Western Energy Production, Lp v. David Orchard, Successor Trustee of the Orchard Family Trust Dated November 19, 1979, Trust a of the Orchard Family Trust, Trust B of the Orchard Family Trust and Trust C of the Orchard Family Trust ( 2023 )


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  •               RENDERED: MAY 26, 2023; 10:00 A.M.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
    Commonwealth of Kentucky
    Court of Appeals
    NO. 2022-CA-0428-MR
    WESTERN ENERGY PRODUCTION,
    LP; BLACK ROCK FARMS, LLLP;
    BLACK ROCK THOROUGHBREDS,
    LLLP; SM CAPITAL VENTURES,
    LLC; STEVEN MARSHALL; AND
    WESTERN ENERGY PRODUCTION,
    LLC                                                APPELLANTS
    APPEAL FROM WOODFORD CIRCUIT COURT
    v.       HONORABLE JEREMY MICHAEL MATTOX, JUDGE
    ACTION NO. 17-CI-00201
    DEREK ORCHARD, SUCCESSOR
    TRUSTEE OF THE ORCHARD
    FAMILY TRUST DATED
    NOVEMBER 19, 1979, TRUST A OF
    THE ORCHARD FAMILY TRUST,
    TRUST B OF THE ORCHARD
    FAMILY TRUST AND TRUST C OF
    THE ORCHARD FAMILY TRUST                             APPELLEE
    OPINION
    AFFIRMING
    ** ** ** ** **
    BEFORE: THOMPSON, CHIEF JUDGE; CALDWELL AND GOODWINE,
    JUDGES.
    CALDWELL, JUDGE: This complex appeal asks two main questions. First, did
    the trial court correctly hold that Derek Orchard,1 (“Orchard”) a judgment creditor
    of Western Energy Production, LP (“Western”), had standing to challenge
    Western’s attempt to transfer its ownership of two Kentucky partnerships to a
    Colorado entity? Second, if Orchard has standing, did the trial court correctly
    grant summary judgment to Orchard because the documents purporting to transfer
    the Kentucky partnerships were not acknowledged, as required by their partnership
    agreements? We agree with the trial court that Orchard has standing and was
    entitled to summary judgment. Accordingly, we affirm.
    RELEVANT FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    The underlying facts and procedural history are tangled. Also, there
    are many business entities involved, some of which are similarly named. We have
    examined the parties’ briefs and the trial court’s record but, in the interests of
    clarity and judicial economy, we shall attempt to streamline the facts and
    procedural history. For example, we will refer collectively to the similarly named
    1
    Derek Orchard, sometimes curiously referred to as David Orchard, is a party in his role as
    successor trustee of the Orchard Family Trust dated November 19, 1979, Trust A of the Orchard
    Family Trust, Trust B of the Orchard Family Trust and Trust C of the Orchard Family Trust. For
    simplicity’s sake, we will refer to him as Orchard.
    -2-
    business entities related to, and including, Western as simply “Western.” We also
    will discuss only the arguments necessary to resolve the limited issues presented to
    us. Any arguments not discussed herein are irrelevant, redundant, or otherwise
    without merit.
    Orchard sued Western in a California state court over a debt. While
    that litigation was ongoing, Western executed documents transferring its
    ownership of two Kentucky entities, Black Rock Farms, LLLP and Black Rock
    Thoroughbreds, LLLP (collectively “Black Rock”) to Steven Marshall; Marshall
    then immediately transferred ownership of Black Rock to SM Capital Ventures,
    LLC (“SM”). Western, Black Rock, and SM were all owned, or controlled, by
    Marshall, and he alone signed the transfer documents on behalf of himself and all
    of the involved entities. None of the transfer documents were notarized.
    Orchard obtained a judgment for more than $600,000 against
    Western in California; Western then sought a charging order in the Fayette Circuit
    Court.2 The Fayette Circuit Court issued a charging order in favor of Orchard
    2
    A charging order is a “[a] statutory procedure whereby an individual partner’s creditor can
    satisfy its claim from the partner’s interest in the partnership.” BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (11th
    ed. 2019). See also 68 C.J.S. Partnership § 263 (2023) (“A charging order is a postjudgment
    remedy that allows the judgment creditor of an individual debtor-member of a limited liability
    company or a partnership to enforce a judgment by charging the individual member’s
    distributional interest with the unsatisfied amount of a judgment. A charging order is not a
    money judgment but the statutory means by which a judgment creditor may reach the partnership
    interest of a judgment debtor.”) (footnotes omitted). Although each jurisdiction has its own
    laws, in general a charging order “exists to protect other members” of the business entity “from
    having involuntarily to share governance responsibilities with someone they did not choose, or
    -3-
    against Western’s interest in Black Rock. But, by the time the charging order was
    issued, Western had already tried to transfer its interests in Black Rock to SM.
    Orchard filed this action in the Woodford Circuit Court against
    Western, Black Rock, Marshall, and SM (collectively “defendants” or
    “Appellants”). It is unclear from the parties’ briefs why Orchard obtained a
    charging order in Fayette Circuit Court but filed this action in Woodford Circuit
    Court,3 but the reason Orchard filed this action is plain: if Western had already
    from having to accept a creditor of another member as a co-manager. A charging order protects
    the autonomy of the original members, and their ability to manage their own enterprise.” In re
    Albright, 
    291 B.R. 538
    , 541 (Bankr. D. Colo. 2003). See also 68 C.J.S. Partnership § 263
    (2023) (“The purpose of the charging order is to protect the partnership business and prevent the
    disruption that would result if creditors of a partner executed directly on partnership assets.”).
    In Kentucky, the issuance of a charging order is governed by Kentucky Revised Statutes
    (KRS) 362.2-703, which provides in relevant part:
    (1) This section provides the exclusive remedy by which the judgment creditor of
    a partner or the transferee of a partner may satisfy a judgment out of the
    judgment debtor’s transferable interest.
    (2) On application to a court of competent jurisdiction by any judgment creditor
    of a partner or a partner’s transferee, the court may charge the transferable
    interest of the judgment debtor with payment of the unsatisfied amount of the
    judgment. To the extent so charged, the judgment creditor has only the rights
    of a transferee, and shall have no right to participate in the management or to
    cause the dissolution of the partnership.
    3
    Even if we assume for purposes of argument that each circuit court had jurisdiction over the
    case filed within it, it is unclear why one or the other case was not transferred so both would be
    before the same court, perhaps pursuant to the doctrine of forum non conveniens. See, e.g., Stipp
    v. St. Charles, 
    291 S.W.3d 720
    , 725 (Ky. App. 2009) (internal quotation marks and citations
    omitted) (“The doctrine of forum non conveniens is an exception to the general rule that a court
    is duty bound to hear cases within its vested jurisdiction. It permits a court properly vested with
    jurisdiction and venue nevertheless to decline the exercise of its jurisdiction where an alternative
    forum exists and where the private interests of the parties or the public interests of the tribunal
    would be better served by proceeding in the alternative forum.”). However, we decline to
    -4-
    divested itself of Black Rock, then the charging order was, from a practical
    perspective, useless.
    Orchard’s complaint raised two related claims, each with the common
    end goal of undoing the Black Rock transfers. Count I asked for a declaratory
    judgment that the transfers were void because they were not acknowledged, as
    required by Black Rock’s partnership agreements. Count II asked for a ruling that
    the transfers were void because they had been made with the intent to delay, hinder
    or defraud Orchard as a creditor of Western, as prohibited by KRS 378.010.4
    Western filed a motion to dismiss. First, they argued Count I had to
    be dismissed because it “asserts the same substantive rights as Count II . . . .”
    Second, they asserted Count II had to be dismissed because the Black Rock
    transfers had been effectuated in the ordinary course of business pursuant to
    Marshall’s counsel’s tax-related advice. Orchard eventually sought summary
    judgment on Count I, arguing it was plain that the transfers were invalid.
    The trial court eventually granted Western’s motion for summary
    judgment, and denied Orchard’s motion for summary judgment, because it
    explore Orchard’s curious usage of dual fora further because Appellants do not explicitly raise
    that two-track approach as a basis for relief (other than, to a degree, their unavailing collateral
    estoppel argument – which we shall address later).
    4
    Before its repeal, KRS 378.010 provided in relevant part that “[e]very gift, conveyance,
    assignment or transfer of . . . any estate, real or personal . . . made with the intent to delay, hinder
    or defraud creditors . . . shall be void as against such creditors . . . .” Though it was repealed
    several years ago, KRS 378.010 was operative when the Black Rock transfers occurred.
    -5-
    concluded Orchard lacked standing to bring the action since KRS 378.010 had
    been repealed before he filed his complaint. Despite having concluded Orchard
    lacked standing, the vast majority of the court’s opinion was favorable to him. For
    example, the court indicated that the lack of notarization on the Black Rock
    transfer documents violated the partnership agreements.
    Orchard appealed. We reversed.
    We held that “the trial court erred in finding Orchard lacked statutory
    standing under KRS 378.010” because the transfers occurred before its repeal.
    Orchard v. Western Energy Production, LP, No. 2019-CA-000066-MR, 
    2019 WL 5293489
    , at *2 (Ky. App. Oct. 18, 2019). We directed the trial court to
    “apply KRS 378.010” on remand. 
    Id.
     But we declined to address Orchard’s
    argument that he was entitled to summary judgment on Count I because the trial
    court had not directly ruled on that issue. Id. at *3.
    After our Supreme Court denied discretionary review, the case
    returned to the trial court, where Orchard quickly again moved for summary
    judgment on Count I. The primary basis for Orchard’s motion was the fact that the
    trial court had already held that the transfers did not comply with Black Rock’s
    partnership agreements. Western objected on numerous grounds, including an
    argument that Orchard was improperly trying to participate in the management of
    Western and/or Black Rock.
    -6-
    While Orchard’s motion was pending, Western filed their own motion
    for summary judgment on Count I. Attached to that motion were what were styled
    “Unanimous Written Consent” documents signed by Marshall on behalf of Black
    Rock, Western and SM. Those consents purported to amend Black Rock’s
    partnership agreements to, essentially, approve retroactively the prior, un-notarized
    Black Rock transfers.
    While the dueling motions for summary judgment were pending,
    Orchard asked the Fayette Circuit Court to hold Western in contempt for violating
    the charging order by executing the consent documents. The Fayette Circuit Court
    denied Orchard’s motion.5
    After the motions for summary judgment had been pending for
    roughly a year, the Woodford Circuit Court issued an unusual order granting
    Orchard’s motion for summary judgment on Count I of the complaint. The order
    contains a lengthy discussion of the case’s history but only minimal analysis.
    Specifically, the only analysis is: “Clearly under KRS 378.010, Plaintiff has
    standing, and as previously discussed, this Court found that the transfers did not
    comply with the partnership agreements. Therefore, the purported transfers in this
    5
    The Fayette Circuit Court’s entire record is not before us, but defendants attached the motion
    for contempt and the order denying that relief to their reply to Orchard’s response to their motion
    for summary judgment. No party has disputed the accuracy of those documents.
    -7-
    case were ineffective because they were not acknowledged.” The court did not
    address defendants’ motion for summary judgment nor many of the arguments
    raised by the parties. Western then filed this appeal.6
    ANALYSIS
    A. Standards of Review
    As the movant, Orchard bore the “burden of showing no genuine
    dispute of material fact.” Bramlett v. Ryan, 
    635 S.W.3d 831
    , 835 (Ky. 2021). That
    burden was heavy because the issue is not whether Orchard presented facts which
    6
    The order states that it is final and appealable but does not state there is no just cause for delay.
    Generally, an order which resolves an entire case is inherently final and appealable under
    Kentucky Rule of Civil Procedure (“CR”) 54.01 but an order which resolves only a discrete
    portion of a case may be made final and appealable only if it explicitly provides that it is final
    and appealable and there is no just cause for delay. See CR 54.02(1); Vorherr v. Coldiron, 
    525 S.W.3d 532
    , 540 (Ky. App. 2017). In short, this order is only final and appealable if it resolves
    the entire action because it lacks the otherwise requisite “no just cause for delay” recitation.
    The order does not explicitly address Appellants’ motion for summary judgment, nor
    does it explicitly resolve Count II of the complaint. It would have been far better practice for the
    trial court to have addressed those matters.
    Nonetheless, under these unique facts, we conclude the order is inherently final and
    appealable. The bottom line of the decision is the court’s conclusion that the Black Rock
    transfers were invalid. Count II sought the same core relief, albeit via a different legal theory
    and mechanism, so granting summary judgment on Count I rendered Count II functionally moot.
    After all, having declared the transfers invalid under Count I, it would have served no practical
    purpose to have determined if the transfers also violated KRS 378.010, the relief sought in Count
    II. Moreover, granting summary judgment to Orchard inevitably denied Appellants’ motion for
    summary judgment implicitly because it is impossible for both Orchard and Appellants to be
    entitled to summary judgment under these facts.
    In sum, what else of material substance remained for the trial court to do after it granted
    summary judgment to Orchard on Count I? Nothing. Thus, the order is final and appealable.
    -8-
    would “draw an inference or conclusion” in his favor; instead, the issue is whether
    “no material facts are disputed such that there is only one legally sufficient
    conclusion to be drawn from the facts – that being the conclusion urged by
    [Orchard].” Id. at 836.
    Our Supreme Court has stressed that “[s]ummary judgment is an
    extraordinary remedy a court must cautiously apply” which “may only be used to
    conclude litigation in which, as a matter of law, it would be impossible for the non-
    moving party to produce evidence at trial warranting a judgment in his or her
    favor.” Id. In assessing whether there are disputes of material fact, we must
    consider the evidence in the light most favorable to Western. Id. Because no
    findings of fact are at issue, our review is de novo. Id.
    Our analysis does not always precisely track that utilized by the trial
    court, but “[i]f an appellate court is aware of a reason to affirm the lower court’s
    decision, it must do so, even if on different grounds.” Mark D. Dean, P.S.C. v.
    Commonwealth Bank & Tr. Co., 
    434 S.W.3d 489
    , 496 (Ky. 2014).
    B. Orchard’s Standing
    Western first argues Orchard lacks standing because he is neither a
    party to Black Rock’s partnership agreements nor an intended beneficiary of them.
    Under longstanding Kentucky law, a stranger to a contract typically “has no right
    to question its validity,” Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Weck, 
    163 Ky. 37
    , 
    173 S.W. 317
    ,
    -9-
    317 (1915), unless it “was made for [the stranger’s] benefit.” Sexton v. Taylor
    Cnty., 
    692 S.W.2d 808
    , 810 (Ky. App. 1985). And, generally, the rules which
    govern contracts also govern partnership agreements. 68 C.J.S. Partnership § 113
    (2023). Orchard admits he is not a party to the agreements or a third-party
    beneficiary of them but asserts he has standing under, among other bases, KRS
    378.010. We agree.
    The parties have not cited, nor have we independently located, any
    precedent specifically allowing a creditor to file a declaratory judgment action
    under KRS 378.010 seeking to declare null a debtor’s attempted transfer of assets.
    But we conclude such an action is permissible (though we recognize that our
    decision will have limited future impact since KRS 378.010 has been repealed).
    A creditor seeking relief under KRS 378.010 would logically not have
    been a party to the allegedly fraudulent transaction it wished to challenge. In other
    words, a creditor seeking relief under KRS 378.010 would have been a stranger to
    the challenged transaction. Thus, a rigid, formulaic application of the typical
    standing rules barring third parties from challenging contracts would, under these
    unique facts, render illusory the statutory protection offered to creditors against
    allegedly fraudulent transfers of a debtor’s assets.
    Moreover, a declaratory judgment action is well-suited for these facts.
    Orchard sought only a ruling from the court that the transfers were an improper
    -10-
    attempt to circumvent the California judgment and Kentucky charging order.
    Western, of course, vigorously denies having committed any improprieties.
    Therefore, there is an actual case or controversy between the parties about whether
    Western took acts to impair Orchard’s rights as a judgment creditor. See, e.g.,
    Commonwealth v. Kentucky Retirement Systems, 
    396 S.W.3d 833
    , 839 (Ky. 2013)
    (internal quotation marks and citations omitted) (noting that the declaratory
    judgment act “requires the existence of an actual controversy” which “occurs when
    a defendant’s position would impair, thwart, obstruct or defeat plaintiff in his
    rights. A declaratory judgment action may be brought standing alone, or may be
    brought with the substantive claim seeking recompense.”). A judgment creditor
    may, generally, seek a declaratory judgment that a creditor has intentionally taken
    actions to destabilize or undermine a court order.
    Western argues that Orchard could not seek declaratory relief in
    Count I while bringing a separate fraud claim under KRS 378.010 in Count II
    because a declaratory judgment action cannot be “a substitute or alternative for
    such actions as are particularly provided for, to be brought in a particular way.”
    Sullenger v. Sullenger’s Adm’x, 
    287 Ky. 232
    , 
    152 S.W.2d 571
    , 574 (1941).
    However, though not addressed by the parties, precedent also provides that relief
    under the Declaratory Judgment Act is unavailable “only where a special statute is
    clearly intended to provide an exclusive remedy . . . .” Iroquois Post No. 229, Am.
    -11-
    Legion v. City of Louisville, 
    279 S.W.2d 13
    , 14 (Ky. 1955). Indeed, CR 57 is
    squarely opposed to Western’s argument since it provides in relevant part that
    “[t]he existence of another adequate remedy does not preclude a judgment for
    declaratory relief in cases where it is appropriate.”
    We conclude that Western’s argument fails. KRS 378.010 was not a
    “special statute” which provided an “exclusive remedy.” It did not specify that an
    action for an alleged violation of its provisions had to have been brought “in a
    particular way.” Moreover, in the prior appeal we held that “the trial court erred in
    finding Orchard lacked statutory standing under KRS 378.010” and “direct[ed] the
    trial court to apply KRS 378.010 on remand.” Orchard, 
    2019 WL 5293489
    , at *2.
    In sum, under these facts, we affirm the trial court’s conclusion that
    Orchard had standing to bring a declaratory judgment action.
    C. No Exclusive Remedy Violation
    Of course, having standing only permits Orchard to seek relief; we
    must now determine whether the trial court correctly concluded that he was
    entitled to receive relief. Western raises several interrelated arguments that
    Orchard was not entitled to relief, the first being that a declaratory judgment action
    is improper because KRS 362.2-703 provides Orchard’s exclusive remedy. KRS
    362.2-703 has apparently never been cited by this Court or our Supreme Court, so
    there is no precedent to assist us.
    -12-
    KRS 362.2-703(1) states in relevant part that it “provides the
    exclusive remedy by which the judgment creditor of a partner or the transferee of a
    partner may satisfy a judgment out of the judgment debtor’s transferable interest.”
    However, Orchard is not attempting to satisfy a judgment in his declaratory
    judgment action. Indeed, he is not seeking monetary relief. Instead, Orchard is
    attempting to ensure that an extant judgment is not impaired.
    In its brief, Western raises a related argument that permitting the
    declaratory judgment action would impermissibly allow Orchard to “meddle and
    challenge every aspect” of Black Rock in order to “effectively destroy the business
    from within.” We disagree for two main reasons. First, Orchard has no motivation
    to destroy Black Rock. In fact, his motivation is logically the exact opposite as he
    needs Black Rock to continue to be vibrant to help him recover under the charging
    order.
    Second, we disagree with Western’s speculative belief that allowing
    the declaratory judgment count permits Orchard to be involved in Black Rock’s (or
    Western’s) day-to-day business affairs. If we affirm the trial court’s grant of
    summary judgment to Orchard, the transfer of ownership from Western to SM will
    be unwound and the charging order would remain effective. But that is all that
    would occur.
    -13-
    The declaratory judgment in favor of Orchard would not permit him
    to require Black Rock (or Western) to take any business-related actions or permit
    him to forbid Black Rock from taking any business-related actions. For example, a
    declaratory judgment would not allow Orchard to require Black Rock to buy or sell
    any particular horse or hire or fire any particular employee. After receiving a
    declaratory judgment, Orchard would be in the same position he was prior to filing
    this complaint: a judgment creditor who has no role in the management or
    business operations of Black Rock (or Western).
    Finally, we are not persuaded by Western’s lament that affirming the
    trial court’s decision would require them to amend their post-transfer tax returns.
    The only issue before the court is whether Orchard presented a meritorious claim
    for declaratory relief. The fact that the declaratory judgment may result in
    ancillary inconvenience or expense to Western is irrelevant – especially as Western
    alone is responsible for executing the unacknowledged documents.
    D. The Validity of the Transfers
    We now turn to Western’s sundry arguments that the transfer
    documents were sufficient. We disagree.
    1. Acknowledgement Requirements
    In relevant part, the partnership agreements provide that a partner
    “may assign the whole or any part of his interest in the Partnership . . . by
    -14-
    executing and acknowledging a written instrument of assignment . . . .”7 The
    agreements do not contain a definition of acknowledgment, but the trial court
    explained in the decision which gave rise to the first appeal that term essentially
    requires any documents transferring partnership interests to be notarized. On
    remand, the trial court held that the transfers at issue “were ineffective because
    they were not acknowledged.” Although their brief is somewhat hazy at times, it
    appears as if Western argues that the agreements did not require notarization.
    “An acknowledgment consists of an oral declaration by the signer of
    the document and a written certificate prepared by a public official, generally a
    notary public.” 1A C.J.S. Acknowledgments § 1 (2023). Accord BLACK’S LAW
    DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019) (defining acknowledgment as it pertains to this case as
    “[a] formal declaration made in the presence of an authorized officer, such as a
    notary public, by someone who signs a document and confirms that the signature is
    authentic”); KRS 423.130(1) (requiring a person “taking an acknowledgment” to
    “certify that . . . [t]he person acknowledging appeared before him and
    acknowledged he executed the instrument”). Therefore, the trial court properly
    held that the transfer documents failed to comply with the unambiguous terms of
    the partnership agreements because the transfer documents were not
    7
    The quoted language applies to limited partners but a general partner “may assign Units in the
    same manner as a Limited Partner.”
    -15-
    acknowledged. All the trial court did was to enforce the plain language of the
    partnership agreements. See, e.g., 68 C.J.S. Partnership § 113 (2023) (“The courts
    cannot make a different contract from that which the parties intended or override
    the agreement which the parties, in fact, made. If the provisions of a partnership
    agreement are clear, complete, and unambiguous, the agreement should be
    enforced according to its terms . . . .”) (footnotes omitted).
    2. Silent Amendment of the Partnership Agreements
    Having established that the Black Rock partnership agreements
    required any documents transferring ownership to be acknowledged, we now
    address Western’s argument that the acknowledgement requirements were
    (silently) eliminated when Marshall – who owned or controlled all relevant entities
    – signed unacknowledged transfer documents. Western’s argument is based on a
    clause in the partnership agreements allowing them to “be amended in any respect
    upon the affirmative vote of the Partners holding a majority of the then outstanding
    Units.” Under Western’s argument, Marshall “voted” to amend the agreements by
    simply signing the transfer documents.
    Western’s argument fails because it cherry picks the language of the
    partnership agreements. The relevant sections of the agreements provide in full:
    Second [sic] 21.1[.] Except as otherwise required by
    law, this Agreement may be amended in any respect
    upon the affirmative vote of the Partners holding a
    majority of the then outstanding Units. If Partners
    -16-
    holding more than 10 percent of the then outstanding
    Units request in writing that the General Partner submit
    to a vote of the Partners a proposed amendment to this
    Agreement, the General Partner shall do so. Any vote of
    the Partners may be accomplished at a meeting of
    Partners called for such purpose by the General Partner
    upon not less than ten days’ prior notice or, in lieu of a
    meeting, by the written consent of the required
    percentage of Partners.
    As Orchard’s brief cogently argues, Western “have not produced
    resolutions, meeting minutes, a sworn affidavit, or any other evidence to establish”
    that there was either a meeting called to amend the agreements or a written consent
    to amend them without a meeting. The agreements do not permit themselves to be
    silently amended whenever Marshall takes any action which does not conform with
    them. To the contrary, the agreements set forth a formal amendment process and
    Western has not pointed to proof where they attempted to follow that process.
    In fact, the transfer documents each state that the transferee “accepts
    and adopts all the provisions” of the partnership agreements. It would be contrary
    to the transfer documents’ plain language to conclude that they somehow were
    intended to amend the partnership agreements. Moreover, the agreements require
    an affirmative vote to be amended, and merely signing a document which makes
    no mention of amending the agreements is not an affirmative amendment vote.
    -17-
    3. Collateral Estoppel
    Western tersely argues that Orchard is collaterally estopped to
    contend that the transfers were ineffective because the Fayette Circuit Court denied
    Orchard’s motion for contempt. Orchard does not meaningfully respond to the
    argument in his brief, nor did the trial court address this argument.
    As we have explained, “[c]ollateral estoppel is a doctrine that evolved
    to promote judicial economy and finality” whose “essential elements . . . are: (1)
    identity of issues; (2) a final decision or judgment on the merits; (3) a necessary
    issue with the estopped party given a full and fair opportunity to litigate; and (4) a
    prior losing litigant.” Swinford Trucking Co., Inc. v. Paducah Bank and Tr. Co.,
    
    314 S.W.3d 310
    , 311 (Ky. App. 2010). Though there is obviously overlap between
    the Fayette Circuit Court action and the Woodford Circuit Court actions, we reject
    Western’s collateral estoppel claims because the precise issue in the Fayette
    contempt proceedings is not present in the Woodford declaratory judgment action.
    The question in the Fayette contempt proceedings was whether
    Western took acts which were contemptuous of the court’s charging order. The
    Woodford action at hand does not involve whether Western violated the charging
    order itself. Instead, the question here is whether the Black Rock transfers were
    valid. The two cases are obviously related but the core issues in the contempt
    -18-
    motion and this action are not identical, so we must reject Western’s collateral
    estoppel arguments.
    4. Retroactive Amendment of the Partnership Agreements
    Western alternatively argues that they retroactively amended the
    partnership agreements to approve the transfers at issue via issuing written
    consents signed by Marshall on behalf of SM, Black Rock and Western. Those
    consents, executed while this case was on remand to the Woodford Circuit Court,
    provide in relevant part that:
    it is in the best interest of the Partnership [Black Rock] to
    formally amend its Agreement in writing to remove any
    alleged or existing requirement that an assignment of
    Limited Partnership interest be acknowledge [sic] by
    notarized signature . . . .
    Any transfer of any Partnership interest (including
    a Limited Partnership interest) delivered to the General
    Partner, whether before or after the date of this
    Unanimous Written Consent, is effective and recognized
    for all purposes as of the date of [sic] set forth on the
    applicable transfer document.
    Western argues that Orchard agreed that the lack of
    acknowledgements could be “cured” during various Woodford Circuit Court
    proceedings. However, as Orchard notes in his brief, Western failed to list the
    video footage of those proceedings in its designation of record. Consequently, the
    circuit court clerk did not include videos of those hearings in the certified record
    before us. See Kentucky Rules of Appellate Procedure (“RAP”) 24(A)(3) and
    -19-
    (B)(1)(A) (effective January 1, 2023);8 CR 98(3) (effective before January 1,
    2023);9 Gambrel v. Gambrel, 
    501 S.W.3d 900
    , 902 (Ky. App. 2016) (“The
    appellant . . . bore responsibility for ensuring the appellate court received a
    complete record. He failed to carry his burden by not designating the November 9
    hearing to be certified as part of the appellate record . . . . Without the recorded
    hearing, we cannot review Denver’s claims and must assume the content of the
    hearing supported the trial court’s entry of the DVO.”). Because the hearings
    relied on by Western are not in the record before us, we cannot determine whether
    Orchard definitively agreed that the deficiencies in the transfer documents could be
    8
    RAP 24 provides in relevant part:
    (A)(3) . . . Official recordings of the trial that results in the order or
    judgment being appealed from shall be certified as a part of the
    record on appeal. In addition, official recordings of other
    proceedings that have been designated by the parties . . . shall be
    certified as a part of the record on appeal . . . .
    (B)(1)(a) . . . Appellant or counsel for appellant, if any, shall
    provide the clerk of the trial court with a designation listing with
    specificity the dates on which official recordings were made for all
    pre-trial and post-trial proceedings necessary for inclusion in the
    record on appeal.
    9
    The former CR 98(3), which was in effect when Appellants filed this appeal and submitted
    their designation of record, similarly contained the following relevant language:
    To facilitate the timely preparation and certification of the record
    . . . appellant or counsel for appellant, if any, shall provide the
    clerk with a list setting out the dates on which video recordings
    were made for all pre-trial and post-trial proceedings necessary for
    inclusion in the record on appeal.
    -20-
    “cured.” And, of course, agreeing that the transfer documents could be cured is not
    the same as agreeing that they were cured by these consent documents.
    Our review of the curative efficacy and validity of the consent
    agreements is hampered by the fact that the trial court did not address this issue.
    Moreover, Western cites no binding authority holding that it is permissible to
    retroactively amend a partnership agreement to validate an act which violated the
    agreement’s terms when performed. On the other hand, Orchard cites no binding
    authority prohibiting a retroactive amendment of a partnership agreement.
    Our independent research did not reveal opinions addressing this
    precise issue. However, there are at least some instances where a partnership is
    permitted to act retroactively. For example, under KRS 362.1-802(2), a
    partnership may sometimes retroactively unwind its dissolution.10 But even if we
    thus assume – solely for the purposes of argument – that a partnership may
    10
    KRS 362.1-802(2) provides:
    (3) At any time after the dissolution of a partnership and before the
    winding up of its business is completed, all of the partners, including
    any dissociating partner other than a wrongfully dissociating partner,
    may waive the right to have the partnership’s business wound up and
    the partnership terminated. In that event:
    (a) The partnership resumes carrying on its business as if
    dissolution had never occurred, and any liability incurred
    by the partnership or a partner after the dissolution and
    before the waiver is determined as if dissolution had never
    occurred . . . .
    -21-
    sometimes retroactively amend its partnership agreement in certain circumstances,
    Appellants have not shown this is one of those unusual circumstances.
    Prior to its repeal, KRS 378.010 made plain that Kentucky public
    policy is to prevent a debtor from transferring assets to prevent a creditor’s ability
    to recover a lawful debt. And for over a century, Kentucky precedent has held that
    a transfer of assets by someone against whom litigation is pending is a “badge of
    fraud, especially where the conveyance leaves the grantor without any estate.”
    McDonough v. McGowan, 
    165 Ky. 425
    , 
    177 S.W. 277
    , 279 (1915).
    Here, Marshall arranged for Western’s interests in Black Rock to be
    transferred to SM while Orchard’s claims against Western were pending in a
    California court. As it pertains to this case, it appears that Western would have no
    Kentucky assets remaining subject to the charging order if the Black Rock
    transfers were effective. Thus, the transfers contain at least one badge of fraud.
    We conclude that it would be improper to allow a judgment debtor to take a
    retroactive act which contains a badge of fraud and would impair the rights of a
    judgment creditor, or the holder of a charging order. We agree with Orchard that
    “if permitted to operate as Appellants intend, [the consents] will effectively allow
    Western to remove its interests in the Black Rock Entities from Orchard’s charging
    order’s purview despite the transfers being ineffective prior to the charging order’s
    -22-
    effective date” which “would undermine both Orchard’s rights under the charging
    order and the charging order remedy at large . . . .”
    Moreover, deeming the consents to be curative would allow Western
    to intentionally, retroactively thwart a charging order. A charging order is “the
    exclusive remedy by which the judgment creditor of a partner or the transferee of a
    partner may satisfy a judgment out of the judgment debtor’s transferable interest.”
    KRS 362.2-703(1). Allowing Western to eliminate, retroactively, its interests in
    Black Rock would mean that the efficacy of the charging order would be nil.
    Thus, Orchard’s “exclusive remedy” would be useless, leaving it with no effective
    remedy at all.
    Or, as Orchard asserts, if the consents “are given effect, it will gut
    Orchard’s charging order, leaving him with no other remedy to collect [the]
    judgment debt through Western’s interests in the Black Rock Entities.” We cannot
    countenance a judgment debtor retroactively eviscerating the rights of a judgment
    creditor. We cannot countenance the intentional, retroactive undermining of a
    valid court order.11
    11
    Appellants argue that Orchard did not raise the inherent conflict between the consents and the
    charging order to the trial court and thus that conflict is beyond our purview. But Appellants
    themselves specifically argued to the Woodford Circuit Court in their motion for summary
    judgment that Marshall’s approval of the consents means “there is no longer an existing ‘actual
    controversy’ with respect to Count I of the Plaintiff’s Complaint . . . .” Record (“R.”) at 411.
    And Orchard responded by arguing in relevant part that the consents “will effectively allow
    Western to remove its interest in the Black Rock Entities from the Charging Order’s purview
    despite the transfers being unsuccessful prior to the Charging Order’s effective date[,]” which
    -23-
    Finally, the consents are flawed because they curiously were not
    signed by Marshall in his individual capacity. Western did not transfer its interests
    in Black Rock directly to SM. Instead, Western transferred its Black Rock
    interests to Marshall who immediately transferred his interests to SM. Thus,
    Marshall in his individual capacity would logically also need to have re-approved
    the transfers in his individual capacity as both a grantee and grantor.
    E. Summary
    Lest this opinion be misconstrued, we are not opining definitively that
    Western acted in bad faith with the attempt to transfer Western’s interests in Black
    Rock to SM. There are badges of fraud, but Western has presented
    counterarguments that the transfers were undertaken upon the tax-related advice of
    counsel. Though the parties discuss it, whether Western acted in bad faith is not
    really at issue in this appeal. Perhaps the issue of Western’s intent presents a
    disputed issue of fact. But that dispute is not material to the limited questions
    “would undermine both Orchard’s rights under the Charging Order and the charging order
    remedy at large . . . .” R. at 417. In short, though the parties’ phraseology in circuit court may
    be different than that used here, the impact of the consents vis-à-vis the charging order was
    discussed in that court. In any event, we are affirming the trial court’s decision based on the
    plain face of the record and our Supreme Court has forcefully commanded that “[i]f an appellate
    court is aware of a reason to affirm the lower court’s decision, it must do so, even if on different
    grounds.” Mark D. Dean, P.S.C., 434 S.W.3d at 496. See also, e.g., Lynn v. Commonwealth,
    
    257 S.W.3d 596
    , 599 (Ky. App. 2008) (“[A]n appellate court may affirm the decision of a trial
    court for any reason sustainable under the record.”).
    -24-
    presented because this appeal does not involve the validity of the charging order or
    whether Western may divest itself of Black Rock, under certain circumstances.
    Instead, reduced to its core essence, the issue in this appeal is whether
    the transfer documents executed by Western are valid – regardless of Western’s
    subjective motivation for seeking to divest itself of Black Rock. Even viewing the
    facts in the light most favorable to Western, the transfer documents are fatally
    flawed. Thus, Orchard was entitled to summary judgment.
    In other words, this entire litigation only returns the parties to the
    status quo ante litem – Orchard possesses a California judgment against Western,
    Western has not validly transferred its interests in Black Rock, and Orchard
    possesses a Kentucky charging order against Western’s interests in Black Rock.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the Woodford Circuit Court is affirmed.
    ALL CONCUR.
    BRIEFS FOR APPELLANTS:                      BRIEF FOR APPELLEE:
    Thomas D. Bullock                           Gregory P. Parsons
    Rachele T. Yohe                             Marshall R. Hixson
    Lexington, Kentucky                         Megan K. George
    Lexington, Kentucky
    -25-