MEMORANDUM OPINION & ORDER
Appellant/Plaintiff John R. Stoebner,
I. BACKGROUND
This matter arises from an underlying adversary proceeding in Bankruptcy Court. The Trustee filed suit under the Minnesota Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act, (“MUFTA”), to avoid certain prepetition payments to the following lenders: Defendants Opportunity Finance, LLC and related Opportunity Finance entities (collectively, “Opportunity Finance”), DZ Bank AG Deutsche Zentral-Genossen-schaftsbank (“DZ Bank”), Sabes Minnesota Limited Partnership, Robert W. Sabes, Janet F. Sabes, Jon R. Sabes, Steven Sabes, (collectively, “the Sabes Family”), and John and Jane Does 1-30. Under the MUFTA, creditors may recover assets that debtors have otherwise fraudulently transferred to third parties. Finn v. Alliance Bank,
Defendants Opportunity Finance and DZ Bank moved to dismiss pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), as incorporated by Fed. R. Bankr. P. 7012(b). While Defendants’ motion was pending, at a December 1, 2015 omnibus hearing, the Trustee requested leave to file a third amended complaint. (See 12/1/15 Bankr. Tr., Tab 2 to Opp. Fin. Appendix [Doc. No. 22 at 29-31].) From the bench, Chief Bankruptcy Court Judge Gregory F. Kishel declined to entertain the Trustee’s request until after the issuance of his ruling on the pending dispositive motions. (Id. at 47-58.) Six weeks later, in the written Order on Defendants’ motions, Chief Judge Kishel granted Defendants’ motion and dismissed the case, with prejudice, finding that any amended pleadings would contradict the facts already alleged so as to be futile. In re Polaroid,
A. Fetters Consumer Brands, LLC
Before the collapse of Tom Petters’ Pon-zi scheme in September 2008, (see Second
The Petters entity directly at issue here is Petters Consumer Brands, LLC (“Pet-tersCB”). During the relevant time period of 2003-2005, PettersCB, under a contractual license agreement with Polaroid, used the Polaroid brand name on certain goods, which PettersCB then sold to retailers like Best Buy. (SAC ¶¶ 24; 36; 40.) But as the Trustee acknowledges, “[Ujnlike many of Tom Petters’ companies, [PettersCB] actually purchased, warehoused, and sold to prominent retailers high volumes of consumer electronic equipment, branded with the Polaroid name.” (SAC ¶ 24.) As alleged in the SAC, Opportunity Finance provided funding to PettersCB which it then used to purchase consumer electronics for resale to retailers or to pay third parties regarding the electronics. (SAC ¶¶ 40-41.) DZ Bank was a senior secured lender to Opportunity Finance, providing Opportunity Finance with funding for its lending to PettersCB. (SAC ¶ 14.) The Trustee generally alleges that Tom Petters used Pet-tersCB to further his Ponzi scheme, (SAC ¶¶ 19; 24), and that Opportunity Finance was a significant investor and “net winner” in Petters’ scheme, receiving “false profits” from “Tom Petters’ entities” and “far higher annual rates of return on its investments with Tom Petters’ entities than were commercially reasonable.” (SAC ¶¶ 27-28.) In addition, the Trustee alleges that PettersCB was used to launder money from the overall Ponzi scheme and “prop up” its losses; Tom Petters is further alleged to have personally taken Ponzi proceeds out of PettersCB. (SAC ¶¶ 25-26.)
The Trustee asserts that,' eventually, Opportunity Finance insisted that Pet-tersCB create an entity called Petters Consumer Brands Funding, LLC (“Pet-tersCB Funding”) as a “bankruptcy remote vehicle.” (SAC ¶¶ 46-47.) Established on or about July 28, 2003, Pet-tersCB Funding was allegedly intended to “shield[] Defendants from the consequences of '[PettersCB’s] inevitable bankruptcy.” (Id. at ¶46.) The Trustee alleges that the envisioned “plan” was for PettersCB Funding to be a “real” and independent entity to which Opportunity Finance would provide loans. (Id.) In exchange, PettersCB Funding would use the loan proceeds to purchase accounts receivable from Pet-tersCB. (Id.) PettersCB would use the money obtained from PettersCB Funding to buy more consumer goods to resell. (Id.) However, the Trustee asserts that the sales of accounts re
The Trustee also alleges that in April 2005, PettersCB paid Opportunity Finance $849,000 as a prepayment penalty (the “Prepayment Penalty Transfer”). (SAC ¶52.) However, the Trustee asserts that no such penalty was owed, since the notes on which the Prepayment Penalty Transfer was made provided for prepayment without penalty. (SAC ¶¶ 53-54.)
Based on the financing agreement between PettersCB and Opportunity Finance and the agreement between Opportunity Finance and DZ Bank, the Trustee alleges that the transfers to Opportunity Finance, purportedly in repayment of the loans, were fraudulent transfers under the MUF-TA. (SAC ¶¶27; 31.) The Trustee also alleges that DZ Bank provided funding to Opportunity Finance, which was presumably loaned to PettersCB. (SAC ¶ 14.) One of the Trustee’s asserted bases of liability for actual fraud under the MUFTA involves the application of the “Ponzi scheme presumption,” although the Trustee does not use this specific term in the SAC.
B. Procedural History
The Trustee commenced the underlying action against Defendants on December 17, 2010. (Bankr. D. Minn. No. ADV-10-4600, ECF No. 1.) Pursuant to the parties’ stipulation, the Bankruptcy Court approved the filing of an amended complaint. (Id., ECF Nos. 19-20.) On May 3, 2011, the Trustee filed the First Amended Complaint. (Id., ECF No. 21.) He filed the SAC on November 8, 2013. (Id., ECF No. 46.)
On December 20, 2013, Opportunity Finance and DZ Bank filed the underlying motions to dismiss the SAC. (Id., ECF Nos. 48; 49.) The Bankruptcy Court heard oral argument on March 3, 2014. (Id., ECF No. 57.) However, prior to the issuance of a ruling, the Minnesota Supreme Court, in an entirely separate legal action, ruled on February 18, 2015, that the Ponzi scheme presumption could not be applied to establish actual fraud under the MUFTA. Finn,
On December 1, 2015, the Bankruptcy Court held an omnibus hearing to discuss various issues in related bankruptcy cases. (See 12/1/15 Bankr. Tr., Tab 2 to Opp. Fin. Appendix [Doc. No. 22 at 47-58].) At the omnibus hearing, counsel for the Trustee expressed his intent to seek to amend the SAC for seven reasons: (1) to address any issues raised by defendants regarding Finn in the separate PCI litigation; (2) to allege with greater specificity the issue of initial versus subsequent transferee; (3) to
C. The Bankruptcy Court’s Order
Six weeks later, in the Order, Chief Judge Kishel granted Defendants’ motions to dismiss on two bases. First, he found that the Trustee lacked statutorily-based standing to seek avoidance of transfers made by PettersCB. In re Polaroid,
In addition, Chief Judge Kishel found that the Trustee’s claims further failed to satisfy the elements of actual or constructive fraudulent transfer under the MUF-TA. Id. at 908-09. In light of the Minnesota Supreme Court’s decision in Finn, the Bankruptcy Court held that the Trustee’s fraudulent transfer claims based on the Ponzi scheme presumption failed as a matter of law. Id. at 906-09.
And, even aside from the unavailing Ponzi scheme presumption, Chief Judge Kishel also found that in light of Finn, the Trustee’s pleading of actual and constructive fraud was deficient. Id. As to whether the debtor received reasonably equivalent value in exchange for the transfers
While the Trustee alleged that the Opportunity Finance loans’ interest rate was excessively high at 12%, (SAC ¶¶ 63-64), and thus demonstrated the lack of reasonably equivalent value, and constituted “false profits,” (id. ¶ 65), the Bankruptcy Court found such pleading conclusory and devoid of any context. In re Polaroid,
As to the Trustee’s allegations of constructive fraud, the Bankruptcy Court analogized them to Finn, in which the debtor-transferor’s transfers that were real and legitimate were not found to be constructively fraudulent, despite the fact that the debtor-transferor was running a Ponzi scheme to defraud other investors through the same type of transactions.
Regarding the Trustee’s claims against Defendant DZ Bank, the alleged subsequent transferee from Opportunity Finance, the Bankruptcy Court held that because the claims against the initial transferee failed, the claims against DZ Bank likewise failed. Id. at 915.
In conclusion, Chief Judge Kishel found that the Trustee could not replead an alternate set of facts to counter the effect of Finn without contradicting the facts asserted in the SAC—all of which repeatedly stated that real goods, real sales, and real loans supported the transactions between PettersCB and Opportunity Finance. Id. Accordingly, the Bankruptcy Court found that it would be futile to amend the pleading, given that any additional facts that might support the Trustee’s claims would contradict the facts previously alleged. Id. at 914. Therefore, Chief Judge Kishel dismissed the Trustee’s MUFTA claims with prejudice.
D. Appeal
On appeal, the Trustee argues that the Bankruptcy Court erred in citing Rule 16 in denying leave to amend. (Pi’s. Mem. at 2; 24-25.) He argues that denying the right to bring a motion for leave to amend effectively denied the motion, improperly, as there was no evidence that Defendants would be unfairly prejudiced by granting leave to amend. (Id. at 2; 25-27.)
As to the other aspects of the Trustee’s MUFTA claims, he contends that the SAC sufficiently alleges fraudulent transfers of the property of PettersCB. (Id. at 37-38.) As to actual fraud, the Trustee contends that “the SAC alleges both that (a) Pet-tersCB knew that by making transfers to Defendants, PettersCB would induce future creditors to make investments in Pet-tersCB; and (b) PettersCB knew that those creditors would be left unpaid when the inevitable exposure of Petters’ Ponzi scheme caused PettersCB to fail.” (Id. at 39.) The Trustee argues that the SAC sufficiently alleges the inevitability that PettersCB would fail when the Ponzi scheme was exposed and that “without financing, an insolvent and unprofitable company cannot survive.” (Id. at 40.) Likewise, the Trustee asserts that Chief Judge Kishel apparently overlooked the allegation in paragraph 39 of the SAC that Pet-tersCB actually knew it was inducing creditors to invest despite the certainty that PettersCB would fail. (Id, at 41.) In addition, the Trustee argues that a lack of reasonably equivalent value is alleged, citing the 12% interest rate and the $349,000 Prepayment Penalty Transfer. (Id. at 45-47.)
As to the constructive fraud claim, the Trustee again argues that the SAC sufficiently alleges a lack of reasonably equivalent value. (Id. at 43.) For all of the transfers except the Prepayment Penalty Transfer, the Trustee cites his 12% interest rate allegation. (Id. at 44.) With respect to that rate, the Trustee argues that he was not required to allege the comparative market rate in his pleading. (Id. at 45-47.) He also argues that the Bankruptcy Court failed to address the adequacy of his allegation that PettersCB received “no value at all” in exchange for the Prepayment Penalty Transfer. (Id.)
Finally, the Trustee contends that the Bankruptcy Court erred in holding that Plaintiff could not state a claim against DZ Finance, in light of the failure to plead adequate claims against the initial transferee. (|d. at 48.) Again, the Trustee maintains that had he been permitted to amend his pleading, he could have adequately asserted his claims against Opportunity Finance, and by extension, DZ Bank. (Id.)
II. DISCUSSION
In an appeal from a bankruptcy court proceeding, the Court acts as an appellate court. See 28 U.S.C. § 158(a). The Bankruptcy Court’s legal conclusions
The Bankruptcy Court applied the correct legal standard to the underlying motions to dismiss. In re Polaroid,
A. Procedural Issues
While an appellate court reviews a denial of leave to amend under an abuse of discretion standard, it applies a de novo standard of review to the underlying legal conclusion that an amendment to the complaint would have been futile. Marmo v. Tyson Fresh Meats, Inc.,
The Trustee argues that Chief Judge Kishel erred in failing to address its oral motion for leave to amend the complaint before ruling on Defendants’ already-pending motions to dismiss. (Pl.’s Mem. at 24) (citing Pure Country, Inc. v. Sigma Chi Fraternity,
Under Rule 15, “there is no automatic right to amend . one’s complaint.” Deutsche Fin. Servs. Corp. v. BCS Ins. Co.,
Here, a review of the relevant dates is instructive:
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As indicated, the Trustee did not seek leave to amend after the motions to dismiss were filed in December 2013, nor at the hearing on the motions to dismiss in March 2014. Nor did the Trustee seek leave to file a motion to amend after the Minnesota Court of Appeals issued its decision in Finn in September 2013.
Plaintiff also argues that the Bankruptcy Court erred in relying on Rule 16 in denying permission to seek leave to amend. (PL’s Mem. at 24-25.) The Trustee asserts that because no scheduling order had yet been issued, the Bankruptcy Court
While Chief Judge Kishel specifically invoked Rule 16 instead of Rule 15 when he denied the Trustee’s request, his decision was guided by concerns regarding a significant Rule 15 factor—the Trustee’s delay. (12/1/15 Bankr. Tr., Tab 2 to Opp. Fin. Appendix [Doc. No. 22 at 31-32; 40-41].) Similarly, defense counsel cited the Rule 15 factors of delay and prejudice. (Id. at 33-34; 38-40.) Underscoring the impact of the Trustee’s delay on Defendants and on the Bankruptcy Court, defense counsel stated, “If there were deficiencies the [Tjrustee thought he had in his complaint, he was duty bound to raise them back at the time that the motion was argued before the court,” as opposed to waiting until the eve of the issuance of the Bankruptcy Court’s ruling. (Id, at 33.) Directly invoking Rule 15, DZ Bank’s counsel further stated that his client devoted numerous resources to its motion to dismiss and would be prejudiced if Plaintiff were granted leave to file a motion to amend. (Id. at 36.) Similarly, counsel for Opportunity Finance cited the lengthy time lag between the Trustee’s request for leave and the hearing on the motions to amend as well as the issuance of the Finn decision, stating, “[T]his kind of seriatim or serial amendment that’s been taking place ... really prevents the Court from actually performing its job in terms of adjudicating the motions that are before it.” (Id. 38.) The Bankruptcy Court’s Order likewise identified the repeated failure to cure deficiencies in the three iterations of pleadings. In re Polaroid,
While it appears that Rule 15 is the applicable rule here, the Court finds that the Bankruptcy Court’s reference to Rule 16 is not grounds for reversal.
B. Futility
Denying leave to amend on grounds of futility is appropriate when a pleading is so deficient that “the court is convinced that its defects cannot be cured through re-pleading.” Tatone v. SunTrust Mortg., Inc.,
[I]t does not appear that the Trustee can remedy the deficiencies by alternate fact-pleading. The Trustee had the onus to plead a plausible case in the first instance, and indisputable aspects of his pleading deprive him of that. These fundamental points of historical occurrence and sequence are conclusive, and they cut against any right to relief in favor of the bankruptcy estates. The Trustee cannot deny them now, for a repleading. Thus, granting leave to essay an amendment would be futile; these fundaments present an insuperable bar to relief under the only law that the Trustee cites as authority for avoidance.
In re Polaroid,
Although no Third Amended Complaint appears to ever have been presented, the Trustee indicated its proposed amendments at the omnibus hearing before the Bankruptcy Court on December 1, 2015, (12/1/15 Bankr. Tr., Tab 2 to Opp. Fin. Appendix [Doc. No. 22 at 29-30]), and in its appellate brief before this Court. (See Pl.’s Mem. at 27-28). While the Trustee’s proposed amendments were not technically before the Bankruptcy Court, and therefore should not be considered on appeal, see Bath Junkie Branson, LLC v. Bath Junkie, Inc.,
1. Standing
A bankruptcy trustee possesses the right to pursue state-law remedies for the fraudulent transfers of property of the bankrupt debtor that unsecured creditors of the bankrupt debtor could have pursued. See 11 U.S.C. § 544(b)(1). The applicable state' law remedy here, the MUFTA, provides as follows:
(a) A transfer made or obligation incurred by a debtor is voidable as to a creditor, whether the creditor’s elaim arose before or after the transfer wasmade or the obligation was incurred, if the debtor made the transfer or incurred the obligation:
(1) with actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud any creditor of the debtor; or
(2) without receiving a reasonably equivalent value in exchange for the transfer or obligation, and the debtor:
(i) was engaged or was about to engage in a business or a transaction for which the remaining assets of the debtor were unreasonably small in relation to the business or transaction; or
(ii) intended to incur, or believed or reasonably should have believed that the debtor would incur, debts beyond the debtor’s ability to pay as they became due.
(b) In determining actual intent under paragraph (a), clause (1), consideration may be given, among other factors, to whether;
(1) the transfer or obligation was to an insider;
(2) the debtor retained possession or control of the property transferred after the transfer;
(3) the transfer or obligation was disclosed or concealed;
(4) before the transfer was made or obligation was incurred, the debtor had been sued or threatened with suit;
(5) the transfer was of substantially all the debtor’s assets;
(6) the debtor absconded;
(7) the debtor removed or concealed assets;
(8) the value of the consideration received by the debtor was reasonably equivalent to the value of the asset transferred or the amount of the obligation incurred;
(9) the debtor was insolvent or became insolvent shortly after the transfer was made or the obligation was incurred;
(10) the transfer occurred shortly before or shortly after a substantial debt was incurred; and
(11) the debtor transferred the essential assets of the business to a lienor that transferred the assets to an insider of the debtor.
(c) A creditor making a claim under paragraph (a) has the burden of proving the elements of the claim by a preponderance of the evidence.
Minn. Stat. § 513.44.
a. Debtor Entity Represented by the Trustee
In the Order, the Bankruptcy Court found that both the Trustee and the alleged creditors lacked standing. As to the Trustee, Chief Judge Kishel raised the following rhetorical question:
[H]ow does this plaintiff-trustee, as the steward of the bankruptcy estates of specific corporate entities, have standing to sue for the avoidance of the transfers that he identifies in his pleading—payments of money made by or out of a corporate entity (PettersCB or Pet-tersCB Funding) that was not itself among the companies that were eventually put into bankruptcy to commence the cases in which this adversary proceeding was brought? The Trustee’s fact-pleading featured almost nothing toward that issue.
In re Polaroid,
The Trustee contends that had he been allowed to amend his pleading, he would have submitted the following amendments, pleading a variant of successor liability “(and more)”:
1. PettersCB was formed on January 17, 2003, under the laws of the State of Delaware. Tom Petters was the sole ultimate owner of Petters CB throughout its existence.
2. Effective 10:30 a.m. on April 27, 2005, PettersCB merged with and into Polaroid Holding Company under the name of Polaroid Holding Company (“PHC”). Like PettersCB, PHC was a creature of Delaware law. Tom Petters was the sole ultimate owner of PHC from that point forward.
3. Effective 10:31 a.m. on April 27, 2005, Petters Consumer Brands, LLC (“New PettersCB”) was formed under the Delaware Limited Liability Company Act. Tom Petters was the sole ultimate owner of NewPettersCB throughout its existence.
4. Also on April 27, 2005, PHC transferred to NewPettersCB, by execution and delivery of a Bill of Sale, all of the rights and assets of PettersCB as at that time, after giving effect to the Merger, were held by PHC. In addition, NewPettersCB assumed all of the liabilities that were formerly the responsibility of PettersCB.
5. In exchange, NewPettersCB gave PHC the ownership of NewPettersCB. PHC immediately transferred it to Polaroid Corporation, of which Tom Pet-ters was the sole ultimate owner.
6.NewPettersCB continued the business of PettersCB with the same officers, directors, and employees, using the same office space, bank accounts, and name. Many of PettersCB’s creditors continued to do business with NewPet-tersCB and are among the ranks of the creditors who have filed claims against NewPettersCB under its more recent name of PCE.
(PL’s Mem. at 16.)
Without conducting any choice of law analysis, the Trustee asserts that Delaware law of successor liability applies because both PettersCB and PCE were Delaware entities. (Id. at 32) The Trustee relies on four theories of successor liability available under Delaware law: express assumption, de facto merger, mere continuation, and fraud. (Id.) While Delaware and the forum state of Minnesota follow the traditional corporate law rule that a purchaser-successor does not ordinarily assume the seller-predecessor’s liabilities simply by purchasing the predecessor’s assets, see, e.g., AJZN, Inc. v. Yu, No. No. 13-149 GMS,
This Court is not certain that Delaware law would apply under Minnesota’s choice-of-law analysis. Nor is the Court certain that the facts of this case would support the Trustee’s variation on successor liability, assuming that it would even be recognized in the Eighth Circuit. Despite its own reservations, however, the Bankruptcy Court assumed that a merger occurred, resulting in either PHC or PCE, in order “to get to the crucial issue at bar.” In re Polaroid,
b. Creditors
As Chief Judge Kishel observed, under the MUFTA, “a creditor suing for avoidance must itself have a legally-enforceable right to payment from the debtor.” Id. (citing Minn. Stat. §§ 513.44(a) (defining transfers that are “fraudulent as to a creditor” whose “claim arose before or after the transfer was made”), 513.45 (defining transfers that are “fraudulent as to a creditor whose claim arose before the transfer was made”), 513.41(4) (defining “creditor” as “a person who has a claim”), 513.41 (defining “claim” as “a right to payment,” framed by several non-limiting characteristics)). Id. Similarly, the court in AS ARCO noted that a plaintiff seeking avoidance under the Bankruptcy Code’s corollary provision must establish the existence of an actual creditor with a viable claim against the debtor:
In other words, each Plaintiff must prove: (1) at the time of the challenged transfer, there was in existence one or more creditors holding unsecured claims against the debtor; (2) the transfer could have been set aside by such creditor under Delaware law; and (3) at least one of the unsecured creditors with the right to challenge the transaction, or its successor in interest, continued to have a claim against the plaintiff until the commencement of the case and is entitled to an allowed claim against the estate.
Applying such requirements to the facts alleged in the SAC, Chief Judge Kishel raised the following question: how, in December 2008 [when PCE filed for bankruptcy], a creditor of PHC or PCE could have reached back beyond April 2005 [when Tom Petters acquired Polaroid] to sue a transferee of PettersCB? In re Polaroid,
The absurdity of the notion is clear, if such a creditor held a claim that arose from direct contractual privity between it and [PHC] or PCE. A transfer madeby PettersCB years earlier would not have deprived such a creditor of anything at all, to which it could have justifiably looked for satisfaction of its claim against its own debtor ([PHC] or PCE).
Id. at 901-02.
“Looking far afield of that direct scenario,” Chief Judge Kishel then envisioned a hypothetical, five-pronged scenario that would support the Trustee’s premise that PHC or PCE are the “objectively-traceable successors in interest to the named transferor, PettersCB.” Id. at 902. He determined that this “very specific stacking of historical events” would require pleading the following facts:
1. The creditor’s claim accrued before Tom Petters’s acquisition [of Polaroid], as a result of direct contractual privity between it and PettersCB or PettersCB Funding.
2. The claim would have accrued during the period of the challenged transfers, or at least before PettersCB and Pet-tersCB Funding passed out of the picture by merger or dissolution.
3. The creditor’s claim was not paid timely under its own terms.
4. The creditor’s claim was not satisfied before PettersCB was merged into Polaroid Holding Company and PettersCB Funding was dissolved.
5. The liability on the debt was expressly preserved and passed to one of the Debtors as part of the complex of transactions through which Tom Petters changed his alignment with the Polaroid enterprise by acquiring that enterprise in full.
Id. Chief Judge Kishel also found that Step 5 of his hypothetical chain of events would require an express, objective undertaking by the parties, through a novation. Id. Ultimately, the Bankruptcy Court found this envisioned sequence of events implausible, explaining, “[l]enders'or trade suppliers generally make their decision to extend credit based on the worthiness of the specific party they are dealing with; and after that is done, and a debt created, it is more likely that they would take a proffered merger as an opportunity to get clear on the account, even if they countenance doing business with the new entity in the future.” Id.
Plaintiffs proposed amendments, (Pl.’s Mem. 16-17), however, do not track Chief Judge Kishel’s roadmap. To correct the Trustee’s acknowledged pleading errors regarding the identification of creditors, (SAC ¶¶ 87, 92. 98, 104), the Trustee proposes amendments that would identify six predicate creditors of PCE and two predicate creditors of PHC. (PL’s Mem. at 17.) But the proposed amendments do not address: when such claims accrued; whether the claims accrued pursuant to a contractual relationship between PettersCB or PettersCB Funding and the creditor; whether the claim accrued during the period of the challenged transfers, or before PettersCB and PettersCB Funding merged or dissolved; whether the claim was untimely paid; or whether the claim remained unsatisfied following the alleged merger into PHC.
And, for the reasons identified by the Bankruptcy Court, In re Polaroid,
2. Claims for Actual and Constructive Fraud
In addition to the inadequacy of pleád-ing standing, Chief Judge Kishel also concluded that in light of Finn, the Trustee’s fraudulent conveyance claims failed under Rule 12(b)(6). He correctly observed that the facts of Finn are “on-point to the pleaded transactional facts here.” Id. at 905.
The debtor in Finn operated a Ponzi scheme, selling fraudulent participation interests in non-existent loans, but he also sold real, legitimate participation interests in real loans to two groups of transferees, the Respondent Banks and Alliance Bank. Finn,
The Finn court first dispensed with the application of the Ponzi scheme presumption to establish actual fraud under the MUFTA. Id. at 646-48. Among the reasons for not applying the presumption as to actual fraud claims, the Minnesota Supreme Court held that the presumption would “allowf ] a creditor to bypass the proof requirements of a fraudulent-transfer claim.” Id. The court observed that fraudulent intent could not be presumed because “[t]he asset-by-asset and transfer-by-transfer nature of the inquiry under MUFTA requires a creditor to prove the elements of a fraudulent transfer with respect to each transfer, rather than relying on a presumption related to the form or structure of the entity making the transfer.” Id. at 647 (citing Minn. Stat. § 513.41(6), (9)). Fraudulent intent to establish actual fraud must therefore be determined under the facts of each case. Id.
Examining the pleadings, the Minnesota Supreme Court concluded that the receiver in Finn sufficiently stated a claim for actual fraud against the Respondent Banks. Id. at 654. The court found that the complaint alleged: (1) several fictitious and oversold participation interests; (2) that the debtor made the payments to the banks with actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud the creditors; and (3) the Ponzi scheme operator pleaded guilty to defrauding banks in connection with the commercial loans that he had arranged. Id. Moreover, the complaint was found to sufficiently allege that the debtor was insolvent at the time payments were made to the Respondent Banks. Id. As to Alliance Bank, however, which had reached the summary judgment stage in the district court proceedings, the court found that the record required summary judgment in Alliance Bank’s favor rather than against it. Id. at 655. The court’s decision centers on reasonably equivalent value, which is an element of a claim for constructive fraudulent transfer and a defense to a claim of actual fraudulent transfer. See Minn. Stat. § 513.44(a)(l)-(2). While the participation agreement between the Ponzi scheme operator and Alliance Bank, (which required the Ponzi scheme operator to receive payments on the loan, then remit payments to Alliance Bank), was part of a larger Ponzi scheme, the court found that satisfaction of the antecedent debt constituted “value” under the MUFTA. Finn,
As to constructive fraud, the Finn receiver asserted liability for constructive fraud pursuant to Minn. Stat. § 513.44(a), which applies to claims that “arose before or after the transfer was made.” Constructive fraud under § 513.44(a)(2)—the provision asserted by the plaintiff in Finn and by the Trustee here, (see SAC ¶¶ 91-96)— turns on proof that the debtor made the transfer or incurred the obligation while evincing a measure of financial distress, i.e., “without receiving a reasonably equivalent value in exchange for the transfer or obligation, and the debtor: (i) was engaged or was about to engage in a business or a transaction for which the remaining assets of the debtor were unreasonably small in relation to the business or transaction.” Minn. Stat. § 513.44(a)(2)(i).
MUFTA requires courts to determine whether the debtor fit within either of the two financial-distress measures in Minn. Stat. § 513.44(a)(2), at the time the transfer was made. See Minn. Stat. § 513.44(a)(2). As a practical matter, even if we were to assume that every entity operating a Ponzi scheme becomes insolvent by the time it is subject to one or more fraudulent-transfer claims, such an assumption still would not prove that such an entity was insolvent at the time it transferred its assets. The. temporal element is important because, as a factual matter, it is not at all clear that every fraudulent investment arrangement that is later determined to be a Ponzi scheme necessarily will have been insolvent from its inception. For example, it is not hard to imagine a debtor that begins as a legitimate business and eventually turns to fraud, which the Respondent Banks insist occurred here. Similarly, a debtor could have assets or legitimate business operations aside from the Ponzi scheme, as Alliance Bank argues here, that it uses to stave off insolvency, at least for a while. Such an entity could be financially stable for a time, whether its stability is measured by the technical definition of insolvency in Minn. Stat. §§ 513.42 and 513.45(a), or the alternate methods of measuring financial distress in Minn. Stat. § 513.44(a)(2).
Id. at 648-49.
a. Actual Fraud
Chief Judge Kishel determined that the Trustee’s fraudulent transfer claims failed in light of Finn. He observed that the SAC repeatedly emphasized the actual, real-life nature of the PettersCB business. In re Polaroid,
[t]he Trustee never alleges that any of the money PettersCB borrowed from [Opportunity Finance] was diverted away from real transactions in Polaroid-licensed merchandise, in fraud of [Opportunity Finance] or any other person or entity. He never pleads that money originated by [Opportunity Finance] wasfunneled through PettersCB into the main churn of Tom Petters’s Ponzi scheme—the activity that Tom Petters carried on through the core of PCI, broadly pretensed on non-existent “diverting” transactions in ostensibly-preexisting consumer merchandise inventory. Nor does he ever accuse Tom Petters of using a separate scheme-structure like PCI’s in 2004-2005, that would have been centered around an exploitation of the Polaroid brand and maintained to defraud lender-investors under a specific pretense of dealing in Polaroid-branded merchandise.
Id. at 907.
The Bankruptcy Court noted that the only term of the loans cited by the Trustee as indicative of a lack of reasonably equivalent value was the 12% interest rate borne by PettersCB, Id. (citing SAC ¶¶ 64, 67.) While the Trustee characterized that rate as excessive, Chief Judge Kishel stated that without any comparison to the prevailing market rate for similar transactions, the Trustee’s allegation only served to reinforce its characterization of the aggregate interest as “false profits.” M. The Bankruptcy Court found the Trustee’s concept of false profits was improperly applied “to the return on investment from the financing of genuine deals, on the sole pleaded ground that the rate on the lending was somehow excessive, predatory.” Id. And, in other portions of the SAC, the Bankruptcy Court observed that the Trustee implicated PettersCB’s involvement in actual deals as a part of a broad pretense to lure investors “into the fraudulent operations elsewhere in Tom Petters’s enterprise structure.” Id. at 907-08,
Under the Trustee’s broad pleading, the Bankruptcy Court found that no lending to PettersCB could have provided a foundation for reasonably equivalent value because Opportunity Finance’s original lending to PettersCB was worthless, since it only prolonged an inherently fraudulent enterprise. Id. at 909. The one allegation that Chief Judge Kishel found to be only slightly more specific was that the merchandising of Polaroid-branded goods through PettersCB functioned only as a front, to give Petters’ business activities “a false air of legitimacy and to extend the duration of the Ponzi scheme.” Id. at 910 (citing SAC ¶¶24; 42). But Chief Judge Kishel found, as in Finn, that even while a Ponzi scheme was underway in other parts of Petters’ empire, the actual deals pleaded by the Trustee here gave PettersCB a legitimate source of earnings with which to pay Opportunity Finance, on debt that had been taken on to finance the real deals. Id. He observed that the SAC “stretched too far in the way it would classify its real-goods-real-proceeds events to meet the causality-based requirement of the federal presumption,” i.e., that the transactions be made “in furtherance”- of a Ponzi scheme. Id. at 909.
With the Ponzi scheme presumption removed as a means by which to establish actual fraud, the Trustee argues that the allegations in the SAC still sufficiently plead the elements of actual fraudulent transfer, by establishing the' requisite elements of traditional fraud.
The Court agrees with the Bankruptcy Court’s conclusion that the Trustee cannot state a claim on which relief may be granted for actual fraudulent transfer. Even assuming the truth of the Trustee’s allegation that a 12% interest rate was excessive, (SAC ¶ 64), and that the Prepayment Penalty Transfer was unnecessary, (SAC ¶¶ 53-54), the Trustee buttresses his pleading of fraudulent intent with allegations that still invoke the Ponzi scheme presumption and otherwise contradict Finn. He asserts that PettersCB made the transfers in question, at excessive interest rates, “with actual intent to hinder, delay or defraud a creditor, given than PCB was part of the Ponzi scheme and destined to fail with the Ponzi scheme, and that the Transfers furthered, and were intended to further, the Ponzi scheme.” (SAC ¶55.) Similarly, the Trustee asserts that Pet-tersCB knew that it was insolvent and destined to fail, (SAC ¶ 56), and that Pet-tersCB made the transfers with actual intent to defraud by postponing the “discovery of the facts that PCB was insolvent, propped up with Ponzi funds and assumption of debt by related parties, and unable to pay its creditors legitimately,” thus misleading PettersCB’s creditors. (SAC ¶57.) Similarly, he alleges that “PettersCB and/or Tom Petters knew that PettersCB was destined to fail.” (SAC ¶ 39).
Yet Finn instructs that commingled funds, let alone the presence of a flourishing Ponzi scheme elsewhere in a related organization, are insufficient to establish actual fraud. Finn,
Relying on European Roasterie, Inc. v. Dale, No. 19-cv-53 (DWF/JJG),
The Court therefore finds that absent the Ponzi scheme presumption, which Finn makes inapplicable to the MUFTA, the Trustee does not plead any set of facts to support the element of actual fraudulent intent. Lacking this critical element, the Trustee’s claims of actual fraudulent transfer fail. The Court likewise agrees with the Bankruptcy Court that given the Trustee’s factual allegations concerning the real-life nature of the transactions of PettersCB, any amendments would necessarily contradict the already-pleaded facts. Accordingly, the Court agrees with the Bankruptcy Court that this claim should be dismissed on grounds of futility.
b. Constructive Fraud
Under the MUFTA, constructive fraud may be alleged where the debtor made the transfer or incurred the obligation without receiving a reasonably equivalent value for the transferred property, and the debtor:
(i) was engaged or was about to engage in a business or a transaction for which the remaining assets of the debtor were unreasonably small in relation to the business or transaction; or
(ii) intended to incur, or believed or reasonably should have believed that the debtor would incur, debts beyond the debtor’s ability to pay as they became due..
Minn. Stat. § 513.44(a)(2).
As noted, the Bankruptcy Court held that the Trustee’s claim for constructive fraud under the MUFTA also failed. In re Polaroid,
At this point, it can be said that Finn settled one thing for the application of MUFTA’s constructive-fraud remedies to transactional history that features the presence of a Ponzi scheme perpetrated by the transferor. On the specific facts before it, the Finn court held that the debtor-transferor does receive reasonably equivalent value for the repayment in ¡full of debt owing per contractual terms to an investor that had funded areal-life, bona fide, closed, and consummated business transaction—despite the fact that the debtor-transferor was perpetrating an operating Ponzi scheme to defraud other investors through the same type of transaction.
Id. at 913 (citing Finn,
While it is true that repayment of an antecedent debt can constitute reasonably equivalent value, Finn,
Regarding the 12% interest rate, the Court rejects authority cited by Defendants for the proposition that a 12% interest rate is per se reasonable. (See DZ’s Opp’n Mem at 31 [Doc. No. 19]) (citing In re Unified Commercial Capital, Inc.,
While the Trustee contends that the Bankruptcy Court did not ‘find fault with his allegations concerning insolvency, (PL’s Mem. at 44), the Bankruptcy Court simply did not address his insolvency pleading, having found the Trustee’s constructive fraud pleading deficient on the lack of reasonably equivalent value. The Trustee’s allegations concerning the insolvency of PettersCB at the time of the transfers rely on the existence of the Ponzi scheme. (See SAC ¶¶ 70-79.) For example, the SAC alleges:
Given [PettersCB’s] significant debt, its operation at a net loss, its participation in the Ponzi scheme orchestrated by Petters, and the fact that [PettersCB]was propped up with Ponzi money, [Pet-tersCB] at all times was engaged in, and/or was about to engage in, a business for which its remaining assets were unreasonably small in relation to its business; alternatively, PCB intended to incur, or reasonably should have believed that PCB would incur debts beyond its ability to pay as they became due.
(SAC ¶ 78.)
Such allegations are conclusory and merely track the statutory language. See Minn. Stat. § 513.44 (a)(2)(i)-(ii). When the Finn court examined the adequacy of the receiver’s insolvency pleading in the constructive fraud claims against the Respondent Banks, the court found allegations tracking the statutory language were sufficient when combined with other factual allegations. Finn,
3. Claims Against DZ Bank
Having found that Plaintiffs claims against Opportunity Finance fail as a matter of law and amendment would be futile, the Court likewise finds that the Trustee’s claims against DZ Bank fail.
III. CONCLUSION
The Court recognizes that the Finn decision, issued by the Minnesota Supreme Court during the pendency of the underlying adversary proceedings and after the filing of the SAC, had a significant impact on the legal theories in this action. While a plaintiff may still assert viable claims of actual and constructive fraud under the MUFTA, the Ponzi scheme presumption is not an available means by which to do so. The legitimate business that PettersCB undertook is quite distinguishable from the fictitious interests that Tom Petters peddled through PCI—a distinction that Chief Judge Kishel noted: “[t]he transactions pleaded here were very different in nature from those that Tom Petters pretensed for his scheme; the Trustee admits that Tom Petters really did act through PettersCB to procure the manufacture of goods from Polaroid branding, and then sold them to real customers.” In re Polaroid,
THEREFORE, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that:
1. Appellant’s Appeal from Bankruptcy Court [Doc. No. 1] is DENIED; and
2. The January 14, 2016 order of the Bankruptcy Court and the December 1, 2015 oral order of the Bankruptcy Court are AFFIRMED.
LET JUDGMENT BE ENTERED ACCORDINGLY.
Notes
. The Court refers to the parties as Plain-tifPTrustee and Defendants, rather than Appellant and Appellees.
. Citations are to the published opinion of the Order.
. The Ponzi scheme presumption, recognized by several federal courts, presumes that transfers made in furtherance of a Ponzi scheme were made with the actual intent to defraud. Ritchie Capital Mgmt., LLC v. Stoebner,
. As discussed in more detail herein, an exchange for reasonably equivalent value may serve as a defense to a claim of actual fraudulent transfer, while an exchange that is not for reasonably equivalent value is an element of a claim for constructive fraudulent transfer. See Minn. Stat. § 513.44.
. In Finn, the Minnesota Supreme Court held that one of the transferees, Alliance Bank, could establish that it gave reasonably equivalent value in the form of payments made pursuant to a contractual agreement with the transferor-debtor.
. Because the Trustee does not appeal the Bankruptcy Court’s dismissal of his claims for breach of contract and common law fraud, (Pl.'s Mem. at 22 [Doc. No. 17]), those claims are not addressed.
. As to the identification of creditors, the Trustee concedes that it almost entirely misidentified the creditors of PettersCB in the SAC, with the exception of Wanlida Group Co., Ltd., (“Wanlida”), a creditor of PCE. (Pl.'s Mem. at 43.) The Trustee seeks leave to amend its complaint to add seven other creditors who are creditors of PCE and PHC. (Id.)
. As Defendants have observed, while the Minnesota Court of Appeals’ decision was not the final word on the viability of the Ponzi scheme presumption to claims arising under the MUFTA, (see 12/1/15 Bankr, Tr„ Tab 2 to Opp. Fin. Appendix [Doc. No. 22 at 35]), the court found that applying the presumption to presume lack of reasonably equivalent value was inconsistent with the legislative intent of the MUFTA. Finn v. Alliance Bank,
. And, arguably, Rule 16 provides some support for the Bankruptcy Court's decision. The Trustee's request arose in a pretrial conference, conducted pursuant to Rule 16(a)(2), under which courts conduct such conferences to “establish early and continuing control so that the case will not be protracted because of lack of management." As Opportunity Finance observes, (Opp. Fin. Opp’n at 40 [Doc. No. 21]), the rule also permits courts to consider at pretrial conferences various matters, including "disposing of pending motions,” Fed. R. Civ. P, 16(c)(2)(K), and “facilitating in other ways the just, speedy, and inexpensive disposition of the action," Fed. R. Civ. P. 16(c)(2)(P). Considering that Defendants’ motions to dismiss had been pending for nearly two years, during which time Finn was issued by the Minnesota Supreme Court, the Bankruptcy Court arguably exercised its management authority in declining to grant leave to file a motion to amend until the issuance of the ruling on the pending motions for dismissal. (12/1/15 Bankr. Tr., Tab 2 to Opp. Fin. Appendix [Doc. No. 22 at 40-41].)
. As noted, this Court reviews the Bankruptcy Court’s determinations of futility on a de novo basis. Marino,
. Although the Trustee does not appeal the dismissal with prejudice of his claims for breach of contract and fraud and misrepresentation, the Bankruptcy Court likewise found that “[t]he Trustee- had three opportunities to flesh out a defensible structure for asserting these claims,” but the factual pleading failed to state viable claims. In re Polaroid,
. The Trustee appears to view his own standing and the standing of creditors as an either/or proposition, framing his argument in support of creditors’ standing as follows: ”[i]n addition or alternatively, creditors of PHC had standing to sue under the MUFTA to avoid fraudulent transfers at issue as- of the filing date." (Pl.’s Mem. at 36) (emphasis added). But, as noted above, a viable fraudulent transfer claim requires that a trustee represent the creditors of the debtor in question and that the creditors themselves have an unsecured claim against the debtor that arose at the applicable time. In re Polaroid,
. As for the last element identified by the Bankruptcy Court-some type of contractual agreement to expressly transfer any liabilities from PettersCB Funding to PCE or PHC— only because successor liability is presumed for the sake of argument, the Court will assume that this element is met.
. The statute provides a second measure of financial distress in § 513.44(a)(2)(B), where the transfer was made without the receipt of reasonably equivalent value and the debtor “intended to incur, or reasonably should have believed that the debtor would incur, debts beyond the debtor’s ability to pay as they became due.” The Trustee does not invoke this subsection of the MUFTA in the SAC.
. The Trustee proposes no additional amendments with respect to his fraudulent transfer claims, other than those discussed earlier regarding the chain of successor liability and identification of creditors.
. At the hearing on the instant appeal, the Trustee's counsel also referred to an internal DZ Bank email that purportedly stated that the head of Opportunity Finance was "in on the fraud.” Any such evidence, however, is not properly before the Court on a motion to dismiss, where the court considers only the facts alleged in the complaint, "materials attached to the complaint as exhibits,” Morton, 793 F,2d at 187, and "documents whose contents are alleged in [the] complaint and whose authenticity no party questions, but which are not physically attached to the pleading.” Kushner v. Beverly Enters., Inc.,
