Shoshana Trust v. Michael Raleigh ( 2014 )


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  •       Case: 12-50462          Document: 00512491928              Page: 1      Date Filed: 01/07/2014
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    January 7, 2014
    No. 12-50462                                 Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    In the Matter of: LOTHIAN OIL, INCORPORATED; LEAD I JVGP,
    INCORPORATED,
    Debtors
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    SHOSHANA TRUST, Lothian Cassidy Claimant, Capital One Northfork
    Claimant, Big Lake Claimant; ANNA MEISHER PENSION PLAN, Lothian
    Cassidy Claimant, Capital One Northfork Claimant; YG TRUST, Lothian
    Cassidy Claimant, Capital One Northfork Claimant; AKBERALI KHAKEE
    PENSION PLAN, Capital One Northfork Claimant, Webb Claimant;
    PENSION SOLUTIONS, Capital One Northfork Claimant; 731 895 866,
    L.L.C., Capital One Northfork Claimant; LISTOKIN FAMILY TRUST, BPZ
    Claimant; MYG TRUST, Put Exercise Claimant; HERZBERG FAMILY
    TRUST, Put Exercise Claimant; YYSD TRUST, Put Exercise Claimant;
    SPITZER FAMILY TRUST, Put Exercise Claimant; MOSES FAMILY TRUST,
    Put Exercise Claimant; BRENDA CRAYK, Put Exercise Claimant;
    HIRSHBERG FAMILY TRUST, Put Exercise Claimant; JG TRUST, Put
    Exercise Claimant; S. POLLAK AUDIOLOGICAL P.C. PROFIT SHARING
    PLAN, Put Exercise Claimant; JACOB DEKELBAUM, Big Lake Claimant;
    MIRIAM DEKELBAUM, Big Lake Claimant; YS TRUST, Big Lake Claimant;
    ISRAEL GROSSMAN, Webb Claimant, Big Lake Claimant, Casselman Well
    and Compensation Claimant; FEINBERG FAMILY TRUST, Put Exercise
    Claimant; SHORIVGER TRUST, BPZ Claimant; LOTHIAN CASSIDY, L.L.C.,
    Appellants,
    v.
    BRUCE RANSOM; TOM KELLY; SETH MARKOWITZ; VINCE BORRELLO;
    DAVIS GERALD & CREMER; WALTER MIZE, being sued as “Estate of
    Walter Mize”; KEN LEVY, Appellee was originally in State Court action and
    has never been served, There are Orders to Seek Summons currently pending
    in Bankruptcy Court.; EUI-YULL HWANG, Appellee was originally in State
    Case: 12-50462      Document: 00512491928         Page: 2    Date Filed: 01/07/2014
    No. 12-50462
    Court action and has never been served, There are Orders to Seek Summons
    currently pending in Bankruptcy Court.; RAOUL BAXTER, Appellee was
    originally in State Court action and has never been served, There are Orders
    to Seek Summons currently pending in Bankruptcy Court.; DANNY
    MASTERS, Appellee was originally in State Court action and has never been
    served, There are Orders to Seek Summons currently pending in Bankruptcy
    Court.; JOHN CARLSON, Appellee was originally in State Court action and
    has never been served, There are Orders to Seek Summons currently pending
    in Bankruptcy Court.; LOTHIAN ENERGY, P.L.C., Appellee was originally in
    State Court action and has never been served, There are Orders to Seek
    Summons currently pending in Bankruptcy Court.; BCP, INCORPORATED,
    Appellee was originally in State Court action and has never been served,
    There are Orders to Seek Summons currently pending in Bankruptcy Court.;
    BIG LAKE SERVICES, INCORPORATED; ALAN GELBAND; SCOTT
    WILSON; CASEY DAVIDSON,
    Appellees.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Texas
    USDC No. 7:11-CV-43
    Before STEWART, Chief Judge, and DeMOSS and CLEMENT, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:*
    This case relates to the bankruptcy of Lothian Oil, Inc. and its affiliated
    companies (collectively “Lothian”), a matter that has already engendered
    multiple appeals to this court. See Grossman v. Belridge Grp. (In re Lothian
    Oil, Inc.), 531 F. App’x 428 (5th Cir. 2013) (“Lothian IV”); Anti Lothian
    Bankruptcy Fraud Comm. v. Lothian Oil, Inc. (In re Lothian Oil, Inc.), 508 F.
    App’x 352 (5th Cir. 2013) (“Lothian III”); Grossman v. Lothian Oil Inc. (In re
    * Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not
    be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH
    CIR. R. 47.5.4.
    2
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    No. 12-50462
    Lothian Oil Inc.), 
    650 F.3d 539
    (5th Cir. 2011) (“Lothian II”); FCR Guardian
    Trust v. Lothian Oil, Inc. (In re Lothian Oil Inc.), 411 F. App’x 736 (5th Cir.
    2011) (“Lothian I”).
    I.
    Lothian filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in the Western District of Texas
    on June 13, 2007. On June 27, 2008, the bankruptcy court approved the
    “Second Modified Amended Joint Plan of Liquidation of the Debtors” (the
    “Restructuring Plan” or “Plan”). In September of 2009, an unofficial committee
    of shareholders (the “Anti-Lothian Committee”), including several Appellants
    here, filed a post-confirmation challenge to the Restructuring Plan in the
    bankruptcy court, alleging that several property transfers approved by the
    Plan resulted from improper inside dealing.               In a decision that was later
    affirmed by this court in Lothian III, the bankruptcy judge rejected the Anti-
    Lothian Committee’s challenge to the Restructuring Plan. Shortly thereafter,
    Appellants filed a state-court action in Kings County, New York (the “Kings
    County case”), alleging the same purported misconduct that the Anti-Lothian
    Committee raised in the bankruptcy proceeding.                     The complaint asserts
    numerous state-law claims against a variety of individuals and corporate
    entities involved with the Lothian bankruptcy (the “Kings County claims”) and
    seeks, among other relief, a constructive trust over the oil and gas properties
    transferred from the Lothian estate during the bankruptcy. 1
    1   The district court described the Kings County complaint as follows:
    The complaint asserts causes of action for fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, gross
    negligence, conversion, breach of contract, tortious interference with contract,
    equitable estoppel, promissory estoppel, and unjust enrichment. The plaintiffs
    accuse various defendants of converting, fraudulently transferring,
    misappropriating, and generally committing unspeakable atrocities upon the
    3
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    On February 1, 2010, one of the defendants removed the Kings County
    case to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York.
    On April 22, 2010, the New York federal court denied Appellants’ motions for
    remand and mandatory abstention and granted defendants’ motion to transfer
    the case to the Western District of Texas. The Texas federal district court then
    referred the case to the bankruptcy court, which treated it as an adversary
    proceeding associated with the Lothian bankruptcy.
    While the Kings County case was working its way from New York state
    court to the Texas bankruptcy court, one of the defendants filed a motion in
    the Lothian bankruptcy proceeding to enjoin Appellants from prosecuting the
    case on the ground that doing so violated the Restructuring Plan. On April 15,
    2010, the bankruptcy court issued a permanent injunction prohibiting
    Appellants from pursuing the Kings County case and later issued contempt
    sanctions against Appellants and their counsel for failing to comply with the
    injunction. The district court affirmed the injunction on appeal, but vacated
    the sanctions order.     In an opinion issued after briefing in this case was
    complete, a panel of this court affirmed both the injunction and the bankruptcy
    court’s imposition of contempt sanctions. Lothian IV, 531 F. App’x at 441, 446.
    While the injunction was on appeal, the bankruptcy court allowed the
    parties to file motions relating to the Kings County case so long as they did so
    in the adversary proceeding.         Several of the defendants filed motions to
    assets of Lothian Oil, Inc. The accusations range from promissory estoppel to
    “asset rape,” and the suit, among other things, expressly seeks to undo
    settlements approved by the Bankruptcy Court during the Lothian
    Bankruptcy. The complaint itself is a bloated, meandering, and nearly
    indecipherable 87 pages of sweeping, dramatic, and ambiguous accusations of
    conspiracy, manipulation, and blackmail.
    Memorandum Op. and Order, Shoshana Trust v. Raleigh, 7:11-cv-43-HLH, (W.D. Tex. Apr.
    9, 2012), ECF. No. 121, at 2.
    4
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    dismiss, which the bankruptcy court granted, holding, among other things,
    that it had core jurisdiction over the case and that Appellants lacked standing
    to assert the claims in the Kings County complaint. Appellants appealed those
    dismissal orders to the district court, which dismissed Appellants’ appeals as
    untimely, except with respect to the appeal of the bankruptcy court order
    granting Appellee Tom Kelly’s motion to dismiss (the “Kelly Dismissal Order”).
    The district court affirmed the Kelly Dismissal Order, finding that the
    bankruptcy court had core jurisdiction over Appellants’ claims against Kelly
    and properly dismissed those claims on standing grounds.
    In this appeal, Appellants challenge numerous rulings by the
    bankruptcy and district courts in the adversary proceeding, including the Kelly
    Dismissal Order and the district court’s decisions concerning the timeliness of
    their appeals. Kelly, who is proceeding pro se, informs us only that he agrees
    with the district court’s decision concerning Appellants’ claims against him.
    The other Appellees urge that the district court correctly found that Appellants
    failed to timely appeal the bankruptcy court orders dismissing them. The
    parties have also submitted a variety of motions, both before and after oral
    argument. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. 2
    2 Appellants assert that we lack jurisdiction to review the decision of the United States
    District Court for the Eastern District of New York denying Appellants’ motion for mandatory
    abstention and that, as a consequence, we should transfer this appeal to the Second Circuit.
    Because Appellants have not appealed that decision to us, however, we see no reason to
    transfer or to even reach the question of whether we would have jurisdiction over that order.
    Appellants point out that they attempted to appeal the New York order to this court in an
    earlier appeal which the panel dismissed for lack of jurisdiction while striking Appellants’
    motion to transfer to the Second Circuit because the attorney who filed it was not admitted
    to practice in the Fifth Circuit. Appellants request that we reinstate that appeal, but provide
    no argument or authority as to why that request is properly directed to this panel or,
    assuming it is, why this panel should do so.
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    II.
    Under the law-of-the-case doctrine, we are bound by the panel opinion in
    Lothian IV. McClain v. Lufkin Indus., Inc., 
    649 F.3d 374
    , 385–86 (5th Cir.
    2011). 3 In affirming the bankruptcy court’s injunction, the Lothian IV panel
    examined the Kings County complaint in detail and made several findings
    concerning the case that control our resolution of the instant appeal. First, the
    Lothian IV panel held that all of the claims asserted by Appellants in the Kings
    County complaint “are derivative of an injury Lothian suffered.” 531 F. App’x
    at 441. Accordingly, the claims “became part of Lothian’s bankruptcy estate.”
    
    Id. The panel
    also held that pursuant to the terms of the Restructuring Plan,
    the claims “reverted to Lothian upon confirmation of the Plan.” Id.; see also 
    id. at 436
    n.9. In short, the panel held that the claims asserted in the Kings
    County case belong to Lothian, not Appellants.
    Second, the panel found that the Kings County suit was an attempt to
    relitigate the issues raised by the Anti-Lothian Committee in Lothian III and
    that granting Appellants the relief they seek in the Kings County suit would
    in effect undo the Lothian bankruptcy proceeding and violate the terms of the
    Restructuring Plan. 
    Id. at 440.
    Consequently, the Lothian IV panel held,
    “[r]egardless of the merits of the Kings County claims, they cannot be divorced
    from the bankruptcy proceeding itself.” 
    Id. The Lothian
    IV decision makes clear that the district court did not err in
    holding that the bankruptcy court had core jurisdiction over Appellants’ claims
    against Kelly.     Indeed, it is clear from the Lothian IV decision that the
    bankruptcy court had core jurisdiction over all the claims asserted in the Kings
    County case. This court has held that claims which are “inseparable from the
    3Although this court has recognized a few exceptions to the law-of-the-case doctrine,
    see Lyons v. Fisher, 
    888 F.2d 1071
    , 1075 (5th Cir. 1989), none are applicable here.
    6
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    bankruptcy context” and cannot “stand alone from the bankruptcy case” fall
    within the bankruptcy court’s core jurisdiction. Southmark Corp. v. Coopers &
    Lybrand (In re Southmark Corp.), 
    163 F.3d 925
    , 931 (5th Cir. 1999); see also
    EOP-Colonnade of Dallas Ltd. P’ship v. Faulkner (In re Stonebridge Techs.,
    Inc.), 
    430 F.3d 260
    , 267 (5th Cir. 2005). As the Lothian IV panel held, the
    Appellants’ claims in this case are so intimately tied to the Lothian bankruptcy
    that they “cannot be divorced from the bankruptcy proceeding itself.” 531 F.
    App’x at 440. Accordingly, the bankruptcy court had core jurisdiction 4 over
    Appellants’ claims, including their claims against Kelly. 5
    The Lothian IV decision likewise makes clear that Appellants lack
    standing to assert their claims against Kelly since, under Lothian IV,
    Appellants lack standing to pursue any of the Kings County claims. The
    Lothian IV panel held that all the claims Appellants assert in the Kings County
    case allege harm to Lothian and therefore became part of the Lothian
    bankruptcy estate. 
    Id. at 441.
    The panel also found that, under the terms of
    the Restructuring Plan, the claims passed from the bankruptcy estate to the
    4 Because the bankruptcy court had core jurisdiction over Appellants’ claims, the court
    correctly denied Appellants’ repeated motions for mandatory abstention. Gober v. Terra +
    Corp. (In re Gober), 
    100 F.3d 1195
    , 1206 (5th Cir. 1996); see also Edge Petroleum Operating
    Co. v. GPR Holdings, L.L.C. (In re TXNB Internal Case), 
    483 F.3d 292
    , 300–01 (5th Cir. 2007);
    In re 
    Southmark, 163 F.3d at 929
    .
    5 Appellants urge that even if the bankruptcy court had core jurisdiction over the
    Kings County claims, it nonetheless lacked constitutional authority to adjudicate at least
    some of those claims under Stern v. Marshall, 
    131 S. Ct. 2594
    (2011). In Stern, the Supreme
    Court held that a bankruptcy court lacked the authority under Article III of the Constitution
    to adjudicate a state-law counterclaim that was “in no way derived from or dependent upon
    bankruptcy law” and that existed “without regard to any bankruptcy 
    proceeding.” 131 S. Ct. at 2618
    . This court has already held, however, that the Kings County claims “cannot be
    divorced from bankruptcy proceeding itself” and that they belong to Lothian by operation of
    the Restructuring Plan approved by the bankruptcy court. Lothian IV, 531 F. App’x at 440.
    Unlike the claim at issue in Stern, therefore, the Kings County claims are by their nature
    intimately tied to the Lothian bankruptcy proceeding.
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    restructured Lothian. 
    Id. at 436
    n.9, 441. With respect to causes of action that
    become part of a bankruptcy estate, only the entity to which those claims are
    reserved under the restructuring plan has standing to assert them.           See
    McFarland v. Leyh (In re Tex. Gen. Petroleum Corp.), 
    52 F.3d 1330
    , 1335 & n.4
    (5th Cir. 1995); see also Torch Liquidating Trust ex rel. Bridge Assocs. L.L.C.
    v. Stockstill, 
    561 F.3d 377
    , 386–88 (5th Cir. 2009). This standing requirement
    is jurisdictional. Dynasty Oil and Gas, LLC v. Citizens Bank (In re United
    Operating, LLC), 
    540 F.3d 351
    , 354–55 (5th Cir. 2008); see also Nat. Benevolent
    Ass’n of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) v. Weil, Gotshal & Manges,
    LLP (In re Nat. Benevolent Ass’n of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)),
    333 F. App’x 822, 826 (5th Cir. 2009). Because the Restructuring Plan reserved
    the Kings County claims to Lothian, not Appellants, only Lothian has standing
    to assert them. Tex. Gen. Petroleum 
    Corp., 52 F.3d at 1335
    & n.4. Accordingly,
    the Appellants lack standing to assert any of the claims in the Kings County
    case. Because Appellants lack standing to assert any of the claims at issue, we
    do not address the other issues raised in their appeal.
    III.
    For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s order holding
    that the bankruptcy court had core jurisdiction over Appellants’ claims against
    Kelly and that Appellants lack standing to assert those claims.         Because
    Appellants also lack standing to assert any of their remaining claims, we
    DISMISS the remainder of the appeal for lack of jurisdiction. Appellants’
    motions for reinstatement of the 10-50407 appeal and transfer to the Second
    Circuit are DENIED. All other pending motions are DENIED as moot.
    8