ADP Dealer Services, Inc. et al v. Scott & Reynolds, LLC
Filing
91
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER by Chief Judge Joseph H. McKinley, Jr. Defendants' motion for summary judgment (DN 83 ) is granted in part and denied in part as set forth. cc: Counsel(JAC)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
WESTERN DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY
BOWLING GREEN DIVISION
CIVIL ACTION NO. 1:14-CV-00045-JHM
CDK GLOBAL, LLC, and
IP NETWORK SERVICES, INC.
PLAINTIFFS
V.
SCOTT & REYNOLDS, LLC,
YARD PARK, LLC, JAMES D.
SCOTT, JAMES A. SCOTT, and
ROBERT REYNOLDS
DEFENDANTS
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
This matter is before the Court on the motion for summary judgment by Defendants Scott
& Reynolds, LLC (“S&R”), Yard Park, LLC (“Yard Park”), James D. Scott (“Scotty”), James A.
Scott (“Tony”), and Robert Reynolds (“Robert”). (DN 83.) Fully briefed, this matter is ripe for
decision. For the following reasons, the motion is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN
PART.
I. BACKGROUND
In 2009, Dan Reynolds (“Dan”) and Scotty organized S&R as a limited liability
company, with Scotty maintaining a 51% interest in the company and Dan maintaining a 49%
interest. (Articles of Organization [DN 85-1] at 6.) This LLC bought a Bobcat equipment
dealership in Bowling Green, Kentucky, and continued to operate the dealership until March 18,
2014, when the dealership was sold to E.K.D. Bowling Green, LLC. (Asset Purchase Agreement
[DN 57-11] at 2.) During the operation of the dealership by S&R, both Robert Reynolds, Dan’s
son, and Tony Scott, Scotty’s son, were employed there. On December 31, 2012, Dan gifted his
entire 49% interest in the LLC to Robert, and Scotty gifted 49% of his interest to Tony while
retaining a 2% interest. (Written Consent In Lieu of Meeting of the Members [DN 85-5] at 1.)
No further transfers of interests have occurred since then.1
On November 9, 2012, S&R entered into a contract with ADP Dealer Services, Inc., the
predecessor in interest to Plaintiff CDK Global, LLC. (DN 28-1.) On November 26, 2012, S&R
also entered into a contract with Plaintiff IP Network Services, Inc. (DN 28-6.) Pursuant to
these contracts, the Plaintiffs provided S&R with a dealer management system, a computer
network, and telephone system for their business, as well as technical support for these services
and all necessary equipment. (Id., DN 28-4.) This system was installed and operational for S&R
by April of 2013. (Dep. Robert Reynolds [DN 55-2] at 31:6–11.)
In addition to selling Bobcat equipment, S&R also sold lawn mowers and other lawn and
garden products. In 2013, S&R began to brand the lawn and garden side of their business as
“Yard Park,” although both the lawn and garden business and Bobcat dealership were operated
by S&R as one store. (Id. at 80:7–81:8.) Additionally, S&R opened a “satellite store” in 2013
that was also branded as “Yard Park” and sold the same lawn and garden products as the original
location; however, this location lacked a service department. (Id. at 85:2–9.)
Around the fall of 2013, Bobcat informed S&R that it would no longer be a Bobcat dealer
and had until March 1, 2014, when “the plug was being pulled.” (Id. at 101:25–104:10.) This
led S&R to sell the property where the dealership was located, the office furniture, rental fleet,
shop tools, and supplies to E.D.K. Bowling Green, LLC, on March 18, 2014. (Id.; Asset
Purchase Agreement [DN 57-11] at 2.)
A representative of S&R notified the Plaintiffs on
February 12, 2014, that the dealership would undergo a change of ownership and inquired about
1
The record is unclear as to whether S&R continues to formally exist, as there is no evidence that the LLC has been
formally wound up or that articles of dissolution have been filed with the Kentucky Secretary of State, which are
required under S&R’s operating agreement for dissolution and termination. (DN 85-1, at 9.) However, Scotty
agreed in testimony that “the company [was] pretty much done by January 23rd, 2015.” (Dep. James D. Scott [DN
55-1] at 104:16–18) (hereinafter “Dep. Scotty”).
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how to proceed with the contracts between S&R and the Plaintiffs. (Email Chain [DN 56-9] at
2.) The Plaintiffs notified S&R on February 14, 2014, that a buyout of the contracts would cost
S&R $81,856.19, with that amount later being amended on March 7, 2014, to $83,504.95. (Id.;
Email Chain [DN 56-10] at 1.)
Letters were then sent on March 24, 2014, to S&R that
demanded payment under both contracts and the equipment lease, stating that S&R was in
default for losing the Bobcat franchise rights and failing to make scheduled payments, among
other reasons. (Demand Letters [DN 28-3, 28-5, 28-8].)
On March 7, 2014, Yard Park, LLC, filed articles of organization with the Kentucky
Secretary of State, listing Scotty and Tony as members.2 (Articles of Organization [DN 57-7] at
5.) Yard Park, LLC, operates a lawn and garden store at the same location as the former S&R
satellite store, as the property is personally owned by Scotty. (Dep. Scotty [DN 55-1] at 40:11,
59:3.) Scotty and Tony continue to operate this store.
On April 1, 2014, the Plaintiffs initiated this lawsuit, with their First Amended Complaint
asserting claims of breach of contract, unjust enrichment, conversion, veil piercing/successor
liability, aiding and abetting, interference with business relations, and fraudulent conveyance,
while also seeking possession of any of Plaintiffs’ equipment retained by the Defendants. (DN
28.) In their answer, the Defendants asserted a counterclaim for breach of contract. (DN 35.)
On August 18, 2016, this Court granted the Defendants’ motion for summary judgment as to the
Plaintiffs’ claim for veil piercing, the Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment as to the
Defendants’ counterclaim for breach of contract, and the Plaintiffs’ motion for summary
judgment as to the Plaintiffs’ claim for breach of contract. (DN 73.) Presently, the Defendants
have moved the Court for summary judgment as to the Plaintiffs’ claims for aiding and abetting
2
The Articles of Organization state Scotty holds a 51% interest and Tony holds a 49% interest, but in Scotty’s
deposition, he twice stated that he only owns 15% of Yard Park and Tony owns 85%. (Dep. Scotty [DN 55-2] at
53:23, 60:4.)
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(Count 18), interference with business relations (Count 19), and fraudulent conveyances (Count
20). (DN 83.)
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Before the Court may grant a motion for summary judgment, it must find that there is no
genuine dispute as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a
matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). The moving party bears the initial burden of specifying the
basis for its motion and identifying that portion of the record that demonstrates the absence of a
genuine issue of material fact. Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322 (1986). Once the
moving party satisfies this burden, the non-moving party thereafter must produce specific facts
demonstrating a genuine issue of fact for trial. Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242,
252 (1986).
Although the Court must review the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, the non-moving party must do more than merely show that there is some
“metaphysical doubt as to the material facts.” Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co., Ltd. v. Zenith Radio
Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 586 (1986). Instead, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure require the nonmoving party to present specific facts showing that a genuine factual issue exists by “citing to
particular parts of materials in the record” or by “showing that the materials cited do not
establish the absence . . . of a genuine dispute[.]” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(1). “The mere existence
of a scintilla of evidence in support of the [non-moving party’s] position will be insufficient;
there must be evidence on which the jury could reasonably find for the [non-moving party].”
Anderson, 477 U.S. at 252.
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III. DISCUSSION
A. SUCCESSOR LIABILITY
As a preliminary matter, the Court must address whether the Plaintiffs’ claim for
successor liability remains viable, as this will determine the scope of the Plaintiffs’ claim for
aiding and abetting. While the Defendants do not address this claim in their motion for summary
judgment, the Plaintiffs state in their response that summary judgment should not be granted on
this claim, as the Defendants have failed to raise the issue, and even if they had, summary
judgment would not be appropriate. (DN 84, at 14–17.) The Defendants argue in their reply that
the Court’s prior opinion granting summary judgment on the veil piercing claim foreclosed the
successor liability claim as well. (DN 90, at 2–3.)
Count 17 of the Plaintiffs’ First Amended Complaint is entitled “Veil Piercing/Successor
Liability – Against All Defendants.” (DN 28, at 17.) After stating the grounds upon which the
claim is asserted, the Complaint states that the Plaintiffs “should be permitted to pierce the veil
of [S&R] and Yard Park and collect the amounts owed by [S&R] and/or Yard Park directly
from” any of the Defendants. (Id. ¶ 133.) Immediately following this, though, the Complaint
states that, “in the alternative, [S&R] and Yard Park share such continuity of ownership,
management, personnel, physical location, and business operations, among other factors, such
that Yard Park is the successor to [S&R] obligations” to the Plaintiffs. (Id. ¶ 134.) The
Defendants moved this Court for summary judgment “with regard to the piercing of the
corporate veil,” (DN 54-1, at 1) and this Court granted the motion. (DN 73, at 5–13.)
Neither veil piercing or successor liability are causes of actions; instead, they are “merely
a means by which a complainant can reach a second corporation or individual upon a cause of
action that otherwise would have existed only against the first corporation.”
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Weingartner
Lumber & Supply Co., Inc. v. Kadant Composites, LLC, 2010 WL 996473, at *4 (E.D. Ky. Mar.
16, 2010) (internal citations and quotations omitted). Under Kentucky law, veil piercing is a
separate theory of liability from successor liability. See id. at *4–8 (analyzing each theory of
liability separately); Excel Energy, Inc. v. Cyprus Amax Coal Sales Corp., 2008 WL 4127147, at
*1 (W.D. Ky. Sep. 4, 2008) (recognizing that plaintiff was not attempting to recover under a
veil-piercing theory but rather a successor liability theory). However, this Court’s August 18,
2016 Memorandum Opinion and Order necessarily foreclosed the Plaintiffs’ success under a
theory of successor liability when it granted summary judgment as to the veil piercing claim, as
the claims were intertwined so as to require both to be decided.
First, it is important to understand what theory of liability would apply to each
Defendant, something the Plaintiffs have not made entirely clear. (See Pl.’s Resp. to Def. Mot.
for Summ. J. [DN 56] at 32) (“[I]t is clear that there are sufficient facts to pierce the limited
liability veils and treat Defendants as one entity . . .”) (emphasis added). S&R has an obligation
to the Plaintiffs. To hold Yard Park liable for this obligation, Yard Park would have to be a
successor entity to S&R; piercing S&R’s veil would not impose an obligation on Yard Park, as
Yard Park is not a member of S&R. Conversely, to hold the members of S&R (Scotty, Tony,
and Robert) liable for this obligation, the Court would have to pierce S&R’s veil, as Scotty,
Tony, and Robert are not successor entities to S&R.
However, Count 17 of the Complaint seeks to “pierce the veil of [S&R] and Yard Park”
so as to hold the members of each (Scotty, Tony, and Robert for S&R; Scotty and Tony for Yard
Park) all liable. (Pl.’s First Amend. Compl. [DN 28] ¶ 133) (emphasis added). The Defendants
moved for summary judgment as to the veil piercing claim, in which the Plaintiffs sought to
pierce the veils of both S&R and Yard Park. In order to decide whether Yard Park’s veil should
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be pierced, it was necessary to decide whether Yard Park is a successor entity to S&R, since
Yard Park would have no obligation to the Plaintiffs that would make veil piercing necessary
unless it were a successor entity to S&R. Thus, it was necessary to decide the issue of Yard
Park’s successor liability in order for the Court to fully resolve the veil piercing claim against
S&R and Yard Park. Therefore, the August 18, 2016 Memorandum Opinion and Order fully
disposed of Count 17 by granting summary judgment in favor of the Defendants.
B. INTERFERENCE WITH BUSINESS RELATIONS
Count 19 of the Complaint alleges that each Defendant “intentionally interfered with the
valuable and established contractual relationships” between the Plaintiffs and S&R. In order to
recover for tortious interference with a contract, a plaintiff must prove (1) the existence of a
contract; (2) knowledge of the contract; (3) intent to cause a breach of that contract; (4) breach of
the contract caused by the defendant’s actions; (5) damages; and (6) that the defendant had no
privilege or justification to excuse its conduct. Snow Pallet, Inc. v. Monticello Banking Co., 367
S.W.3d 1, 5–6 (Ky. 2012) (citations omitted). However, “[t]he failure to perform a contractual
obligation typically does not give rise to a cause of action in tort . . . [it is only] if a plaintiff can
establish the existence of an independent legal duty, [that] he may maintain an action in tort even
though the acts complained of also constitute a breach of contract.” Francis v. Armstrong Coal
Reserves, Inc., 2012 WL 777271, at *4 (W.D. Ky. Mar. 7, 2012) (quoting Mims v. WesternSouthern Agency, Inc., 226 S.W.3d 833, 836 (Ky. Ct. App. 2007).
First, the claim against S&R fails the independent legal duty rule. The contracts with
which S&R allegedly interfered were the contracts between S&R and the Plaintiffs. S&R owed
the Plaintiffs a duty to not breach the contract, and nothing more. The Court has already granted
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the Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment as it pertains to S&R’s breach, and the independent
legal duty rule prohibits a recovery in tort for the same breach.
Turning to the claim as it pertains to the remaining Defendants, the Plaintiffs have failed
to establish evidence indicating that Scotty, Tony, Robert, or Yard Park caused the breach of the
contracts between the Plaintiffs and S&R. The demand letters sent from the Plaintiffs to S&R on
March 24, 2014 (DN 28-3, 28-5, 28-8), indicate that S&R breached the contracts in the following
ways:
(1) by losing its franchise right to operate its heavy equipment dealership (DN 28-3, 28-5,
28-8);
(2) by failing to pay all amounts when due (DN 28-5, 28-8);
(3) by attempting to sell equipment leased under the contract (DN 28-5);
(4) by conducting an asset sale under the lease (DN 28-5);
(5) by failing to own the required amount of ownership in the location where the services
are provided under the contract (DN 28-8); and
(6) by defaulting under the other agreements. (DN 28-3.)
The record is devoid of any evidence explaining when or how criteria (3), (4), or (5) occurred,
meaning that the record is similarly devoid of any evidence indicating that Scotty, Tony, Robert,
or Yard Park caused these events to occur. And criteria (6) is reflexive, implicated when only
one of the other five criteria have been demonstrated, meaning that separate consideration of it is
not necessary. Thus, the only two criteria that merit consideration are the loss of the franchise
rights and failure to pay.
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First, the Plaintiffs have not demonstrated that Scotty, Tony, Robert, or Yard Park caused
S&R to lose its franchise rights to operate the Bobcat dealership. The only evidence indicating
why S&R lost the franchise rights comes in the depositions of Robert and Scotty. Robert stated:
Basically, when Bobcat came to us and said that we -- you know,
we’re kind of being forced out, and that we had ‘till March 1st,
2014 to either sell the business or, you know, or the plug was being
pulled. At that same time, Bobcat was out trying to recruit another
Bobcat dealer to take over the territory . . . The business was, you
know, that was kind of being given to [the dealership’s buyer] by
Bobcat company, the franchise, so we really just had a facility to
sell.
(Dep. Robert Reynolds [DN 55-2] at 101:25–102:5, 103:16–18.) Scotty further stated that S&R
had no choice but to relinquish its franchise since “GE, the one that was financing our floor plan
and everything pulled the plug on us.” (Dep. Scotty [DN 55-1] at 41:9–11.) This evidence
indicates that the franchise rights were lost due to either Bobcat’s unhappiness with the
performance of S&R as a Bobcat dealership or Bobcat’s desire to allow a different ownership
group to take over S&R’s geographic territory. The Plaintiffs have put forth no evidence of an
alternative theory as to why the franchise rights were lost so as to create a dispute as to a material
fact.
Second, the Plaintiffs have not demonstrated that Scotty, Tony, Robert, or Yard Park
caused S&R to become delinquent in its obligations to the Plaintiffs. There is no dispute that
S&R failed to pay per the terms of the contract; such was the basis for this Court granting the
Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment on it claim of breach of contract against S&R. (DN 73,
at 17.) But the fact that S&R failed to pay does not establish that Scotty, Tony, Robert, or Yard
Park caused the failure to pay. The record indicates that it was not within the job descriptions of
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any of the individuals to ensure that bills were timely paid, 3 and there is no evidence that any of
these individuals instructed an S&R employee to withhold payment. Merely being a member of a
company that misses a payment does not mean that each individual member caused that payment
to be missed.
Nor is there evidence that demonstrates Yard Park caused S&R to not pay the Plaintiffs;
while there are allegations of fraudulent conveyances between S&R and Yard Park that the Court
has yet to address, even if such conveyances occurred and left S&R without adequate funds to
pay the Plaintiffs, S&R would still be the entity that caused the payment to be withheld, as it
would have been within its power to pay before the conveyance was made. The Plaintiffs have
asserted no evidence beyond the fact that the Defendants were generally present and involved
with S&R at the time that S&R failed to pay, and this is not sufficient evidence to create a
dispute as to whether the Defendants caused the breach to occur. Thus, the claim against each
Defendant for interference with business relations must fail, and the Defendants’ motion for
summary judgment is GRANTED.
C. FRAUDULENT CONVEYANCES
Count 20 of the Complaint asserts that S&R has “transferred assets and other collateral
with the intent to delay, hinder, or defraud creditors and other persons, including [the Plaintiffs],”
in violation of KRS 378.010 and 378.020. (DN 28 ¶ 142.) Because Scotty, Tony, Robert, and
Yard Park were the recipients of these allegedly fraudulent transfers, the Plaintiffs seek to avoid
the transfers and levy on the transferred assets. (Id. ¶¶ 143, 144.) KRS 378.010 and 378.020
have been repealed; however, that repeal was not effective until January 1, 2016, after all of the
3
Scotty testified, and Robert confirmed, that Scotty was not involved in the day-to-day operations of the company.
(Dep. Scotty [DN 55-1] at 30:23–24; Dep. Robert Reynolds [DN 55-2] at 91:12–13). Robert worked a variety of
jobs, but he never rose to general manager or worked in accounting. (Dep. Robert Reynolds [DN 55-2] at 21:23–
22:4, 88:23–89:8). Tony never had a formal job title and would mostly run errands when needed. (Id. at 92:5–11.)
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alleged fraudulent transfers, meaning that the statutes would apply to the conveyances in this
case. KRS 378.010 states that “[e]very gift, conveyance, assignment or transfer . . . made with
the intent to delay, hinder or defraud creditors . . . shall be void as against such creditors[.]”
KRS 378.020 similarly states that “[e]very gift, conveyance, assignment, transfer, or charge
made by a debtor . . . without valuable consideration therefor, shall be void as to all his then
existing creditors[.]”
“In actions to set aside a conveyance for fraud, the fraud must be established by clear and
convincing evidence.”
Hayes v. Rodgers, 447 S.W.2d 597, 600 (Ky. 1969).
However,
“Kentucky acknowledges the difficulty of finding direct evidence of fraudulent intent—
companies do not regularly announce plans to defraud creditors.” Ky. Petroleum Operating Ltd.
v. Golden, 2015 WL 927358, at *4 (E.D. Ky. Mar. 4, 2015). Therefore,
[w]hen sufficient ‘badges of fraud’ are shown that it would be
unreasonable, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, to find
that the transfer was not fraudulent . . . the plaintiff is entitled to a
directed verdict [or summary judgment] in the absence of
countervailing proof tending to show that the transfer or
conveyance was made fairly and without intent to defraud the
creditor.
Russell Cty. Feed Mill, Inc. v. Kimbler, 520 S.W.2d 309, 311 (Ky. 1975) (citations omitted).
There are four generally recognized badges of fraud that Kentucky courts consider:
(1) where the transfer or conveyance is between persons who are related or occupy a
confidential relationship;
(2) where the transfer or conveyance contains false statements and recitals of
consideration, or inadequate consideration;
(3) where the transfer or conveyance is made by a debtor in anticipation of a suit against
him or after a suit has begun or is pending against him; and
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(4) where the transfer or conveyance is made by a debtor who transfers all or any
appreciable part of his property when he is insolvent or financially embarrassed.
Id. at 311–12; Bank of Josephine v. Hopson, 516 S.W.2d 339, 341 (Ky. 1974).
The Plaintiffs in this case have not moved for summary judgment; instead, they argue
that there are genuine disputes of fact that necessitate a trial. Therefore, to avoid summary
judgment, the Plaintiffs must first demonstrate sufficient badges of fraud so that it “would be
unreasonable . . . to find that the transfer was not fraudulent.” Russell Cty. Feed Mill, 520
S.W.2d at 311. If sufficient badges of fraud are not shown, summary judgment is appropriate
for the Defendants. If sufficient badges of fraud are shown, however, summary judgment will
still be appropriate if the Defendants can then show “countervailing proof . . . that the transfer or
conveyance was made fairly and without intent to defraud the creditor.” Id. If there remains a
genuine dispute of a material fact after these showings have been made, summary judgment will
be denied.
In their response to the Defendants’ motion for summary judgment, the Plaintiffs identify
eight categories of alleged fraudulent transfers. The Court will address each in turn.
1. INVENTORY TRANSFERS
The Plaintiffs allege that S&R fraudulently transferred inventory to Scotty, who then
either gave or loaned the inventory to Yard Park. (Pl.’s Resp. to Def.’s Mot. for Summ. J. [DN
84] ¶ 18.) Scotty’s deposition and associated financial records indicate that Scotty bought
$403,000 worth of inventory from S&R on April 14, 2014, and $84,804.84 worth of inventory
from S&R on April 23, 2014. (Dep. Scotty [DN 55-2] at 114:12–116:18). As to the badges of
fraud present in this transaction, Scotty is a member of S&R and therefore is in at least a
fiduciary relationship with S&R. Both transactions were also made in April 2014, after the
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demand letter had been sent to S&R on March 24, 2014, raising questions as to whether the
conveyance was made in anticipation of a suit. And the transaction took place after the sale of
the dealership to E.K.D. Bowling Green, which, after paying off bank loans on the property, left
S&R at least close to insolvency. (Dep. Robert Reynolds [DN 55-2] at 110:8-15 (“. . . and then
there was really nothing left after [paying the bank loans]”).) This sufficiently demonstrates that
these conveyances bear badges of fraud.
However, S&R has a quite convincing argument in rebuttal: the inventory did not belong
to S&R. There appears to be no dispute that the inventory Scotty purchased from S&R was not
owned outright by S&R but was rather “floor-planned” by different vendors of S&R, meaning
that these vendors allowed S&R to possess the inventory on its sales floor and pay the vendors
once the items ultimately sold. (Dep. Scotty [DN 55-1] at 81:13–15.) If these pieces of
inventory had not been sold by S&R, the vendors alone would have had a right to this property,
not another creditor like the Plaintiffs. Thus, when Scotty purchased the inventory, he actually
injected funds into S&R, rather than siphoning assets out of it, which S&R then could use to pay
off the amounts owed on the individual pieces of inventory and any other obligations like the one
owed to the Plaintiffs. The fact that these funds were not ultimately used to pay the debt owed to
the Plaintiffs, or that there were no funds left over after fulfilling the floor plan obligations, does
not make Scotty’s initial purchase of the inventory fraudulent. This is sufficient proof that the
transfer was made without intent to defraud the Plaintiffs, and no reasonable juror could
conclude that the transfer was made with the intent to defraud. Therefore, the motion for
summary judgment as to this conveyance is GRANTED.
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2. PAYMENTS FROM SCOTTY TO YARD PARK
The Plaintiffs argue that Scotty transferred a total of $706,256.75 to Yard Park, either in
the form of a gift or loan, that includes the above inventory that Scotty purchased from S&R.
(Pl.’s Resp. to Def.’s Mot. for Summ. J. [DN 84] ¶ 19.) Yard Park’s balance sheets list this
amount as a loan (DN 58-9, at 1), but Scotty testified that he was not sure if he would ever seek
repayment from Yard Park. (Dep. Scotty [DN 55-1] 124:12–23.) The Plaintiffs assert that “the
clear implication [of these transactions] is that they were unfair to the failing S&R.” (Pl.’s Resp.
to Def.’s Mot. for Summ. J. [DN 84] ¶ 19.) Regardless of the Plaintiffs perception of these
transactions, any gift or loan made by Scotty to Yard Park does not implicate KRS 378.010 or
378.020. The Plaintiffs were creditors of only S&R, not Scotty or Yard Park. Neither Scotty nor
Yard Park qualifies as a “debtor” under KRS 378.020, and the Plaintiffs have failed to explain
how a gift or loan made between entities that have no obligations to the Plaintiffs could be made
with the intent to defraud them.
Therefore, the motion for summary judgment as to this
conveyance is GRANTED.
3. YARD PARK’S ASSUMPTION OF S&R’S DEBTS
Yard Park assumed two “Long Term Liabilities” from S&R: one from Ford Credit for
$22,476.98 for a truck, and one from Independence Bank for $29,298.10 that was likely for a
trailer, for a total of $51,775.08. (Dep. Scotty [DN 55-1] 87:10–88:5; DN 85-9.) As to the
badges of fraud attached to this transaction, the conveyance was between companies with
common members, as Tony and Scotty were members of both S&R and Yard Park. While this is
not the quintessential confidential relationship, the Court will at least consider the relatedness of
the two entities through their common members. But there is no evidence of the timing of these
transactions that may shed light on how close they came to S&R’s insolvency or the Plaintiffs’
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demand for payment. Likewise, there is no evidence on the valuation of these items so as to
determine whether assumption of the debts alone was adequate consideration for the property.
The badges of fraud in this transaction are not sufficient to even require rebuttal evidence
from the Defendants. The property the Plaintiffs accuse S&R of disposing of so as to avoid its
obligation to the Plaintiffs was clearly encumbered by obligations to other creditors. If the
liabilities were not assumed by someone who would make the required payments to those
creditors, the property would have been repossessed by those creditors, and the Plaintiffs would
have no right to that property to fulfill S&R’s obligation to them. There is not sufficient
evidence of an intent to defraud the Plaintiffs for the claim to survive the Defendants’ motion.
Therefore, the motion for summary judgment as to this conveyance is GRANTED.
4. PAYMENTS TO ROBERT REYNOLDS
The Plaintiffs argue that $151,343.62 was transferred from S&R to Robert “without
sufficient explanation or support.” (Pl.’s Resp. to Def.’s Mot. for Summ. J. [DN 84] ¶ 22.) As to
the badges of fraud, Robert is a member of S&R and is at least in a fiduciary relationship with
S&R. But the timing of these payments significantly diminishes the likelihood that they were
made with the intent to defraud the Plaintiffs. These payments began February 14, 2012 and
occurred roughly twice a month until March 14, 2014. (DN 85-10, at 1.) All of these payments
occurred before the demand letters were sent by the Plaintiffs, and only $6000 was paid to
Robert after the first quote on the buyout of the contract came on February 14, 2014. (Id.) Thus,
only a very small portion of the total amount at issue could have arguably been made in
anticipation of a suit by the Plaintiffs. Further, no payments occurred after the dealership was
sold on March 18, meaning that there is no evidence that the transfer was made when S&R was
near insolvency.
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The Defendants have adequately rebutted any badges of fraud associated with this
transaction. Although Robert did not have an employment contract, these payments were made
as compensation to him, based on both his salary and the commissions he earned from sales.
Thus, there was no mere recital of consideration with these transactions. The Court has already
determined in its prior opinion that Robert averaged $5,820.90 per month while working at S&R,
which hardly “indicate[s] that [he was] siphoning funds from S&R.” (DN 73, at 11.) And the
only amount that even has any indicia of having been transferred with the intent to defraud the
Plaintiffs, the $6000 made after February 14, 2014, was made in the form of three $2000
payments occurring every two weeks, a pattern of compensation that dates back to at least the
beginning of 2014. (DN 85-10, at 1–2.) Based on this evidence, no reasonable juror would
conclude that any of the payments made to Robert over the course of two years were made with
the intent to defraud the Plaintiffs. Therefore, the motion for summary judgment as to this
conveyance is GRANTED.
5. PAYMENTS TO TONY SCOTT
The Plaintiffs also contest $8,137.99 that was paid to Tony from S&R. (Pl.’s Resp. to
Def.’s Mot. for Summ. J. [DN 84] ¶ 23.) This analysis is almost identical to that of S&R’s
payments to Robert. Tony is in a fiduciary relationship with S&R as a member of the LLC, but
all payments were made before the demand letter was sent and before the dealership was sold,
with the last payments coming on March 17, 2014. Any badges of fraud on these transactions
are easily rebutted by the record. Tony was paid $475 every two weeks going back to at least
August 2013, a regularity that does not suggests an intent to defraud the Plaintiffs. (DN 85-10, at
1.) Just as with Robert, the Court has already found that these payments hardly indicate a
siphoning of funds from S&R, as the payments are reasonable in light of the work done by Tony
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over the course of the business. (DN 73, at 11.) Therefore, the motion for summary judgment as
to this conveyance is GRANTED.
6. PAYMENTS BY YARD PARK TO TONY
The Plaintiffs also note that Tony has been paid $15,545.11 by Yard Park. (Pl.’s Resp. to
Def.’s Mot. for Summ. J. [DN 84] ¶ 23.) Just as with the loans or gifts made by Scotty to Yard
Park, these transfers do not implicate the fraudulent conveyance statutes. Tony and Yard Park
owe no debt to the Plaintiffs, and the Plaintiffs fail to explain how a transfer from Yard Park to
Tony could have been made with the intent to defraud a creditor of neither. Therefore, the
motion for summary judgment as to this conveyance is GRANTED.
7. PAYMENTS TO SCOTTY
Scotty received a total of $12,412 from S&R from February 2, 2012, until November 7,
2013. (DN 85-10, at 1.) Again, Scotty is in a fiduciary relationship with S&R as a member of
the LLC. There is some doubt as to what these payments were for, which raises the possibility
that there was inadequate consideration for these transfers. But the timing of these transfers is
again telling: all occurred well before S&R received a demand for payment from the Plaintiffs on
March 24, 2015, or S&R sold the dealership on March 18, 2014.
It is a close call as to whether these are sufficient badges of fraud so as to require rebuttal
evidence, but regardless of their sufficiency, the Defendants have adequately rebutted any
suggestion of fraud. Scotty stated that he believed the checks were to pay Tony for his work
done for S&R, and the record supports this contention. (Dep. Scotty [DN 55-1] at 127:18–
128:21.) First, Scotty, Tony, and Robert all testified that Scotty would assist Tony in managing
his money due to an accident Tony suffered that caused him difficulties in maintaining his
finances. (Dep. Scotty [DN 55-1] at 129:5–7; Dep. Robert Reynolds [DN 55-2] at 95:5–11; Dep.
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Tony Scott [DN 57-9] at 44:3–6.) Second, there is almost no overlap between the time period
where Scotty was paid by S&R and the time period where Tony was paid by S&R. Scotty
received payments approximately monthly for amounts under $2000 from February to November
2012. (DN 85-10, at 1.) And Tony did not begin receiving his bi-weekly $475 payments until
August 2013. (Id.) Thus, the record supports Scotty’s belief that the payments he received were
to support Tony during that period, as S&R only began paying Tony directly at a later date and
in smaller sums. The Plaintiffs’ argument becomes all the more unconvincing since these
transfers began at least eight months before S&R entered into the relevant contracts with the
Plaintiffs. Based on this evidence, the Plaintiffs’ claim must fail. Therefore, the motion for
summary judgment as to this conveyance is GRANTED.
8. TRANSFER FROM S&R TO YARD PARK
Finally, the Plaintiffs argue that $13,050.04 was transferred from S&R to Yard Park with
an intent to defraud the Plaintiffs. As to the badges of fraud surrounding these transactions, the
Court will again give some consideration to the relatedness of the entities through their common
members. There is also some doubt as to what these payments were for, which raises the
possibility that there was inadequate consideration for these transfers. The timing of these
transfers also places a badge of fraud on the conveyances: the payments were made through three
checks written in May, June, and July of 2014, after the demand for payment had been made and
after the sale of the dealership that left S&R close to insolvency. (DN 85-10, at 1, 3.) Thus, the
Plaintiffs have sufficiently demonstrated that these conveyances bear badges of fraud.
In rebuttal, the Defendants do not offer much explanation for these payments. When
discussing at least two of the three checks at issue, Scotty stated, “I have no idea about these
checks. I didn’t sign the checks. I never followed them, anything.” (Dep. Scotty [DN 55-1] at
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103:2–3.) Robert also testified that he was working for the new Bobcat dealership at that time
and had no involvement with S&R when these checks were written. (Dep. Robert Reynolds [DN
55-2] at 152:4–5.) Based on these arguments, there is a genuine dispute as to whether these
transfers were made with the intent to defraud the Plaintiffs. Therefore, the motion for summary
judgment as to this conveyance is DENIED.
D. AIDING AND ABETTING
Count 18 of the Complaint alleges that all five defendants “aided and abetted in and acted
in concert or pursuant to a common design to” defraud the Plaintiffs. (DN 28 ¶ 136.) The only
claim that has survived the Defendants’ motion for summary judgment is the claim for fraudulent
conveyance between S&R and Yard Park, making it the only claim to which any other Defendant
could have aided or abetted.
The Defendants argue, though, that Kentucky law does not
recognize a claim for aiding and abetting a fraudulent conveyance.
In CNH Capital A.M., LLC v. Hunt Tractor, Inc., 568 F. App’x 461, 469–70 (6th Cir.
2014), the Sixth Circuit determined that the Kentucky statutes at issue “do not explicitly allow
recovery from a beneficiary of the [fraudulent] transfer” and that a plaintiff can only recover on a
claim of fraudulent conveyance from “a direct transferee or transferor[.]” Consistent with this
opinion, federal district courts in Kentucky have held that “there is no cause of action for aiding
and abetting a fraudulent conveyance.” Bank of Am., N.A. v. Corporex Co., LLC, 99 F. Supp. 3d
708, 719 (E.D. Ky. 2015). See also GATX Corp. v. Addington, 879 F. Supp. 2d 633 (E.D. Ky.
2012). Under the statutes, the Plaintiffs only have a cause of action for fraudulent conveyance
against the transferor (S&R) and the transferee (Yard Park), and no claim for aiding and abetting
exists. Therefore, the motion for summary judgment as to the aiding and abetting claim is
GRANTED.
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E. REMAINING CLAIMS
Finally, the Court must address what claims remain in this case. As stated above, the
Plaintiffs’ fraudulent conveyance claim may proceed as it pertains to the $13,050.04 transferred
from S&R to Yard Park. In their filings arguing for and against reopening the period for
dispositive motions (DN 79, 81), the parties seem to agree that the claims decided in this opinion
are the only claims remaining. However, there have been no dispositive rulings on Counts 3, 8,
and 13 (unjust enrichment); Counts 4, 9, and 14 (conversion of the unreturned equipment); and
Counts 5, 10, and 15 (seeking return of the retained equipment).
The claims for unjust
enrichment were adequately disposed of when the Court granted summary judgment on the
breach of contract claims, as unjust enrichment is an alternative theory of recovery based on the
same conduct. Therefore, Counts 3, 8, and 13 are DISMISSED. As to the claims for conversion
and seeking return of the unreturned equipment, a letter from counsel for the Defendants to
counsel for the Plaintiffs after the initiation of the suit indicates that the Defendants “removed all
property belonging the [the Plaintiffs] and stored it in a secure location . . . [in order to]
coordinate a mutually convenient” retrieval. (DN 60-1.) Based on the parties’ filings, the Court
assumes that the property has been returned, and that these counts do not need to be litigated
further.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the Defendants’
motion for summary judgment is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART.
cc:
counsel of record
March 10, 2017
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