In re: JOSEPH J. VIOLA AKA GIUSEPPE VIOLA ( 2012 )


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  •                                                                FILED
    APR 06 2012
    1
    ORDERED PUBLISHED           SUSAN M SPRAUL, CLERK
    U.S. BKCY. APP. PANEL
    2                                                         O F TH E N IN TH C IR C U IT
    3                 UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY APPELLATE PANEL
    4                           OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    5
    6   In re:                        )     BAP No.    NC-11-1173-DoDH
    )
    7   JOSEPH J. VIOLA aka           )     Bk. No.    10-30904
    GIUSEPPE VIOLA,               )
    8                                 )     Adv. No. 10-03103
    Debtor.       )
    9                                 )
    )
    10   JANINA M. HOSKINS,            )
    Chapter 7 Trustee,            )
    11                                 )
    Appellant,    )
    12   v.                            )     O P I N I O N
    )
    13   CITIGROUP, INC.; CITIGROUP    )
    GLOBAL MARKETS, INC.;         )
    14   CITIBANK, N.A.,               )
    )
    Appellees.    )
    15   ______________________________)
    16
    17                Argued and Submitted on January 20, 2012
    at San Francisco, California
    18
    Filed - April 6, 2012
    19
    Appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court
    20                  for the Northern District of California
    21             Hon. Dennis Montali, Bankruptcy Judge, Presiding.
    22
    23   Appearances:    John H. MacConaghy of MacConaghy & Barnier argued
    for the appellant. Stefan Perovich of Keesal,
    24                   Young & Logan argued for the appellees.
    25   Before:    DONOVAN,1 DUNN, and HOLLOWELL, Bankruptcy Judges.
    26
    27
    1
    Hon. Thomas B. Donovan, United States Bankruptcy Judge for
    28   the Central District of California, sitting by designation.
    1       DONOVAN, Bankruptcy Judge:
    2
    3           Janina M. Hoskins (Hoskins), chapter 7 trustee for the
    4   estate of Joseph Viola (Viola), appeals an order of the
    5   bankruptcy court dismissing with prejudice Hoskins’ Second
    6   Amended Complaint against Citigroup, Inc. (Citigroup), Citigroup
    7   Global Markets, Inc. (CGMI), and Citibank, N.A. (Citibank),
    8   (collectively Citi), for avoidance of fraudulent transfers and
    9   damages for aiding and abetting intentionally fraudulent
    10   transfers.      We AFFIRM the dismissal.
    11                                    I.   FACTS
    12           Viola, a convicted felon and fugitive from justice,
    13       approached a San Francisco branch of Citibank managed by vice
    14       president Rik B. Schrammel on or about April 14, 1999.2
    15       Citibank was apparently Viola’s bank of choice; his prior
    16       conviction arose out of fraudulent activities in Arizona
    17       involving Citibank accounts, and he was investigated by Citibank
    18       internal fraud personnel in relation to those activities.
    19       Despite this past investigation, Viola and Ralph Napolitano, a
    20       retired auto mechanic, were permitted to open an account at
    21       Citibank in the name of “The Ralph Napolitano Irrevocable Living
    22       Trust DTD April 13, 1999.”   The Account Opening Form indicated
    23       that Napolitano earned $25,000 per year and had an entire net
    24
    2
    All facts are drawn from allegations raised in Hoskins’ Second
    25   Amended Complaint, and are taken as true for the purposes of
    reviewing the bankruptcy court’s dismissal of Hoskins’ complaint
    26
    for failure to state a claim. See Stoll v. Quintanar (In re
    27   Stoll), 
    252 B.R. 492
    , 495 (9th Cir. BAP 2000).
    28                                         2
    1   worth of $220,000.   Under the terms of the trust, which was
    2   executed and notarized in the presence of Schrammel, Viola had
    3   full power of attorney for Napolitano, Viola and Napolitano were
    4   co-trustees of Napolitano’s affairs, and Schrammel was
    5   designated as successor trustee.    Viola and Napolitano also
    6   opened an investment brokerage account in the name of the trust.
    7       Napolitano died in 2000.   However, the funds in the trust
    8   accounts were not distributed to his chosen beneficiaries.
    9   Instead, beginning around January 1, 2005, Viola began using the
    10   trust accounts to operate a Ponzi scheme.    In that year, the
    11   balance in the trust accounts grew from approximately $362,000
    12   to $771,000, with the increase due almost entirely to funds
    13   obtained from Ponzi scheme victims.    Viola successfully
    14   represented to at least sixty investors that he was an
    15   experienced securities and commodities trader and promised
    16   generous investment returns.   Based on these representations,
    17   these investors entrusted him with roughly $17 million.
    18       Over the course of the scheme, Viola used the funds
    19   invested: (a) to make distributions to investors, thereby giving
    20   the false impression that he was generating returns, (b) to pay
    21   his own living expenses, (c) to speculate in commodities trades,
    22   in the process losing roughly $4 million, (d) to invest
    23   approximately $1,200,000 in a retail bakery business, and (e) to
    24   design and build custom sports cars.    On February 21, 2008,
    25   Viola also used $1,007,6003 to purchase preferred stock of
    26   Citigroup through an investment brokerage account managed by
    27   3
    At one point the Second Amended Complaint references a
    28   $1,007,800 transfer. This appears to be a typographical error,
    as Exhibit 5 to the Second Amended Complaint, referenced as
    evidence for this transaction, indicates a value of $1,007,600.
    3
    1   CGMI.   Both Citibank and CGMI are subsidiaries of Citigroup, a
    2   holding company.
    3       Due to the increased account balances in early 2005, and
    4   pursuant to the terms of the Patriot Act, Citi required updated
    5   account information forms for the trust accounts, which Viola
    6   fraudulently filled out on behalf of Napolitano, signing
    7   Napolitano’s name and giving his own address and phone number
    8   for Napolitano’s, who was dead.       With this information, Viola
    9   was permitted to continue operating the trust accounts and to
    10   transfer millions of dollars through the accounts, which had a
    11   high balance of $9,452,583.34 on February 21, 2008.       These
    12   transfers included a $4,810,553 transfer to a commodities
    13   brokerage.   When the commodities brokerage firm became concerned
    14   over the size of Viola’s losses, Citi provided two letters of
    15   reference on his behalf in October of 2008, attesting to Viola
    16   and Napolitano’s wealth, sophistication, and integrity.       Citi
    17   also assured two of Viola’s victims that Schrammel, the
    18   successor trustee of the accounts, could act in the event that
    19   Viola was not able.
    20       Citi provided Viola with other assistance, including false
    21   representations to victims that Viola was a practicing attorney
    22   and a skilled investment advisor, and assuring Citi customers
    23   that allocating portions of the victims’ investment portfolios
    24   to aggressive investment with Viola was a sound investment
    25   strategy.    Citi also permitted Viola to use its conference room
    26   to meet with victims on at least one occasion.       Citi referred
    27   customers to Viola.   For example, when Citi customer Morton
    28   Kirsch sought to repatriate approximately $8 million of his
    4
    1       offshore funds to his own account, Schrammel referred him to
    2       Viola as one who was experienced in international money
    3       transfers.
    4             Citi eventually approached Viola to request additional
    5       documentation after Citi’s compliance department flagged the $8
    6       million foreign wire transfer from Kirsch and acknowledged that
    7       the transactions in general were wholly inconsistent with a
    8       personal trust account.   Viola refused to cooperate, and Citi
    9       closed the accounts after sixty days, during which time Viola
    10       disbursed an additional $912,240.22.   Viola continued to operate
    11       the Ponzi scheme for another six months, through other Citi
    12       accounts that were opened with Schrammel’s assistance, until
    13       Viola’s arrest and his involuntary chapter 7 petition filed on
    14       March 16, 2010.
    15            Following the involuntary filing, an order for relief was
    16       entered and Hoskins was appointed chapter 7 Trustee.   After
    17       investigation, Hoskins filed an adversary complaint and then a
    18       First Amended Complaint naming the Citi defendants and raising
    19       two claims for avoidance of fraudulent transfers under 11 U.S.C.
    20       §§ 548(a)(1)(A) and 544(b)4 and a third claim for damages for
    21       aiding and abetting fraudulent transfers under § 544(a)(2).     On
    22       September 10, 2010, Citi brought a motion to dismiss the First
    23       Amended Complaint.   The bankruptcy court granted the motion with
    24       leave to amend on the grounds that Viola, not Citi, controlled
    25       the funds in the trust accounts; accordingly, Hoskins could not
    26       bring an action against Citi as a non-transferee.   Further, the
    27   4
    Unless otherwise indicated, all chapter, section and rule
    28   references are to the Bankruptcy Code, 
    11 U.S.C. §§ 101-1532
    , and
    to the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure, Rules 1001-9037.
    5
    1   court found that Hoskins lacked standing to assert a claim for
    2   aiding and abetting a fraudulent transfer.       Hoskins then filed
    3   the Second Amended Complaint realleging the dismissed claims and
    4   adding a fourth claim for avoidance of Viola’s purchase of
    5   Citigroup preferred stock.    The court granted Citi’s motion to
    6   dismiss the Second Amended Complaint with prejudice for the
    7   reasons stated in its previous Memorandum Decision, with the
    8   added reason that § 546(e) precluded the fourth claim.      Hoskins
    9   appealed.
    10                                   II. ISSUES
    11             A.   Are Citigroup, CGMI, and/or Citibank transferees
    for the purposes of imposing fraudulent transfer liability?
    12
    B.   Does a bankruptcy trustee have standing to bring
    13        a claim for relief alleging the aiding and abetting of
    fraudulent transfers under California law?
    14
    C.   Do the provisions of § 546(e) apply to protect
    15        Citigroup from liability in connection with a sale of its
    own stock through its subsidiary, CGMI?
    16
    17                                III. JURISDICTION
    18        The bankruptcy court properly exercised jurisdiction under
    19   
    28 U.S.C. § 157
    (b)(2)(E), and § 1334.    We have jurisdiction
    20   under 
    28 U.S.C. § 158
    .
    21                            IV. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    22        The BAP reviews de novo a bankruptcy court’s dismissal for
    23   failure to state a claim under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
    24   12(b)(6).   Busseto Foods, Inc. v. Laizure (In re Laizure), 548
    
    25 F.3d 693
    , 696 (9th Cir. 2008).    When reviewing a motion to
    26   dismiss a complaint, the court must take as true all allegations
    27   of material fact and construe them in a light most favorable to
    28   the nonmoving party.   Parks Sch. of Bus., Inc. v. Symington, 51
    6
    
    1 F.3d 1480
    , 1484 (9th Cir. 1995) (citation omitted).    For a
    2   complaint to survive a motion to dismiss, alleged facts must be
    3   plausibly suggestive of a claim entitling the plaintiff to
    4   relief.    Moss v. U.S. Secret Serv., 
    572 F.3d 962
    , 969 (9th Cir.
    5   2009).    A plaintiff’s complaint may be dismissed either for
    6   failing to articulate a cognizable legal theory or for failing
    7   to allege sufficient facts under a cognizable legal theory.
    8   Robertson v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc., 
    749 F.2d 530
    , 534 (9th
    9   Cir. 1984).
    10                              V. DISCUSSION
    11        A.    The Citi Defendants Are Not Transferees Pursuant To The
    12   Ninth Circuit’s Dominion Test.
    13        Hoskins’ first and second claims for relief against Citi in
    14   the Second Amended Complaint are for avoidance of intentionally
    15   fraudulent transfers under §§ 548(a)(1)(A) and 544(b).    These
    16   sections permit the trustee to avoid a transfer of an interest
    17   of the debtor in property made with the actual intent to hinder,
    18   delay, or defraud a creditor within two years prior to the
    19   bankruptcy filing, and to avoid any transfer of such an interest
    20   that is voidable under applicable law by an unsecured creditor.
    21   Pursuant to § 550(a), a trustee may recover a fraudulent
    22   transfer from “the initial transferee of such transfer or the
    23   entity for whose benefit such transfer was made; or any
    24   immediate or mediate transferee of such initial transferee.”
    25   The term “transferee” is not defined in the Bankruptcy Code;
    26   however, the Ninth Circuit has examined the question of who
    27   constitutes a transferee at length.
    28        As explained in In re Incomnet, Inc., 
    463 F.3d 1064
    , 1069
    7
    1   (9th Cir. 2006), there are two generally recognized tests to
    2   determine if a party is a transferee: the “dominion test” and
    3   the “control test.”    Perhaps because the words are usually
    4   synonyms, the tests have frequently been conflated, but as
    5   explained in Incomnet, the Ninth Circuit “ha[s] applied the
    6   dominion test several times, but ha[s] declined to adopt the
    7   control test.”   
    Id.
       The Ninth Circuit’s dominion test defines a
    8   transferee as one who “has dominion over the money or other
    9   asset, the right to put the money to one’s own purposes. . . .
    10   The inquiry focuses on whether an entity had legal authority
    11   over the money and the right to use the money however it
    12   wished.”   
    Id. at 1070
     (internal citations omitted).
    13        The Ninth Circuit has identified Bonded Financial Services,
    14   Inc. v. European American Bank, 
    838 F.2d 890
     (7th Cir. 1988), as
    15   the leading case in this area.    Incomnet, at 1070.   In Bonded
    16   Financial, a bank was held not to be a transferee under
    17   § 550(a), even though the debtor, a corporation, sent the bank a
    18   check payable to the bank’s order, because the check was
    19   accompanied by a note directing the bank to deposit the check
    20   into another account belonging to the debtor’s principal.      838
    21   F.2d at 891.   The Seventh Circuit found that the bank received
    22   no benefit from the transaction in which it served merely as a
    23   financial intermediary; accordingly, the scenario failed the
    24   dominion test, which stresses the ability of the recipient to
    25   use the money as it chooses.    Id. at 893.
    26        The Ninth Circuit in Incomnet emphasized that the dominion
    27   test is more restrictive than the “control test” used by other
    28   circuits, referencing the explanation of the control test laid
    8
    1   out in Nordberg v. Societe Generale (In re Chase & Sanborn
    2   Corp.), 
    848 F.2d 1196
    , 1199 (11th Cir. 1988).    Incomnet, 463
    3   F.3d at 1071.    Under the control test, an examining court must
    4   evaluate a transaction in its entirety and make a “logical and
    5   equitable” determination as to whether “the banks actually
    6   controlled the funds or merely served as conduits, holding money
    7   that was in fact controlled by either the transferor or the real
    8   transferee.”    Chase & Sanborn Corp., 
    848 F.2d at 1199-1200
    .
    9   Therefore, while similar, “[t]he dominion test focuses on
    10   whether the recipient of funds has legal title to them and the
    11   ability to use them as he sees fit.    The control test takes a
    12   more gestalt view of the entire transaction to determine who, in
    13   reality, controlled the funds in question.”    Incomnet, 
    463 F.3d 14
       at 1071 (internal citations omitted).
    15        Hoskins’ Second Amended Complaint fails to demonstrate that
    16   any of the Citi defendants had dominion over the funds
    17   transferred to the trust accounts with Citibank and CGMI.     To
    18   the contrary, the complaint reflects that Viola had dominion
    19   over the funds, or in other words, the legal title and ability
    20   to do with them whatever he wished, much to the chagrin of his
    21   duped investors.    Hoskins has argued that, because a Citi
    22   employee, Schrammel, was designated as successor trustee to the
    23   trust accounts, Citi should be viewed as having exercised
    24   dominion over the funds.    In the alternative, Hoskins argues
    25   that Citi should be deemed to have exercised dominion over the
    26   funds in light of its continued violations of rules and
    27   regulations in permitting the accounts to operate unlawfully.
    28        Unfortunately for Hoskins, the Ninth Circuit has been clear
    9
    1   regarding its adoption of the dominion test and corresponding
    2   rejection of the “more lenient” control test.   Incomnet, 463
    3   F.3d at 1071.    Although it is a disturbing fact that Schrammel,
    4   a Citi branch vice president, was designated as successor
    5   trustee, the complaint does not allege that Schrammel served as
    6   trustee at any time, nor that he had “sufficient authority over
    7   the funds to direct their disbursement.”   Id. at 1074.
    8        The allegations that Citibank ignored multiple red flags
    9   and permitted glaring regulatory violations, thereby
    10   facilitating the continuation of Viola’s fraud, are also
    11   disturbing.   It is possible that the Citi defendants may be
    12   subject to liability under state or federal law as a consequence
    13   of these violations.   However, the failure of Schrammel or any
    14   of the Citi defendants to exercise dominion over the trust
    15   accounts determines the issue of liability for fraudulent
    16   transfer under the Bankruptcy Code and the Ninth Circuit
    17   dominion test.
    18        The bankruptcy court correctly determined that the Citi
    19   defendants are not transferees under § 550(e) pursuant to
    20   current binding precedent; accordingly, the dismissal of Hoskins
    21   first and second claims for relief is affirmed.
    22        B.   The Trustee Does Not Have Standing To Bring A Claim For
    23   Relief For Aiding And Abetting Fraudulent Transfers Because The
    24   Trustee Is Not A Real Party In Interest.
    25        Hoskins’ third claim for relief attempts to invoke the
    26   trustee’s “strong arm” powers under § 544(a)(2), which gives the
    27
    28                                   10
    1       trustee
    2                 . . .
    the rights and powers of, or [the power to] avoid any
    3                 transfer of property of the debtor or any obligation
    incurred by the debtor that is voidable by -- . . .
    4                 (2) a creditor that extends credit to the debtor at the
    time of the commencement of the case, and obtains, at
    5                 such time and with respect to such credit, an execution
    against the debtor that is returned unsatisfied at such
    6                 time, whether or not such a creditor exists . . . .
    7       § 544(a)(2).   Hoskins refers to the strong arm powers granted in
    8       this section as those of the “hypothetical execution lien
    9       creditor.”    These powers, as Hoskins correctly asserts, go beyond
    10       mere avoidance powers.   However, they do not establish Hoskins'
    11       right to a claim for relief in this case under Ninth Circuit
    12       precedent.5
    13            Congress granted these “rights and powers” primarily to
    14       facilitate a trustee’s pursuit of leviable assets.   Section
    15       544(a)(2) was particularly intended to give a trustee, standing
    16       in the shoes of a creditor that has already exhausted available
    17
    5
    For the purposes of analyzing Hoskins’ argument, we assume
    18 that § 544(a)(2) powers are available to Hoskins in this case. We
    note, however, that there is some ambiguity in this Circuit’s case
    19 law as to whether a creditor must exist who had the legal right to
    20 an execution at the time the bankruptcy case was filed, but simply
    failed to obtain said execution. See Pac. Fin. Corp. v. Edwards,
    21 
    304 F.2d 224
    , 228 (9th Cir. 1962); see also In re Skipwith, 
    9 B.R. 730
    , 737 (Bankr. S.D. Cal. 1981) (noting criticism of the Pacific
    22 decision) (overruled on other grounds by Emmerich v. Lampi, 
    19 B.R. 666
     (9th Cir. BAP 1982)); 124 Cong. Rec. 32400 (1978)
    23
    (suggesting that the Bankruptcy Code overrules Pacific Finance
    24 Corp. insofar as it held that the trustee did not have the status
    of a creditor who extended credit immediately prior to the
    25 commencement of the case). It is not necessary for us to resolve
    this ambiguity in light of our conclusion that these powers, if
    26 granted, would still not allow Hoskins to pursue a claim against
    27 the Citi defendants for aiding and abetting fraudulent transfers.
    28                                        11
    1   legal remedies, power to pursue equitable remedies in the context
    2   of discovery.   See S. Rep. No. 89-1159 (1965), reprinted in 1966
    3   U.S.C.C.A.N. 2032, at 2466.    Hoskins asks this Panel to
    4   interpret § 544(a)(2) to give a trustee all the substantive
    5   rights of the hypothetical execution lien creditor, which in
    6   California include standing to bring a claim for relief for
    7   aiding and abetting fraudulent transfers against a third party.
    8   See Neilson v. Union Bank of Cal., N.A., 
    290 F. Supp. 2d 1101
    ,
    9   1118 (C.D. Cal. 2003).   Other courts within the Ninth Circuit
    10   have declined to grant a trustee standing to pursue such a claim,
    11   albeit under a different subsection of the strong arm statute.
    12   See Wyle v. Howard, Weil, Labouisse, Friedrichs Inc. (In re
    13   Hamilton Taft & Co.), 
    176 B.R. 895
    , 902 (Bankr. N.D. Cal. 1995)
    14   (holding that the trustee did not have power to pursue an aiding
    15   and abetting claim for relief under § 544(b)); Ciolino v. Ryan
    16   (In re Ryan), 
    2008 Bankr. LEXIS 2968
     at *10 n.5 (Bankr. N.D. Cal.
    17   Oct. 29, 2008) (same).
    18        Hoskins attempts to distance her claim from these rulings by
    19   emphasizing the differences between § 544(a), the basis for her
    20   claim, and § 544(b), the basis for the claims in In re Hamilton
    21   Taft & Co. and Ryan.   This attempt is futile in light of the
    22   factual similarities between her claim and that raised in
    23   Williams v. California 1st Bank, 
    859 F.2d 664
     (9th Cir. 1988).
    24   In addition to having a nearly identical factual scenario, the
    25   reasoning of the Ninth Circuit’s interpretation of Supreme Court
    26   precedent is as applicable to this case as it was to Williams.
    27        In Williams, the Ninth Circuit considered a bank’s motion to
    28   dismiss the trustee’s action against the bank for violation of
    12
    1   the federal securities laws on behalf of creditors who had been
    2   bilked in a Ponzi scheme.      
    Id. at 665
    .   In response to the bank’s
    3   assertion that the trustee did not have standing to bring such a
    4   suit, the trustee obtained an assignment of the claim from some
    5   of the investors.      
    Id.
       Nonetheless, the Ninth Circuit concluded
    6   that under the Supreme Court’s decision in Caplin v. Marine
    7   Midland Grace Trust Co., 
    406 U.S. 416
    , 428-30 (1972), the trustee
    8   did not have standing to pursue the claim against the bank and
    9   the case should be dismissed.
    10           The Ninth Circuit gave three specific reasons for
    11   dismissal.    First, the trustee did not have power to collect
    12   money not owed to the estate: the court reasoned that the
    13   assignment of their claims notwithstanding, the investors
    14   remained the real parties in interest.       Williams, 
    859 F.2d at
    15   666-67.    Second, the debtor had no independent claim against the
    16   bank.    
    Id. at 667
    .    Third, allowing the trustee to bring a suit
    17   raised the potential for inconsistent actions between the trustee
    18   and those investors who had not assigned their claims,
    19   potentially creating a conflict of interest and the proliferation
    20   of litigation.    
    Id.
        The court further noted that Congress had
    21   the opportunity in 1978 to overturn Caplin, which had first
    22   raised these three points in denying a trustee the authority to
    23   recover damages, and decided not to do so.       Accordingly,
    24   “‘Congress’ message is clear -- no trustee, whether a
    25   reorganization trustee as in Caplin or a liquidation trustee [,]
    26   has power under . . . the Code to assert general causes of action
    27   . . . on behalf of the bankrupt estate’s creditors.’”       
    Id.
     at 667
    28   (quoting In re Ozark Rest. Equip. Co., 
    816 F.2d 1222
    , 1228 (8th
    13
    1   Cir. 1987)).
    2        The reasoning of Williams applies to this case.    First, any
    3   recovery of funds from the Citi defendants will go straight to
    4   the investors, apart from administrative costs that Hoskins may
    5   recoup as the cost for bringing the suit.   Second, Viola’s estate
    6   has no independent claim against the Citi defendants.   Hoskins
    7   cannot bring a claim on behalf of the estate against the bank for
    8   the bank’s alleged complicity with Viola’s fraudulent activities.
    9   Finally, allowing Hoskins to go forward with her suit against the
    10   Citi defendants raises the risk of inconsistent actions brought
    11   outside of bankruptcy by the investors themselves.
    12         In the Ninth Circuit, “it is well settled that a bankruptcy
    13   trustee has no standing generally to sue third parties on behalf
    14   of the estate’s creditors, but may only assert claims held by the
    15   [debtor] itself.”   Smith v. Arthur Andersen LLP, 
    421 F.3d 989
    ,
    16   1002 (9th Cir. 2005) (internal citations omitted); see also In re
    17   Hamilton Taft & Co., 
    176 B.R. at 902
     (“A debtor’s bankruptcy
    18   trustee . . . is not authorized to pursue every action that
    19   creditors of the debtor might pursue.”).    Hoskins’ claim against
    20   the Citi defendants for aiding and abetting fraudulent transfers
    21   is entirely derived from the creditor investors, and would not
    22   exist but for their existence and involvement in the bankruptcy.
    23   For the reasons laid out in Caplin and adopted by the Ninth
    24   Circuit in Williams, we must conclude that Hoskins does not have
    25   standing to pursue this claim, and therefore we affirm the
    26   dismissal of Hoskins’ third claim for relief.
    27        C.   The Trustee Cannot Avoid The Transfer Of $1,007,600 For
    28   Citigroup Stock Because The Transfer Was Made Through CGMI, A
    14
    1       Protected Entity Under § 546(e).
    2            Hoskins’ fourth and final claim for relief against the Citi
    3       defendants seeks to avoid Viola’s 2008 transfer of $1,007,600 for
    4       the purchase of Citigroup’s preferred stock.6   This transfer
    5       falls outside of the statutory period in § 548(a)(1)(A), having
    6       occurred more than two years before the petition was filed.
    7       Accordingly, Hoskins seeks to avoid the transfer under § 544(b).
    8             Section 546(e) limits the trustee’s power to avoid
    9       transfers made by, to, or for the benefit of, certain entities,
    10       including stockbrokers and financial institutions.   Specifically,
    11       the section states:
    12            Notwithstanding section[ ] 544 . . . , the trustee may
    not avoid a transfer that is . . . a settlement payment
    13            . . ., made by or to (or for the benefit of) a commodity
    broker, forward contract merchant, stockbroker,
    14            financial institution, financial participant, or
    securities clearing agency, or that is a transfer made
    15            by or to (or for the benefit of) a commodity broker,
    forward contract merchant, stockbroker, financial
    16            institution, financial participant, or securities
    clearing agency, in connection with a securities
    17            contract, as defined in section 741(7), commodity
    contract, as defined in section 761(4), or forward
    18            contract, that is made before the commencement of the
    case.
    19
    20       § 546(e).   Hoskins has conceded that CGMI is an entity covered
    21       under the safe harbor of § 546(e).   However, she does not concede
    22       that Citigroup, the parent holding company of CGMI and Citibank,
    23       is so protected.
    24            Instead, Hoskins argues that CGMI should be treated as a
    25       “mere conduit,” consistent with the bankruptcy court’s prior
    26
    6
    This transfer is treated differently from those raised under
    27 Hoskins’ first and second claims for relief, because in this case
    the Citi defendants are transferees under § 550(a), having
    28
    received the cash in exchange for stock, and accordingly obtained
    legal right to do as they wished with the cash.
    15
    1   determination regarding the dismissal of her first and second
    2   claims for relief, which this court has affirmed.   Hoskins argues
    3   under this reasoning that Citigroup, the seller of the preferred
    4   stock, is the true transferee.   She further argues that Citigroup
    5   is not protected under § 546(e), and so the claim for relief
    6   should move forward.
    7         Hoskins’ “mere conduit” argument fails for two reasons.
    8   First, there is nothing in the Bankruptcy Code or subsequent case
    9   law to suggest that the Ninth Circuit’s test to determine a
    10   transferee under § 550(a) should be applied as a limitation to
    11   the safe harbor provisions of § 546(e).    The two sections do not
    12   cross-reference, and they explain different subjects: § 546(e)
    13   deals with transfers, while § 550(a) deals with transferees.
    14   Second, even under the Ninth Circuit’s dominion test, CGMI would
    15   be considered a transferee for the $1,007,600 transaction.     CGMI
    16   received the investor money from the Citi trust accounts in
    17   payment for the Citigroup stock, and then had legal authority to
    18   do what it wished with that money.    This is unlike CGMI or
    19   Citibank’s mere holding of trust account funds, which Viola
    20   controlled and transferred as he wished.
    21        As was noted in oral argument, Hoskins unfortunately has
    22   been caught between two statutory provisions--the safe harbor
    23   clause of § 546(e), and the statutory limits of § 548(a)(1)(A).
    24   Her argument that “Section 546(e) should not be used as a free
    25   pass to avoid liability in a scheme to defraud” is appealing.
    26   However, the drafters of the Bankruptcy Code have already
    27   provided a limitation on § 546(e) to that effect.   Any avoidance
    28   action arising under § 548(a)(1)(A) that concerns transfers made
    16
    1   “with actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud,” is exempt from
    2   § 546(e) protections.    However, § 548(a)(1)(A) is limited to
    3   transactions made within two years before the bankruptcy filing
    4   date.   In this case, the filing date was March 16, 2010.   The
    5   transaction that Hoskins seeks to avoid took place on February
    6   21, 2008, more than two years prior to the bankruptcy filing, and
    7   is accordingly outside of the § 548(a)(1)(A) statutory period.
    8        It is not the place of this Panel to read in an expansion of
    9   clear statutory limits in response to this factual scenario.      See
    10   In re Hamilton    Taft & Co., 
    176 B.R. at 901
     (finding that the
    11   ethical nature of a transaction outside the statutory period of
    12   exemption under § 546(e) is irrelevant to the court’s
    13   determination).    Accordingly, the bankruptcy court’s dismissal of
    14   this claim for relief is affirmed.
    15                              VI. CONCLUSION
    16        For the foregoing reasons, the bankruptcy court’s dismissal
    17   with prejudice of Hoskins’ case for failure to state a claim is
    18   AFFIRMED.
    19
    20   HOLLOWELL, Bankruptcy Judge, concurring:
    21
    22      I agree with the majority that Hoskins cannot assert an
    23   aiding and abetting claim under § 544(a)(2) because the estate
    24   has no claim against the Appellees.    The rights of a
    25   hypothetical lien creditor are dependent on the rights of its
    26   debtor.   Smith v. Arthur Andersen LLP, 
    421 F.3d 989
    , 1002 (9th
    27   Cir. 2005) citing Shearson Lehman Hutton, Inc. v. Wagoner,
    28   
    944 F.2d 114
    , 118 (2d Cir. 1991).     Here, because the deposits at
    17
    1       issue were not made by Viola, the Citi defendants did not become
    2       the obligors of Viola.1   Certified Grocers, 150 Cal.App.3d at
    3       286 (“When a bank receives deposits, it becomes the debtor of
    4       the depositor and its implied contract with him is to discharge
    5       that indebtedness by honoring such checks as he may draw upon
    6       it; the bank is not entitled to debit his account with payments
    7       not made by his order or direction.”).   Even if Viola had been
    8       the depositor, the facts do not indicate that Viola had a claim
    9       against the Appellees.    Accordingly, the equitable remedies made
    10       available to a judgment creditor whose execution is returned
    11       unsatisfied, such as the right to bring a creditor’s bill, or
    12       seek a receivership, or bring an action for aiding and abetting,
    13       could not be exercised by Hoskins against the Appellees.
    14           If, however, Viola had a valid claim against the Appellees,
    15       then the holding in Williams v. Cal. 1st Bank, 
    859 F.2d 664
     (9th
    16       Cir. 1988), and its progeny, barring claims against third
    17       parties by a trustee would not apply.    Smith, 421 F.3d at 1002
    18       (“If the debtor suffered an injury, the trustee has standing to
    19       pursue a claim seeking to rectify such injury.”).   For example,
    20       in such a case, defendants would not necessarily be able to
    21       assert an in pari delicto defense if state law bars such a
    22       defense against receivers.   See Mosier v. Stonefield Josephson,
    23       Inc., 
    2011 WL 5075551
     *4 (C.D. Cal. Oct. 25, 2011).   Nor, if the
    24   1
    The deposits were either in the name of the Napolitano Trust or
    25   a Delaware “shell” corporation. While Viola had signing authority
    for the accounts, the Appellees were authorized “to honor
    26   withdrawals from an account on the signatures authorized by the
    signature card, which serves as a contract between the depositor
    27   for the handling of the account.” Certified Grocers of Cal., Ltd.
    v. San Gabriel Valley Bank, 
    150 Cal.App.3d 281
    , 287 (Cal. Ct. App.
    28
    1983).
    18
    1   debtor had a claim, independent of the claims of its creditors,
    2   would a trustee be prohibited from pursuing the claim just
    3   because the creditors might have similar claims.    In Smith, the
    4   court recognized that while acts of mismanagement by an
    5   insolvent corporation indirectly injured creditors, the trustee
    6   for the debtor corporation still had standing to bring an action
    7   for breach of duty or misconduct to the debtor.    421 F.3d at
    8   1004.
    9       There are other important rights a trustee may assert under
    10   § 544(a) which would be unavailable under § 544(b), such as
    11   defenses to a claim that the statute of limitations has expired.
    12   Collins v. Kholberg & Co. (In re Sw. Supermarkets, LLC.),
    13   
    325 B.R. 417
    , 427 (Bankr. D. Ariz. 2005)
    14      I note the differences between § 544(a) and (b) not because
    15   the majority’s analysis is incorrect.   On the facts of this
    16   case, no other result is possible.   Nevertheless, the difference
    17   between a trustee's § 544(a) and (b) powers is worth noting
    18   because, depending on the facts of a particular case, that
    19   difference may significantly impact a trustee’s ability to
    20   recover assets.
    21
    22
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    25
    26
    27
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    19