Securities and Exchange Commission v. Nadel et al
Filing
1226
NOTICE OF APPEAL as to 1222 Order on Motion for Miscellaneous Relief by Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.. Filing fee not paid. (Attachments: # 1 Exhibit A)(Wirth, Steven)
Case 8:09-cv-00087-RAL-TBM Document 1222 Filed 02/02/16 Page 1 of 10 PageID 25745
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA
TAMPA DIVISION
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION,
Plaintiff,
v.
CASE NO: 8:09-cv-87-T-26TBM
ARTHUR NADEL; SCOOP CAPITAL, LLC;
and SCOOP MANAGEMENT, INC.,
Defendants,
SCOOP REAL ESTATE, L.P.;
VALHALLA INVESTMENT PARTNERS, L.P.;
VALHALLA MANAGEMENT, INC.;
VICTORY IRA FUND, LTD.; VICTORY FUND, LTD.;
VIKING IRA FUND, LLC; VIKING FUND, LLC;
and VIKING MANAGEMENT, LLC,
Relief Defendants.
/
ORDER
Before the Court is the Receiver’s Motion (1) for Determination that Wells Fargo
Bank, N.A.’s Failure to Comply with this Court’s Claims Administration Process
Extinguished its Purported Interests in Receivership Properties, and (II) for Release of
Proceeds of Sale of Sarasota Property (Dkt. 1209), the Response of Wells Fargo Bank,
N.A. (Wells Fargo) in Opposition and Request for Oral Argument (Dkts. 1216 & 1217),
and the Receiver’s Reply Brief and Opposition to Request for Oral Argument (Dkt.
EXHIBIT A
Case 8:09-cv-00087-RAL-TBM Document 1222 Filed 02/02/16 Page 2 of 10 PageID 25746
1221). After careful consideration of the Motion, the submissions of the parties,1 and the
applicable law, the Court concludes the motion should be granted.
BACKGROUND
Three loans were given by Wells Fargo to receivership entities: the Rite Aid loan,
the Laurel Preserve loan, and the second priority Moody loan. The loans were secured by
the two properties referred to as the Laurel Mountain and Sarasota properties, which are
the subject of the pending motion. The Laurel Mountain property became part of the
receivership by order of February 11, 2009.2 The Receiver initially contacted Wells
Fargo about marketing the Laurel Mountain property, and Wells Fargo began sending
loan statements in May 2009 for payment past due to the Receiver.3 Possession of and
title to the Sarasota property was granted to the Receiver by order dated January 28,
2010,4 and the order was recorded in Sarasota County on February 25, 2010.5 At this
time, the Laurel Mountain property is encumbered by Wells Fargo’s lien for a loan in the
1
Finding the paper submissions more than sufficient to decide the pending motion, the
Court denies Wells Fargo’s Request for Oral Argument (Dkt. 1217) as unnecessary.
2
See docket 44.
3
See docket 1210, Exh. A (invoice). Wells Fargo was in communication with the
Receiver regarding the Receiver’s marketing of the property as evidenced by exchanged
emails in June 2009. See docket 1210, para. 10 (citing docket 713-7, pp. 5 & 9).
4
See docket 327.
5
See docket 756-1.
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amount of $1.9 million,6 and the Sarasota property sold in April 2015 with proceeds of
$2,147,993.69.7
On April 21, 2010, this Court entered an order establishing a deadline for filing a
Proof of Claim Form and setting a Claim Bar Date of September 2, 2010.8 On March 2,
2012, this Court entered an order approving the determination of certain claims and claim
priorities, among other things, including the approval of a plan of distribution and a
proper objection procedure.9 In the March 2012 order, this Court reserved ruling on
Wells Fargo’s dispute with the Receiver over the Sarasota and the Laurel Mountain
properties,10 including the motion for determination that filing proofs of claim was
unnecessary to preserve state law property rights in the properties, until Wells Fargo’s motion
to disqualify the Receiver and his law firm was decided.11 The March 2012 order did not
alter the Claim Bar Date of September 2, 2010.
6
See docket 1210, para. 6.
7
See docket 1177 (Order approving sale of Sarasota property entered April 29, 2015)
and docket 1181, Exh. B, p. 8 (Receiver’s Eighteenth Interim Report stating Sarasota property
sold June 1, 2015, and attaching Exhibit B showing the amount of proceeds).
8
See docket 391.
9
See docket 776.
10
On February 8, 2012, Wells Fargo filed a motion for a determination that filing
proofs of claim was unnecessary to preserve secured creditors’ state law security interests
regarding certain properties including the Laurel Mountain and Sarasota properties. See docket
740.
11
See docket 776, para. 9.
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As part of the claims administration process, the Receiver would mail a claims
packet, which contained a Proof of Claim Form,12 to “each investor who, according to the
Receiver’s records, is associated with each pertinent account.”13 For creditors who were
not investors, such as Wells Fargo regarding the Laurel Mountain and Sarasota properties,
the Notice of Deadline Requiring Filing of Proofs of Claim provides that such noninvestors must provide to the Receiver the amount claimed due, together with supporting
documents, by the Claim Bar Date.14
In accordance with the claims administration process, the Receiver mailed one
claims packet to Wells Fargo (then Wachovia) at its Atlanta, Georgia, address.15 The
Receiver used the address listed in the documents provided by Wells Fargo on its loan
invoices for the both the Laurel Preserve and Rite-Aid loans. The Laurel Preserve loan
documents provide for notice by mail or delivery to one of two Roanoke, Virginia,
12
The Proof of Claim Form was approved and referenced in the April 2010 order
setting the Claim Bar Date. See docket 391 (“4. The Claims Administration Procedure as set
forth in the Motion and Proof of Claim Form as attached to the Motion as Exhibit A are
approved in all respects.”) and docket 390, Exh. A (Proof of Claim Form).
13
See docket 390, p. 8.
14
See docket 390, Exh. B, p. 4 (“If you were not an investor, but believe you are or
may be a creditor of one or more of the Receivership Entities, you must provide to the Receiver
by the Claim Bar Date (1) the amount you contend you are owed from any Receivership Entity;
(2) any amounts received from any Receivership Entity; and (3) legible copies of all documents
on which you base your claim (i.e., all invoices for services or goods provided, loan
documents, etc.) or, if any such documents are not available, a detailed explanation as to why
such documents are not available.”
15
See docket 1216, p. 13, and docket 713, para. 23, Exh. 10.
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addresses for Wachovia Bank.16 Although Wells Fargo received a claims packet from the
Receiver, it never submitted a proof of claim with respect to either the Laurel Mountain
or Sarasota properties. The Receiver informed Wells Fargo on April 5, 2011, that he had
not received a proof of claim regarding the Laurel Mountain property, and that “its
interest will not be considered by the Receiver” unless Wells Fargo “believes there are
circumstances that justify its failure to file a Proof of Claim” and submits a proof of claim
“and an explanation for the delay and any other materials or information which it deems
appropriate.”17 The Receiver reminded Wells Fargo of the passage of the Claim Bar Date
of September 2, 2010.
ARGUMENT
Wells Fargo argues, first, that the state property rights of a secured creditor trump
a federal equitable receivership in that a secured creditor need not file a proof of claim in
the receivership to maintain its priority interest, and any extinguishment of Wells Fargo’s
security interests would violate the Fifth Amendment as an unconstitutional taking.
Second, Wells Fargo argues that it should be permitted to file late proofs of claim for the
Laurel Mountain and Sarasota properties as timely under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
60(b)(1), and, in any event, Wells Fargo has shown excusable neglect for failing to file
them earlier. The Receiver argues that Wells Fargo’s failure to file a proof of claim in the
receivership results in the extinguishment of not only its rights to a cash distribution but
16
See docket 740-4, pp. 8 & 24 (Composite Exh. D attached to Wells Fargo’s Motion
for Determination that Filing Proofs of Claim Not Necessary, filed February 8, 2012).
17
See docket 713-8, Exh. 8.
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to its secured interests as well. The Court agrees with the Receiver and finds that Wells
Fargo’s security interests in the properties at issue were not preserved in this receivership
because of its failure to file a proof of claim, its Rule 60(b) request filed before the March
2012 order was untimely, and the Receiver’s failure to send more than one claims packet
to Wells Fargo does not constitute excusable neglect under Rule 60.
ANALYSIS
The Court need look only to the conduct of Wells Fargo (formerly Wachovia) after
the receivership was created in 2009, not before that time. The sole issue this Court will
address is whether Wells Fargo was required to timely file a proof of claim to preserve its
security interests in the two particular properties in these receivership proceedings.18 This
Court has already established, however, that “each person or entity that asserts a claim
against the Receivership” must submit a proof of claim by the Claim Bar date of
September 2, 2010, and that “any person or entity that fails to submit” a proof of claim
“shall be forever barred and precluded from asserting any claim.”19 This means that a
secured creditor must file a proof of claim before the Claim Bar Date.
18
The Court is well aware that the Receiver generally takes property subject to liens
and encumbrances. Wells Fargo, however, seems to argue on the one hand that it should be
allowed to seek redress to its collateral in these receivership proceedings, which would be
subject to the claims administrative process, and on the other hand, that the proper procedure is
to seek an order from this Court requesting the Receiver release the collateral or the injunction
be set aside to enforce Wells Fargo’s state law remedies against the collateral. See docket
1216, p. 10, citing Clark on Receivers and two cases. It appears from its submissions that
Wells Fargo seeks to be excused from failing to file proofs of claim in the receivership
proceedings.
19
See docket 1174 (Order Denying Turnover of Sales Proceeds of Fairview Property
to BB&T).
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Wells Fargo is not excused as a secured creditor from filing a proof of claim in this
federal equitable receivership under the conduct of the proceedings established in this
Court. As in the case of BB&T in this Court’s prior order, the burden rests on Wells
Fargo “to protect its rights pursuant to the framework clearly set forth in the conduct of
this receivership.”20 Wells Fargo disagrees with this Court’s prior order, arguing that a
secured creditor’s in rem rights to the collateral are distinct from its right to receive a cash
distribution from the liquidation of general receivership assets. See SEC v. Spongetech
Delivery Sys., 98 F.Supp.3d 530, 533 (E.D.N.Y. 2015);21 SEC v. Madison Real Estate
Group, LLC, 647 F.Supp.2d 1271, 1276 (D. Utah 2009). While this may generally be
true, a secured creditor must follow the dictates for protecting its rights to its collateral in
the receivership proceedings by following the format outlined in the claims administration
process for making a claim. The administrative process here requires both secured and
unsecured creditors to comply with the process by filing a proof of claim.
Wells Fargo contends that the failure to file a proof of claim, at most, may prohibit
its receiving payment for a deficiency claim. In making this argument, Wells Fargo
further urges this Court to find a violation of the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
The Receiver is correct that the Fifth Amendment is triggered by governmental action,22
20
See docket 1174, p. 7.
21
The Spongetech was not brought to this Court’s attention when it issued the order
on BB&T on April 15, 2015, as Spongetech was decided just two weeks earlier on March 31,
2015.
22
See Lingle v. Chevron U.S.A. Inc., 544 U.S. 528, 537, 125 S.Ct. 2074, 2081, 161
L.Ed.2d 876 (2005).
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not the actions of a private receiver marshaling private assets to pay private parties. See
United States v. Beszborn, 21 F.3d 62, 68 (5th Cir. 1994) (holding that receiver Resolution
Trust Corporation acts as “private, non-governmental entity, and is not the Government”).
Moreover, the taking must be for a public use. See Scott v. Jackson County, 297 F.
App’x 623, 625-26 (9th Cir. 2008). No case has been cited to the Court that would subject
the actions of a receiver in a federal equitable receivership to the Takings Clause.
Wells Fargo asks this Court to permit it to file a late proof of claim, because on
February 8, 2012, it filed a motion for determination of whether the filing of a proof of
claim was necessary or, in the alternative, for leave to file a late claim.23 By filing the
motion before the March 2012 order, Wells Fargo argues, it met the one-year deadline
under Rule 60(b)(1). Wells Fargo relies on a prior order of this Court for the proposition
that the start date of the one-year deadline began March 2, 2012.24 The relevant start date
of the one-year period for Wells Fargo’s claims, however, was not determined by the
order denying the turnover of funds to BB&T. The prior order of this Court considering
the turnover of funds to BB&T did not discuss any start date other than the date of the
March 2012 order, because the parties did not argue an earlier date to the Court.25
23
See docket 740.
24
See docket 1174 (Order denying BB&T’s Motion for Turnover of Sale Proceeds of
Fairview Property Subject to Mortgage Interest).
25
The Court did not consider and reject the position that Rule 60's one-year period
began prior to March 2012 on the Claim Bar Date in September 2010.
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Here, the Receiver argues that the start date for purposes of Rule 60's one-year
period falls on the Claim Bar Date of September 2, 2010. Consequently, the Receiver
contends that Wells Fargo was required to file its Rule 60 motion by September 2, 2011.
Wells Fargo, however, did not file its motion until February 2012. Between Wells
Fargo’s incorrect reliance on the prior BB&T order regarding the start date and the
Receiver’s choice of September 2, 2010, the Claim Bar Date, the Court finds for purposes
of this motion, Rule 60's one-year period began to run on the Claim Bar Date.
With respect to excusable neglect, Wells Fargo argues that the Receiver mailed
only one claims packet, despite the three separate loans given by Wells Fargo. It
contends that the Receiver should have sent three separate claims packets, one for “each”
account, and the Receiver should have mailed a claims packet for the Laurel Mountain
property to one of two Roanoke, Virginia, addresses in accordance with the Laurel
Preserve loan documents.26 Wells Fargo returned only one completed Proof of Claim
Form before the bar date for the purpose of a claim relating to a loan to Scoop Real
Estate, L.P., secured by property in Graham, North Carolina (the Rite-Aid property),
which is different from the Laurel Mountain property.27 The Court finds that the claims
administrative process did not require the Receiver to send separate claims packets for
each of the loans, which involved a non-investor creditor. Despite notice and many
communications with the Receiver regarding the Laurel Mountain and Sarasota properties
26
See docket 740-4, pp. 8 & 24 (Composite Exh. D attached to Wells Fargo’s Motion
for Determination that Filing Proofs of Claim Not Necessary, filed February 8, 2012).
27
See docket 713, para. 25, Exh. 11.
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before the Claim Bar Date, Wells Fargo’s failure to file timely proofs of claims by the
Claim Bar Date, and even one year thereafter, is not excused by the Receiver’s neglect in
filing separate claims packets for each loan.
It is therefore ORDERED AND ADJUDGED that the Receiver’s Motion (1) for
Determination that Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.’s Failure to Comply with this Court’s Claims
Administration Process Extinguished its Purported Interests in Receivership Properties,
and (II) for Release of Proceeds of Sale of Sarasota Property (Dkt. 1209) is GRANTED
to the extent that this Court finds that Wells Fargo failed to comply with the claim
administrative process and its failure did not constitute excusable neglect for purposes of
Rule 60.
It is further ORDERED AND ADJUDGED that this order shall not become final
until the time for filing a notice of appeal has expired and no notice of appeal was filed
or, if a notice of appeal is timely filed, until the appellate process has terminated with an
affirmance of this order.
DONE AND ORDERED at Tampa, Florida, on February 2, 2016.
s/Richard A. Lazzara
RICHARD A. LAZZARA
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
COPIES FURNISHED TO:
Counsel of Record
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