratton’s Financial Status
Maxwell was the Secretary and Treasurer of RMS and the alleged de facto Chief Financial Officer of Stratton from 1993 until the commencement date. 5 ¶¶ 27, 29, 32 and 74. In that position, he signed most, if not all, of Stratton’s checks and authorized its wire transfers. ¶¶ 29, 32 and 74. He was aware of Belfort’s and Po-rush’s positions as officers and directors of Stratton, of Stratton’s business and financial affairs and of the SEC Consent Order barring Belfort from the securities industry for life and Porush from any supervisory capacity for one year. ¶¶ 65-68. Acting pursuant to Porush’s instructions (¶¶28, 29 and 74), the Trustee claims, Maxwell was instrumental in perpetrating Belfort’s and Porush’s fraudulent and self-dealing scheme by upstreaming the necessary cash from Stratton to RMS as “management fees” in order to make the necessary payments to Belfort pursuant to the NCP Agreement and by creating corresponding fraudulent internal invoices representing the transfers from Stratton to RMS. ¶¶ 28, 74. Maxwell also facilitated the payment of the excessive salaries and bonuses to Porush because he had to release those monies to Porush. ¶ 27. In July 1995, when Stratton was no longer financially able to make the million dollar payments to Belfort, the amounts advanced to RMS by Stratton for that purpose were reduced to $500,000, ¶ 74. The Trustee alleges that an additional amount was upstreamed alongside the NCP Payments to pay Maxwell’s excessive salary and bonuses. ¶ 74.
The Trustee alleges that Porush, Belfort and Maxwell knew that Stratton’s 1993 financial statements and SEC filings were inflated as a result of a failure to report operating lease commitments of over $4,000,000, equipment leases, and litigation and arbitration liabilities. ¶ 67. These parties also knew that approximately $30 to $40 million in customer claims from 1994 and 1995 were being asserted against Stratton and that these liabilities were not featured or accounted for in Stratton’s financial statements for those years, (¶ 67), in those amounts or in a percentage of those amounts which would have represented the figure Stratton had historically paid to resolve or satisfy such claims. ¶ 68. Thus, the Trustee pleads that Maxwell, his son and Porush breached their fiduciary duties to Stratton by entering into the SP and NCP Agreements and by paying themselves excessive bonuses and salaries, liabilities they knew Stratton was unable to satisfy unless it failed to satisfy others. ¶¶ 15, 64-68.
D. Nancy Porush and Nadine Belfort
Last, but not least, the Trustee targets the wives of Belfort and Porush as alleged
II. Applicable Legal Standards
A. F.R.C.P. 12(b)(6)
Dismissal for failure to state a claim under F.R.C.P. 12(b)(6) is appropriate only where it appears that a plaintiff can prove no set of facts upon which relief may be granted.
See Conley v. Gibson,
In addition to the factual allegations in the complaint, the court may consider the contents of any documents attached to the complaint or incorporated therein by reference, matters as to which judicial notice may be taken, and documents either in the plaintiffs possession or of which the plaintiff had knowledge and relied upon in bringing suit.
See Brass v. American Film Technologies, Inc.,
B. F.R.C.P. 9(b)
All of the defendants have moved to dismiss the Complaint for failure to plead fraud with the particularity required by F.R.C.P. 9(b), which seeks to provide a defendant with sufficient and fair notice of the plaintiffs claim in order to enable that defendant to defend him or herself, protect a defendant’s reputation from the harm that can flow from unfounded accusations of fraud, and reduce the number of strike suits.
See Campaniello Imports, Ltd. v. Saporiti Italia,
“Malice, intent, knowledge and other condition of mind of a person may be averred generally.” F.R.C.P. 9(b). However, the relaxation of the specificity requirement for scienter is not to be abused or “mistaken for license to base claims of fraud on speculation and conclusory allegations.”
Shields,
There are several other important principles to consider in reviewing this Complaint. The first is that where a case involves multiple defendants, F.R.C.P. 9(b) requires that the complaint allege facts specifying each defendant’s contribution to the fraud, identifying which defendant is responsible for which act.
See Ellison v. American Image Motor Co., Inc.,
Generally, fraud allegations cannot be based upon information and belief.
See DiVittorio,
Lastly, F.R.C.P. 9(b) must be read together with F.R.C.P. 8(a), which calls for “short and plain statement^]” of claims for relief.
DiVittorio,
III. The First Through Fourth Claims for Relief: Avoiding Fraudulent Transfers
The First and Second Claims asserted against all the defendants have their genesis in the SP and NCP Agreements while the Third and Fourth Claims against the Porushes spring only from the S & B Payments. The crux of the defendants’ dismissal motions is the Trustee’s asserted (1) inability to establish the existence of some type of “transferee” under § 550(a) of the Bankruptcy Code, without which he cannot recover any fraudulent conveyances under § 544, 2) failure to state a claim for actual or constructive fraud and/or 3) failure to plead fraud with particularity pursuant to F.R.C.P. 9(b).
These first four claims seek the avoidance of the SP, NCP and S
&
B Payments pursuant to § 544(b) of the Bankruptcy Code, the principal purpose of which is to undo pre-petition transfers of property that remove or withhhold that property from the estate to the prejudice of creditors.
Pereira v. Goldberger (In re Stephen Douglas, Ltd.),
Once the grounds for setting aside a transfer have been shown, the Trustee faces the second hurdle of establishing a means of recovery under § 550(a)
7
, the remedies section, which requires the Trustee to identify a specific category of persons from whom recovery of the fraudulent transfer may be had. 11 U.S.C. § 550(a);
see Cassirer v. Sterling National Bank & Trust (In re Schick),
A. Identifying the Transferee or Beneficiary under § 550(a)
There are three types of entities from whom or which a trustee may recover an avoidable transfer under § 544(b): an initial transferee, an entity for whose benefit the initial transfer was made or a subsequent transferee.
See
11 U.S.C. § 550(a);
Christy v. Alexander & Alexander (In re Finley, Kumble, Wagner, Heine, Underberg, Manley, Myerson & Casey),
The Bankruptcy Code does not define the word “transferee” nor does it define the type of “benefit” that must inure to an entity in order for it to be strictly liable to the estate. Questions have arisen where the first recipient of the transfer is not the intended beneficiary but, rather, someone like a courier or bank teller.
See Finley, Kumble,
[W]e think the minimum requirement of status as a “transferee” is dominion over the money or other asset, the right to put the money to one’s own purposes. When A gives a check to B as agent for C, then C is the “initial transferee”; the agent may be disregarded.... “Transferee” is not a self-defining term; it must mean something different from “possessor” or “holder” or “agent”.
Bonded,
Thus, an initial transferee is the person who has dominion and control over the subject of the initial transfer to the extent that he or she may dispose of it as he or she pleases, such as “investing] the whole [amount] in lottery tickets or uranium stocks.”
Finley Kumble,
Section 550(a) treats with transferees, those with the power and intent to manipulate the subject matter of the transfer on the one hand, as just discussed, and those who benefit from the initial transfer, on the other hand.
See Bonded,
The quintessential example of the entity who benefits from the initial transfer is a guarantor of the debtor.
See Finley, Kumble,
1. Maxwell Belfort
Although Maxwell
10
does not premise his request for dismissal on the Trustee’s failure to state a claim under § 550(a) but, rather, on the grounds that neither the First nor the Second Claims plead fraud with particularity as required by F.R.C.P. 9(b)
11
, the Trustee has not alleged any facts which would permit a recovery pursuant to § 550(a) from Maxwell. Nowhere has the Trustee alleged that Maxwell received any of or benefitted from the SP or NCP Payments. All the Trustee alleges is that as Maxwell moved the funds from Stratton to RMS and then to his son, “[a]n additional amount was upstreamed to pay Maxwell’s excessive salary and bonuses.”
12
¶ 74. It is not alleged
B. Actual Fraud
Claims of actual fraud fall under DCL § 276.
13
, where the scienter requirement is “actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud” present or future creditors. DCL § 276 (McKinney 1998). As discussed earlier, factual allegations supporting claims of intentional fraudulent transfer are scrutinized pursuant to F.R.C.P. 9(b),
see White Metal Rolling,
“Actual intent” is rarely susceptible to direct evidence and therefore may be gleaned from the circumstances surrounding the alleged fraudulent transaction.
See U.S. v. McCombs,
(1) the lack or inadequacy of consideration; (2) the family, friendship or close associate relationship between the parties; (3) the retention of possession, benefit or use of the property in question; (4) the financial condition of the party sought to be charged both before and after the transaction in question; (5) the existence or cumulative effect of a pattern or series of transactions or course of conduct after the incurring of debt, onset of financial difficulties, or pen-dency or threat of suits by creditors;and (6) the general chronology of the events and transactions under inquiry.
Kaiser,
1. Porush
Porush faces two claims of actual fraud: the first based on the SP and NCP Payments and the second, on the S & B Payments.
The Trustee alleges that the SP and NCP Agreements were executed as part of Porush’s and Belfort’s scheme to defraud Stratton and its creditors. 14 He compares the value of RMS, the alleged alter ego holding company ($2.5 million, or twice what Porush paid Belfort for his RMS stock, which stock was worth was Stratton was worth), to Stratton’s obli gation to pay Belfort $180,000,000 pursuant to the NCP Agreement. Moreover, the Trustee alleges, since Belfort was banned for life from participating in the securities industry, there was patently no consideration given by Belfort to RMS (read Stratton) for the NCP Agreement. Although the issue of consideration is not dispositive under DCL § 276, it can be used as circumstantial evidence of actual intent to defraud where, as here, not only is there alleged to be no consideration but there is a huge discrepancy in Stratton’s value as reflected in the SP Agreement on the one hand and the NCP Agreement on the,other hand. The Trustee also alleges a course of conduct between Porush and Belfort which creates a strong inference that Belfort and Porush were in cahoots to bleed Stratton dry of all its assets in complete and conscious disregard of Stratton’s creditors.
With respect to the Third Claim, the Trustee alleges numerous instances where Porush awarded himself substantial salary increases and undeserved bonuses, showering himself with over $18 million dollars in bonuses, more than $6 million of which was awarded while Porush was suspended from performing any supervisory functions at Stratton or RMS pursuant to the SEC Consent Order. Moreover, the Trustee alleges that Porush did not perform any services that would support or justify the award of such excessive bonuses. The Trustee even details the procedural means by which the salary increases and bonuses were awarded. The Trustee has sufficiently pleaded with particularity a course of conduct that shows that Belfort and Porush were operating together to abuse Stratton financially.
If the allegations be proven, the S & B, SP and NCP Payments are funds that, by being diverted to Porush’s and Belfort’s pockets, delayed and hindered any recovery by Stratton’s legitimate creditors. The Trustee alleges that Porush knew of Stratton’s ailing financial condition and of the tens of millions of outstanding customer claims against the company that would not get satisfied if the SP and NCP Agreements were honored and the S & B Payments were made. Thus, allegations are plentiful which support an inference that Porush was engaged in conscious misbehavior, or at a minimum reckless behavior, to use all of Stratton’s assets to fund RMS’s completely illusory obligations to Belfort and to pay Porush excessive salaries and bonuses. While it is true that some allegations are more detailed than others, the Trustee is permitted to plead in such a fashion given his second-hand knowledge of facts which are
a. Recovery under § 550(a)
Porush argues that the Trustee fails to allege that Porush was the transferee of any of the SP or NCP Payments and therefore fails to state a claim under § 550(a). 15 Porush additionally posits that since Stratton was a wholly-owned subsidiary of RMS and RMS was 95% owned by Porush, the Trustee cannot logically argue that these payments were made for the benefit of Porush because the NCP payments • were basically coming out of his own pocket. I disagree.
The Trustee suggests that the SP and NCP Agreements be regarded as one transaction. Courts will overlook the formal structure of a transaction where the knowledge and intent of the parties involved indicate that the transactions should be. viewed together.
See Wieboldt Stores, Inc. v. Schottenstein (In re Wiebold
t
Stores, Inc.),
2. Nancy Porush and Nadine Belfort
Nancy and Nadine move to dismiss the actual fraud claim on the grounds that the allegations regarding the offshore' trusts fail to state a claim, fail to plead fraud with particularity and fail to plead that they are transferees pursuant to § 550(a).
A transfer may be avoided as fraudulent pursuant to DCL § 276 if the conveyance was made with actual intent to defraud, hinder or delay present or future creditors. DCL § 276. It is the intent of the transferor and not that of the transferee that is dispositive.
See HBE Leasing Corporation v. Frank,
I have already determined that the Trustee has properly pleaded his actual fraud claims with respect to the S & B Payments as well as the SP and NCP Payments. The Complaint adequately apprises Nancy and Nadine of which transactions are claimed to be fraudulent and why, when they took place, how they were executed and by whom. The Trustee then alleges that Nancy and Nadine were subsequent transferees of those fraudulent transfers. He certainly gives them notice of how they received the funds, from whom they received them and where those original funds or their proceeds are housed. The Trustee need not allege that Nancy or Nadine, as transferees, intended to defraud Stratton or that they participated in the fraud perpetrated by their husbands in order to avoid the fraudulent transfers as to them.
See Crowthers,
C. Constructive Fraud
The Second and Fourth Claims for constructive fraud are governed by DCL §§ 273 through 275
18
.
See HBE Leasing Corp. v. Frank,
The pleading of constructive fraud, as opposed to actual fraud, must only comply with F.R.C.P. 8(a) because scienter is not an element; the claim is based upon the financial condition of the transferor at the time of the transfer and the sufficiency of the consideration provided by the transferee.
See White Metal Rolling,
1. Second Claim for Relief
The Second Claim for Relief alleges constructive fraud against all the defendants based on the SP and NCP Agreements. Led by Belfort, the defendants challenge the constructive fraud claim because the SP and NCP Agreements 19 did not obligate Stratton, but RMS, to pay Belfort, as a result of which those payments could not have rendered Stratton insolvent. Even though Stratton admittedly upstreamed to RMS the money with which to make the NCP payments, Belfort claims that neither he nor JRB had any recourse against Stratton were RMS to default on its obligations. Thus, he says, Stratton was not implicated by the NCP Agreement and under § 273 of the DCL, the Trustee cannot assert a claim for constructive fraud against any of the defendants. To overcome this seeming problem, the Trustee proposes a reverse veil piercing theory or to collapse Stratton and RMS into one entity, to which the defendants take strong exception, urging that such a step is an extremely rare occurrence and not warranted under these facts. They claim that the Trustee has not alleged that RMS was created for an illicit or fraudulent purpose or that Stratton and RMS, but for superficially, share the same corporate formalities.
a. Does the Trustee adequately plead that RMS and Stratton should be collapsed into one entity?
i. Standing
The Trustee alleges that Stratton and RMS are alter egos of each other
A trustee’s standing to pierce the corporate veil typically becomes an issue where he or she is seeking that relief in order to foist the liabilities of the corporate debtor to its creditor body onto its prineipals or its parent. In that situation, a trustee has standing if the underlying claim is a general one such that it could have been brought by any creditor of the debtor, and the debtor, under state law, could have asserted an alter ego claim to pierce its own corporate veil.
See Murray v. Miner,
State law governs the application of corporate veil piercing principles in the context of transfer avoidance actions in bankruptcy.
Barber v. Production Credit Services (In re KZK Livestock, Inc.),
New York law recognizes reverse veil piercing.
See American Fuel Corporation v. Utah Energy Development Company,
ii. Traditional Corporate Veil Piercing
“The concept of piercing the corporate veil is a limitation on the accepted principles that a corporation exists independently of its owners, as a separate legal entity, that the owners are normally not liable for the debts of the corporation, and that it is perfectly legal to incorporate
Generally, piercing the corporate veil requires a showing that the parent corporation dominates the subsidiary to such an extent that the latter is really an agent for or instrumentality of the former and the parent corporation used that control to commit fraud or some other wrong that injured the party seeking to pierce the veil.
See American Fuel,
The Second Circuit suggests consideration of the following factors to determine whether disregarding corporate separateness is an appropriate remedy:
(1) the absence of the formalities and paraphernalia that are part and parcel of the corporate existence, i.e., issuance of stock, election of directors, keeping of corporate records and the like, (2) inadequate capitalization, (3) whether funds are put in and taken out of the corporation for personal rather than corporate purposes, (4) overlap in ownership, officers, directors, and personnel, (5) common office space, address and telephone numbers of corporate entities, (6) the amount of business discretion displayed by the allegedly dominated corporation, (7) whether the related corporations deal with the dominated corporation at arms length, (8) whether the corporations are treated as independent profit centers, (9) the payment or guarantee of debts of the dominated corporation by other corporations in the group, and (10) whether the corporation in question had property that was used by other of the corporations as if it were its own.
Passalacqua,
iii. Reverse Veil Piercing in the Present Case
Judge Learned Hand in
Kingston Dry Dock, Co. v. Lake Champlain Transp. Co.,
Courts that have encountered reverse veil piercing in parent/subsidiary scenarios have extrapolated from Judge Hand’s comments that, to accommodate the differences between the traditional and nontraditional veil piercing situations, the domination requirement of the traditional test needs to be relaxed in favor of finding a control relationship between the parent and the subsidiary.
See
Fletcher, § 43.60 at 781 (“It is more appropriate in these cases to require, as a necessary but not sufficient condition for finding liability, only that there be a control relationship between the parent and the subsidiary.”);
Mid-West Metal,
The Complaint alleges that Po-rush and Belfort were officers and directors of both Stratton and RMS. ¶¶ 23, 25. Although the “commonplace circumstance” of “interlocking directorates” is insufficient on its own to establish the domination or control necessary to have the corporate veil pierced,
see American Protein Corporation v. AB Volvo,
In re Mid-West Metal Products, Inc.,
Just like Espy, RMS served no business purpose other than to be the holding company for Stratton. RMS, not Stratton, was the signatory to the NCP Agreement however, Belfort was being paid not to compete with Stratton, not RMS, so that Stratton was the recipient of the supposed benefit of the contract. Significantly, Stratton was the party funding the Agreement. It should also be noted that although the Agreement was signed by Po-rush on behalf of RMS, the computer-generated footer in the agreement identifies Stratton as the source of the document.
See
Exhibit A to the Complaint. Stratton is therefore similar to Mid-West in that it appears to be the real party to the Agreement with RMS being but a conduit through which to effectuate the NCP Payments to Belfort.
See, e.g., In re Best Products Co., Inc.,
The defendants rely heavily on
In re Thomson McKinnon Securities, Inc.,
The court declined to pierce the corporate veil because the claimants had failed to produce any evidence of fraud or breach of fiduciary duty.
See Thomson McKinnon,
The facts in
Thomson McKinnon
did not support reverse veil piercing because there was no domination or control of the parent by the subsidiary. It is precisely this lack of domination or control that makes
Thomson McKinnon
distinguishable from the present facts. While TMI and TMSI shared stationary, office space and some directors, TMSI had many other directors that were not also directors of TMI. TMI did not depend exclusively on TMSI’s operations because it held many other subsidiaries which represented live businesses. More importantly, TMI admitted to being liable to the director claimants and there was no evidence that TMSI was meant to be liable to the director claimants under the employment contracts. By contrast, here it is alleged that there is almost complete overlap of officers and directors between Stratton and RMS; both companies share many corporate formalities including books and records; RMS’ only business purpose is to own 100% of Stratton and no other entity, making RMS wholly dependent on Stratton’s
The Complaint pleads all three elements of a reverse veil piercing claim: 1) that Stratton exerted a high degree of control over RMS; 2) that Stratton used this control to defraud Stratton’s creditors by virtue of the Agreement and the payments made thereunder to Belfort; and 3) that Stratton’s unsecured creditors were injured as a result of Stratton’s assets being diverted away from the estate. Accordingly, the Trustee has properly contended that Stratton and RMS should be treated as one entity for purposes of determining whether the Agreement was constructively fraudulent as to Stratton’s creditors.
b. Elements of Constructive Fraud
As I have already indicated, the Trustee must allege that Stratton transferred property for less than fair consideration while it was insolvent or which transfer rendered it insolvent, while the debtor suffered from unreasonably small capital or while Stratton knew that it would be unable to pay debts as they became due. The Trustee has satisfied all three elements. He has identified the NCP Payments and alleged that no consideration was given for them because Belfort was legally prohibited from engaging in any activities in the securities industry, which illusory refrain or restraint was supposed to be the consideration for the NCP Agreement, (¶ 64), or at least, that far less than fair consideration was given when the transactions are viewed as one and the valuation of Stratton/RMS under the SP Agreement is compared with its indirect valuation under the NCP Agreement. ¶ 63. Finally, the Trustee alleges that the NCP Payments rendered Stratton insolvent (¶¶ 13, 39) and prevented the debtor from paying the arbitration awards being entered against it. ¶¶ 67, 68.
See Harvard Knitwear,
2. Third Claim for Constructive Fraud
The Trustee has also pleaded all three elements of constructive fraud with respect to the S & B Payments to Porush. The Trustee identifies actual monies that were transferred to Porush as salaries and bonuses while Stratton was insolvent because they were made after the NCP Agreement was executed. ¶¶ 78-84. The Trustee also alleges that Porush paid himself these excessive salaries and bonuses while customer claims remained outstanding, knowing that if he made the S & B Payments to himself, those customer claims could not be satisfied. ¶¶ 64-68. Lastly, the Trustee alleges that these transfers were not supported by fair consideration because Porush did not perform any services or produce any benefits for Stratton that would merit such inordinate increases in salary and bonuses. ¶ 84. Moreover, there was plainly no consideration given for the S & B Payments made while Porush was banned from engaging in any supervisory duties at Stratton by the SEC. ¶¶ 85, 86. 23
A. Eighth Claim for Relief: Conversion against Porush
The Trustee alleges that the S & B payments to Porush constitute waste and conversion of Stratton’s assets because they were excessive, unreasonable and not equal to the value of the services performed by Porush. Porush argues that these allegations fail to state a claim for conversion under New York law because, at a minimum, the Trustee has not identified the alleged converted funds; has not established that Porush without authority assumed control and exercised a right of ownership over these funds; and has not established that any other parties had an ownership right to or were precluded from exercising an ownership right in these funds.
In New York, the common law tort of conversion is the “unauthorized exercise of dominion over the property of another to the exclusion of the owner’s right, or the unauthorized use of that property.”
Maxwell Macmillan Realization Liquidating Trust v. Aboff (In re Macmillan, Inc.),
The Trustee must plead conversion with particularity inasmuch as the claim is based on the monies Porush fraudulently siphoned out of Stratton as the S
&
B Payments. The Complaint alleges that Porush committed an unauthorized exercise of dominion over Stratton’s property by paying himself millions of dollars in S
&
B payments from Stratton’s coffers to the exclusion of Stratton’s creditors at a time when Stratton was insolvent. ¶¶ 78-85. The Trustee identifies the specific amounts of cash and stocks comprising the S
&
B Payments, the date on which Porush transferred this property to himself and the origin of these monies and stocks as Stratton’s assets. ¶¶ 78-84. The Trustee alleges that every single S & B Payment precluded Stratton’s legitimate creditors, such as those customers who had asserted $30 to 40 million in claims against Stratton, from being paid. ¶ 85. In addition, the Complaint alleges, even if Porush could show entitlement to the S
&
B Payments, those made during Porush’s year-long SEC-imposed suspension from working in the securities industry were clearly an unauthorized use of Stratton’s assets, (¶ 81), and not equivalent in value to any of the services Porush rendered to Stratton. ¶¶ 55, 85. The Trustee has not only met
B. Ninth and Tenth Claims for Relief against Maxwell Belfort
The Ninth Claim is for breach of fiduciary duty based on Maxwell’s role in the execution and delivery of the SP and NCP Payments while the Tenth Claim is for aiding and abetting the breaches of fiduciary duty allegedly committed by Porush and Belfort. Maxwell moves to dismiss both claims for failure to plead in accordance with F.R.C.P. 9(b), labeling as deficiencies 1) the Trustee’s failure to allege that Maxwell held a formal position with Stratton, 2) the Trustee’s pleading that Maxwell was an officer or director of Stratton without specifying when and 3) the Trustee’s failure to identify which fiduciary duties were breached, how they were breached or when those breaches occurred with the requisite particularity in order for Maxwell to defend himself. 25
Maxwell also seeks dismissal of the Ninth Claim on the theory that officers of a parent corporation owe no fiduciary duty to the subsidiary. With respect to the Tenth Claim, its dismissal is warranted, he says, because it is a cause of action for aiding and abetting a fraudulent transfer, which is not cognizable under New York law where the defendant was not the recipient or transferee of any of the fraudulently transferred funds. At most, he says, he is guilty of having assisted in the transfers but that assistance alone does not lay the foundation for an “aiding and abetting” cause of action.
Although Maxwell does not identify standing as the underlying problem, whether or not the Trustee has standing is the linchpin to the survival of these claims. And that,.in turn, rests on whether Maxwell is a fiduciary of Stratton or a mere third party from whom the Trustee seeks a recovery.
See The Mediators, Inc. v. Manney (In re The Mediators, Inc.),
1. Breach of Fiduciary Duty
The Trustee alleges that Maxwell was an officer and director of RMS as well as the
de facto
Chief Financial Officer of
To successfully plead a claim for breach of fiduciary duty, the Trustee must allege factors establishing the existence of a fiduciary relationship,
see Eickhorst v. E.F. Hutton Group, Inc.,
There can be no doubt that the Trustee has alleged the existence of a fiduciary relationship between Maxwell and Stratton because he has alleged that Maxwell acted as the
de facto
Chief Financial Officer of the debtor. ¶¶ 27, 29, 32 and 74;
see Princeton,
The Trustee has amply pleaded the facts and circumstances surrounding Maxwell’s breach of his fiduciary duty to Stratton. Maxwell voluntarily took an excessive salary and bonuses. ¶ 15. He knew of the S
&
B Payments and of SP and NCP Agreements (¶¶ 27, 28 and 74); he knew they were fraudulent because he also knew of the discrepancy in the valuation of Strat-ton as between both Agreements, of Bel-fort’s ban from working in the securities industry (¶ 65), that the value of Porush’s services were not equal to the bonuses and salaries he received, of Porush’s one year suspension from performing any supervisory role at Stratton (¶ 65), of Stratton’s very poor financial condition and its attendant inability to meet the S & B, SP and NCP obligations without forsaking others, and of the outstanding creditor arbitration awards. ¶ 74. Yet, in total disregard of his fiduciary duties to Stratton, pleads the Trustee, Maxwell coordinated and executed both Stratton’s and RMS’ financial participation in both transactions by issuing checks and authorizing wire transfers to Belfort in furtherance of the SP and NCP Agreements and to Porush in the form of the S & B Payments. ¶¶ 28, 29, 32 and 74;
see Lippe,
2. Aiding and Abetting a Breach of Fiduciary Duty
Whereas I agree with Maxwell that a cause of action for aiding and abetting a fraudulent transfer does not lie under New York law against a person who is not alleged to be the recipient or transferee of the fraudulently conveyed assets,
see Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation v. Porco,
New York recognizes a claim for aiding and abetting a breach of fiduciary duty.
See Goldin v. Primavera Familienstifbung TAG Associates, Ltd. (In re Granite Partners, L.P.),
The Complaint is replete with allegations that Porush and Belfort were fiduciaries who breached their fiduciary duties to Stratton by entering into the SP and NCP Agreements and by making the S & B Payments. The Trustee further alleges that. Maxwell knew that Porush and Belfort were fiduciaries of Stratton, that the S & B, SP and NCP transactions represented a breach of Porush’s and Belfort’s fiduciary duties, and that Maxwell affirmatively and substantially assisted Po-rush and Belfort in completing those transactions. ¶¶ 27, 28, 29, 65 and 74;
see Centennial Textiles,
C. Eleventh Claim for Relief: Conspiracy to Breach Fiduciary Duties
The Trustee’s Eleventh Claim for Relief alleges that Porush, Belfort and Maxwell conspired to breach their fiduciary duties to Stratton through manipulation, mismanagement, and usurpation of Stratton, self-dealing by its principals, officers and directors, and resulting unjust enrichment and corporate waste, all of which were allegedly occasioned by or a direct result of the SP and NCP Agreements and the S & B payments. Belfort, his father and Porush argue that these claimed breaches are already reflected in the Fifth, Sixth, Seventh (all three of which are unchallenged), Ninth and Tenth Claims for relief, the first against Belfort, the second two against Porush and the third two against Maxwell. The Eleventh Cause of Action, assert the trio, merely adds that they conspired to commit the foregoing breaches of fiduciary duty and, therefore, standing alone, is not actionable under New York law because the underlying acts to which this claim for civil conspiracy attaches have already been alleged in the form of separate and distinct claims against the individual defendants.
A conspiracy is an agreement between two or more persons to accomplish an unlawful purpose.
See Borden v. Spoor Behrins Campbell & Young,
Since New York courts do not recognize an independent cause of action for civil conspiracy, the Eleventh Claim can lie only if it alleges, in addition to the conspiracy, independent overt acts undertaken in pursuit of that conspiracy. Here, the overt acts alleged by the Trustee are the breaches of fiduciary duty; however, they are already embodied in the Complaint’s Fifth, Sixth, Seventh and Ninth Claims for Relief asserted against Porush, Belfort and Maxwell, respectively. Accordingly, the Eleventh Cause of Action is duplicative of those claims and should be dismissed.
See ESI,
D. The Equitable Claims for Relief: Twelve and Thirteen
Claiming he has no adequate remedy at law, the Trustee seeks the imposition of a constructive trust and an accounting from all the defendants.
26
A party may state as many separate claims for relief or defenses as he or she wishes regardless of their consistency with each other and of whether they are based on legal or equitable grounds.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(e)(2);
ESI
The defendants argue that where a plaintiff has an adequate legal remedy,
However,
[ojrdinarily, when plaintiffs seek both money damages and equitable relief ... the courts will not entertain a motion to dismiss solely that portion of the complaint which asks for the equitable remedy. (internal citations omitted)_ [a] motion to dismiss the complaint will not search out the nature of the relief or judgment to which a plaintiff may be entitled. The application will be denied if the complaint “states a case for relief either at law or in equity.”
Lichtyger,
1. Constructive Trust
The general rule in New York is that a party claiming entitlement to a constructive trust must ordinarily establish four elements: (1) a confidential or fiduciary relationship, (2) a promise, express or implied, (3) a transfer made in reliance on that promise, and (4) unjust enrichment.
See Koreag v. Refeo F/X Assoc., Inc.,
Certainly, the Trustee has alleged that Belfort and Porush had a fiduciary relationship with Stratton, that with Stratton’s insolvency, Belfort and Porush had fiduciary obligations running to Stratton’s creditors,
see Unsecured Creditors’ Comm. of Debtor STN Enters. v. Noyes (In re STN Enters.),
More troublesome is the Trustee’s desire to impose a constructive trust on the assets of Maxwell, Nadine and Nancy. Although the Trustee, in passing, pleads that Maxwell paid himself excessive salaries and bonuses, he does not plead that Maxwell (as opposed to Porush or Belfort) authorized those payments or that Maxwell, without authority from Porush or Belfort, made those payments to himself. Neither does the Trustee allege that the payments were skimmed from the up-streamed Stratton funds intended for the payments to Belfort. I have already found that the Trustee has failed to plead Maxwell was a transferee, thereby making it very difficult to conclude that he was unjustly enriched, not having received any money or benefit from the challenged transfers. Absent an unjust enrichment in particular and a transfer made in reliance on a promise, whose existence I question for the same reasons I stated earlier, the Trustee has not pleaded the requisites for imposition of a constructive trust on Maxwell’s assets.
Admittedly, Nancy and Nadine are not fiduciaries of Stratton, nor have they made any express or implied promises to Stratton or its creditors. Clearly, if the underlying promise does not exist, then a transfer in reliance on that absent promise cannot exist either. At most, the wives have been unjustly enriched by the transfer of the SP, NCP and S & B Payments to them by their husbands. That the Trustee does not allege the wives were
Subsequent transfers of the alleged trust property do not preclude the imposition of a constructive trust, if equity would otherwise require that one be impressed on the subsequent transferees.
See SK & I,
2. Accounting
In seeking an accounting, the trustee must allege the following conditions in the Complaint: (1) relations of a mutual and confidential nature; (2) money or property entrusted to the defendant imposing upon him or her a burden of accounting; (3) that there is no adequate legal remedy; (4) and in some cases, not relevant here, a demand for an accounting and a refusal.
See Pressman v. Estate of Steinvorth,
As clear as it is that a fiduciary relationship exists between Stratton on the one hand and Porush, Belfort and Maxwell on the other, it is equally as plain that none exists between Stratton and Nancy and Nadine. Assuming, without deciding, that there exists no adequate remedy at law, the wives have been entrusted with property by their husbands but not by Stratton, so the accounting action against them must be dismissed.
The result differs, however, with respect to Maxwell, Porush and Belfort. Although Maxwell may not have received funds himself from Stratton, as its
de facto
Chief
E. Regulatory Action References
Two of the paragraphs in the Complaint (¶¶ 89 and 90) refer to state civil actions and administrative proceedings brought principally against Belfort and Porush. Paragraph 89 alleges that Porush was mismanaging Stratton and that, as a result, he was repeatedly fined, censured and suspended by the SEC, the National Association of Securities Dealers (“NASD”) and several state securities regulators. ¶ 89. Paragraph 90 lists the instances of state, NASD and SEC reprimand, including that Porush was enjoined for violating the March 17, 1994 SEC Consent Order (¶ 90(3)) and that, on December 6, 1996, the NASD expelled Stratton from membership and banned Porush from the securities industry for life. ¶ 90(18). The defendants request that these references be stricken because they are prejudicial to them, explaining that the state, NASD and SEC actions were settled on consent, without the defendants ever “admitting or denying” any of the allegations asserted against them. Further, none of the orders resolving those actions contains any findings of fact or law so that reference to those actions in this Complaint, argue the defendants, cannot have any probative effect or evidentiary value.
Although motions to strike are generally disfavored,
see Eskofot A/S v. E.I. Du Pont De Nemours & Company,
The Second Circuit has clearly held that consent judgments, such as these, are not the result of actual adjudications on the merits and therefore can not be used as evidence in subsequent litigation between the parties.
See Lipsky,
The Trustee is directed to SETTLE ORDER consistent with this decision. To the extent that he has been granted leave to replead, he is to do so within 20 days of entry of an order resolving these motions.
Notes
. The First and Second Causes of Action implicate all the defendants whereas the Third and Fourth are only asserted against the Po-rushes. Belfort does not move to dismiss the First Claim for Relief for actual fraud.
. These are for conversion, aiding and abetting a breach of fiduciary duty, civil conspiracy to commit a breach of fiduciary duty, the imposition of a constructive trust and an accounting.
. At all relevant times to this complaint, Bel-fort was and remained the President of JRB. ¶ 33.
.According to the Complaint, bonuses and salaries had to be authorized by Stratton’s Board of Directors (the "Board”). ¶¶ 47,48. Often, Porush and Belfort signed a "Unanimous Consent of the Board of Directors to Corporate Action in lieu of Special Meeting of the Board of Directors” in order to carry out their scheme. ¶¶ 47-50. These unanimous consents enabled Porush and Belfort to co-authorize bonuses and other financial rewards to each other.
. Although not technically an officer of Strat-ton, Maxwell Belfort held himself out as an employee of Stratton. ¶ 27.
. New York’s DCL Article 10 enacts the Uniform Fraudulent Conveyance Act rather than the more modern Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act.
. Section 550(a) provides in relevant part that
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this section, to the extent a transfer is avoided under section 544 ... of this title, the trustee may recover, for the benefit of the estate, the property transferred, or if the court so orders, 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.
11 U.S.C. § 550(a).
. Although most cases discuss "transferee” in terms of the initial transferee, it is clear from
Bonded
that the judicial definition was meant to apply across the board, to immediate and mediate transferees as well.
See Bonded,
. The
Bonded
interpretation of “transferee” applies not only to initial transferees but to subsequent transferees as well.
See Bonded,
. I am using Maxwell Belfort's first name in order to distinguish him from his son. I am also doing the same with respect to Porush and Belfort's wives. In all instances, I do not mean to belittle or denigrate, only to differentiate.
. The Trustee has pleaded that Maxwell knew that his son was banned from participating in the securities industry for the rest of his life; that he participated in paying his son in accordance with the NCP Agreement despite the fact that Belfort was legally prohibited from competing with Stratton; that Maxwell was the de facto chief financial officer of Stratton; that he knew Stratton’s financial statements misrepresented the company's liabilities; and that he nevertheless kept paying Belfort, Porush and himself huge sums of money in satisfaction of fictitious obligations or undeserved bonuses. The Trustee is not in a position to know all of the facts, such as the nature of Maxwell's exact role in the execution of Porush' and Belfort's scheme. However, the Trustee has given Maxwell notice of the basis of his claim of actual fraud against him. The Trustee has alleged a time period, with whom Maxwell communicated about the NCP payments {i.e. Porush), how he accomplished the fraudulent transfers {i.e. false billing statements) and that such conduct was reckless given the decrepit financial state in which Stratton found itself and of which Maxwell was aware. Therefore, were I faced with deciding whether the actual fraud claim against Maxwell was pleaded with particularity, I would hold that it was and would deny its dismissal.
.Instead, these payments are more germane to the Trustee’s claim for breach of fiduciary duty against Belfort.
. DCL § 276: Eveiy conveyance made and every obligation incurred with actual intent, as distinguished from intent presumed in law, to hinder, delay, or defraud either present or future creditors, is fraudulent as to both, present and future creditors. DCL § 276 (McKinneys 1998).
. Remember, Belfort does not move to dismiss the First Claim for Relief for Actual Fraud.
. Porush does not challenge that he indeed received the S & B Payments.
. There may have been some very minor areas in which Belfort was still able to participate in the industry.
. Porush. does not argue that he is not a transferee of the S & B Payments.
. The Trustee bases his constructive fraud claims (Second and Fourth Claims for Relief) on DCL §§ 272 through 275:
Section 272 Fair Consideration: Fair consideration is given for property, or obligation,
a. When in exchange for such property, or obligation, as a fair equivalent therefor, and in good faith, property is conveyed or an antecedent debt is satisfied, or
b. When such property, or obligation is received in good faith to secure a present advance or antecedent debt in amount not disproportionately small as compared with the value of the property, or obligation obtained.
Section 273 Conveyance by Insolvent: Every conveyance made and every obligation incurred by a person who is or will be thereby rendered insolvent is fraudulent as to credi
Section 274 Conveyances by Persons in • Business: Every conveyance made without fair consideration when the person making it is engaged or is about to engage in a business or transaction for which the property remaining in his hands after the conveyance is an unreasonably small capital, is fraudulent as to creditors and as to other persons who become creditors during the continuance of such business or transaction without regard to his actual intent.
Section 275 Conveyances by a Person about to Incur Debts: Every conveyance made and every obligation incurred without fair consideration when the person malting the conveyance or entering into the obligation intends or believes that he will incur debts beyond his ability to pay as they mature, is fraudulent as to both present and future creditors.
Most of the Trustee’s allegations fall under §§ 273 and 275.
. In this section, I will refer to both agreements as the Agreement since I have found that they should be viewed as a unitary transaction.
. In order to avoid any confusion, I believe that it would be useful to sort out the corporate veil "lingo.” Traditionally, a court applies an "alter ego” theory where an individual abuses the corporate form to attain his or her own personal ends in order to hold that individual responsible for the liabilities of the corporation. See
Wm. Passalacqua Builders, Inc. v. Resnick Developers South, Inc.,
. While most cases discuss reverse veil piercing in the context of holding a corporation liable for the debts of its principal or shareholders (i.e., the reverse "alter ego” scenario),
Thomson McKinnon,
a case from this District, stated in
dictum
that a subsidiary could be responsible for the obligations of its parent.
See In re Thomson McKinnon Securities, Inc.,
. To the extent that the allegations in the Complaint supporting this reverse piercing theory involve fraud, they must comply with F.R.C.P. 9(b). Otherwise, F.R.C.P. 8(a) governs. Considering that any allegations involving fraud which are relevant to the present analysis have already been determined to meet the particularity requirements of F.R.C.P. 9(b), see section on actual fraud (III. A.), I need not address them again here.
. For the same reasons that Porush and Nancy Porush were deemed to be properly pleaded as transferees under the Second Claim, they are properly pleaded as transferees under this one.
. The case law does not specify whether the plaintiff must be able to trace at the time of the conversion, that is, where the funds were initially deposited by the converter, or, rather, at the time of suit. In either event, the Trustee has met his pleading burden, alleging the initial destination of the converted funds and identifying an offshore trust into which they were eventually deposited.
. Maxwell claims that the Complaint is deficient because it pleads that he prepared financial statements without specifically indicating how or why these contributed to any fraudulent scheme; that he paid Belfort pursuant to the SP and NCP Agreements (whose invoices, according to Maxwell, were fully disclosed) against the advice of Stratton's counsel without identifying why he was bound by that advice, what that advice was or whether it was indeed ever given.
. It is not clear from the Complaint or from the briefs whether the constructive trust claim is asserted against Maxwell and consequently whether or not he moves to dismiss it. To avoid confusion, I will assume the Trustee does bring a constructive trust claim against Maxwell and that, he, in turn, moves to dismiss it.
. Under New York law, a director’s fiduciary duty runs to creditors when the corporation becomes insolvent. However, and no New York case holds to the contrary, Delaware law holds that this same duty begins to run as
soon
as the corporation approaches insolvency.
See Geyer v. Ingersoll Publications Co.,
