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Malone v. Iceberg Transp. S.A. (In re Gold & Appel Transfer S.A.)

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
Sep 6, 2013
Case No. 05-00775 (Bankr. D.D.C. Sep. 6, 2013)

Opinion

Case No. 05-00775 Adversary Proceeding No. 05-10022

2013-09-06

In re GOLD & APPEL TRANSFER S.A., Debtor in a Foreign Proceeding. MEADE MALONE, OFFICIAL LIQUIDATOR FOR GOLD & APPEL TRANSFER S.A., Plaintiff, v. ICEBERG TRANSPORT S.A., et al., Defendants.


The document below is hereby signed.

____________________

, Jr.

United States Bankruptcy Judge

(In a Case Under Section

304 of the Bankruptcy Code)


Not for publication in

West's Bankruptcy Reporter


MEMORANDUM DECISION RE MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT

WITH RESPECT TO PROPERTY TRANSFERRED FROM GOLD &

APPEL TRANSFER S.A. TO WALTER ANDERSON, THE FOUNDATION

FOR THE INTERNATIONAL NONGOVERNMENTAL DEVELOPMENT

OF SPACE, ICEBERG TRANSPORT SA, COMVERGE, LTD. AND SPACE INC.

Gold & Appel Transfer S.A. is a British Virgin Islands corporation that is in an insolvency proceeding in the British Virgin Islands. On May 16, 2005, pursuant to section 304 of the Bankruptcy Code (11 U.S.C.), as then in effect, Meade Malone, Official Liquidator for Gold & Appel in its insolvency proceeding, commenced a case here regarding Gold & Appel, Case No. 05-00775, ancillary to the British Virgin Islands insolvency proceeding. Malone then commenced this adversary proceeding in this court to reach various assets.

Section 802 of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005, Pub. L. 109-8, 119 Stat. 23 (Apr. 20, 2005) repealed 11 U.S.C. § 304 effective for cases filed on or after October 17, 2005. In place of § 304, that Act added to the Bankruptcy Code a chapter 15 (Ancillary and Other Cross-Border Cases) effective for cases filed on or after October 17, 2005.

From its initial formation and until the commencement of the insolvency proceedings, Gold & Appel was controlled by Walter Anderson, through various straw entities. Anderson struck it rich as a telecommunications entrepreneur. Anderson used Gold & Appel as a vehicle, wholly controlled by him, to evade reporting and paying United States income taxes. Anderson has been convicted of tax fraud for filing income tax returns that failed to report more than $364 million in investment-type income from Gold & Appel on his income tax returns with respect to the years 1998 and 1999. See Anderson v. Comm'r, 698 F.3d 160, 165 (3d Cir. 2012), cert. denied, 2013 WL 705914 (June 10, 2013). Income tax deficiencies asserted by the Internal Revenue Service for those years have been upheld. Id.

Gold & Appel invested in numerous entities. Among the companies in which Gold & Appel held interests were:

• Asia Access Telecom, Inc. ("AAT");
• Communications Telesystems International, doing business as WorldxChange; and
• Panztel, Ltd.
When Gold & Appel was unable timely to pay obligations owed to creditors, Gold & Appel transferred ownership of those interests (and certain other properties) to Comverge Ltd., another entity wholly controlled by Anderson, pursuant to an Agreement in Relation to Re-Organization of Private Funds dated April 5, 2003 (the "Reorganization Agreement"). Incident to the same Reorganization Agreement, Gold & Appel transferred other properties to Iceberg Transport S.A., and Space Incorporated. Like Comverge, Iceberg and Space were exclusively controlled by Anderson.

By a motion for partial summary judgment, Malone seeks to avoid the transfers to Comverge, Iceberg, and Space of some of those assets (specifically, those he calls the "Transferred Assets") as fraudulent conveyances, and seeks to have the Transferred Assets (or their fruits) returned to and re-vested in him as Official Liquidator for Gold & Appel. What appear to be the more significant Transferred Assets were conveyed to Comverge:

Malone does not include as part of the Transferred Assets he seeks to recover paintings that Gold & Appel (transferred to Space under the Reorganization Agreement) and interests in certain entities transferred under the Reorganization Agreement. See n.50, infra.

• $526,000 in proceeds of the sale of 83,136 shares of common stock in AAT ("the AAT shares");
• no less than $2,097,057.96 in cash held by a law firm in escrow and representing proceeds realized from Gold & Appel's claims against various parties in connection with its investment in WorldxChange; and
• 216,713 shares of stock in Panztel, Ltd.
Comverge, Iceberg, and Space have not filed oppositions to the motion.

In addition, Malone's motion seeks a determination that certain liens on the Transferred Assets were released or are avoidable as fraudulent conveyances. To elaborate, prior to the transfer of the Transferred Assets to Comverge, Iceberg, and Space, Gold & Appel had granted liens on the Transferred Assets to Walter Anderson and to another entity Anderson formed and controlled, Foundation for the International Non-Governmental Development of Space ("FINDS"), to secure debts allegedly owed them by Gold & Appel. FINDS' lien, if extant, includes as collateral the $2,097,057.96 related to WorldxChange; Anderson's lien, if extant, includes as collateral the AAT shares (for which the sales proceeds are $526,000) and the Panztel, Ltd. shares of an unknown value.

Anderson has filed an opposition to Malone's motion, but FINDS has not. FINDS filed an answer to the complaint, and a counterclaim against the plaintiff to recover the debt it alleges it is owed by Gold & Appel. FINDS is no longer represented by counsel in this proceeding, raising the prospect that its counterclaim may be dismissed. If that dismissal occurs and is made with prejudice, that would moot Malone's attempt to avoid FINDS' lien as FINDS would no longer have a claim.

For summary judgment purposes, a court views the evidence in the light most favorable to the parties against whom summary judgment is sought. Viewing the evidence that way, and after ascertaining those material facts as to which there is no genuine dispute, I conclude that Malone has shown that his motion should be granted in part.

Malone has shown that the transfers to Comverge, Iceberg, and Space were fraudulent as to creditors of Gold & Appel. Malone has not shown, however, that the liens of Anderson and FINDS on the Transferred Assets were released or that the conveyances of liens to Anderson and FINDS on the Transferred Assets were themselves fraudulent conveyances. Under 11 U.S.C. § 544, an unperfected lien is generally ineffective against a trustee in a bankruptcy case. Malone, however, is a liquidator in a foreign proceeding, and this proceeding is filed in a case under 11 U.S.C. § 304 ancillary to that foreign proceeding. Malone properly has not contended that he enjoys the powers of a bankruptcy trustee under the Bankruptcy Code. Nor has he pointed to a provision under British Virgin Islands law, or under District of Columbia law, or other nonbankruptcy law, that is comparable to 11 U.S.C. § 544, and that would allow the court to treat an unperfected lien as ineffective in the British Virgin Islands insolvency proceeding. Accordingly, for purposes of deciding this motion for partial summary judgment, I view Malone as having failed to show that Anderson's and FINDS' asserted liens must be treated as ineffective as against him.

A case under § 304 of the Bankruptcy Code does not vest a foreign representative with the powers of a trustee under § 544. See Metzeler v. Bouchard Transp. Co. (In re Metzler, Trustee in Bankruptcy for Uni-Petrol Geselleschaft fuer Mineralolprudukte), 78 B.R. 674, 677 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 1987) ("a foreign representative may assert, under § 304, only those avoiding powers vested in him by the law applicable to the foreign estate."). Malone has not commenced a case regarding Gold & Appel, under chapter 7 or 11 of the Bankruptcy Code, in which § 544 would apply, and no creditor has commenced such a case either.

I


THE FRAUDULENT CONVEYANCES TO COMVERGE, SPACE, AND ICEBERG

I will address first the avoidability of the transfers to Comverge, Space, and Iceberg. In the second part of this decision I will address the avoidability of the liens on the Transferred Assets.

However, the liens in favor of Anderson and FINDS play a part in regard to the avoidability of the transfers to Comverge, Space, and Iceberg: for the transfers to Comverge, Iceberg, and Space to have been fraudulent transfers, it would be necessary for Malone to show that the Transferred Assets were not fully encumbered by perfected liens. Under D.C. Code § 28-3101(12), a "transfer" includes any "parting with . . . an asset or an interest in an asset . . . ." However, the term "asset" means property of the debtor but does not include "[p]roperty to the extent it is encumbered by a valid lien." D.C. Code § 28-3101(2). In turn, the term "valid lien" means "a lien that is effective against the holder of a judicial lien subsequently obtained by legal or equitable process or proceedings." D.C. Code § 28-3101(13).

Malone has shown that the liens that Anderson asserts that he and FINDS had in Gold & Appel property were never perfected under the D.C. Uniform Commercial Code such as to be effective against the holder of a judicial lien. Because the liens of Anderson and FINDS were never perfected, the conveyances of Transferred Assets to Comverge, Iceberg, and Space were "transfers" of assets of Gold & Appel as that term is used in fraudulent conveyance law. In the course of discussing the pertinent facts (part A, below), I conclude that those liens were not released, but in the discussion of the applicable law, I conclude (in part B(1), below) that they were not perfected, such that the conveyances to Comverge, Space, and Iceberg are "transfers" under the applicable statute. In turn, the facts establish that a reasonable factfinder could only conclude that these transfers were intentionally fraudulent transfers (part B(2), below).

A. FACTS

Malone's statement of material facts not in genuine dispute is lengthy. In large part, the facts he sets forth have not been challenged by Anderson, the only defendant who responded to Malone's motion for partial summary judgment. Those facts must be viewed in the light most favorable to the parties against whom summary judgment is sought, and my discussion of the facts views them in that way.

Even though Comverge, Iceberg, Space, and FINDS did not file an opposition to the motion for partial summary judgment, I will take into account those instances in which Anderson's affidavit has demonstrated that a material issue of fact exists as to them.

As pertinent to the claims against Comverge, Iceberg, and Space, the most critical fact is that there was no meaningful business justification for the transfers of assets from Gold & Appel (one entity controlled by Anderson) to Comverge, Iceberg, and Space (other entities controlled by Anderson), transfers made for no consideration when Gold & Appel was clearly on the ropes financially, and unable to pay its debts, by reason of huge debts owed to various unrelated non-insider creditors.

1. FORMATION, AND ANDERSON'S CONTROL, OF GOLD & APPEL AND FINDS

Anderson formed Gold & Appel as a British Virgin Islands corporation in 1992. Anderson continuously controlled and managed Gold & Appel through entities he exclusively controlled. He hid his ownership of Gold & Appel through other entities, pretending that he was acting on behalf of owners whose identities he was obligated to keep confidential. One of the entities through which he controlled Gold & Appel was Iceberg, to whom he transferred all of the issued shares of Gold & Appel.

This conclusion is based on specific uncontested material facts stated by Malone, and by evidence filed by Malone.

In 1993, Anderson, employing the alias "Mark Roth," caused the formation of Iceberg as a Panamanian entity. Anderson directed that the stock in Iceberg be issued in bearer form and that these bearer shares be sent to him in the Netherlands. On October 1, 1993, Anderson caused the Smaller World Trust to be formed under British Virgin Islands law. He executed a Declaration of Non Beneficial Ownership and Management Policy Agreement Between Walter Anderson and Smaller World Trust (Anderson Ex. Y) that treats the Trust as owning the shares in Iceberg (which was to hold the issued shares of Gold & Appel) and treats Anderson as holding the option to purchase 990 shares of Gold & Appel for the benefit of the Trust. Gold & Appel served as the sole trustee of the Trust until February 4, 2003, when it was replaced as the sole trustee by Iceberg. The documents creating the Smaller World Trust identify Anderson as the settlor and the beneficiary as a "purpose trust" to be set up by Anderson to receive the assets of the Smaller World Trust at the end of its 13-year "term." The documents do not identify the beneficiaries of the "purpose trust" but left their selection to a trustee to be selected by Anderson. The "purpose trust" was never established by Anderson, and the trustee who was to select the beneficiaries of the "purpose trust" was never appointed by Anderson. In 2004, Anderson created the Smaller World Foundation, a Panamanian entity designated by Anderson as a "change of venue" for the Smaller World Trust and intended to hold the assets of the Smaller World Trust under the same terms and conditions as set forth in the documents creating the Smaller World Trust.

On July 12, 1996, Anderson formed FINDS as a charitable corporation under Delaware law. Anderson has effectively been in control of FINDS since its inception.

See Malone's Statement of Material Facts at ¶¶ 13-17.

2. THE NORTEL OBLIGATIONS

In reliance upon a binding loan commitment made in the Spring of 2000 by Gold & Appel, a group of lenders led by Nortel Networks, Inc. (collectively, "Nortel") made loans in the principal amount of $8.8 million to one of Gold & Appel's portfolio companies named NetTel Communications, Inc. ("NetTel") (the "First Nortel Obligation"). On or about April 20, 2000, and in conjunction with the First Nortel Obligation, Gold & Appel paid $1 million for NetTel stock. In reliance upon a further binding loan commitment from Gold & Appel dated July 17, 2000, Nortel made additional loans to NetTel in the principal amount of $18,905,000 (the "Second Nortel Obligation"). The First and Second Nortel Obligations were in the nature of bridge loans that were to be repaid no later than November 15, 2000, by Gold & Appel. Gold & Appel was to have provided a written commitment to provide the funds by September 15, 2000, but did not provide either the commitment or the funds. Anderson asserted that, prior to September 15, 2000, Gold & Appel advanced $13.8 million to NetTel - $1.8 million in July 2000 and $12 million in August 2000. The Second Nortel Obligation was in existence as of July 17, 2000 and was reduced to a judgment in the amount of $25,690,713 on or about May 24, 2004, and has not been satisfied. The First Nortel Obligation has not yet been reduced to judgment and is a claim in the British Virgin Islands insolvency proceeding. The First Nortel Obligation was in existence no later than April 20, 2000. In the midst of incurring the Nortel Obligations, Anderson caused Gold & Appel to make transfers of funds ultimately used by One World Properties to purchase a mansion in Madrid, Spain (the "Madrid Mansion"). This court held these transfers to be fraudulent conveyances. See Order dated June 2, 2008 (the "Madrid Mansion Order") (Dkt. No. 322).

3. THE 2000 LOAN AGREEMENT AND COLLATERAL PLEDGE AGREEMENT

Anderson caused Gold & Appel to execute and deliver a certain Mortgage Loan Purchase & Loan Agreement that he dated July 1, 2000 (the "2000 Loan Agreement") pursuant to which Anderson lent $177,555 to Gold & Appel. The 2000 Loan Agreement recited that Gold & Appel was having difficulty "realiz[ing] any liquidity" from its portfolio of assets. The security provided for the $177,555 "loan" described in the 2000 Loan Agreement is described in a Collateral Pledge Agreement that Anderson also dated July 1, 2000 and signed for all parties (the "2000 Pledge Agreement"). On November 14, 2000, Anderson and Gold & Appel entered into an Amendment to "Mortgage Loan Purchase & Loan Agreement Dated July 1, 2000," signed by him for both, and memorializing an agreement for an additional loan of $163,000 that he transferred to Gold & Appel two days later on November 16, 2000. The 2000 Pledge Agreement was amended by Anderson as of November 15, 2000, to add additional collateral.

Malone Ex. W (Chalmet Affidavit), at p. 44.

The collateral was:

(i) shares in, and loans to, Aquarius Holdings Limited;
(ii) shares in, and the $4 million loan to, MirCorp, even though that loan was not actually made until later;
(iii) shares in CIS-Lunar Development Laboratories, Inc.; and
(iv) shares in WWW.com.
Malone Ex. W (Chalmet Affidavit), ¶ 64 and Exhibit pages 46-50 thereto; Malone Decl., Exhibit "M," entry for 7/18/00. Anderson signed the 2000 Loan Agreement and the 2000 Pledge Agreement for himself and for Gold & Appel.

Anderson Affidavit, ¶ 9 and Exs. H and I.

The additional collateral was:

• shares in X-Drive;
• shares in, and loans to, Galactech Corporation; and
• loans to, and warrants in, WWW.com.
Malone Ex. W (Chalmet Affidavit), ¶ 65 and Exhibit pages 51-52 thereto. Anderson signed the amendment to the 2000 Pledge Agreement for Gold & Appel and for himself.

No financing, registration or similar statement was ever filed with respect to any of the collateral pledged under the 2000 Pledge Agreement or the amendment thereto in either Washington, D.C. or the British Virgin Islands. Anderson responds that he took physical possession of the share certificates that had been pledged as collateral. Anderson contends that he thereby perfected his security interest in those items of collateral.

Anderson Decl., ¶¶ 7 and 9. The collateral with respect to WWW.com was warrants, not shares, but I will assume that Anderson means that he took possession of the evidence of warrants in WWW.com.

4. GOLD & APPEL'S MARGIN CREDIT AT BROKERAGE FIRM

On July 13, 2000, Gold & Appel had, through Anderson, obtained almost $2 million in margin credit from Ferris, Baker, Watts, Inc. ("FBW").

5. THE AUGUST 2000 LOAN FROM DONALD A. BURNS

On or about August 7, 2000 (after Gold & Appel had entered into the obligations to Nortel relating to NetTel) Donald A. Burns made a loan to Gold & Appel; Revision, LLC; Anderson; and Entrée International LLC ("Entrée") (a company owned and controlled by Anderson) in the original principal amount of $13,000,000 (subsequently increased to $14,310,400) (the "Burns Loan") and the debt evidenced by the Burns Loan was therefore in existence as of August 7, 2000. The Burns Loan was secured by a stock pledge agreement by and among Anderson, Gold & Appel, Revision, FINDS, and Burns. The Burns Loan was secured, in part, by 1,883,261 shares of Covista Communications, Inc. ("Covista"), a publicly traded company, that were owned by FINDS and Revision.

As of August 2000, Covista was known as Total Tel USA Communications, Inc. ("Total Tel"). On or about September 12, 2000, Total Tel changed its name to Covista. For ease of reference, the name Covista is used throughout.

Malone states that 2,454,661 shares of Covista owned by FINDS, Revision, and Gold & Appel were pledged, but the evidence he cites for that, App. O ("App." refers to the Appendix in support of Malone's motion), at 3, recites that Revision pledged 1,179,732 shares and FINDS pledged 703,529 shares, a total of 1,883,261 shares. As discussed later, FINDS stated in a filing of August 7, 2000, with the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") that 2,454,661 Covista shares were pledged to Burns (which included the 703,529 shares owned by FINDS). App. R. No explanation for the variance between App. O and App. R has been furnished.

6. THE FINDS TRANSACTION INCIDENT TO THE BURNS LOAN

Anderson caused Gold & Appel and FINDS to enter into a "Loan Collateral Agreement" that states that it was "made on August 14, 2000" and that was signed by Anderson for all parties (the "FINDS Collateral Agreement"). In the FINDS Collateral Agreement, FINDS agreed to allow Gold & Appel to "use" 703,529 shares of Covista stock owned by FINDS as collateral for the Burns Loan until August 4, 2001. The FINDS Collateral Agreement recites that in exchange for allowing Gold & Appel to "use" 703,529 Covista shares, Gold & Appel agrees to pay FINDS $150,000 and other compensation, and to be contingently liable to FINDS for damages if the Covista shares were not ultimately returned to FINDS, and to provide FINDS with collateral, which included shares in WorldxChange.

The FINDS Collateral Agreement (Malone Ex. W, Exhibit pages 65-74) provided that if the Covista shares were sold by Burns or if the Covista shares were not returned to FINDS at the conclusion of the holding period ending August 4, 2001, then within 15 days after Burns sold the Covista shares or within 15 days after August 4, 2001, if the Covista shares were not returned to it, Gold & Appel was to pay FINDS:

• the $150,000; and
• "Value of the 703,529 shares plus 15%. Value to be determined by taking the closing price for the 10 trading days prior to the event."
FINDS was also to "receive the benefit of any dividend distributions, stock splits[.]" Finally, in the event of a default in making any payment when due, the obligation was to bear interest upon default at 18% per annum after demand for payment.

The other collateral consisted of Gold & Appel's ownership of:

• certain 20th century paintings;
• shares in American Technology Labs, Inc.;
• shares in and a judgment against Digitel Telecommunications International, Inc.;
• a convertible note owed by Incomnet, Inc.;
• shares in and a convertible note owed by Rotary Rocket Corporation;
• a loan owed by Teleport UK Limited (Satellite Media Services) and shares to be issued in exchange for that debt; and
• shares in Western Telecom.


Although Gold & Appel, through Anderson, agreed to the FINDS Collateral Agreement, no financing, registration or similar statement was ever filed relating to the FINDS Collateral Agreement in either Washington, D.C. or the British Virgin Islands. Anderson contends that he perfected FINDS' lien on shares of stock by taking possession of them on behalf of FINDS.

The FINDS Collateral Agreement was amended by a document dated August 10, 2001, to provide FINDS with additional collateral, including a chose in action concerning the exchange of shares in WorldxChange for shares in World Access, Inc., which has resulted in $2,097,057.91 in cash held in escrow. In the agreement, Gold & Appel also agreed to pay FINDS an additional $150,000.

The other collateral consisted of Gold & Appel's:

• debt owed by CD Import, giving it a right to shares in, CD Import;
• loan to MirCorp;
• loan to Western Telecom, with option for warrants in Western Telecom, and distribution rights in a French bankruptcy case regarding Western Telecom;
• loan to American Technology Labs with right of conversion to shares.


The amendment to the FINDS Collateral Agreement is Malone Ex. W, Exhibit pages 75-76. Anderson asserts that the consideration for FINDS' entering into this agreement, as the agreement recites, was that Gold & Appel was permitted to use the Covista shares for an additional period of one year as collateral for the Burns Loan, and thereby to obtain Burns' forbearance from enforcement of the previously granted security interest.

Anderson is the sole signatory of the amendment to the FINDS Collateral Agreement which he signed twice, once as "President" of FINDS and once for Gold & Appel. Although Gold & Appel, through Anderson, purportedly signed and agreed to this amendment to the FINDS Collateral Agreement, no financing, registration or similar statement was ever filed relating to the amendment to the FINDS Collateral Agreement in either Washington, D.C. or the British Virgin Islands.

Nor was the pledge in favor of FINDS disclosed in the SEC filing that disclosed the liens that FINDS granted to Burns. That statement recited that "[i]n consideration for FINDS' pledging its 703,529 [Covista shares], Gold & Appel will pay to FINDS a sum equal to $70,352.90 for the first six months such shares are pledged [and] . . . after such six-month period . . . the sum of $20,000 per month for each additional month Finds' shares are held as collateral under the Stock Pledge Agreement." Neither party has suggested why the SEC filing listed compensation to be paid FINDS by Gold & Appel that is different from the compensation listed in the FINDS Collateral Agreement and the amendment thereto.

7. ANDERSON CAUSES GOLD & APPEL TO DEFAULT ON ITS OBLIGATIONS TO NORTEL, BURNS, AND FBW

Default on Nortel Obligations; Judgment in Civil Action.

Gold & Appel failed to provide any written commitment to Nortel by September 15, 2000, and further failed to make all of the required loans to NetTel by November 15, 2000, thereby defaulting under its agreements with Nortel. After Gold & Appel defaulted on its obligations to NetTel and Nortel, Nortel initiated a civil action on April 12, 2002 against Gold & Appel in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia. See Complaint [D.E. 1], Nortel Networks, Inc. v. Gold & Appel Transfer, S.A., Case No. 1:02-cv-00706 (JDB) (D.D.C.) (the "Nortel Action"). On May 24, 2004, that court entered final judgment in favor of Nortel and against Gold & Appel on the Second Nortel Obligation in the amount of $25,690,713.59 (the "Nortel Judgment"). At the request of Nortel, further action on its claims with respect to the First Nortel Obligation was held in abeyance. The Nortel Judgment remains unsatisfied.

Malone Decl., ¶ 29.

On or about February 11, 2002, the Burns Loan became due and payable, but neither Gold & Appel nor any of its co-debtors made the required payments. The borrowers' failure to pay constituted an immediate default and, accordingly, on February 13, 2002, Burns served Gold & Appel (along with its co-debtors on the Burns Loan) with a notice of default. Negotiations between Anderson and Burns with respect to the defaulted Burns Loan did not succeed and, as will be seen, FINDS issued its own notice of default on August 15, 2002.

On or about April 12, 2002, after Gold & Appel had earlier failed to pay its obligations to FBW, FBW filed a motion for summary judgment in lieu of complaint against Gold & Appel in the Supreme Court for the State of New York, Case No. 04-600340. On or about December 10, 2003, FBW domesticated its New York judgment against Gold & Appel in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, Maryland, in the amount of $1,912,695.20 plus interest (the "FBW Judgment").

8. THE JULY 28, 2002 LOAN AND PLEDGE AGREEMENTS

After Nortel had filed its civil action against Gold & Appel, after Burns had declared the Burns Loan in default, and after FBW had sued Gold & Appel in New York, Anderson caused Gold & Appel to incur a third debt to him. On July 28, 2002, Anderson and Gold & Appel entered into a Loan Agreement (the "2002 Loan Agreement") pursuant to which Anderson, among other things, lent Gold & Appel $1,296,636 for a period of one year at an interest rate of 7.5%.

Malone Ex. W (Chalmet Affidavit), ¶ 71 and Exhibit pages 77-78 thereto. Gold Appel's banking records show incoming funds on July 31, 2002 in the amount of $1,296,636.00. Malone Decl. and Exhibit "M" thereto, entries for July 31, 2002. Those incoming funds are designated "FX SettlemeSTG@1.5675" (i.e., "foreign exchange settlement" STG @ 1.5675) which indicates that the funds originated as British pounds sterling ("STG"). See Barclays Business Banking website printout, App. S (showing that "STG" is an abbreviation for "pounds sterling") and attached information from the Bank of England website (to which the Barclays materials direct the reader) showing the exchange rate on July 31, 2002 for pounds sterling to dollars was 1.5670. Anderson explains that the funds originated from the sale of some artwork that was owned by him, and sold at auction at Christie's London location to raise funds for this loan. Anderson Decl. ¶ 55. He further explains that "the asset sold at auction was a painting by Paul Delvaux which I had purchased around 1½ years before from a private dealer," and attaches the sale confirmation issued to him by Christie's. Id. ¶ 22.

The 2002 Loan Agreement was accompanied by a Loan Pledge Agreement ("2002 Pledge Agreement"), by and between Anderson and Gold & Appel, and also dated July 28, 2002. Under the 2002 Pledge Agreement, Gold & Appel pledged to Anderson certain collateral, including the AAT shares and shares in Panztel, Ltd. Anderson is the sole signatory to the 2002 Pledge Agreement. Anderson signed the 2002 Pledge Agreement twice, once for himself and once for Gold & Appel. Although Gold & Appel, through Anderson, agreed to the 2002 Pledge Agreement, no financing, registration or similar statement was ever filed relating to the 2002 Pledge Agreement in either Washington, D.C. or the British Virgin Islands.

Malone Ex. W (Chalmet Affidavit), ¶ 71 and Exhibit pages 79-83 thereto.

The collateral also included:

• shares in Constellation Services, Inc.;
• shares in LunaCorp;
• shares in Orbital Recovery Corporation; and
• Gold & Appel's interest in loans made to certain individuals named Rossi, Furman and Cooper.

9. FINDS AND ANDERSON DECLARE GOLD & APPEL IN DEFAULT, AND BURNS COMMENCES A CIVIL ACTION AGAINST GOLD & APPEL TO RECOVER ON THE BURNS LOAN

Anderson caused FINDS to send a letter to Gold & Appel dated August 15, 2002--only 18 days after the date of the transfers made to Anderson under the 2002 Loan Agreement--declaring Gold & Appel in default of the FINDS Collateral Agreement on account of Gold & Appel's default on its obligations to Burns. The August 15, 2002 letter demands that Gold & Appel pay FINDS the aggregate amount of $3,455,327 but states that "[b]ased upon information which FINDS has about Gold & Appel's current liquidity, it is unlikely that Gold & Appel will be able to pay this amount . . . ." The letter then states that FINDS will determine what action to take with respect to the collateral "being held" under the 2000 Pledge Agreement. Anderson signed the August 15, 2002 letter as the "President" of FINDS.

Malone Ex. W (Chalmet Affidavit) ¶ 72 and Exhibit page 84 thereto.

The August 15, 2002 letter stated:
Gold & Appel, per the LOAN COLLATERAL AGREEMENT is required to pay the following by August 30, 2002 (within 15 days).

Use of collateral fee for 1st year

$150,000

Use of collateral fee for 2nd year

$150,000

Value of 703,529 shares (close 8/14/02@3.90)

$2,743,763

15% premium on share value

$411,564

TOTAL DUE

$3,455,327

Malone Ex. W (Chalmet Affidavit) ¶ 72 and Exhibit page 84 thereto.

Malone Ex. W (Chalmet Affidavit) at Exhibit page 84.

On or about September 5, 2002, Burns brought an action against Gold & Appel and its co-debtors to collect the Burns Loan styled Donald A. Burns v. Walter Anderson, et al., Case No. 02-1326-A in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, Alexandria Division (the "Burns Action").

Anderson then sent a letter dated September 9, 2002, to Gold & Appel declaring it in default under the 2000 and 2002 Loan Agreements. In his September 9, 2002 letter Anderson states that "[i]t is clear that Gold & Appel Transfer S.A. does not have the liquidity at this time to repay these loans." In this same letter, Anderson also states:

Malone Ex. W (Chalmet Affidavit) ¶ 73 and Exhibit page 85 thereto.

Due to existing agreements which I have with Gold & Appel Transfer S.A.[,] Iceberg Transport S.A. and the ultimate beneficial owner of these organizations, I can not have the collateral for these loans to be transferred to me or any organization which I own.
I am considering an arrangement in which the collateral can be reorganized under existing owner(s) with a possible extension of the loans.
In the mean time these assets may not be encumbered or disposed of without written permission from me.
I reserved [sic] all rights in relation to these agreements in the collateral associated with the loans.
As of September 9, 2002, Gold & Appel's bank balance was less that $4,000.

Malone Decl., ¶ 27 and Ex. M thereto, entry for 9/9/02.

10. THE ICEBERG LETTER OF DECEMBER 14, 2002 - A LETTER OF INTENT CALLING FOR A TRANSFER OF THE COLLATERAL FOR THE FINDS AND ANDERSON LOANS

After Nortel, Burns, and FBW had already sued Gold & Appel, Anderson caused Iceberg to send a letter dated December 14, 2002, to Anderson, FINDS and Gold & Appel, executed by Anderson for Iceberg and those three entities as a letter of intent, and concerning Gold & Appel's defaults on its indebtedness to Anderson and FINDS (the "Iceberg Letter"). The Iceberg Letter addresses the collateral held by Gold & Appel for Anderson and FINDS, and recites that:

Malone Ex. W (Chalmet Affidavit), ¶ 74 and Exhibit pages 86-88 thereto.

Gold & Appel does not have sufficient cash or assets which can be easily liquidated at this time to pay back the financial obligations to Walt Anderson and FINDS. The collateral which FINDS and Walt Anderson are holding while not liquid may increase in value in time and become more liquid in the future.
Walt Anderson and FINDS have the option, under their agreements with Gold & Appel to take over their collateral and attempt to operate the companies or liquidate the assets. Walt Anderson and FINDS would prefer to have the collateral assets remain under professional management and wait until they can become liquid over time.
Walt Anderson and FINDS agree on the following:
The Walt Anderson and FINDS collateral assets will most likely increase if the companies are allowed to continue operations without disruption.
The collateral consists of equity holdings and debt that cannot be liquidated easily of [sic] effectively at this time.
Walt Anderson and FINDS do not want to own or manage these assets and are only interested in ultimately being repaid the funds due to them plus appropriate interest.
The absurdity of these recitals, of course, is that Anderson, through his ultimate ownership of Gold & Appel and of Comverge, Space, and Iceberg, was the individual who was already managing the assets, and who would continue to manage them after the contemplated transfers. The Iceberg Letter then keeps up the pretense, stating:
Walt Anderson has existing agreements with Iceberg, and Transport S.A., the parent company of Gold & Appel and the ultimate beneficial owner of Iceberg Transport S.A. It may create a conflict of interest for Walt Anderson to exercise ownership control of or to become the beneficial owner of these collateral assets.
The Iceberg Letter then recites that it is in the best interests of Anderson and FINDS that the various items of collateral to which they were entitled as a result of Gold & Appel's defaults continue to remain under "professional management" (professional management that Anderson himself was performing). Anderson and FINDS state that they will allow Iceberg and Gold & Appel "to extend terms of payment in an agreement with the following basic premises," to wit:
To allow the continuing professional management of the collateral assets.
Walt Anderson and FINDS agree that the collateral assets are to be transferred from Gold & Appel per a planned reorganization to newly formed fund vehicles (Space Incorporated S.A and Comvergent Ltd. [eventually organized instead as Comverge Ltd.) which will be 100% owned by Iceberg Transport S.A.
Walt Anderson and FINDS agree to exchange their collateral rights in individual assets for a collective interest in which the fund vehicles shares are collateral.
Walt Anderson and finds will exchange their collateral interests and rights for a new loan agreement to be guaranteed by Iceberg Transport and secured by collateral interests in the new fund vehicles.
Walt Anderson and FINDS will be paid the full amount which was originally owed by Gold & Appel within a 3 year period plus a reasonable interest rate. All payments will be prorated based on the relative value of the indebtedness[.]
Gold & Appel will not have any continuing rights or interest in relation to the disposition of the collateral rights held by Walt Anderson and FINDS. Walt Anderson and FINDS will have joint continuing right and interest in all the collateral which they have arranged to transfer to the new fund vehicles.
[Emphasis added.] As anticipated that "an agreement" would be forthcoming, the Iceberg letter was followed by a Consolidated Note of March 31, 2003, and the Reorganization Agreement of April 5, 2003, carrying out (with minor changes) the intent of the Iceberg Letter. See infra, points 13 and 14.

The collateral the Iceberg Letter addresses consists of the assets previously identified as collateral in the 2000 Loan Agreement, the 2000 Pledge Agreement, the FINDS Collateral Agreement, and the 2002 Pledge Agreement.

11. THE ICEBERG LETTER WAS NOT AN AGREEMENT BY ANDERSON AND FINDS TO RELEASE THEIR LIENS

Malone contends that the paragraph regarding exchanging collateral rights amounted to an agreement by Anderson and FINDS to release their liens upon the assets that had been pledged to them as collateral in exchange for liens only on the equity interests in the "fund vehicles." I reject that contention for the following reasons.

First, the language is ambiguous because it could be read as meaning that Anderson and FINDS were exchanging their separate lien rights by combining their liens to be used for each other's benefit as between themselves ("a collective interest") resulting in prorated payments to them, with Anderson and FINDS additionally obtaining liens on the shares of the new fund vehicles.

Second, the concluding paragraph quoted above can be read as meaning that, in contrast to Gold & Appel, whose interest in the collateral it had pledged would cease upon the transfer of the collateral to the new fund vehicles, Anderson and FINDS' liens were to continue in that collateral upon the transfer of the collateral to the new fund vehicles.

12. SUBSEQUENT EVENTS IN THE BURNS LITIGATION

On March 31, 2003, the court in the Burns Action granted partial summary judgment to Burns. Left for trial, as far as Burns's monetary claim against Gold & Appel was concerned, was the issue of the calculation of the deficiency Gold & Appel would owe based on the credit to be given for the Covista stock that had been pledged to Burns. That trial ensued and was concluded on April 2, 2003.

Memorandum Opinion, March 31, 2003 in the Burns Action, App. X.

13. THE MARCH 31, 2003 CONSOLIDATED NOTE

In the midst of the Burns Action proceeding to a trial (with major issues resolved by a partial summary judgment ruling), Anderson caused Gold & Appel to enter into a consolidated note for its obligations to Anderson and FINDS, with the collateral for the loans transferred to Comverge, Space, and Iceberg. "As of March 31st 2003," Anderson caused Gold & Appel, Comverge, Space, Iceberg, FINDS and himself to enter into a "Consolidated Note (Smaller World Funds)" (the "Consolidated Note").

Malone Decl., ¶ 32 and Ex. Z thereto.

Comverge is a Bahamas international business company that was formed by Anderson in March, 2003. All of the authorized shares of Comverge, issued by Anderson as the corporation's sole director on March 18, 2003 (in the midst of the Nortel Action and the Burns Action), were initially issued to Anderson, who then transferred them to Iceberg on March 25, 2003, for no consideration. Space is a British Virgin Islands international business company formed by Anderson in August, 2002 (after Burns had declared a default, a month before the Burns action commenced, and after Nortel and FBW had commenced their actions against Gold & Appel). All of the authorized shares of Space were initially issued to Anderson, who, in January 2003, transferred them to Iceberg for "$1.00" in consideration paid on behalf of Iceberg by Gold & Appel.

Malone Decl., ¶ 33 and Ex. AA thereto.

Malone Decl., ¶ 35, Ex. BB thereto.

Id.

The "Borrower" under the Consolidated Note comprises Gold & Appel, Comverge, Space and Iceberg. Anderson and FINDS are, collectively, the "Lender." As anticipated in the Iceberg Letter, the Consolidated Note amends and restates the supposed obligations arising under the 2000 Loan Agreement, the FINDS Collateral Agreement and the 2002 Loan Agreement, as all had been amended time to time. The Consolidated Note recited that Anderson and FINDS "held shares and debt of various companies as collateral against the debt owed by [Gold & Appel];" that upon Gold & Appel's default they:

The Consolidated Note is signed six (6) times by Anderson, for himself, as "president" of Comverge, as "power of attorney-in-fact" for Gold & Appel, as "power of attorney-in-fact" for Iceberg, as "president" of Space and as "president" [sic] of FINDS.

Malone Decl., ¶ 32 and Ex. Z thereto.

did not wish to take over control and management of assets and instead entered into agreements with Gold & Appel and Iceberg . . . to reorganize the assets per a pre-existing plan into industry specific funds in which [Anderson and FINDS] can retain collateral rights until paid [emphasis added];
and that the indebtedness to Anderson and FINDS "is hereby consolidated to form one single note and one single indebtedness." Consistent with the Iceberg Letter, this indicates that under the Consolidated Note, Anderson and FINDS were to retain their security interests in the collateral. Section 6 of the Consolidated Note ("EVENTS OF DEFAULT AND ACCELERATION") stated, in part, that:
Taking any action to sell transfer, borrow against or otherwise reduce the value of any of the "Collateral" which is held jointly by the Lenders shall be an even [sic] of default ("Event of Default") hereunder.
The term "Collateral" was not defined but presumably means the existing collateral of the Lenders (Anderson and FINDS), the "shares and debt of various companies" referred to in the opening recitals. Again, consistent with the Iceberg Letter, this indicates that under the Consolidated Note, Anderson and FINDS were to retain their security interests in the collateral. Section 8 of the Consolidated Note recites:
The parties that comprise the Lender have exchanged their collateral rights in equity and debt of various companies into combined collateral right to hold the 100% of the outstanding shares in the corporations comprising the Borrowers. The borrowers agree not to transfer, borrow against or otherwise encumber these shares without express permission in writing from Lenders.
[Emphasis added.] Malone contends that this amounted to a release of the liens held by the Lenders (Anderson and FINDS) in exchange for liens on the shares of stock of the Borrowers (Gold & Appel, Comverge, Space and Iceberg). However, that interpretation is inconsistent with the earlier recitals that indicate that, consistent with the Iceberg Letter, Anderson and FINDS are not relinquishing their liens, and that instead they are engaging in a "pooling of their collateral interests." As to the shares of various companies that had been serving as collateral, this specific provision of the Consolidated Note ought to be interpreted, consistent with the earlier recitals, as meaning that:
• Anderson and FINDS, with the consent of the Borrowers, were pooling their collateral--each was giving up its individual rights in the collateral in exchange for a "combined collateral right" treating 100% of the various shares of collateral allocated to the Borrowers as now combined collateral to secure payment of both of their claims.
• The combined collateral right extended to all of the collateral that had been held by Anderson and FINDS, that was now to be held by Comverge, Space, and Iceberg as "new industry specific funds." The phrase "100% of the outstanding shares in the corporations comprising the Borrowers" means that now that Anderson and FINDS share a combined collateral right, 100% of the collateral being placed in Comverge, Space, and Iceberg is held as combined collateral for payment of their debts.
The last sentence ("The borrowers agree not to transfer, borrow against or otherwise encumber these shares without express permission in writing from Lenders.") fits nicely with that interpretation. That interpretation also jibes with the statement in the Iceberg Letter that Anderson and FINDS were to have "joint continuing right and interest in all the collateral which they have arranged to transfer to the new fund vehicles."

The foregoing analysis works well as to shares of stock that Gold & Appel had pledged as collateral to Anderson and FINDS, but what about debt obligations that Gold & Appel had pledged to Anderson and FINDS as collateral? Despite the sloppy draftsmanship of the Consolidated Note, the Iceberg Letter demonstrates that the parties intended all of the existing collateral to continue to serve as collateral. The Consolidated Note can be interpreted as consistent with that by treating "outstanding shares in the corporations comprising the Borrowers" as meaning the shares of collateral respectively being allocated to the three Borrowers (in other words, the assets that were to "compris[e] the Borrowers" as new investment funds). Only that interpretation is consistent with the Iceberg Letter and with the Consolidated Note's earlier recitals that provide for all of the collateral to continue to serve as collateral. Moreover, as will be seen, on April 5, 2003, shortly after the March 31, 2003, date of the Consolidated Note, the parties to the Consolidated Note entered into their Reorganization Agreement that made clear that Anderson and FINDS were retaining their liens against all of the individual assets (shares of stock in and debts owed by various companies) that Gold & Appel had pledged as collateral.

On the other hand, this provision of the Consolidated Note would fall short in preserving all of the collateral as collateral if the term "shares" includes only shares of stock that were collateral and does not include those items of collateral that were "debt of various companies." In that event, this provision could be read as stating that new combined collateral does not include the "debt of various companies" held by Anderson and FINDS "as collateral" for their loans. I reject that interpretation because it is inconsistent with the Iceberg Letter and with the earlier provisions in the Consolidated Note.

Comverge, Space, and Iceberg paid no consideration to Gold & Appel for the transfers to them. The Consolidated Note extended the due date of the obligations for three years to April 1, 2006, but in the transaction Gold & Appel gave up all of the collateral to entities controlled by Anderson, depriving Gold & Appel of assets that would otherwise be available for creditors in its ensuing insolvency proceedings. There was no reason why Gold & Appel--instead of Comverge, Space, and Iceberg--could not have retained the collateral and remained the sole obligor on the Consolidated Note.

The Consolidated Note changed the interest rate to 12% per annum, with a default rate upon maturity of 16% per annum coupled with a late charge of 4.8% per annum (four cents each dollar per month) for an effective total rate of 20.8% upon maturity, versus 7.5% on the obligations to Anderson, and versus 18% on the obligation to FINDS.

14. THE REORGANIZATION AGREEMENT OF APRIL 5, 2003

On or about April 5, 2003, five days after the date of the Consolidated Note, five days after the court in the Burns Action had granted partial summary judgment in favor of Burns, and three days after trial in the Burns Action was completed, Anderson caused Iceberg, Comverge, Space, Gold & Appel, and FINDS to enter into the Reorganization Agreement (titled Agreement in Relation to Re-Organization of Private Funds). Anderson had earlier made reference to this reorganization scheme detailed in the Reorganization Agreement in a letter dated September 9, 2002, and had further referred to it in the Iceberg Letter of December 2002.

Malone Ex. W (Chalmet Affidavit), ¶ 75 and Exhibit pages 89-96 thereto. Anderson is the sole signatory of the Reorganization Agreement, which he signed six (6) times, once personally, once as President of FINDS, once for Gold & Appel, once for Iceberg, once as President of Space and once as President of Comverge.

Malone Ex. W (Chalmet Affidavit) at Exhibit page 85.

The Reorganization Agreement reflected an agreed transfer of various assets that were serving as collateral in favor of Anderson and FINDS to one of either Comverge, Space, or Iceberg, stating that each of those transferees "holds" such collateral or is having the collateral "allocated to" it as of December 14, 2002 (in the case of Space and Iceberg) or as of March 19, 2003 (in the case of Comverge, whose own shares were not issued until the previous day). Paragraph 10 of the Reorganization Agreement provides:

The Gold & Appel property transferred to Comverge, Space and Iceberg comprises the assets (other than the TWCD mortgage and certain "20th century paintings") pledged under the 2000 Loan Agreement, the 2000 Pledge Agreement, the FINDS Collateral Agreement and the 2002 Pledge Agreement, all as subsequently amended. The Reorganization Agreement states that Gold & Appel's ownership of the AAT Shares, Gold & Appel's interest in WorldxChange and Gold & Appel's shares in Panztel, Limited are being transferred to Comverge, and Anderson then directed AAT to transfer the AAT shares held by Gold & Appel to Comverge and Panztel to transfer Gold & Appel's Panztel shares to Comverge. Malone Decl., ¶ 35 and Exhibit DD thereto.

The Reorganization Agreement provided that collateral relating to telecommunications companies "will be transferred to Comverge;" collateral relating to companies having business activities relating to space or space technologies "will be transferred to Space;" and equity or debt interests in Aquarius Holdings Limited "will be transferred to Iceberg . . . ." It then recited that per the Iceberg Letter, the equity and debt interests in companies had been transferred to Comverge, Space, and Iceberg on the books of Gold & Appel (and on the books of the transferees). It treated Comverge as holding on March 19, 2003 (the day after the issuance of its stock to Anderson) interests in various telecommunication companies. It treated Space and Iceberg as holding the collateral transferred to them as of December 14, 2002 (the date of the Iceberg Letter).

all parties to this agreement acknowledge and agree that [Anderson and FINDS] retain there [sic] respective interests and rights in the collateral even though they have elected not to take ownership or exercise control over the management of the interest [sic] at this time.
Moreover, paragraph 15 of the Reorganization Agreement provided that in the event of a default under the "CONSOLIDATED LOAN AGREEMENT for WALT ANDERSON and FOUNDATION for the INTERNATIONAL NON-GOVERNMENTAL DEVELOPMENT of SPACE," Anderson and FINDS could "transfer collateral from [Comverge, Iceberg or Space] respectively." These provisions appear to be dispositive of whether Anderson and FINDS intended to release their liens via the Consolidated Note. The Consolidated Note and the Reorganization Agreement are dated close in time, and the Consolidated Note recites that Anderson and FINDS have "entered into agreements with Gold & Appel and Iceberg . . . to reorganize the assets per a pre-existing plan into industry specific funds in which [Anderson and FINDS] can retain collateral rights." A reasonable finder of fact could conclude that the Consolidated Note intended the Reorganization Agreement to control regarding the retention of collateral rights, that the Consolidated Note and the Reorganization Agreement are part of the same transaction, and that Anderson and FINDS were to retain their security interests in the collateral being transferred to Comverge, Space, and Iceberg. Malone responds that the Reorganization Agreement expressly provided that it was not intended to modify the Consolidated Note. He relies upon paragraph 11 of the Reorganization Agreement, which provided:
Any payments made by COM, ICE or SI against the loans to WA and FINDS will be proportionate to the amount due to each party. No funds may be paid to one party without the other party receiving their respective share. Additional conditions relating to the allocation of payments and interest in the collateral may be contained in the "CONSOLIDATED LOAN AGREEMENT for WALT ANDERSON and FOUNDATION for the NON-GOVERNMENTAL DEVELOPMENT OF SPACE" and nothing in this agreement is intended to override, change or modify that agreement.
[Emphasis added.] No document titled Consolidated Loan Agreement for Walt Anderson and Foundation for the Non-Governmental Development of Space has been submitted. (The Consolidated Note was titled "CONSOLIDATED NOTE (Smaller World Funds.") Even assuming that the Consolidated Note and the referenced Consolidated Loan Agreement for Walt Anderson and Foundation for the Non-Governmental Development of Space are one and the same, Malone's argument is unpersuasive. The Consolidated Note is at least ambiguous regarding the retention of security interests in all of the collateral, and the Reorganization Agreement clarifies the intent of the parties under the Consolidated note: it does not override, change, or modify the Consolidated Note. Moreover, the quoted passage relates to "the allocation of payments and interest" between Anderson and FINDS and the anti-modification clause can be read as relating to only that issue of "the allocation of payments and interest."

The record contains no explanation for why the Reorganization Agreement is dated April 5, 2003, whereas the Consolidated Note (which refers to Anderson and FINDS having "entered into agreements with Gold & Appel and Iceberg . . . to reorganize the assets") is dated as of March 31, 2003. It is further noted that the Reorganization Agreement and the Consolidated Note conflict as to the maturity date of the obligation: that date is April 1, 2006 under the Consolidated Note and is December 31, 2006 under the Reorganization Agreement.

The Reorganization Agreement did not alter the ultimate "ownership" of any asset, according to Anderson, but simply transferred the Gold & Appel assets from one "investment company" owned and managed solely by Anderson--Gold & Appel--to others also owned and managed solely by Anderson: Comverge, Space, and Iceberg.

Anderson Deposition, July 1, 2004, p. 71, lines 14-19; p. 84, lines 8-18. App. Y.

Comverge had no capitalization other than the equity interests it allegedly received from Anderson and FINDS under the Reorganization Agreement. The purpose of the "reorganization," according to Anderson, was to allow FINDS and Anderson "to maintain control of the collateral." The "reorganization," according to Anderson, "just changed my ability to more effectively manage the fund . . . ." The Reorganization Agreement transferred to Comverge, Space, and Iceberg all of the Gold & Appel assets that had been identified as collateral in the security agreements, discussed previously, in favor of Anderson and FINDS. Except for paintings conveyed to Space, those transferred items of collateral are the Transferred Assets that Malone seeks to recover by the instant motion.

Anderson Deposition, July 1, 2004, p. 124, lines 2-4. App. Z.

Anderson Deposition, July 1, 2004, p. 220, lines 15-18. App. AA.

Anderson Deposition, July 1, 2004, p. 225, lines 6- 9. App. BB.

The Reorganization Agreement also conveyed certain additional interests in entities that had not been identified as collateral in the security agreements in favor of Anderson and FINDS. Malone has not included those as part of the Transferred Assets. For example, Reorganization Agreement ¶¶ 5(b), 5(d)(v), and 5(d)(vii) listed as assets being conveyed to Comverge, Space, or Iceberg and as "collateral held by WA [i.e., Anderson] and FINDS" Gold & Appel's interests in:

• Space Launch Corporation;
• XCOR Aerospace, Inc.; and
• Requisite.
The security agreements, discussed previously, in favor of Anderson and FINDS do not identify those interests as collateral, and Malone limited the Transferred Assets to those assets that were identified as collateral in those agreements. Those additional interests are treated as not addressed by Malone's motion unless the interests are fruits of any of the Transferred Assets (for example, by way of a spinoff).

15. THE ENSUING JUDGMENT IN THE BURNS ACTION

On or about August 1, 2003, the court in the Burns Action entered judgment in favor of Burns and against Gold & Appel and its co-debtors, jointly and severally, in the amount of $11,633,874.87 (the "Burns Judgment") and on August 7, 2003, the court in the Burns Action released its opinion. The Burns Judgment was subsequently affirmed by the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit and remains unsatisfied.

App. O.

Statement of Material Facts (Mansion), ¶ 5; Madrid Mansion Order at ¶ A; Malone Decl., ¶ 29.

16. THE BRITISH VIRGIN ISLANDS INSOLVENCY PROCEEDING AND DEVELOPMENTS WITH RESPECT TO GOLD & APPEL'S INTERESTS IN ATT, WORLDXCHANGE, AND PANZTEL

Anderson managed and controlled Gold & Appel until Nortel placed Gold & Appel in an involuntary insolvency proceeding in the British Virgin Islands High Court of Justice on January 12, 2005, thereby initiating an action styled In the Matter of the Insolvency Act 2003 and In the Matter of Gold & Appel Transfer S.A., Claim No. BVIHCV 2004/0130. At the time that it was placed in liquidation, the debts owed by Gold & Appel to creditors unconnected with Anderson or with any entities he created or controlled exceeded $44 million. The Official Liquidator initiated this adversary proceeding on May 16, 2005.

See Statement of Material Facts (Mansion) at ¶¶ 1, 2; Madrid Mansion Order at ¶ A. 113.

Malone Decl., ¶ 3.

AAT Shares Proceeds. In the Spring of 2007, AAT contacted the Official Liquidator and expressed an interest in repurchasing the AAT Shares. On April 27, 2007, this Court granted approval for a sale of the AAT shares. The proceeds of such sale--$52 6,000--are being held in escrow pending receipt by the escrow agent of an order of this court determining whether the Official Liquidator or Comverge is the rightful owner of the AAT Shares and hence of the proceeds of their sale.

See Dkt. No. 126 in Case No. 05-00775.

Funds Deriving From WorldxChange. Gold & Appel's interest in WorldxChange originated in an investment Anderson caused Gold & Appel to make prior to any of the transactions that are the subject of this motion. In February 2000, WorldxChange agreed to merge with World Access, Inc. ("World Access"), an entity in which MCI WorldCom, Inc. ("MCI WorldCom") was a major shareholder. After World Access failed and filed a voluntary bankruptcy case, former investors in WorldxChange, including Gold & Appel, asserted fraud claims against, inter alia, MCI WorldCom and various of its officers in state court in California. Gold & Appel and other investors in WorldxChange reached a settlement of their claims in the California litigation, under which they were to receive payments from the defendants. After MCI WorldCom filed its bankruptcy case, former investors in WorldxChange, including Gold & Appel, also filed proofs of claim in the MCI WorldCom bankruptcy case. Gold & Appel and these other investors in WorldxChange were also able to achieve a settlement of their proofs of claim against MCI WorldCom in its bankruptcy case and received shares of stock in Verizon Communications, Inc., in consideration of such claims.

Because of Anderson's transfer of Gold & Appel's interest in WorldxChange to Comverge, the Official Liquidator was not in a position to settle Gold & Appel's claims without the participation of Comverge. The Settlement Agreement with respect to the claims of Gold & Appel and the other investors in WorldxChange in the MCI WorldCom bankruptcy case was therefore also signed by Jean-Claude Chalmet as President of Comverge, and contained a statement that Comverge represents that on April 5, 2003, Gold & Appel assigned to Comverge its interests in the Proofs of Claim against the Debtors. Gold & Appel disputes that it assigned its interests in the Proofs of Claim against the Debtors to Comverge or anyone else, and disputes Comverge's claims to the proceeds of this Settlement on numerous other grounds.

The shares of Verizon Communications, Inc. allocable to Gold & Appel in the settlement with MCI WorldCom on account of its allowed claim were subsequently liquidated and, together with the proceeds allocable to Gold & Appel from the settlement of the state court litigation relating to World Access, these sums--aggregating $2,097,057.91 as of July 31, 2012--are currently being held in escrow pending an order of this Court determining that either the Official Liquidator or Comverge is the rightful owner of such funds.

Panztel Shares. By stipulation and order entered on or about December 9, 2005, this court has approved an agreement between the Official Liquidator and Panztel that provides, inter alia, acknowledging that there is a dispute as to the ownership of Gold & Appel's stock interest in Panztel and further providing that Panztel will recognize the judgment of this court as to the ownership of such stock interest upon recognition of such judgment by the New Zealand High Court.

B. LAW

On those material facts as to which there is no genuine dispute, Malone has established that the transfers to Comverge, Space, and Iceberg were fraudulent conveyances.

Anderson ran Gold & Appel from offices in the District of Columbia and has not disputed that it is appropriate to apply District of Columbia fraudulent conveyance law. Under the District of Columbia's enactment of the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act ("UFTA"), a transfer made by a debtor is fraudulent as to present and future creditors if the debtor made the transfer with the actual intent to hinder, delay or defraud any creditor. D.C. Code § 28-3104(a)(1) (2001).

As to remedies, District of Columbia law further provides that in an action to avoid a fraudulent transfer a creditor may obtain: "(1) [a]voidance of the transfer . . . to the extent necessary to satisfy the creditor's claim; (2) [a]n attachment or other provisional remedy against the asset transferred or other property of the transferee . . .; (3) [s]ubject to applicable principles of equity and in accordance with applicable rules of civil procedure: (A) [a]n injunction against further disposition by the debtor or transferor, or both, of the asset transferred or other property; (B) [a]ppointment of a receiver to take charge of the asset transferred or of other property of the transferee; or (C) [a]ny other relief the circumstances require." D.C. Code § 28-3107(a).

1. THE CONVEYANCES TO COMVERGE, SPACE, AND FINDS WERE TRANSFERS UNDER THE UFTA

As previously explained, the conveyances at issue here were not transfers under D.C. Code § 28-3101(12) if the assets conveyed were fully encumbered by valid liens, meaning "a lien that is effective against the holder of a judicial lien subsequently obtained by legal or equitable process or proceedings." D.C. Code § 28-3101(13). The Anderson and FINDS liens were ineffective against a subsequent judgment lienor for the following reasons, and thus the conveyances to Comverge, Space, and FINDS were transfers under UFTA.

It is undisputed that neither Anderson nor FINDS filed a financing statement with respect to the security interests at issue. Anderson Resp. ¶¶ 7, 9, 12, 20. Thus, they did not perfect their security interests in the Transferred Assets by filing. Instead, Anderson claims that he perfected the security interests by possession or control. See Anderson Resp. ¶¶ 4, 5, 7, 9, 12, 18, 20; Anderson Decl. ¶¶ 7, 9, 20, 23, 24, 25, 27-29.

More specifically, with respect to the AAT shares, Anderson asserts that he "personally held the original share certificates of Asia Access Telecom" and that he "informed the management of Asia Access Telecom that I personally had a security interest in these shares." Anderson Decl. ¶ 27. Anderson notes that he "personally served on the Board of Directors of Asia Access Telecom" to further secure his interest in the AAT shares. Anderson Decl. ¶ 28.

Anderson alleges that he has "maintained control" of the Panztel shares. Anderson Decl. ¶ 20. In particular, Anderson states that he took the following actions:

24. The secured shares were purchased by Gold & Appel per a PANZTEL LIMITED SHARE OFFER (Exhibit P) relating to 248,139 shared of Panztel Ltd. I personally retained this share purchase agreement and other documents related the [sic] Gold & Appel investment in Panztel. Upon execution of the July 2002 LOAN AGREEMENT I informed Jonathan Hudson, the Managing Director of Panztel Ltd. of my collateral interest in the Gold & Appel shares. To further secure my interest in relation to this Panztel collateral, I personally held all records generated by Panztel and sent to Gold & Appel by Panztel. Exhibit Q documents the Panztel Shares and the transfer of shares from Gold & Appel to Comverge as part of my control over my collateral interest.
25. To further secure the Panztel shares and protect my collateral interests in the Panxtel [sic] shares in relation to the July 2002 loan, I personally served on Panztel's Board of Directors as noted on page 2, in section listing "Director's Shareholding" of the PANZTEL LIMITED- ANNUAL REPORT AND CONSOLIDATED FINANCILA [sic] STATEMENT dated 31 march, 2004 (Exhibit R).
Anderson Decl. ¶¶ 24, 25. Anderson explains: "Panztel under New Zealand Law did not issue any share certificates so I took possession of all the rocords [sic] related to the share purchase and holding." Id. ¶ 29.

Anderson's Exhibits Q and R are Panztel documents reflecting Comverge's ownership of Panztel shares but they do not reflect Anderson's lien on the shares.

a. Certificated Securities

Under Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code (U.C.C.), which the District of Columbia has adopted, "[a] secured party may perfect a security interest in tangible certificated securities by taking delivery of the certificated securities under § 8-301." U.C.C. § 9-313(a); D.C. Code § 28:9-313(a). In turn, U.C.C. § 8-301(a) provides in relevant part that delivery of a certificated security occurs when "the purchaser acquires possession of the security certificate[.]". U.C.C. § 8-301(a); D.C. Code § 28:8-301(a).

Possession is permitted as a means of perfection because it can provide notice of the creditor's interest to third parties. See FDIC v. Kipperman (In re Commercial Money Ctr., Inc.), 392 B.R. 814, 830 (B.A.P. 9th Cir. 2008) ("The debtor's lack of possession and the creditor's actual possession of collateral serve to notify third-party creditors that the debtor 'no longer has unfettered use' of the collateral.") (quoting Heinicke Instruments Co. v. Republic Corp., 543 F.2d 700, 702 (9th Cir. 1976)). "Thus, in order to effect perfection, possession must be 'unequivocal, absolute and notorious, so that third parties may be advised.'" Hutchison v. C.I.T. Corp., 726 F.2d 300, 302 (6th Cir. 1984) (quoting Transp. Equip. Co. v. Guar. State Bank, 518 F.2d 377, 381 (10th Cir. 1975)).

Possession by a secured party who is closely associated with the debtor fails to give unequivocal notice to third parties and therefore does not perfect the security interest. McDonald v. Nat'l Bank of Stigler (In re Hill), 7 B.R. 433, 436 (Bankr. W.D. Okla. 1980) (finding that the bank did not have a perfected security interest in a motorboat because it was in the possession of the debtor's father who was also a co-debtor). As explained in Official Comment 3 to U.C.C. § 9-313:

The debtor cannot qualify as an agent for the secured party for purposes of the secured party's taking possession. And, under appropriate circumstances, a court may determine that a person in possession is so closely connected to or controlled by the debtor that the debtor has retained effective possession, even though the person may have agreed to take possession on behalf of the secured party. If so, the person's taking possession would not constitute the secured party's taking possession and would not be sufficient for perfection.
U.C.C. § 9-313, cmt. 3; see also 4 JAMES J. WHITE, ROBERT S. SUMMERS, & ROBERT A. HILLMAN, UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE § 31-8 (6th ed.) ("It is plain that certain persons should not be recognized as a proper agent of the creditor. Obviously this is true of the debtor and the debtor's agent as is suggested in the quote from comment 3.").

Anderson's taking possession of the certificated shares, such as the AAT shares, is not sufficient possession to perfect his security interest because he was so closely connected to the debtor, Gold & Appel, that his possession failed to give notice to third parties of his interest. Anderson was both the secured creditor and the person controlling the debtor. Therefore, Gold & Appel "retained effective possession" of the securities and Anderson does not have a perfected security interest under the U.C.C. in the certificated securities that were part of the Transferred Assets.

b. Uncertificated Securities

Anderson also argues that he has a security interest in uncertificated securities. A security interest in uncertificated securities, such as the Panztel shares, may be perfected by "control." U.C.C. §§ 9-106, 9-314; D.C. Code §§ 28:9-106, 28:9-314. Under the U.C.C.:

(c) A purchaser has "control" of an uncertificated security if:

(1) the uncertificated security is delivered to the purchaser; or
(2) the issuer has agreed that it will comply with instructions originated by the purchaser without further consent by the registered owner.
U.C.C. § 8-106(c).

A "purchaser" is a "person that takes by purchase," see U.C.C. § 1-201(30), and a "purchase" means "taking by sale, lease, discount, negotiation, mortgage, pledge, lien, security interest, issue or reissue, gift, or any other voluntary transaction creating an interest in property." U.C.C. § 1-201(29). Accordingly, Anderson is a purchaser within the meaning of this provision.

This provision indicates that there are two possible ways that a purchaser may have control of an uncertificated security and thereby perfect his security interest. The first way is if the purchaser accepts delivery of the uncertificated security. U.C.C. § 8-106(c)(1). An uncertificated security is delivered to a purchaser when:

(1) The issuer registers the purchaser as the registered owner, upon original issue or registration of transfer; or
(2) Another person, other than a securities intermediary, either becomes the registered owner of the uncertificated security on behalf of the purchaser or, having previously become the registered owner, acknowledges that it holds for the purchaser.
U.C.C. § 8-301(b). Gold & Appel did not "deliver" the uncertificated securities to Anderson within the meaning of U.C.C. § 8-301(b). First, there are no facts showing that the issuer of the Panztel stock registered Anderson as the owner. Second, there no facts suggesting that another person became the registered owner of the uncertificated security on behalf of Anderson or acknowledged that it held the security for Anderson. Accordingly, Anderson does not have a perfected security interest in the Panztel stock via delivery under § 8-106(c)(1).

A purchaser can also have control over the uncertificated securities if the issuer (here, Panztel) has agreed that it will comply with instructions originated by the secured party (here, Anderson) without further consent of the owner (here, Gold & Appel). U.C.C. § 8-106(c)(2); see also In re Pfautz, 264 B.R. 551, 552 (Bankr. W.D. Mo. 2001) (applying Missouri law). Anderson argues that the "transfer of [the Panztel] shares from Gold & Appel to Comverge" is evidence of his control of the Panztel shares. Anderson Decl. ¶ 6. But that share transfer merely shows that the owner, Gold & Appel, transferred shares to Comverge. See Anderson Resp., Ex. Q. There is nothing in the record that shows that the issuer, Panztel, agreed to comply with Anderson's instructions without further consent by the registered owner of the stock, Gold & Appel. Therefore, Anderson does not have a perfected security interest in the Panztel shares via § 8-106(c)(2).

Having failed to obtain control under either prong of § 8-106(c), Anderson does not have a perfected security interest in the Panztel shares.

c. General Intangibles and Commercial Tort Claims

To the extent Anderson and FINDS claim security interests in general intangibles and commercial tort claims (such as the chose in action concerning the WorldxChange shares), these interests have not been perfected. The only way to perfect a security interest in general intangibles and commercial tort claims is by filing. U.C.C. § 9-310; D.C. Code § 28:9-310. Anderson admits that no filing was made.

2. THE TRANSFERS WERE INTENDED TO HINDER OR DELAY CREDITORS

Under the District of Columbia's enactment of UFTA, a transfer made by a debtor is fraudulent as to present and future creditors if the debtor made the transfer with the actual intent to hinder, delay or defraud any creditor. D.C. Code § 28-3104(a)(1) (2001). In determining whether a debtor actually intended to hinder, delay or defraud its creditors:

consideration may be given, among other factors, to whether:

(1) The transfer . . . was to an insider;
(2) The debtor retained possession or control of the property transferred after the transfer;
(3) The transfer . . . was disclosed or concealed;
(4) before the transfer was made or obligation was incurred, the debtor had been sued or threatened with suit; . . .
(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 . . . ;
(9) The debtor was insolvent or became insolvent shortly after the transfer was made . . .;
(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 who transferred the assets to an insider of debtor.
D.C. Code § 28-3104(b) (2001). While it is often difficult for a claimant seeking to avoid a transfer as a fraudulent conveyance to present direct evidence to establish a debtor's actual intent to defraud creditors, Kelly v. Armstrong, 141 F.3d 799, 802 (8th Cir. 1998), summary judgment is appropriate "where all the facts 'point[] to a finding of intent with no inference of a pure motive possible.'" Consumers United Ins. Co. v. Smith, 644 A.2d 1328, 1358 (D.C. 1994) (quoting Jones v. Cent. Nat'l Bank of St. Johns, 547 N.E.2d 887, 891 (Ind. Ct. App. 1989)). Accordingly, the law recognizes certain "badges of fraud," including the factors enumerated in § 28-3104(b), as "common indicia . . . which have frequently bespoken fraudulent intent in the past." Kelly v. Armstrong, 141 F.3d at 802. Once a claimant "establishes a confluence of several badges of fraud, the [claimant] is entitled to a presumption of fraudulent intent" and "[i]n such cases 'the burden shifts to the transferee to prove some legitimate supervening purpose for the transfers at issue.'" Id. (quoting Acequia, Inc. v. Clinton (In re Acequia, Inc.), 34 F.3d 800, 806 (9th Cir. 1994)); see also Schilling v. Heavrin (In re Triple S Rests., Inc.), 422 F.3d 405, 414-416 (6th Cir. 2005) ("Badges of fraud are circumstances so frequently attending fraudulent transfers that an inference of fraud arises from them." (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)). "The presence of a single badge of fraud may spur mere suspicion . . . and the confluence of several can constitute conclusive evidence of an actual intent to defraud, absent 'significantly clear' evidence of a legitimate supervening purpose." Max Sugarman Funeral Home, Inc. v. A.D.B. Investors, 926 F.2d 1248, 1254-55 (1st Cir. 1991). Once a record contains only evidence establishing badges of fraud supporting an inference that the transfer was made with an actual intent to defraud a creditor, the transfer must be set aside as a fraudulent conveyance unless sufficient evidence is presented to explain or justify the circumstances constituting badges of fraud. Leonardo v. Leonardo, 251 F.2d 22, 26 (D.C. Cir. 1958).

The burden of proof applicable to Malone in seeking to avoid the transfers to Comverge, Space, and Iceberg is to show a fraudulent intent by clear and convincing evidence. Consumers United, 644 A.2d at 1358. That burden has been carried here. A reasonable finder of fact could only conclude that clear and convincing evidence existed that (1) the transfers display sufficient "badges of fraud" showing that the transfers were made with the actual intent to hinder, delay and defraud the creditors of Gold & Appel in the absence of a legitimate purpose for the transfers, and (2) that no such legitimate purpose existed--just as was the case with respect to the transfers in connection with the Madrid Mansion that was the subject of an earlier ruling of this court. See Dkt. No. 322.

The transfers to Comverge, Space, and Iceberg in March of 2003:

• were to insiders (corporations controlled and ultimately owned by Anderson, two of which, Comverge and Space, were formed in the midst of the civil actions brought by Nortel, Burns, and FBW);
• were made in exchange for no consideration received from Comverge, Space, and Iceberg;
• were made after Anderson had often acknowledged that Gold & Appel lacked liquidity of assets with which to pay debts, and when it had failed to pay Burns and FBW the debts owed them when those debts had come due, a situation that was, at least, akin to being insolvent under D.C. Code § 28-3102(b) (that is, generally not paying its debts as they came due); and
• were made in the midst of civil actions to collect debts that Gold & Appel had been unable to pay, civil
actions in which substantial judgments were eventually entered against Gold & Appel.
By August of 2000, Gold & Appel had incurred debts to Nortel and to Burns aggregating more than $40 million; in September of 2002 the Burns Action had commenced; in April of 2002 the Nortel Action had commenced; and by April of 2002 Gold & Appel was being sued for a debt owed FBW for which a judgment in excess of $2.9 million was entered. The Reorganization Agreement itself noted Anderson's intention that time be gained in which the collateral could become liquid and be used to pay the debts owed to Anderson and FINDS, and the Iceberg Letter had noted that the collateral "while not liquid may increase in value in time and become more liquid in the future." Anderson concealed the transfers from Gold & Appel's legitimate creditors by not filing financing statements revealing his and FINDS' liens against the assets now held by Comverge, Space, and Iceberg. Additionally, once the transfers came to light, Anderson kept up the pretense that he was not the de facto owner of Comverge, Space, and Iceberg. By attempting to surreptitiously transfer assets to offshore entities beyond the reach of Gold & Appel's legitimate creditors, Anderson effectively sought to abscond with Gold & Appel's assets.

Under D.C. Code § 28-3104(b)(1) a transfer to an insider is a factor to be considered. Comverge, Space, and Iceberg were insiders as affiliates of Gold & Appel. D.C. Code § 28-3101(1)(B) and § 28-3101(7)(E).

Under D.C. Code § 28-3104(b)(8), the lack of consideration is a factor to be considered. Although the Reorganization Agreement gave Gold & Appel further time to repay the debts owed Anderson and FINDS, that was the desire of Anderson and FINDS, who wanted the collateral to have time to increase in value and liquidity, and who, via the transfers, placed the assets beyond the reach of other creditors. Anderson and FINDS could have agreed to those new terms with Gold & Appel without the necessity of transferring the assets to Comverge, Space, and Iceberg.

Under D.C. Code § 28-3104(b)(9), insolvency is a relevant factor. Anderson presented no evidence that as of 2003, Gold & Appel was paying its other debts as they came due. The burden, however, is on Malone to show insolvency, and he may not have met the statutory test if he has focused on only the few debts for which judgments were entered, and not debts in general. Nevertheless, Gold & Appel's inability to pay its debts and its failure to pay significant debts after they came due is evidence that bears on fraudulent intent in Gold & Appel's making the transfers to Comverge, Space, and Iceberg. The factors listed in § 28-3104(b) are not a straitjacket barring consideration of other factors that bear on motive.

Under D.C. Code § 28-3104(b)(4), a debtor's having been sued is a relevant factor.

Under D.C. Code § 28-3104(b)(3), concealment is a relevant factor.

Under D.C. Code § 28-3104(b)(6), a debtor's absconding is a relevant factor. Whether that means absconding with assets or, instead, means that the debtor itself fled from creditors does not matter. Even if it has the latter meaning, absconding in the former sense is similarly indicative of a fraudulent intent. The factors listed in § 28-3104(b) are not exclusive.

There are sufficient badges of fraud to mandate a finding of an intent to hinder and delay creditors unless Comverge, Space, and Iceberg showed a legitimate purpose for the transfers to them. The facts fail to show any such legitimate purpose. While Anderson's stated purpose for the transfer of assets to Comverge, Space, and Iceberg was to improve their "management," these assets remained under "management" by Anderson at all times, and a reasonable finder of fact could only conclude that the reason Anderson replaced one investment management company--Gold & Appel--that he created, owned and controlled with others that he created, owned and controlled was that the new "management companies" did not owe the substantial debts burdening Gold & Appel, and that Anderson intended thereby to gain time so that, as recited in the Iceberg Letter, the assets "may increase in value in time," a goal that would be frustrated if Gold & Appel's non-insider creditors (such as Nortel and Burns) had executed on the assets. That is not a legitimate purpose. See Consumers United, 644 A.2d at 1358-59 (citing and quoting Klein v. Rossi, 251 F. Supp. 1, 2 (E.D.N.Y. 1966)) ("[F]raudulent purpose includes a 'solvent person's deliberate effort to stave off creditors by putting property beyond their reach even when the purpose of that is not to cheat them of ultimate payment but only to wrest from them time to restore the debtor's affairs'").

Under D.C. Code § 28-3104(b)(2), a debtor's continued retention of possession or control of the property transferred is a relevant factor. Anderson, who was the only person acting on behalf of Gold & Appel, continued to retain possession and control of the assets.

It is accordingly appropriate to enter partial summary judgment avoiding the transfers to Comverge, Space, and Iceberg.

II

Malone further seeks to avoid the liens granted to Anderson and FINDS. Although Malone has demonstrated under the standards for summary judgment that the transfers to Comverge, Space, and Iceberg were fraudulent conveyances, he has not demonstrated, under the standards for granting summary judgment, that the liens granted to Anderson and FINDS were intentionally fraudulent conveyances. The analysis has been made difficult by Malone's having failed to separately address the avoidability of the transfers to Comverge, Space, and Iceberg versus the avoidability of the transfers of liens to Anderson and FINDS.

A. FACTS

Malone seeks to paint with a broad brush by treating Gold & Appel's many transfers of assets and funds for no consideration (and often as fraudulent conveyances) as necessarily demonstrating that the conveyances of liens to Anderson and FINDS were intentional fraudulent conveyances. In support of this effort at demonstrating fraudulent intent, he tosses into the evidentiary pot various other circumstances: the transfers to accounts held by Sylvia Rubio de Molina; the doubtful necessity of Gold & Appel to enter into the transactions with Anderson and FINDS; Anderson's disclaimer of any benefit from making his loans; the disproportionately high value of the collateral versus the debts owed to Anderson and FINDS; the receipt by Anderson and FINDS of funds from Gold & Appel after their loans were made, receipts for which no credit was given to Gold & Appel; and the use of the 2002 Loan funds to pay obligations owed to Anderson, FINDS, and other Anderson-controlled entities. Those circumstances could be viewed by a reasonable finder of fact as only innuendo regarding fraudulent intent. For the sake of completeness (despite the unfortunate effect of adding to a thicket of facts that is already quite dense), I will detail the facts that Malone marshals in favor of these arguments.

1. TRANSFERS TO ACCOUNTS HELD BY SYLVIA RUBIO DE MOLINA

Malone notes substantial transfers of Gold & Appel funds to Sylvia Rubio de Molina ("Molina"), most of which occurred before Gold & Appel incurred any of the debts to Nortel, Burns, and FBW. Specifically, commencing in December 1998 and continuing until early June 2000, Anderson transferred more than $20 million out of Gold & Appel's bank account and into accounts at Krediet Bank (Suisse) S.A. in Geneva, Switzerland. Swiss authorities identified the holder of these Swiss bank accounts as Sylvia Rubio de Molina, a Spanish national trained as an attorney. Anderson had a personal and professional relationship with Molina.

Malone has not sued Molina in this proceeding.

The transfers were as follows:

Dec. 22, 1998 - $5,000,000
Mar. 4, 1999 - $3,000,000
May 13, 1999 - $1,844,503
June 28, 1999 - $10,150,000
June 7, 2000 - $570,074.01


It is not clear what these transfers were for. Anderson claims that she "acted as a custodian of documents[] for the Smaller World trust, the owner of Gold & Appel" and that she provided "consulting and business connections" to Gold & Appel. Anderson Decl. ¶ 43. However, the transfers to Molina could not have been compensation for serving as custodian of documents for the Smaller World Trust, because the Custodian Agreement for Smaller World Trust, dated February 9, 1996, states: "Silvia Rubio de Mofina agrees that she has already been compensated for the first 5 years of Custodian services." Anderson Decl., Ex. AA (emphasis added). So for the years 1996 through 2000 ("the first 5 years of Custodian services"), Molina had already been compensated for services as a Custodian.

Instead, in a June 2004 statement Anderson explained that the payment of $10,150,000 to Molina in June of 1999 was for services rendered to Esprit, a company in which Gold & Appel invested. However, Esprit was an independent company, and no documentation has been submitted to show that Gold & Appel was obligated to pay for services Molina rendered to Esprit. Anderson's interest in Esprit had ended long prior to June of 1999. He has given no explanation why there was a long delay in making the payments to Molina if, indeed, Gold & Appel was compensating her for services rendered with respect to Esprit. Moreover, Anderson on deposition in July of 2004 testified that Molina had not worked for Gold and Appel, and had no relationship to it.

Malone Decl., Ex. V.

Malone Mtn. App. J. On deposition examination by a Justice Department attorney in Spain on December 2, 2004, Molina herself stated she provided professional services to Anderson. Malone Mtn. App. I, par. 9. Molina testified that after she and Anderson had met each other at a seminar in New York:

He [Anderson] sporadically asked her specific questions relating, for example, to how to register a trademark, etc. . . . In 1995-1996 she started to charge professional advisory fees. She started to do so because he asked her to be a custodian of documentation and also to advise him on investments he wanted to make. She provided legal services to Mr. Anderson.
. . . [In addition to serving as a custodian of documents], [b]efore 1996 she also acted at legal advisor on how to register trademarks, set up an office, labor issues, and hiring personnel here in Spain, but based on their friendship there is no record, or at least she doesn't have any documents attesting to that relationship.
Malone Mtn. App. I, par. 3.

Not only is there no satisfactory explanation of why funds were transferred to Molina, but there is also no explanation regarding what happened to the funds transferred to Molina. In being deposed by the Justice Department in December 2004, Molina appeared to disclaim any interest in the accounts into which the funds were transferred:

Who the [sic] holders of the KREDITBANK SUISSE account? She states it is a matter of professional privilege. She is not an accountholder.
Malone Mtn. App. I, par. 17.

All but one of the transfers to Molina occurred prior to the year 2000. However difficult it may be to ascertain the true purpose of the transfers from Gold & Appel to Molina that occurred prior to 2000, I fail to see how they demonstrate that the subsequent transactions at issue here were fraudulent. Remember, Anderson admitted in pleading guilty to tax fraud charges that Gold & Appel had income of $327 million in 1998 and 1999 that he failed to report. Malone has failed to show that in 1998 and 1999 Gold & Appel was not awash in huge amounts of funds, and has failed to show that the transfers to Molina prior to 2000 were not just a small fraction of Gold & Appel's funds. As long as Gold & Appel was left highly solvent when the pre-2000 transfers to Molina were made (a matter that Malone has not negated), Anderson was free to dispose of Gold & Appel funds as he saw fit unless he somehow intended the transfers to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors (again, something Malone has not shown). So even if the payments to Molina preceding 2000 were only a gift (or were made to Molina for her to hold for Anderson), I fail to see how that demonstrates a fraudulent intent in Anderson's making those payments.

The transfer on June 7, 2000, of $570,074.01 to Molina came in the midst of Gold & Appel's own financial difficulties of incurring substantial obligations regarding NetTel that ultimately it could not honor. Anderson has not specifically asserted that this transfer was payment for services. Nor have invoices by Molina for services rendered to Gold & Appel been introduced as evidence. At the same time, however, Malone has not shown that this transfer left Gold & Appel unable to pay its debts. If Gold & Appel was entirely solvent and able to pay its debts, and if Anderson viewed Gold & Appel as able to pay its debts and harbored no intent to hinder, delay or defraud creditors via the transfer, Anderson was free to make a gift of $570,074.01 to Molina without it being a fraudulent conveyance.

Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Anderson and FINDS, the transfers to Molina were not intended to hinder, delay, or defraud any creditor, and do not establish a pattern of making fraudulent conveyances.

2. RED TULIP

Malone's motion devotes considerable attention to a failed business venture, Red Tulip, LLC. Suffice it to say, I find the material facts in regard to Red Tulip to be in genuine dispute.

Red Tulip was a company devoted to acquiring and developing an apartment building in New York City. The enterprise failed, with the apartment building being sold at foreclosure for less than the mortgage debt. Malone complains that Gold & Appel gave up an ownership interest in Red Tulip and converted that to a loan interest instead. (Anderson disputes that version of the facts and says that Gold & Appel was intended to be a lender from the outset.) Many a building enterprise proves unsuccessful, and Malone has not shown that an ownership interest in Red Tulip had any substantial value or that structuring Gold & Appel's interest as a lender instead of as an owner could have had any meaningful impact on Gold & Appel's creditors.

3. THE TRANSFERS RELATING TO THE MADRID MANSION

After incurring the First Nortel Obligation and in the midst of incurring the Second Nortel Obligation, and during the time he was making the June 7, 2000, transfer of $570,074.01 to Molina, Anderson engaged in fraudulent conveyances of Gold & Appel funds used to purchase an improved property in Madrid, Spain (the "Madrid Mansion"). Between May 22, 2000 and July 28, 2000, Anderson caused Gold & Appel to transfer a total of $6,270,997.52 to himself and to certain affiliates or intermediaries, which funds were ultimately employed to purchase the Madrid Mansion. Anderson effected the transfer of funds used to purchase the Madrid Mansion by employing a series of Anderson-controlled affiliates of Gold & Appel, including Entrée and Iceberg. In the period following the transfer of the funds used to purchase the Madrid Mansion, Anderson caused Gold & Appel's initial sole ownership of One World Properties, S.A., the entity that owned the Madrid Mansion, to be first diluted, and then transferred away, for the benefit of other Anderson affiliates, thereby effectively placing more than $6.2 million of Gold & Appel's funds beyond the reach of Gold & Appel's legitimate creditors. In the Madrid Mansion Order, this Court found that these transfers "were made with the actual intent to hinder, delay and defraud the creditors of Gold & Appel Transfer S.A." Molina has identified herself as an "administrator" of One World Properties, S.A.

Malone tries to suggest a fraudulent intent regarding the Anderson and FINDS liens by using their juxtaposition with the incurring of debts to Nortel and the fraudulent transfers regarding the Madrid Mansion. The footnote below captures the essence of this attempt to taint the liens via association with the fraudulent Madrid Mansion transfers. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Anderson and FINDS, a reasonable finder of fact could conclude that the liens were in exchange for reasonably equivalent value, that Anderson and FINDS gave up valuable assets in exchange for the liens, and that they obtained loan repayment obligations that were fair to Gold & Appel. A reasonable finder of fact could conclude that these factors outweigh any hint of fraud urged by Malone based on the liens having been obtained close in time to the fraudulent Madrid Mansion transfers.

By April 20, 2000, the First Nortel Obligation for more than $8 million had come into existence. On or about July 1, 2000, Anderson caused Gold & Appel to pledge substantial assets to himself for a $177,555 loan in the 2000 Loan Agreement when Gold & Appel was facing liquidity problems. Only 7 days before (on June 23, 2000), despite Gold & Appel's imminent liquidity problems, Anderson had transferred $5,650,000 from Gold & Appel to himself and Entrée ($2,825,000 to each of Anderson and Entrée) for the ultimate acquisition by One World Properties of the Madrid Mansion. On July 17, 2000, the Second Nortel Obligation for more than $18 million came into existence. On July 20, 2000, Anderson caused Gold & Appel to transfer an additional sum of $565,440.00 to One World Properties--now almost completely owned by Anderson and Entrée rather than Gold & Appel--in connection with the acquisition of the Madrid Mansion.
As of August, 2000, when Anderson caused Gold & Appel to enter into the FINDS Collateral Agreement, Anderson and Entrée had received the $5,650,000 from Gold & Appel in connection with the ultimate acquisition by One World Properties of the Madrid Mansion, and One World Properties had received another $565,400 in connection with its acquisition of the Madrid Mansion.

4. DEBATABLE NECESSITY OF THE ANDERSON AND FINDS LOANS

Malone questions whether the loans from Anderson and FINDS could have served any legitimate business purpose because around the time they were made, Gold & Appel had the ability to make several large payments to other entities. Malone points out that the 2000 Loan Agreement and the 2000 Collateral Agreement occurred while the transfers of funds to purchase the Madrid Mansion were being completed. In addition, on or about July 17, 2000, Anderson caused Gold & Appel to advance $4,000,000 to MirCorp Limited ("MirCorp"), a company in which Gold & Appel held a 40% shareholder interest. From this, Malone argues that the Anderson loan was unnecessary and simply an excuse to gain control of Gold & Appel assets. Malone Mtn. at 38. Anderson responds that Gold & Appel was under an obligation to make that transfer to MirCorp, and that's why Gold & Appel needed money from Anderson in July 2000. Anderson Decl. ¶ 47.

Malone also questions the necessity of Gold & Appel's borrowing Covista shares from FINDS to use as collateral for the Burns Loan when Gold & Appel itself was scheduled as holding Covista shares valued at $56,900.77. See List of Assets, Ex. A to Limited Opp. (Dkt. No. 315, relating to the Madrid Mansion claims). That does not alter the fact that FINDS gave real value to Gold & Appel in making the loan. FINDS' loan of the Covista shares placed those shares at risk, enhanced the assets Gold & Appel had at its disposal, and resulted in FINDS' Covista shares being liquidated by Burns as collateral pledged to him, sparing Gold & Appel's Covista shares from that fate. A reasonable finder of fact could find that FINDS gave reasonably equivalent value in exchange for the security interest it obtained.

On or about March 12, 2008, FINDS, along with other Anderson affiliates and adversary proceeding defendants Galactech, Space, Mircorp, Entrée, and Comverge, filed a Limited Opposition to the Official Liquidator's Madrid Mansion Motion (Dkt. No. 315 in this adversary proceeding) (the "Limited Opposition"). Attached as Exhibit A to the Limited Opposition was a "list of assets in the Smaller World Trust dated December 31, 2000" which, according to FINDS, "shows that [Gold & Appel] had assets totaling over $387 million at the end [of 2000]." Limited Opposition, p. 5. Included in this list of Gold & Appel assets is a line item for "Total Tel - (Covista) Equity" valued at $56,900,777. See Malone Decl., ¶ 30 and Exhibit "X" thereto (Limited Opposition and Exhibit).

5. HIGH RATIO OF VALUE OF ASSETS SERVING AS COLLATERAL VERSUS THE DEBTS SECURED THEREBY

The value of the collateral securing the debts owed Anderson and FINDS far exceeded the amount of such debts, according to the List of Assets compiled by Anderson. See Ex. A to Limited Opp. (Dkt. No. 315, relating to the Madrid Mansion claims). In addition, according to Anderson, the purchase prices of the 20th century paintings that were part of the collateral posted to secure the FINDS debt amounted to $2,878,512. Malone asserts that the value of the paintings was considerably in excess of the ultimate value of the pledged Covista stock, but Anderson disputes this.

I fail to see the relevance of these points. Malone has not contended that the debts created by Anderson's and FINDS' loans were on unreasonable terms. Moreover, the extent of a security interest securing repayment of a debt is capped by the underlying debt. That a lender obtains a security interest in property worth far more than the debt owed it does not establish a lack of reasonably equivalent value.

For example, the values ascribed by Anderson to Gold & Appel's assets that served as collateral for the debts owed FINDS amount to $177 million whereas the debt now owed FINDS is less than $4 million. This discrepancy proves nothing. FINDS was entitled to obtain a security interest in as much collateral as it thought was warranted, and its lien was limited by the amount of debt owed to it. If the repayment of FINDS's claim was secured by collateral of a value far in excess of the debt owed it, Gold & Appel would be entitled to the excess after satisfaction of FINDS' debt. Malone similarly notes that in consideration of the loan of $177,555 under the 2000 Loan Agreement, Gold & Appel transferred to Anderson assets he valued on the List of Assets at more than $37,000,000. For the same reasons as in the case of the FINDS collateral, it does not matter that the value of the assets serving as collateral for the Anderson loans far exceeded the amount owed Anderson.

6. ANDERSON'S DISCLAIMER OF A BENEFIT TO HIMSELF FROM MAKING THE LOANS

Anderson disclaimed any benefit to himself from making the loans to Gold & Appel. Anderson testified in 2004 (when he was still hiding the fact that he ultimately controlled the ownership of Gold & Appel) that, although he had always managed Gold & Appel, he was not entitled to take ownership of any Gold & Appel asset. In the same testimony in July 2004, Anderson asserted that he made this loan even though no benefit from any preservation of Gold & Appel's assets would accrue to him, and the so-called "beneficial owners" of those assets were not even asked to advance funds to Gold & Appel. Although this shows a lack of credibility on Anderson's part, I fail to see how this proves a fraudulent intent on his part in obtaining liens in his favor to secure a loan made by him.

Anderson Deposition, July 21, 2004, p. 425, line 15 - p. 426, line 18. App. N. See also Anderson's Letter of September 9, 2002 (Chalmet Affidavit, ¶ 73 and Exhibit page 85 thereto) in which he wrote: "[d]ue to existing agreements which I have with Gold & Appel Transfer S.A., Iceberg Transport S.A. and the ultimate beneficial owner [sic] of these organizations, I can not [sic] have the collateral for these loans to be [sic] transferred to me or any organization which I own."

Anderson Deposition, July 21, 2004, p. 422, line 7 - p. 423, line 8. App. J.

7. TRANSFERS OF GOLD & APPEL FUNDS TO ANDERSON AND FINDS

Malone questions the genuineness of the Anderson and FINDS liens when these two entities had either already received funds from Gold & Appel when they made a loan, or received funds after they made a loan but the funds were not credited to the loan. After each of the two times that it incurred a $150,000 debt to FINDS, Gold & Appel made transfers to FINDS. The ultimate total liability to FINDS exceeded $3 million, and the transfers that were made to FINDS (for which no credit was given against the debt owed to FINDS) fell well short of $3 million. The transfers were these:

In 1998 and 1999, Anderson had caused Gold & Appel to transfer more than $2,000,000 to FINDS. Because this was before Gold & Appel began to have financial difficulties, I view that as of no relevance as to whether Anderson was engaged in fraudulent conveyances as to the creditors of Gold & Appel.

• After incurring in August 2000 its first obligation to pay FINDS $150,000, Gold & Appel, in the period starting January 24, 2001, and ending May 14, 2001,
transferred at least $400,000 to FINDS. There is no explanation in the record for those transfers.
• After incurring in August 2001 its second obligation to pay FINDS $150,000, Gold & Appel thereafter transferred at least $213,000 in funds to FINDS.
The transfers totaling $213,000 occurred during the period of October 22, 2001, to July 31, 2002, all before the expiration of the use of FINDS Covista shares as collateral for the Burns Loan. There is no explanation in the record for those $213,000 in transfers. Nevertheless, even if the transfers were set off against the $3 million debt owed to FINDS, the debt would not be satisfied.

Malone Affidavit , Ex. M, showing these transfers to FINDS:

01/24/2001 02/12/2001

$100,000 $100,000

04/02/2001

$100,000

04/09/2001

$50,000

05/14/2001

$50,000

Malone Affi., Ex. M, showing these transfers to FINDS:

10/22/2001

$7,500

11/27/2001

$11,000

12/06/2001

$11,000

01/14/2002

$3,800

01/29/2002

$4,000

02/14/2002

$1,000

03/26/2002

$5,000

04/03/2002

$2,500

04/04/2002

$11,000

04/10/2002

$11,000

05/15/2002

$2,200

07/03/2002

$2,000

07/31/2002

$141,000

In addition, during the period of June 23, 2000, to July 31, 2002, Gold & Appel made these transfers to Anderson:

06/23/2000

$2,825,000

12/06/2001

$50,000

07/31/2002

$145,000


The June 23, 2000, transfer of $2,825,000 to Anderson was only seven days before the execution on July 1, 2000 of the 2000 Loan Agreement in which Anderson lent $177,555, but that $2,825,000 was ultimately used by One World Properties (an entity effectively owned and controlled by Anderson) in acquiring the Madrid Mansion. As between Anderson and Gold & Appel, the $2,825,000 was not viewed as giving rise to a debt owed by Anderson to Gold & Appel, so that does not cast doubt on the genuine intent of Anderson and Gold & Appel to treat the July 1, 2000 loan as a genuine loan. No explanation has been given for the other two transfers totaling $195,000. That $195,000, however, is far less than what Gold & Appel owes Anderson.

8. USE OF THE FUNDS LENT UNDER THE 2002 LOAN AGREEMENT TO PAY OBLIGATIONS OWED ANDERSON, FINDS, AND ENTRÉE

Malone makes much of the fact that Anderson's loan to Gold & Appel pursuant to the 2002 Loan Agreement funded contemporaneous payments by Gold & Appel to Anderson, FINDS and Entrée aggregating $502,000 that would otherwise have remained unfunded. Anderson explains that he provided Gold & Appel with funds needed by Gold & Appel to pay its obligations:

Malone Decl., ¶ 25 and Exhibit "M" thereto, entries for July 31, 2002.

and some of those obligation[s] were to me, to repay expenses which I had incurred on behalf of Golf [sic] and Appel. Other obligations were to Entrée International for contractual consulting fees which had been incurred by Gold & Appel. Some of these funds went to FINDS to repay a portion of Gold & Appel's obligation to that entity.
The fees that Gold & Appel was obligated to pay to Entrée are detailed in the "CONSULTING AND MANAGEMENT SERVICES AGREEMENT BETWEEN GOLD & APPEL TRANSFER S.A. AND ENTRÉE INTERNATIONAL (Exhibit FF). Entrée International expended funds for it's [sic] rent, salaries and other overhead which was related to managing the activities of Gold & Appel and Gold & Appel's investments.
Anderson was free to make a loan to his corporation in order for it to meet expenses. That the funds were used in part to pay debts owed him, Entrée, and FINDS effectively made his loan a restructuring of those debt obligations, plus an infusion of additional funds to pay other debts. There is no evidence that Anderson failed to respect the separateness from him of Gold & Appel as a corporate entity. Indeed, he went so far as to maintain a charade that he was not ultimately in control of the ownership of the corporation, and I make that point to emphasize that his intent was to treat the loan as a genuine loan.

The payments left Gold & Appel obligated to Anderson alone on the new loan (versus being obligated to three entities beforehand). As to the existing obligations, Anderson could have left things the way they were, and demanded the posting of collateral from Gold & Appel in return for forbearance by the three entities. That would be the equivalent of what actually resulted.

9. FAILURE OF ANDERSON AND FINDS TO ENFORCE LIENS AND THEIR INTENTION TO RELEASE GOLD & APPEL FROM LIABILITY

Malone notes that no foreclosure proceedings, whether under applicable provisions of the Uniform Commercial Code or otherwise, have ever been commenced or completed with respect to any Gold & Appel asset pledged as security to Anderson and FINDS. That does not demonstrate that the liens were not genuine. Malone also notes that the Iceberg Letter stated that the "Agreement will relieve Gold & Appel of any continuing obligations to Walt Anderson and FINDS in relation to these specific obligations." Malone notes that Anderson acknowledges that the release of Gold & Appel was a gratuitous act, for which neither he nor FINDS received any consideration. Anderson Deposition, July 21, 2004, p. 455, lines 9-13. App. V. I fail to see how that helps Malone: any release of Gold & Appel was to its benefit. Moreover, as Anderson notes, the Iceberg Letter called for "a new loan agreement to be guaranteed by Iceberg Transport and secured by collateral interests in the new fund vehicles." Anderson and FINDS were not giving up the debt, but instead arranging for other entities (to whom Gold & Appel assets were to be transferred) to be substituted in place of Gold & Appel as owners of the collateral that would still secure payment of the debt. Moreover, as will be seen, once a formal consolidated note and an agreement regarding allocation of the collateral were entered into, Gold & Appel was still treated as a borrower.

B. LAW

1. ANDERSON'S STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS DEFENSE FAILS

Anderson argues that avoidance of his liens is barred by the statute of limitations, but that argument fails. He argues that the transfers to him of liens were made more than four years before this adversary proceeding was brought and, as a consequence, that the cause of action is extinguished by D.C. Code § 28-3109. That provision provides that, with respect to a cause of action brought under D.C. Code § 28-3104(a)(1), the cause of action is extinguished unless it is brought "within 4 years after the transfer was made or the obligation was incurred or, if later, within 1 year after the transfer or obligation was, or could reasonably have been discovered by the claimant[.]". D.C. Code § 28-3109(1). Transfers of unperfected security interests are deemed to be made immediately before the commencement of the action and consequently fall within the statute of limitations. See D.C. Code § 28-3106(2). Because the security interests in the Transferred Assets were unperfected, the transfers at issue fall within the statute of limitations.

Because the transfers to Comverge, Space, and Iceberg were made less than four years before the commencement of this adversary proceeding, the statute of limitations does not bar Malone's claims to avoid those transfers.

That provision provides:
For the purposes of this chapter:

(1) A transfer is made:
(A) With respect to an asset that is real property other than a fixture, including the interest of a seller or purchaser under a contract for the sale of the asset, when the transfer is so far perfected that a good-faith purchaser of the asset from the debtor against whom applicable law permits the transfer to be perfected cannot acquire an interest in the asset that is superior to the interest of the transferee; and
(B) With respect to an asset that is not real property or that is a fixture, when the transfer is so far perfected that a creditor on a simple contract cannot acquire a judicial lien otherwise than under this chapter that is superior to the interest of the transferee.
(2) If applicable law permits the transfer to be perfected as provided in paragraph (1) of this section and the transfer is not so perfected before the commencement of an action for relief under this chapter, the transfer is deemed made immediately before the commencement of the action.
D.C. Code § 28-3106.

Moreover, even without looking to when the transfers are deemed to have been made under § 28-3106(2), it is evident that several of the transfers occurred within the four-year period before the filing of this proceeding on May 16, 2005. The transfer of the interest in the claims involving WorldxChange occurred on August 10, 2001, when the FINDS Collateral Agreement was amended. The transfers of the AAT shares and the Panztel shares were made pursuant to the 2002 Pledge Agreement, dated July 28, 2002, which is well within the four-year limitations period.

2. MALONE HAS NOT SHOWN THAT THE LIENS ARE AVOIDABLE

Malone asserts:

A review of the incomplete Gold & Appel banking records provided to the Official Liquidator shows that there was no rational basis for Gold & Appel, which was owed substantial amounts by Anderson and FINDS at the time of the Transfers, to be borrowing any money from Anderson or FINDS. For example, after the transfer by Anderson of more than $20 million in Gold & Appel cash to Swiss bank accounts, Gold & Appel's banking records show no less than $2,500,000 transferred from Gold & Appel to FINDS from December, 1998 through July, 2002 and approximately $3,100,000 transferred from Gold & Appel to Anderson during the period June, 2000 through July, 2002. Material Facts, ¶ 59. Moreover, the "loan" by Anderson in July, 2002 was in all likelihood not from Anderson at all and primarily covered outstanding checks of Gold & Appel to Anderson and entities he owned and controlled. Material Facts, ¶ 70.
Malone Mem. at 37-38. This argument must be rejected.

First, Anderson's affidavit establishes that the loan was from Anderson. Although Malone questions the veracity of what Malone calls Anderson's self-serving statements regarding the genuineness of the July 2002 loan, Malone's attacks on Anderson's evidence as self-serving raises, at best, issues of credibility that must be reserved for trial. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Anderson, a reasonable finder of fact could conclude that the documents and evidence demonstrate that Anderson indeed made the July 2002 loan, and could reject any argument that funds for that loan more likely did not come from Anderson.

Second, the argument regarding Anderson and FINDS being liable to Gold & Appel appears to be that Anderson made huge transfers of monies or other assets from Gold & Appel, and made transfers to himself and to FINDS such that the transfers of liens to them occurred when they were liable to Gold & Appel. Yet Malone argues this in a conclusory fashion, without spelling out the legal basis upon which such obligations could exist. Moreover, a reasonable finder of fact could conclude that Anderson and FINDS (even if possibly liable to Gold & Appel) viewed themselves as able to decline to pay to Gold & Appel any potential debts they owed to Gold & Appel that had not been reduced to judgment, and to treat Gold & Appel as required to borrow from them if it was going to immediately obtain the use of their funds and property.

In any event, all that Malone's motion sought was a determination that the granting of the liens was a fraudulent conveyance. Malone did not seek summary judgment on any claim for money damages against Anderson and FINDS. Without Malone having sought a judgment for money damages against Anderson and FINDS, or having articulated a legal theory for imposing a judgment for such damages, the issue of damages has not been briefed in a way that the issue is framed in a procedurally regular fashion. I decline to take into account Malone's argument that Anderson and FINDS were indebted to Gold & Appel in deciding whether there was an actual intent to make a fraudulent conveyance.

Third, Malone's attacks on the fairness of consideration that Anderson and FINDS gave up in exchange for the transfers disregards the reasonably equivalent value of what Anderson and FINDS gave up in exchange for the obligations Gold & Appel incurred and for Gold & Appel's granting of liens to secure repayment of those obligations. Of course, "where actual intent to defraud creditors is proven, the conveyance will be set aside regardless of the adequacy of consideration given." United States v. McCombs, 30 F.3d 310, 328 (2d Cir. 1994). However, a relevant factor in determining whether a transfer was made (or an obligation was incurred) with actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud a creditor is whether "[t]he 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." D.C. Code § 28-3104(b)(8). Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Anderson and FINDS, a finder of fact reasonably could give heavy weight to the existence of reasonably equivalent value and conclude that the transfers of liens to Anderson and FINDS were not intentionally fraudulent.

Related to that issue of the effect of reasonably equivalent value, it bears noting that although some factors to be considered in determining whether there was an intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors in incurring obligations to Anderson and FINDS and granting them liens might weigh in favor of finding such an intent, a reasonable finder of fact could conclude that they are outweighed by the following considerations. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Anderson and FINDS, a reasonable finder of fact could conclude that Anderson and FINDS had accumulated assets of their own over time as to which Gold & Appel had no claim; that in dealing with Gold & Appel as creditors, they strove to maintain the corporate separateness of Gold & Appel from them; that they strove to document the terms of the obligations incurred to them by Gold & Appel; that the obligations incurred to them by Gold & Appel were for reasonably equivalent value; that in lending funds or putting their assets at the disposal of Gold & Appel, they subjected themselves to the risk of nonpayment; and that to guard against such nonpayment, it was prudent on their part to demand liens securing repayment. In contrast to Consumers United, 644 A.2d at 1358, this is not a case in which all the facts point only to an intent of Anderson and FINDS to defraud a creditor in obtaining liens from Gold & Appel, with no pure motive being possible. Accordingly, summary judgment is not appropriate.

Malone further argues:

[F]unds advanced by a transferee who participates in an intentional fraudulent transfer are not recoverable by such transferee nor can they offset the amounts fraudulently transferred. In re Spotless Tavern Co., Inc., 4 F.Supp. 752 (D. Md. 1933); Manufacturers Nat'l Bank v. Simon Mfg. Co., 123 N.E.340 (Mass. 1919); Citizens Bank and Trust Co. v. Rockingham Trailer Sales, Inc., 221 N.E.2d 868, (Mass. 1966); Sumpter v. U.S., 302 F.Supp.2d 707 (E.D. Mich. 2004) (trust receiving property from a grantor as part of fraudulent conveyance not entitled to credit for taxes paid and improvements made to property if trust actively participated in the fraud). Significantly, in Twyne's Case Mich. 44 Eliz. (Star Ch. 1601), the court observes . . . fraud is always appareled and clad with a trust, and a trust is the cover of fraud."
Malone Mem. at 43. FINDS, of course, did not make the fraudulent conveyances regarding the Madrid Mansion or the fraudulent conveyances to Comverge, Space, and Iceberg. Anderson made those transfers on behalf of Gold & Appel, but those transfers were separate from the transactions whereby Anderson made loans to Gold & Appel and received liens on various assets as security for the loans. The decisions Malone cites do not serve to defeat Anderson's and FINDS' liens as obtained in intentionally fraudulent transfers.

Sumpter, 302 F. Supp. 2d at 726-27, and In re Spotless Tavern Co., 4 F. Supp. at 755-56, lay out the general rule that a conveyee who actively participated in a fraudulent conveyance is not entitled, as against the conveyor's creditors when the conveyance is set aside, to reimbursement for expenditures made by it to preserve or enhance the value of the property. Here, the rule does not apply. It is Anderson and FINDS--not Comverge, Space, and Iceberg as conveyees of the fraudulent conveyances of assets--who are asserting claims against those assets for loans to Gold & Appel. Those loans preceded by many months the fraudulent conveyances to those three entities, and they were not made to facilitate the conveyances.

In Manufacturers' National Bank, the Simon Manufacturing Company transferred all of its assets to the Simon Coat Company to protect the assets from the bank. Manufacturers' Nat'l Bank, 123 N.E. at 343. Wanting to maintain its credit with certain merchandise creditors, the Simon Coat Company then paid the merchandise creditors of the manufacturing company. Id. The court found that the transfer of assets to the coat company was a fraudulent conveyance, and that because the coat company participated in the fraud, it was not allowed a credit for the amounts it paid to the merchandise creditors. Id. at 343. In that case, the conveyee of the fraudulently transferred assets--the coat company--was denied a credit. Manufacturers' National Bank is distinguishable because Anderson's and FINDS' liens were not obtained incident to furthering any fraudulent conveyance to themselves. Their loans were not made to enhance the value of the Madrid Mansion and preceded the transfer of assets to Space, Comverge, and Iceberg. In making their loans to Gold & Appel, Anderson and FINDS did not act in any capacity as conveyees of a fraudulent conveyance seeking to accomplish or enhance the fraudulent conveyance.

Similarly, Citizen Bank and Trust Company is distinguishable because it pertains to a party who received the fraudulently conveyed asset and who sought credit for a payment it made to the conveyor in exchange for obtaining the fraudulently conveyed property. The case deals with the fraudulent conveyance of a trailer home. Bradbury sold the trailer to Rockingham Trailer Sales, Inc., who turned around and sold it to another party. Citizens Bank & Trust Co., 221 N.E.2d at 870. The court, in determining that the transfer from Bradbury to Rockingham was a fraudulent conveyance, found that Rockingham (the conveyee) was an "active participant in the fraud" and therefore was not entitled to any credit for the amount it paid Bradbury for the trailer. Id. at 870-71. Here, Anderson's and FINDS' loans were not made to accomplish the fraudulent conveyances.

Anderson and FINDS obtained their liens as part of transactions with Gold & Appel that were wholly separate from the conveyances that this court has deemed fraudulent. Therefore, Malone's argument--that Anderson's and FINDS' liens and the loans they secure should be defeated as claims against Gold & Appel because Anderson, at other times and in different transactions, participated in fraudulent conveyances--fails.

This analysis does not address the different issue of Malone's right to set off the amount owed Anderson by any amount that Anderson owes Gold & Appel, an issue not before the court at this juncture.

III

Orders follow.

[Signed and dated above.] Copies to: All counsel of record; Jean-Claude Chalmet
Representative of Space Incorporated S.A. and Entrée
International Limited
Flat 9, 26-27 Conduit Street
London, W1S 2XZ, UNITED KINGDOM
Jean-Claude Chalmet
President and Sole Director
Iceberg Transport, S.A.
53 Filonos Street, 183 35 Piraeus
GREECE
Mr. Bob Werb
Foundation for the International Non-Governmental
Development of Space
4539 Seminary Road
Alexandria, VA 22304

Id.





Summaries of

Malone v. Iceberg Transp. S.A. (In re Gold & Appel Transfer S.A.)

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
Sep 6, 2013
Case No. 05-00775 (Bankr. D.D.C. Sep. 6, 2013)
Case details for

Malone v. Iceberg Transp. S.A. (In re Gold & Appel Transfer S.A.)

Case Details

Full title:In re GOLD & APPEL TRANSFER S.A., Debtor in a Foreign Proceeding. MEADE…

Court:UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Date published: Sep 6, 2013

Citations

Case No. 05-00775 (Bankr. D.D.C. Sep. 6, 2013)