Korth v. Luther , 304 Neb. 450 ( 2019 )


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    12/13/2019 09:06 AM CST
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    Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets
    304 Nebraska Reports
    KORTH v. LUTHER
    Cite as 
    304 Neb. 450
    Gerald C. Korth, appellee and cross-appellant,
    v. Laura Luther and Michael Luther,
    appellees and cross-appellees, Atelier
    Partners, intervenor-appellee and
    cross-appellant, David J. Koukol,
    appellant, and Kathryn J. Derr,
    appellee and cross-appellant.
    Gerald C. Korth and Atelier Partners,
    appellee and cross-appellants, v. Laura
    Luther and Michael Luther, appellees
    and cross-appellees, David J. Koukol,
    appellant, and Kathryn J. Derr,
    appellee and cross-appellant.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed November 15, 2019.   Nos. S-18-670, S-18-671.
    1. Conveyances: Fraud: Equity: Appeal and Error. An action under the
    Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act is equitable in nature, and an appeal of
    a district court’s determination that transfers of assets were in violation
    of the act is equitable in nature.
    2. Equity: Appeal and Error. In an appeal of an equity action, an appel-
    late court tries factual questions de novo on the record, reaching a con-
    clusion independent of the findings of the trial court, provided, however,
    that where credible evidence is in conflict on a material issue of fact, the
    appellate court considers and may give weight to the fact that the trial
    judge heard and observed the witnesses and accepted one version of the
    facts rather than another.
    3. Judgments: Appeal and Error. When reviewing questions of law,
    an appellate court resolves the questions independently of the lower
    court’s conclusions.
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    4. Judgments: Pleadings. A motion for judgment on the pleadings is prop-
    erly granted when it appears from the pleadings that only questions of
    law are presented.
    5. Attorney Fees: Appeal and Error. On appeal, an appellate court
    will uphold a lower court’s decision allowing or disallowing attorney
    fees for frivolous or bad faith litigation in the absence of an abuse
    of discretion.
    6. Conveyances: Fraud: Debtors and Creditors: Proof. In an action to
    set aside an actually fraudulent transfer or obligation under Neb. Rev.
    Stat. § 36-705(a)(1) (Reissue 2016) of the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer
    Act, it is the plaintiff’s burden to prove by clear and convincing evi-
    dence that (1) the debtor made a transfer or incurred an obligation, (2)
    the plaintiff was a creditor of the debtor, and (3) the debtor made the
    transfer or incurred the obligation with actual intent to hinder, delay, or
    defraud any creditor of the debtor.
    7. Conveyances: Fraud: Words and Phrases. It is fundamental that
    before there can be a “fraudulent transfer” under the Uniform Fraudulent
    Transfer Act, there must be a “transfer.”
    8. Actions: Parties: Appeal and Error. An appellate court reviews a case
    on the theories pursued by the parties, not on a theory that the parties
    might have raised.
    9. Conveyances: Fraud: Property: Words and Phrases. There are limits
    to how abstract an interest may be and still constitute “property” under
    the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act.
    10. ____: ____: ____: ____. Whether under the Uniform Fraudulent
    Transfer Act there is a “subject of ownership” constituting “property”
    that can be an “asset” depends on a legitimate and identifiable claim
    of entitlement.
    11. Conveyances: Fraud: Debtors and Creditors. A security agreement by
    the debtor in favor of an alleged transferee is the vehicle for disposing
    of or parting with an asset or an interest in an asset; for purposes of the
    Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act, it is not the asset itself.
    12. Conveyances: Fraud: Property: Debtors and Creditors: Estates:
    Liens: Words and Phrases. Only equity in property in excess of the
    amount of encumbering liens thereon is an “asset” reachable by credi-
    tors as a fraudulent transfer; encumbered property is not considered part
    of the debtor’s estate.
    13. Conveyances: Fraud: Debtors and Creditors. A blanket security
    agreement does not convey an asset under the Uniform Fraudulent
    Transfer Act if everything subject to ownership that is described as
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    collateral therein is fully encumbered by other creditors with superior
    claims at the time of the alleged transfer.
    14.   Judges: Words and Phrases. A judicial abuse of discretion exists when
    the reasons or rulings of a trial judge are clearly untenable, unfairly
    depriving a litigant of a substantial right and denying just results in mat-
    ters submitted for disposition.
    15.   Actions: Attorney Fees: Words and Phrases. Frivolous for the pur-
    poses of Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-824 (Reissue 2016) is defined as being
    a legal position wholly without merit, that is, without rational argu-
    ment based on law and evidence to support a litigant’s position in
    the lawsuit.
    16.   ____: ____: ____. Frivolous for purposes of Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-824
    (Reissue 2016) connotes an improper motive or legal position so wholly
    without merit as to be ridiculous.
    17.   Actions. Any doubt whether a legal position is frivolous or taken in
    bad faith should be resolved in favor of the one whose legal position is
    in question.
    Appeals from the District Court for Douglas County: W.
    Mark Ashford, Judge. Affirmed in part, and in part reversed.
    Mark C. Laughlin and Jacqueline M. DeLuca, of Fraser
    Stryker, P.C., L.L.O., for appellant.
    Lisa M. Meyer, of Pansing, Hogan, Ernst & Bachman,
    L.L.P., for appellee Gerald C. Korth.
    Kathryn J. Derr,              of   Berkshire       &     Burmeister,       for
    intervenor-appellee.
    Richard L. Anderson and David J. Skalka, of Croker, Huck,
    Kasher, DeWitt, Anderson & Gonderinger, L.L.C., for appellee
    Laura Luther.
    Maynard H. Weinberg, of Weinberg & Weinberg, P.C., for
    appellee Michael Luther.
    Julie Jorgensen, of Morrow, Willnauer & Church, L.L.C., for
    appellee Kathryn J. Derr.
    Heavican, C.J., Miller-Lerman, Cassel, Stacy, Funke,
    Papik, and Freudenberg, JJ.
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    KORTH v. LUTHER
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    Freudenberg, J.
    I. NATURE OF CASE
    This consolidated appeal involves two actions brought under
    Nebraska’s Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act (UFTA)1 by two
    creditors. The creditors alleged in both actions that a blan-
    ket security agreement guaranteeing repayment of a loan by
    a wife to her husband was a fraudulent transfer under the
    UFTA. The amount loaned to the husband was paid directly
    to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to satisfy a settlement
    agreement between the husband and the IRS relating to the
    husband’s unpaid taxes. When the husband signed the blanket
    security agreement, the IRS liens were still outstanding and the
    husband made ownership claims to little other than contingent
    expectancy interests in past and future business ventures. After
    receipt of the funds, the IRS extinguished the liens and dis-
    missed the lawsuit, which sought to foreclose against the mari-
    tal home that was titled solely in the wife’s name. Following
    a trial in one of the actions, the district court determined that
    there was no actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud any
    creditor under the UFTA and, in any event, that the wife had
    proved good faith. The court ultimately granted the wife attor-
    ney fees as sanctions against the creditors and their attorneys
    on the grounds that both actions were frivolous. We affirm in
    part and in part reverse.
    II. BACKGROUND
    1. Prior Judgments in Favor of Creditors
    In July 2001, Gerald C. Korth was awarded a judgment
    against Michael Luther and a company then owned by Michael,
    Aden Enterprises, Inc., in the amount of $1,392,328.50. The
    judgment was entered as a sanction for discovery violations.
    Korth subsequently sought orders in aid of execution, but was
    unsuccessful in securing any assets. On October 4, 2016, the
    1
    Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 36-701 to 36-712 (Reissue 2016) (subsequently repealed
    and replaced by Uniform Voidable Transactions Act, 2019 Neb. Laws,
    L.B. 70).
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    district court released Terra Nova Carbon Energy Company,
    LLC (Terra Nova); Terra Nova’s chief executive officer; and
    other entities on the grounds that they had proved they pos-
    sessed no money, property, or credits of Michael at the time
    garnishee interrogatories were served and should accordingly
    be discharged of any garnishee liability.
    In an unrelated action in June 2007, Atelier Partners (Atelier)
    obtained a money judgment against Michael in the amount of
    $152,898. Atelier was unable to execute on its judgment to any
    degree until May 2013, when Michael’s stock interests in sev-
    eral business entities, including Luther Capital Management,
    L.L.C. (Luther Capital), and Luther Corporation, were auc-
    tioned off at a sheriff’s sale following public notice. Atelier
    purchased the interests for $1,000.
    2. Other Lawsuits by Atelier or Korth
    A prior action by Atelier (the 2012 Atelier action) against
    Laura Luther and Michael, her husband, had sought to set
    aside a $2 million cash conveyance to Laura from Michael
    and the acquisition of the marital home in Laura’s name. The
    action was dismissed with prejudice as barred by the statute
    of limitations.
    3. IRS Action to Enforce Tax Liens
    Between 2007 and 2009, the IRS filed with the Nebraska
    Secretary of State notices of a federal tax lien against Michael
    in a total amount of approximately $1 million. On February
    12, 2012, the IRS sued Laura and Michael for the collection
    of unpaid taxes owed by Michael (the IRS action). The IRS
    sought a judgment against Michael in the total amount of
    $1,266,227.20 for federal personal income taxes and penalties
    for the years 2004 through 2007 and trust fund recovery penal-
    ties for 2001 and 2002.
    The IRS named Laura in the suit because it sought to fore-
    close its tax liens against the home that Laura and Michael
    lived in, which was titled only in Laura’s name. The IRS
    alleged that Michael provided money to Laura to purchase
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    the home and that Michael had retained beneficial use and
    equitable ownership of the home. The IRS joined, as persons
    that may claim an interest in the property, Atelier, Korth, and
    several other creditors of Michael.
    Michael reached a settlement agreement with the IRS in
    which he agreed to pay the IRS $450,000 to satisfy the tax
    debts owed by him as of March 24, 2014. In exchange, the IRS
    agreed to dismiss the case with prejudice as against Laura and
    Michael and not take further collection action against the home
    or certain transfers of property between Laura and Michael.
    The IRS also agreed to terminate the tax liens after receipt of
    the $450,000.
    4. $450,000 Loan and Corresponding
    Security Agreement
    Laura agreed to loan Michael $450,000 in order to pay
    the settlement, because Michael lacked the funds to do so.
    On March 20, 2014, Michael signed a security agreement to
    secure payment of the loan, which was reflected by a demand
    note also dated March 20, 2014, in the original face amount
    of $450,000.
    The security agreement described that it was to secure
    payment of the “Obligations,” which were defined as the
    March 20, 2014, demand note in the original face amount of
    $450,000. The security agreement then described the collateral
    for such obligations as follows:
    “Collateral” means the following personal property,
    assets, and rights, wherever located, whether now owned
    or hereafter acquired or arising, in which [Michael] now
    has or hereafter acquires an interest and all proceeds
    and products thereof: all personal and fixture property
    of every kind and nature including without limitation all
    goods (including inventory, equipment and any accessions
    thereto), instruments (including promissory notes), docu-
    ments, accounts (including health-care-insurance receiv-
    ables), chattel paper (whether tangible or electronic),
    deposit accounts, letter-of-credit rights (whether or not
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    the letter of credit is evidenced by a writing), commercial
    tort claims, securities and all other investment property,
    supporting obligations, any other contract rights or rights
    to the payment of money, insurance claims and proceeds,
    and all general intangibles (including all payment intan-
    gibles). [Laura] acknowledges that the attachment of [her]
    security interest in any additional commercial tort claim
    as original collateral is subject to [Michael’s] compli-
    ance with this agreement with respect to commercial
    tort claims.
    The Collateral shall also include, as applicable, all (i)
    products of the Collateral; (ii) substitutions and replace-
    ments for the Collateral; (iii) proceeds from the sale or
    disposition of the Collateral, including insurance proceeds
    and any rights of subrogation resulting from the damage
    or destruction of the Collateral; and (iv) for Collateral that
    is tangible, all additions, increases, improvements, acces-
    sories, attachments, parts, equipment and repairs now or
    in the future attached to or used in connection with such
    Collateral, and any warehouse receipts, bills of lading or
    other documents of title now or in the future evidencing
    [Michael’s] ownership of the Collateral.
    5. First UCC Filing
    On March 20, 2014, a Uniform Commercial Code (UCC)
    financing statement was filed with the Secretary of State,
    describing Michael, at his mailing address, as the debtor and
    Laura as the secured party. It described the collateral in the
    same terms as those set forth in the security agreement.
    6. Payment of IRS and Dismissal of Claims
    The $450,000 was transferred from Laura’s brokerage
    account to her attorney’s trust account, from where it was trans-
    ferred directly to the IRS on March 24, 2014. Subsequently,
    the IRS terminated the tax liens and the court dismissed with
    prejudice the IRS action as against Laura and Michael. The
    court thereafter dismissed any and all claims against the United
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    States with prejudice and any and all pending claims asserted
    by any defendant against any coparty without prejudice.
    7. Collateral Control Agreement
    On March 19, 2014, a collateral control agreement was
    signed by Michael, Laura, and Koch as chief executive officer
    of the “account debtor,” Terra Nova. The agreement described
    that Terra Nova “may now or in the future hold accounts,
    general intangibles, or other elements of the Collateral for
    [Michael], and acknowledges [Laura’s] security interest in the
    Collateral.” Terra Nova further “acknowledges, without imme-
    diate verification, that it is not aware of and has not been given
    notice of any other security interest existing on the Collateral.”
    Terra Nova subordinated in favor of Laura “any security inter-
    est or lien [Terra Nova] may have, now or in the future, against
    the Collateral, except that [Terra Nova] will retain its right of
    setoff in the account.”
    8. Korth Filed Complaint Alleging Security
    Agreement Was Fraudulent Transfer
    On January 14, 2015, Korth, represented by attorney David
    Koukol, filed a complaint against Laura and Michael alleging
    that the security agreement and the financing statement that
    recorded that agreement reflected a fraudulent transfer. The
    complaint did not seek to void the collateral control agree-
    ment. Korth’s complaint was filed under case No. CI 15-299
    (CI 15-299).
    9. Laura’s and Michael’s Answers
    to Complaint in CI 15-299
    Laura and Michael, in their answers to the complaint, denied
    that Korth had a lien on Michael’s personal property at the time
    of the collateral agreement, elaborating that he had not suc-
    cessfully seized in execution any of Michael’s property pursu-
    ant to Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-1504 (Reissue 2016). Further, they
    denied any intent to hinder, delay, or defraud. They alleged
    that a lien in favor of Laura in the sum of $450,000 replaced
    liens filed by the IRS against Michael’s assets in the amount
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    of $1,266,227.20 plus interest and penalties and that the IRS
    liens were superior to Korth’s interest in Michael’s assets and
    would have had to have been satisfied before Korth could
    have executed upon Michael’s assets. Thus, Laura and Michael
    argued, the loan and corresponding security agreement being
    challenged by Korth had placed Korth in a better position to
    collect against Michael’s assets than Korth had been in before
    the loan transaction. Laura and Michael asserted that even
    without the security agreement and UCC financing statement
    that allegedly represented the fraudulent transfer, under the
    doctrine of equitable subrogation, Laura’s interest in Michael’s
    assets in the amount owed under the loan would still be supe-
    rior to Korth’s creditor interest.
    Laura and Michael asserted that Korth’s claims against them
    were frivolous and asked that sanctions be awarded pursuant
    to Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-824 (Reissue 2016). Michael’s attorney
    filed an affidavit stating that he had notified Koukol of his
    intent to enforce sanctions under § 25-824 against both Korth
    and his attorneys.
    10. Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment or
    Partial Summary Judgment in CI 15-299
    Laura and Michael both moved for summary judgment in
    CI 15-299, asking that Korth’s complaint be dismissed with
    prejudice. They asserted that no fraudulent transfer had been
    pled or could be proved. Korth filed a motion for partial
    summary judgment asking the court to declare that the UCC
    financing statement was ineffective as a matter of law, because
    the description in the agreement of the collateral was too broad
    and the filing failed to reflect Michael’s middle initial, which
    is present on his driver’s license.
    At the hearing on the motions, the court received Laura’s
    and Michael’s deposition testimony.
    (a) Michael’s Deposition
    Michael described that his work involves providing cor-
    porate finance services either individually or through Luther
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    Capital. Michael indicated that he was generally paid for his
    services by a percentage of project revenues, if they material-
    ized, on a kind of contingency or equity ownership basis. He
    described that his equity and stock interests in several compa-
    nies he had worked with had been subjected to execution.
    Michael explained that at the time of the loan, he had
    anticipated receiving a payment from Terra Nova. Michael
    elaborated that he had a loose oral agreement with Terra Nova
    to receive approximately $100,000 for past services performed
    on a particular project, if and when Terra Nova realized suf-
    ficient profits. He had intended to give that payment to Laura
    as partial repayment of the loan. Michael testified that both at
    the time of the security agreement and as of the time of the
    deposition, he owned no real property and possessed personal
    property of only nominal value.
    Michael admitted, over his counsel’s objection, that he had
    given Laura $2 million in 1999 or 2000. This transfer was
    the subject of the 2012 Atelier action which was dismissed as
    barred by the statute of limitations. Michael did not know what
    Laura had done with the money or whether, approximately
    14 years later, she used that money to effectuate the loan that
    enabled him to pay the IRS settlement.
    Michael could not recall if he had made any interest pay-
    ments to Laura on the loan. The evidence was undisputed that
    at the time of the summary judgment hearing, Michael had
    made no payments toward the principal. Michael described
    that Laura orally demanded payment on the note “every day.”
    Michael testified that he owed Laura the money lent to him
    as reflected in the security agreement and that he intended to
    repay her.
    (b) Laura’s Deposition
    In her deposition, Laura testified that she was the sole titled
    owner of the residence where she and Michael lived, which had
    been paid for in cash by Michael in 2000. Most of Laura’s tes-
    timony concerned whether Michael had any assets. There were
    none that she could identify.
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    (c) Other Evidence
    Korth submitted evidence that Michael had numerous unsat-
    isfied judgments in favor of various entities against either
    Michael personally or Luther Capital in a total amount of
    approximately $9 million.
    Other evidence demonstrated that on May 5, 2015, a sec-
    ond UCC financing statement was filed reflecting the col-
    lateral pledged to Laura under the security agreement—this
    time with Michael’s middle initial. Evidence was submitted,
    and it was later stipulated, that the standard search logic used
    by the Secretary of State’s office to search filings under the
    UCC changed on May 4, 2015. Before May 4, a search for
    “‘Michael S. Luther,’” the name on Michael’s driver’s license,
    would not retrieve the financing statement reflecting the secu-
    rity agreement that was with “‘Michael Luther.’” After May 4,
    it would.
    11. Order Denying Motions for Summary
    Judgment in CI 15-299
    On July 6, 2015, the court denied Korth’s motion for partial
    summary judgment on the ground that he was making a prema-
    ture claim for declaratory relief. The court explained that Korth
    was seeking through his motion a declaration of lien priority
    when there were no assets or funds that the parties were iden-
    tifying as being subject to a lien priority contest. Further, the
    court reasoned that it would not rule on a motion for summary
    judgment dealing with lien priority and perfection issues when
    those issues were not presented in Korth’s complaint.
    Despite this conclusion that there were no assets that the
    parties were fighting over, the court also denied Laura’s and
    Michael’s motions for summary judgment. Citing Matter of
    Holloway,2 the court first explained that it was rejecting any
    argument that the UFTA does not apply to the grant of secu-
    rity interests. The court did not otherwise address whether it
    mattered that the only identified interests transferred by the
    2
    Matter of Holloway, 
    955 F.2d 1008
    (5th Cir. 1992).
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    security agreement were future contingent expectancy interests.
    Nor did the court address whether there could be a “transfer”
    under the act if the debtor’s assets at the time the security
    agreement was executed were subject to a lien superior to the
    creditor’s rights.
    Instead, the court focused on Laura and Michael’s argument
    that because there was no genuine issue that the grant of the
    security interest was for a reasonably equivalent value and that
    Laura took the security interest in good faith, she had a com-
    plete defense as a matter of law under § 36-709(a). The court
    found there was no genuine issue that a reasonably equivalent
    value was exchanged for the assets transferred through the
    security agreement. However, the court found a genuine issue
    of material fact as to whether the transfer was made in good
    faith. For that reason, the court denied Laura’s and Michael’s
    motions for summary judgment.
    12. Intervention in CI 15-299
    Atelier filed a complaint in intervention in April 2015 as
    another creditor seeking to set aside the alleged transfer effec-
    tuated by the security agreement and UCC filing. Atelier was
    represented by Kathryn Derr. Michael opposed intervention
    on the ground that Atelier’s claim was already litigated and
    decided in the 2012 Atelier action. The court allowed the inter-
    vention after it ruled on the motions for summary judgment. In
    his answer to the complaint in intervention, Michael pled that
    the Atelier action operated as claim preclusion.
    13. Denial of Leave to Amend in CI 15-299
    On May 2, 2016, the court denied Korth’s motion for
    leave to file an amended complaint. The court explained that
    the motion was substantively identical to a prior motion for
    leave to file an amended complaint in May 2015, which
    had been denied because it was made in response to Laura’s
    and Michael’s motions for summary judgment. In addition to
    repeating the allegations of fraudulent transfer, the proposed
    amended complaint asked the court to declare that the UCC
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    financing statement reflecting the collateral agreement between
    Laura and Michael was ineffective as a matter of law and thus
    not perfected and not entitled to priority over Korth’s lien.
    14. New Action, CI 16-3789,
    Filed and Transferred
    Two days after the court denied Korth leave to amend,
    Atelier and Korth filed a new complaint in district court. The
    complaint was similar to the prior proposed amended complaint
    in CI 15-299, but added that another UCC financing statement
    had been filed on or about May 5, 2015. This complaint was
    filed as No. CI 16-3789 (CI 16-3789). Pursuant to an agree-
    ment, the case was ultimately transferred to the judge assigned
    to CI 15-299. The court ultimately determined the cases should
    be tried separately.
    In their answers to the joint complaint in CI 16-3789, Laura
    and Michael denied most of the allegations, including the
    premise that any “asset” was or has since been transferred
    by the security agreement or that any UCC filing can grant
    a security interest. Laura and Michael affirmatively alleged,
    among other things, that the claims were frivolous and made in
    bad faith. They also alleged law of the case, issue preclusion,
    and claim preclusion based on the orders of dismissal in the
    IRS action and the 2012 Atelier action, as well as the district
    court’s prior orders in CI 15-299 denying summary judgment
    and leave to amend.
    15. Motions for Judgment on
    Pleadings in CI 16-3789
    Laura and Michael moved for judgment on the pleadings in
    CI 16-3789 on the grounds that the complaint failed to allege
    there was an “[a]sset” as defined by § 36-702(2), which, pur-
    suant to § 36-707(4), was required for there to be a transfer
    subjecting the transaction to the UFTA. Laura pointed out that
    Atelier and Korth had not alleged that either of them had ever
    seized in execution any of Michael’s personal property; thus,
    she alleged they had no lien pursuant to § 25-1504.
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    At the hearing on the motions for judgment on the plead-
    ings, Koukol’s cocounsel, Michael Milone, described that since
    the court had already decided in its prior order on summary
    judgment that the transaction was for a reasonably equivalent
    value, Korth considered the remaining issue before the court
    in both cases to be good faith. Milone explained, “[T]he issues
    [in the complaint in CI 16-3789] are almost identical” to those
    of the complaint in CI 15-299 “except for that in the second
    complaint we’re alleging that the second UCC financing state-
    ment really should be treated and analyzed by the Court in the
    same way as in the first.” Milone stated of Korth, “[W]e’re . . .
    not attempting to expand the pleadings beyond what we deter-
    mined before you last May in summary judgment.” Beyond
    there being a “separate transfer” by virtue of the second UCC
    filing, Milone asserted, “the issues are substantively identical
    between the two cases.”
    The court stayed proceedings on CI 16-3789 pending the
    outcome in CI 15-299 and explained that it was also postpon-
    ing ruling on the motions for judgment on the pleadings until
    after the outcome in CI 15-299.
    16. Motion to Compel Identification of
    “Assets” and Property Subject to
    Superior Liens and Notice
    After a motion to compel Atelier and Korth to identify
    what assets were at issue under the UFTA, Korth identified
    $8.11 garnished from a brokerage account. Laura responded
    that the garnishment was of Luther Capital’s assets and not
    of Michael’s assets. And Luther Capital had been owned by
    Atelier since 2013. Laura disclaimed any interest in the gar-
    nished assets.
    Atelier and Korth conceded at a hearing that beyond such
    funds, there were really no concrete interests they had knowl-
    edge of that had been transferred to Laura. Instead, it was their
    assertion that “the giving of the security interest, not convey-
    ance of specific assets,” was the fraudulent “transfer” under
    the UFTA.
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    17. Bench Trial in CI 15-299
    A 3-day bench trial was held on CI 15-299. Before trial,
    Laura and Michael argued that as a threshold matter, there
    was no “transfer” of any “asset” under the UFTA due to the
    superior lien by the IRS in the assets described by the security
    agreement. They also argued that Michael lacked actual intent
    to defraud, and Laura argued that she received the security
    agreement in good faith.
    (a) Stipulated Facts
    For purposes of the trial, the parties stipulated as to the
    five notices of federal tax liens between September 19, 2007,
    and June 12, 2009, and to the details of the IRS action claim-
    ing Michael owed a total of $1,266,227.20 as of January 15,
    2012, for amounts assessed between September 20, 2003, and
    September 25, 2008. They stipulated to the details of the settle-
    ment between Michael and the IRS for $450,000. The parties
    also stipulated that on September 20, 2013, the IRS filed a
    notice of a federal tax lien against Michael in the amount of
    $234,064.71 for tax years 2008 through 2012, which was not
    the subject of the settlement and remained outstanding.
    The parties stipulated that other than the disputed gar-
    nishment of $8.11 from the brokerage account in the name
    of Luther Capital, Korth has never seized in execution on
    the Korth judgment. They stipulated that Atelier had neither
    seized in execution on its judgment at the time the notice
    of the federal tax lien for $545,472.96 was filed nor pos-
    sessed any personal property of Michael that it had seized in
    execution as of March 20, 2014. Between March 20, 2014,
    and May 4, 2015, neither Atelier nor Korth had success-
    fully seized any assets of Michael or garnished any rights
    to payment of Michael in execution on the Atelier or Korth
    judgments.
    (b) Testimony of Mitchell Murphy
    Mitchell Murphy, a finance and accounting professional, tes-
    tified at trial as Atelier’s and Korth’s expert witness. Murphy
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    had reviewed financial documents pertaining to Laura and
    Michael for the period of 2011 through 2017.
    Murphy testified that he did not see evidence of any wages,
    salary, or personal disbursement earnings for Michael. He
    observed only what appeared to be business income flowing
    into and between Michael’s business and personal accounts.
    Murphy observed that while over the years, the level of busi-
    ness income had risen, there was no corresponding increase in
    business revenue. In other words, there did not appear to be
    any retention of any funds from the increased level of business
    and the account balances remained zero. Murphy summarized
    that a combination of commingling accounts, frequent and
    systematic transfers of funds, a practice of authorizing debits
    that could not be honored, and withdrawal and deposits of
    cash did not “look like what [he] see[s] in normal business
    activity.” Murphy admitted on cross-examination, however,
    that he could not determine from the information he had
    reviewed whether any of the inflows or outflows were actu-
    ally improper.
    Murphy found nothing noteworthy in his review of Laura’s
    accounts. He testified on cross-examination that he did not
    find it unusual that a blanket security agreement would be
    given in exchange for a $450,000 loan. Also, Murphy could
    find no evidence that in March 2014, Michael had transferred
    any actual property or assets to Laura.
    (c) Laura’s Testimony
    Laura testified largely consistently with her prior deposi-
    tion testimony. She elaborated on matters surrounding the loan
    and security agreement. She testified that at the time of the
    loan and corresponding security agreement, she did not know
    anything about Michael’s liabilities other than that Atelier and
    Korth were creditors joined in the IRS action. She did not
    discuss with anyone or even contemplate how the loan transac-
    tion would affect Atelier’s or Korth’s ability to collect. Laura
    explained that “there was no consideration of anything else
    except for myself and Michael and the IRS.” Laura stated that
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    her only intention was to be paid back. The verbiage of the
    security agreement was crafted by her legal counsel.
    (d) Michael’s Testimony
    Michael testified that he had entered into the loan transac-
    tion with Laura because he did not have the funds to pay the
    settlement with the IRS. At the time of the security agree-
    ment, Michael had few assets. Mirroring his prior deposition
    testimony, Michael described that he had only some personal
    possessions and small sums in bank accounts. Michael testi-
    fied that it was not his idea to create a security agreement, but
    that he signed the agreement crafted by Laura’s legal counsel
    because Laura asked him to as a requirement for the loan.
    Michael testified that he did not enter into the loan transaction
    and its accompanying security agreement in order to make it
    more difficult for creditors to collect from him.
    18. Judgment of Dismissal of CI 15-299
    The court issued an order in CI 15-299 on September 1,
    2017, finding that the case lacked merit and accordingly dis-
    missing it with prejudice. The court rejected Michael’s argu-
    ment that the IRS was a necessary party to the action.
    The court considered whether Atelier and Korth had proved
    by clear and convincing evidence that there was a fraudulent
    transfer under § 36-705(a), explaining that under that statute,
    there is a fraudulent transfer only if either the debtor had actual
    intent to hinder, delay, or defraud any creditor or the transfer
    was made without a reasonably equivalent value in exchange
    for the transfer and the debtor thereby dissipated assets or
    intended to incur or reasonably should have believed he or
    she would incur debts beyond the ability to pay. The court
    explained that since it had already determined there was a rea-
    sonably equivalent value exchanged in the loan transaction, the
    transfer was fraudulent under § 36-705(a)(1) only if there was
    an actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud a creditor.
    The court considered the factors set forth by § 36-705(b),
    which, among other factors, may be given consideration when
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    determining whether there was actual intent to hinder, delay,
    or defraud. The court found that Michael did not have an
    actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud a creditor. The court
    elaborated that “[w]hile there are some ‘badges of fraud’ pres-
    ent in the current case, the majority of the evidence indicate[s]
    the absence of fraud in the challenged transaction.” The court
    recognized as indicia of fraud that the transfer was to an
    insider, Laura, and that Michael had the Atelier and Korth
    judgments outstanding against him before the transfer was
    made. However, the court found supportive of an absence
    of fraud that the judgments were obtained a number of
    years before the security agreement, only interests in personal
    property were transferred, the obligation was not concealed,
    Michael did not abscond, none of the assets were removed or
    concealed, and there was an equivalent value. The court also
    found that “there can be no intent to hinder where the estate
    was improved in position rather than diminished.” The court
    explained that the loan was intended and used to pay a settle-
    ment that extinguished IRS liens of higher priority than either
    the Atelier or the Korth judgment. This settlement “exchanged
    over $1.2 million in debt for $450,000 in debt, improving
    [Michael’s] estate by more than $750,000 and putting Korth
    and Atelier that much closer to collecting on their judgment
    leins [sic].”
    Further, as to the claim against Laura, the court found merit
    to Laura’s affirmative defense of good faith under § 36-709(a).
    The court stated that it was “clear from the evidence that there
    was no intent on the part of Laura to defraud the creditors of
    Michael.” The court found that there was “absolutely no evi-
    dence of intent to defraud on the part of Laura and that the
    good faith defense would be applicable.” The court did not spe-
    cifically discuss whether it was utilizing a subjective or objec-
    tive standard of intent in determining whether Laura received
    the transfer in good faith.
    The court found no merit to the conspiracy claim because
    Laura and Michael did not engage in the underlying tort, there
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    was no evidence of agreement between Laura and Michael to
    engage in a tort, and Laura had acted in good faith.
    The court ordered that both Korth’s and Atelier’s claims
    of fraudulent transfer and conspiracy were without merit as
    to both Laura and Michael, and those claims were dismissed
    with prejudice. The court noted in its order that the parties had
    raised the issue of attorney fees, which would be determined at
    a separate hearing.
    19. Order of Judgment on
    Pleadings in CI 16-3789
    Laura and Michael again moved for judgment on the plead-
    ings in CI 16-3789, this time based on issue and claim preclu-
    sion stemming from the September 1, 2017, order in CI 15-299.
    They again sought sanctions pursuant to § 25-824.
    At the hearing on the motions, Laura and Michael argued
    with regard to attorney fee sanctions that from the time the
    litigation was filed, Atelier and Korth both knew that they did
    not have a lien interest superior to the IRS’ interest that was
    extinguished by the loan. Atelier and Korth responded that
    there was a sufficient factual dispute to take the case to trial.
    The court agreed with Laura and Michael. The court stated
    that “during the course of the trial it became abundantly clear,
    at least in [the court’s] mind, that the only truly credible wit-
    ness[’ testimony] in the entire testimony of all the witnesses
    was that of [Laura].” The court explained that while it perhaps
    should have resolved the good faith defense by way of sum-
    mary judgment, once the court heard the evidence at trial, “it
    was absolutely clear to [the court] that there was no legal, pos-
    sible factual, legal, a combination of the two facts of law, that
    would support an inference of fraud on the part of [Laura].”
    Laura engaged in the transaction to protect her interest and
    nothing more. That, the court believed, should have been dis-
    coverable at the time of the pleadings.
    The court expounded:
    [T]otally frivolous. Without question, it was known early
    on; there was consideration; it was a protection of her
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    interest; there was an IRS lien which would have been
    superior. I already made that clear. You people should
    have known that. You brought her to court, in my opinion,
    for no valid reason whatsoever.
    On November 3, 2017, the court issued an order granting
    Laura’s and Michael’s motions for judgment on the pleadings.
    The court further found that the action was frivolous as to
    Laura. Although Michael had argued that one of the grounds
    for judgment on the pleadings and frivolousness was issue
    preclusion by virtue of Atelier’s and Korth’s failing to bring
    their claims in the IRS action, the court implicitly rejected that
    argument. The court’s order referred to its prior findings pro-
    nounced at the hearing as the findings supporting its conclu-
    sion that the lawsuit was frivolous.
    At a subsequent hearing, when Korth asserted that the court
    had failed to make specific findings relating to its frivolousness
    determination, the court responded that its statements in open
    court were sufficient:
    I did. I based it basically on credibility. Further, I think
    my order of findings [is] very, very thorough. . . .
    ....
    I made the findings in open court based upon the credi-
    bility, and also the fact that [Laura] acted in good faith, at
    the very least. Further, there was no evidence of a fraudu-
    lent transfer. And clearly, the IRS lien, which would have
    been superior to . . . [Michael], of course was the impetus
    for reducing that IRS obligation that could have adhered
    to not only her but possibly both.
    At one point, the court expressed that it “may have been too
    rash” in rejecting Michael’s claim for attorney fees, but the
    court did not change its mind on that issue.
    The court dismissed CI 16-3789 with prejudice subject to
    fully resolving the amount of attorney fees under § 25-824.
    In a second order issued the same day, the court amended
    the judgment in CI 15-299 so as to tax costs in Laura’s favor
    and against Atelier and Korth jointly and severally in the
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    amount of $572. The court also stated in the amended order
    that CI 15-299 was frivolous as against Laura only and that she
    was entitled to attorney fees under § 25-824.
    20. Attorney Fees
    On February 2, 2018, the court issued two orders, one in
    CI 15-299 and one in CI 16-3789, determining the amount of
    and parties responsible for attorney fees under § 25-824. The
    orders were identical and awarded attorney fees to Laura due
    to the frivolous nature of the suits. The court again set forth its
    reasoning that the actions as against Laura were frivolous:
    This Court found that the actions against Laura . . .
    were totally without merit and without a rational argu-
    ment based upon law and the evidence at trial. Korth
    and Atelier . . . failed to present evidence to prove their
    case against Laura . . . . Specifically: (i) there was no
    testimony from any parties contradicting [Laura’s] testi-
    mony regarding the purpose of the $450,000.00 loan and
    security agreement; (ii) there was no evidence that the
    $450,000.00 was not regarded as a loan; and (iii) there
    was no evidence showing that [Laura’s] bank accounts
    were used to hide assets from [Michael’s] creditors. It
    is clear that Laura . . . made the loan to Michael . . . in
    order to protect against an IRS lean [sic] on the marital
    home. The $450,000.00 loan facilitated a settlement with
    the IRS and extinguished an outstanding tax obligation in
    excess of $1.2 million. . . . By acquiring the loan and set-
    tling with the IRS, Michael . . . exchanged over $1.2 mil-
    lion of debt to the IRS for $450,000.00 of debt to Laura
    . . . . This improved his estate by more than $750,000.00,
    putting Korth and Atelier . . . that much closer to collect-
    ing on their respective judgment liens. Clearly, Korth’s
    and [Atelier’s] junior lien positions were benefited by
    [Laura’s] loan to Michael . . . . The $450,000.00 loan pro-
    ceeds went directly from Laura . . . to the IRS. . . . There
    is no evidence to support the allegation that [Laura’s] loan
    to Michael . . . was fraudulent or collusive.
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    Furthermore, [Laura’s] counsel (David Skalka) notified
    Korth’s counsel (. . . Koukol) as far back as January 27,
    2015, that Laura . . . considered the case to be frivolous.
    . . . Copies of the $450,000.00 loan documentation were
    included with the notice to . . . Koukol. The security
    agreement plainly states that the security interest was
    limited to the $450,000.00 loan which was used to pay
    the IRS settlement. The Court notes that Korth previously
    acknowledged receipt of the January 27, 2015, letter
    from . . . Skalka. Korth offered and this Court received a
    copy of the letter into evidence on the cross motions for
    summary judgment. . . . Despite receipt of the loan docu-
    mentation, Korth and Atelier . . . persisted in their claims
    against Laura . . . .
    Korth and Atelier . . . point to an $8.00 garnishment
    on a brokerage account during the pendency of this litiga-
    tion as evidence that an account had been executed upon
    despite the lien priority dispute. However, during the
    course of the trial it became abundantly clear that at least
    Atelier . . . had to have known that Michael . . . did not
    own said brokerage account. . . . It is also important to
    note that one of the necessary elements for the claims in
    CI 16-3789 required Korth and Atelier . . . to establish
    that a reasonable equivalent value was not given by Laura
    . . . to Michael . . . . Yet in its July 6, 2015, order on the
    cross motions for summary judgment in CI 15-299, this
    Court explicitly found that a reasonable equivalent value
    had been given. Korth and Atelier . . . maintained their
    claims against Laura . . . despite this clear signal that they
    would be unable to establish a necessary element.
    The court noted that while it did not grant summary judgment,
    [t]he fact that the Court deferred to Korth’s assertions
    and did not fully see then what later became apparent
    at trial—that based on facts which were known to Korth
    and Atelier . . . there was not a meritorious claim against
    [Laura]—does not ameliorate the frivolous nature of the
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    claims and does not preclude this Court from awarding
    attorney’s fees.
    The court rejected the notion that Atelier should not share
    equally in the sanction, finding that Atelier joined the suit with
    full knowledge and was fully aware of the unreasonableness
    of the litigation. And the court determined it was appropriate
    to award sanctions against Koukol and Derr as individuals in
    order to deter them and other members of the legal profession
    from future similarly frivolous actions.
    The court awarded Laura a judgment of attorney fees in
    CI 15-299 in the amount of $75,000 and in CI 16-3789 in the
    amount of $7,000. The court ordered that one-third of the judg-
    ments ($27,333) was to be against Korth, one-third ($27,333)
    against Atelier, and the remaining one-third against Koukol and
    Derr to be split equally (each liable for $13,667).
    21. Motion to Alter or Amend
    and Notices of Appeal
    Koukol timely moved to alter or amend the judgment in
    CI 16-3789 as against him.3 Koukol’s attorney argued that
    Laura was a necessary party to Korth’s action and that there-
    fore, it could not be frivolous as against Laura when it was not
    frivolous as against Michael. Koukol’s attorney also argued
    that the court’s reliance on $1.2 million in superior liens by
    the IRS was misplaced, because the validity of those liens was
    contested by Michael in the IRS action. Further, according to
    Koukol’s attorney, the transfer at issue did not include what
    Michael did with the money, i.e., pay the IRS. How Michael
    spent the money should not have been relevant to whether
    the transfer was fraudulent; rather, what was relevant was the
    fact that Laura loaned Michael the money in exchange for a
    promissory note that she knew or should have known would
    not be honored, given Michael’s substantial outstanding debt
    obligations and history of avoiding them. Koukol’s attorney
    also found it unnecessarily convoluted that Laura would loan
    3
    See Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-1329 (Reissue 2016).
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    the settlement money to Michael rather than simply pay the
    IRS directly, as she was also a defendant in the IRS action
    and the only person who was at risk in the lawsuit given that
    Michael was “judgment proof.” Koukol’s attorney argued that
    all of this, at a minimum, created issues of fact that rendered
    the lawsuits not frivolous.
    Korth filed a motion styled as a motion to alter or amend
    in CI 16-3789 more than 10 days after the February 2, 2018,
    judgment, joining in Koukol’s motion.
    On June 15, 2018, the court denied the motions to alter or
    amend. The court did so on the merits and also, in the case of
    Korth’s motion, because it was untimely.
    Koukol filed his notice of appeal on July 6, 2018. Atelier,
    Derr, and Korth filed timely notices of appeal thereafter.
    III. ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    Atelier and Korth assign as error, summarized, that the dis-
    trict court erred when it dismissed Korth’s fraudulent transfer
    claim upon finding that Michael did not act with actual intent
    to hinder, delay, or defraud his creditors and that Laura acted
    in good faith.
    Atelier, Korth, Koukol, and Derr all assign as error, sum-
    marized, that the district court erred by (1) finding that the
    fraudulent transfer claims were frivolous and that frivolous
    pleading sanctions, including attorney fees, were appropriate
    and (2) receiving in evidence allegedly altered summaries of
    Laura’s attorney fees, which failed to fulfill the requirements
    of Neb. Rev. Stat. § 27-1006 (Reissue 2016).
    Koukol additionally assigns that the court erred in overrul-
    ing his motion to alter or amend.
    Atelier and Derr additionally assign that the court erred by
    assessing the same percentage of attorney fee sanctions against
    them as it did against Korth and Koukol, when Atelier entered
    the case almost a year after it was commenced and Atelier and
    Derr were not part of the case when a large number of the fees
    were incurred.
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    IV. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1,2] An action under the UFTA is equitable in nature, and
    an appeal of a district court’s determination that transfers of
    assets were in violation of the UFTA is equitable in nature.4 In
    an appeal of an equity action, an appellate court tries factual
    questions de novo on the record, reaching a conclusion inde-
    pendent of the findings of the trial court, provided, however,
    that where credible evidence is in conflict on a material issue
    of fact, the appellate court considers and may give weight to
    the fact that the trial judge heard and observed the witnesses
    and accepted one version of the facts rather than another.5
    [3] When reviewing questions of law, an appellate court
    resolves the questions independently of the lower court’s
    conclusions.6
    [4] A motion for judgment on the pleadings is properly
    granted when it appears from the pleadings that only questions
    of law are presented.7
    [5] On appeal, an appellate court will uphold a lower court’s
    decision allowing or disallowing attorney fees for frivolous or
    bad faith litigation in the absence of an abuse of discretion.8
    V. ANALYSIS
    These appeals involve the merits of Atelier’s and Korth’s
    challenges under the UFTA to the security agreement. Atelier
    and Korth do not assign or argue that the district court erred
    in concluding that a lien priority contest under the UCC was
    premature, and they no longer assert that either UCC financ-
    ing statement was a “transfer” under the UFTA. Atelier and
    4
    Janice M. Hinrichsen, Inc. v. Messersmith Ventures, 
    296 Neb. 712
    , 
    895 N.W.2d 683
    (2017).
    5
    
    Id. 6 Maloley
    v. Central Neb. Pub. Power & Irr. Dist., 
    303 Neb. 743
    , 
    931 N.W.2d 139
    (2019).
    7
    Foundation One Bank v. Svoboda, 
    303 Neb. 624
    , 
    931 N.W.2d 431
    (2019).
    8
    Chicago Lumber Co. of Omaha v. Selvera, 
    282 Neb. 12
    , 
    809 N.W.2d 469
        (2011).
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    Korth argue the district court erred in finding that they had
    failed to prove the security agreement was a fraudulent trans-
    fer under § 36-705(a)(1), that Laura had proved a good faith
    defense, and that their fraudulent transfer actions as against
    Laura were frivolous. Atelier additionally argues that the
    court erred in assessing the same amount of sanctions against
    it as it did against Korth, while Koukol and Derr argue that
    the court should not have assessed any of the sanctions
    against them personally. We affirm the district court’s judg-
    ment dismissing Atelier’s and Korth’s claims in CI 15-299
    and CI 16-3789, but we reverse its determination that the
    claims were frivolous.
    1. Merits of Dismissals of UFTA Claims
    We first address the underlying merits of Atelier’s and
    Korth’s fraudulent transfer claims. An action under the UFTA
    is equitable in nature, and an appeal of a district court’s deter-
    mination that transfers of assets were in violation of the UFTA
    is equitable in nature.9 In an appeal of an equity action, an
    appellate court tries factual questions de novo on the record,
    reaching a conclusion independent of the findings of the trial
    court, provided, however, that where credible evidence is in
    conflict on a material issue of fact, the appellate court consid-
    ers and may give weight to the fact that the trial judge heard
    and observed the witnesses and accepted one version of the
    facts rather than another.
    [6] Under the UFTA, a creditor may reach assets transferred
    by a debtor if the transfer was fraudulent.10 Atelier and Korth
    assign that the court erred in failing to find a fraudulent trans-
    fer under § 36-705(a)(1). In an action to set aside an actually
    fraudulent transfer or obligation under § 36-705(a)(1) of the
    UFTA, it is the plaintiff’s burden to prove by clear and con-
    vincing evidence that (1) the debtor made a transfer or incurred
    9
    See Janice M. Hinrichsen, Inc. v. Messersmith Ventures, supra note 4.
    10
    See §§ 36-705, 36-706, and 36-708.
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    an obligation, (2) the plaintiff was a creditor of the debtor,
    and (3) the debtor made the transfer or incurred the obligation
    with actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud any creditor of
    the debtor.11
    [7] Our analysis focuses on the first element. “It is funda-
    mental that before there can be a ‘fraudulent transfer’ under
    the UFTA, there must be a ‘transfer.’”12 A “[t]ransfer” “means
    every mode, direct or indirect, absolute or conditional, volun-
    tary or involuntary, of disposing of or parting with an asset
    or an interest in an asset, and includes . . . release . . . and
    creation of a lien or other encumbrance.”13 An “[a]sset” is
    defined by the UFTA as “property of a debtor,” but the UFTA
    specifically excludes as an “[a]sset” “property to the extent it
    is encumbered by a valid lien.”14 “Property” under the UFTA is
    “anything that may be the subject of ownership.”15
    Section 36-707(1) describes when such a “transfer” of an
    “asset” occurs. It states that with respect to an “asset” that is
    not real property, a transfer is made “when the transfer is so far
    perfected that a creditor on a simple contract cannot acquire
    a judicial lien otherwise than under the act that is superior to
    the interest of the transferee.”16 If applicable law permits the
    “transfer” to be perfected, and it was not, then it “is deemed
    made immediately before the commencement of the action.”17
    Finally, if applicable law does not permit the “transfer” to
    be perfected, it is made “when it becomes effective between
    the debtor and the transferee.”18 In all these circumstances,
    11
    See, Janice M. Hinrichsen, Inc. v. Messersmith Ventures, supra note 4; 55
    Causes of Action 2d 467, § 4 (2012).
    12
    Essen v. Gilmore, 
    259 Neb. 55
    , 60, 
    607 N.W.2d 829
    , 834 (2000).
    13
    § 36-702(12).
    14
    § 36-702(2).
    15
    § 36-702(10).
    16
    § 36-707(1)(ii).
    17
    See § 36-707(2).
    18
    See § 36-707(3).
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    h­ owever, there is no “transfer” “made until the debtor has
    acquired rights in the asset transferred.”19 Creditors are not
    entitled to avoid as fraudulent a conveyance of property to
    which the debtor had no title at all or no such title as they
    could have subjected to payment of their claims.20
    [8] The district court never explicitly determined the thresh-
    old question of whether there was a “transfer” of any “asset”
    by virtue of the security agreement, but that does not preclude
    this court from doing so under the record presented.21 In our
    de novo review, we find under the facts and the theories pre-
    sented below that Atelier and Korth failed as a matter of law
    to prove there was any “asset” parted with through the security
    agreement. They thus failed to prove there was a “transfer” as
    defined by the UFTA. Atelier and Korth did not argue below or
    on appeal that the security agreement was an “obligation . . .
    incurred,” and an appellate court reviews a case on the theories
    pursued by the parties, not on a theory that the parties might
    have raised.22
    Throughout the litigation, Atelier and Korth asserted that
    the security agreement was the “asset” fraudulently trans-
    ferred, while Laura and Michael insisted that Atelier and
    Korth identify with more specificity what “assets” Atelier
    and Korth believed were fraudulently transferred through the
    agreement. At trial, Murphy testified that he could find no
    evidence that Michael had transferred any actual property
    or assets to Laura, and the parties stipulated that they had
    not successfully seized in execution on their judgments or
    garnished any rights to payment. Atelier and Korth only ever
    identified the $8.11 garnished from the brokerage account in
    the name of Luther Capital as any more particular “asset” at
    19
    See § 36-707(4).
    20
    37 C.J.S. Fraudulent Conveyances § 9 (2017).
    21
    See In re Interest of Jordan B., 
    300 Neb. 355
    , 
    913 N.W.2d 477
    (2018).
    22
    See § 36-705(a). Accord Linda N. v. William N., 
    289 Neb. 607
    , 
    856 N.W.2d 436
    (2014).
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    issue. The district court concluded the money did not belong
    to Michael, and Atelier and Korth do not challenge that find-
    ing on appeal.
    Atelier and Korth concede on appeal that there has yet to
    be any identifiable property parted with via the security agree-
    ment. They continue to assert that the security agreement itself
    was the “asset.”
    Successful fraudulent transfer claims have been made in
    cases involving security agreements, but the courts in those
    cases have not held that the security agreements themselves
    were the “property” constituting the “asset” disposed of
    or parted with.23 Instead, there were specifically identified
    “assets” that the creditors were attempting to reach, interests
    which had been disposed of or parted with through the security
    agreements.24 In Matter of Holloway,25 for example, the court
    referred to the transfer of a security “interest,” not of the secu-
    rity agreement. Further, that security interest was in something.
    At issue in that case was the debtor’s assignment of a substan-
    tial judgment, the funds from which had been deposited into
    the registry of the court.
    In arguing that the security agreement was a “transfer,”
    Atelier and Korth rely on the fact that under § 36-702(12), a
    “[t]ransfer” “includes . . . creation of a lien or other encum-
    brance.” They fail, though, to suggest an object of the lien or
    encumbrance effectuated by the security agreement. Liens and
    encumbrances do not exist independently of the interests they
    attach to, and this reference to liens or other encumbrances
    does not modify the express requirement of the UFTA that
    there be an “asset” before there can be a “transfer.”
    23
    See, In re Fair Finance Co., 
    834 F.3d 651
    (6th Cir. 2016); Matter of
    Holloway, supra note 2; Webster Industries, Inc. v. Northwood Doors, Inc.,
    
    320 F. Supp. 2d 821
    (N.D. Iowa 2004); In re Afonica, 
    174 B.R. 242
    (N.D.
    Ohio 1994).
    24
    See 
    id. 25 Matter
    of Holloway, supra note 
    2, 955 F.2d at 1015
    .
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    Intangible interests are not necessarily excluded from the
    UFTA, of course. The drafters of the model Uniform Fraudulent
    Transfer Act intended the definition of property to include
    “real and personal property, whether tangible or intangible,
    and any interest in property, whether legal or equitable.”26
    They envisioned, for instance, that an “‘asset’” could include
    “an unliquidated claim for damages resulting from personal
    injury or a contingent claim of a surety.”27
    [9] But there are limits to how abstract an interest may be
    and still constitute “property.” Usually, inchoate interests do
    not satisfy the requirements of a legitimate legal claim consti-
    tuting “property” and, thus, of an “asset” that the debtor has
    “acquired rights in”28—though few cases explore this realm.
    The court in State ex rel. ICA v. Wright 29 held that the debtor’s
    future wages were not too “speculative or ephemeral” to be
    “‘property’” under Arizona’s version of the model Uniform
    Fraudulent Transfer Act, reasoning that the right to wages was
    choate while only the amount of the debtor’s future income
    was speculative. In contrast, the court in In re Morehead held
    that there can be no rights to future wages, and thus there is
    no “transfer,” until wages are actually earned.30 In AirFlow
    Houston, Inc. v. Theriot, the court held that a company logo,
    name, telephone number, and business records constituting
    26
    Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act § 1, comment (10), 7A (part II) U.L.A.
    257, 260-61 (2017).
    27
    
    Id., comment (2),
    7A (part II) U.L.A. at 259.
    28
    See, Wornick v. Gaffney, 
    544 F.3d 486
    (2d Cir. 2008); McGahee v.
    McGahee, 
    204 Ga. 91
    , 
    48 S.E.2d 675
    (1948); First Wisconsin Nat. Bank
    v. Roehling, 
    224 Wis. 316
    , 
    269 N.W. 677
    (1936). See, also, Allegaert v.
    Chemical Bank, 
    418 F. Supp. 690
    (E.D.N.Y. 1976); Essen v. Gilmore, 
    259 Neb. 55
    , 
    607 N.W.2d 829
    (2000); Robert M. Zinman et al., Fraudulent
    Transfers According to Alden, Gross and Borowitz: A Tale of Two Circuits,
    39 Bus. Law. 977 (1984).
    29
    State ex rel. ICA v. Wright, 
    202 Ariz. 255
    , 258, 
    43 P.3d 203
    , 206 (Ariz.
    App. 2002).
    30
    In re Morehead, 
    249 F.3d 445
    , 449 (6th Cir. 2001).
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    corporate goodwill met the definition of “property” that could
    constitute “assets” under Texas’ version of the model Uniform
    Fraudulent Transfer Act, because the lower court had found
    as a matter of fact that such goodwill existed.31 In contrast,
    the court in In re Bob Nicholas Enterprise, Inc.,32 rejected the
    contention that purchase orders and goodwill were property
    interests capable of being fraudulently transferred, where the
    creditor had failed to prove the business was reasonably profit-
    able. The court explained that “[a] property interest consists
    of more than a unilateral expectation or abstract need[;] there
    must be a legitimate claim of entitlement.33
    [10,11] We agree with the court in In re Bob Nicholas
    Enterprise, Inc. Whether under the UFTA there is a “‘sub-
    ject of ownership’” constituting “‘property’” that can be an
    “‘“[a]sset”’” depends on a legitimate and identifiable claim
    of entitlement.34 Further, where the focus of a fraudulent
    transfer action is a security agreement by the debtor in favor
    of the alleged transferee, the question is what identifiable
    and legitimate claim of entitlement the debtor had, which the
    debtor transferred an interest in via the security agreement. A
    security agreement by the debtor in favor of an alleged trans-
    feree is the vehicle for “disposing of or parting with an asset
    or an interest in an asset.”35 For purposes of the UFTA, a secu-
    rity agreement by the debtor in favor of an alleged transferee
    is not the “asset” itself. It could not be otherwise, because
    whether there is an “asset” under the UFTA requires a spe-
    cific inquiry into numerous statutory factors, such as whether
    the “property” was encumbered by a valid lien, whether
    the “property” was generally exempt under nonbankruptcy
    31
    AirFlow Houston, Inc. v. Theriot, 
    849 S.W.2d 928
    , 933 (Tex. App. 1993).
    See, also, In re Fair Finance Co., supra note 23.
    32
    In re Bob Nicholas Enterprise, Inc., 
    358 B.R. 693
    (S.D. Tex. 2007).
    33
    
    Id. at 701-02.
    34
    
    Id. at 701.
    35
    See § 36-702(12).
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    law,36 and when the debtor acquired rights in the “asset.”37 A
    blanket security agreement without any reference to particu-
    lar “property” that the agreement granted the transferee an
    interest in is not amenable to such inquiries.
    [12] Atelier and Korth do not propose anything other than
    the security agreement as the “property” at issue in CI 15-299
    and CI 16-3789. Further, whatever “property” could have been
    disposed of or parted with by the security agreement, it would
    have been fully encumbered by “valid lien[s]”38 when the
    alleged “transfer” occurred. Only equity in property in excess
    of the amount of encumbering liens thereon is an “‘asset’”
    reachable by creditors as a fraudulent transfer; encumbered
    property is not considered part of the debtor’s estate.39
    Though stated in relation to the predecessor of the UFTA,
    Nebraska’s Uniform Fraudulent Conveyance Act,40 we still find
    applicable our statement in Holthaus v. Parsons 41 that an action
    to set aside a conveyance cannot be maintained unless the con-
    veyance put beyond the creditor’s reach property that would
    have been subject to the payment of the debt. While “damages”
    are not an express element of a claim under the UFTA, the
    various provisions of the UFTA together operate to require that
    creditors show in a concrete way that they were injured by the
    transaction they are seeking to set aside. A transfer of property
    in which the debtor has no equity cannot be the subject of a
    fraudulent transfer action because the creditors cannot show
    36
    See § 36-702(2). Accord § 36-709.
    37
    See § 36-707(4). Accord § 36-709.
    38
    See § 36-702(2)(i).
    39
    See In re McFarland, 
    170 B.R. 613
    , 622 (S.D. Ohio 1994). Accord,
    Preferred Funding, Inc. v. Jackson, 
    185 Or. App. 693
    , 
    61 P.3d 939
         (2003); Rich v. Rich, 
    185 W. Va. 148
    , 
    405 S.E.2d 858
    (1991); National
    Loan Investors v. World Properties, 
    79 Conn. App. 725
    , 
    830 A.2d 1178
         (2003).
    40
    Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 36-601 to 36-613 (Reissue 1988) (repealed 1989).
    41
    Holthaus v. Parsons, 
    238 Neb. 223
    , 
    469 N.W.2d 536
    (1991).
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    they would have received anything by avoiding the transfer and
    were injured thereby.42
    [13] A blanket security agreement does not convey an
    “‘asset’” under the UFTA if everything subject to ownership
    that is described as collateral therein is fully encumbered by
    other creditors with superior claims at the time of the alleged
    “‘transfer[].’”43 As the district court repeatedly observed in the
    context of actual intent, “there was an IRS lien which would
    have been superior” to other creditors’ claims.
    Valid liens are defined under the UFTA as liens “effective
    against the holder of a judicial lien subsequently obtained
    by legal or equitable process or proceedings.”44 It was undis-
    puted that Atelier and Korth never perfected choate liens, i.e.,
    liens that identified with specificity the identity of the lienor,
    the property subject to the lien, and the amount of the lien.45
    There was no evidence that any other creditor had either. In
    order to defeat an IRS lien, a creditor must both be prior in
    time and have a perfected, choate lien.46 An IRS lien is upon
    “all property and rights to property”47 of the debtor, and the
    moment a prior inchoate interest of the debtor becomes choate,
    a prior perfected IRS lien in all the taxpayer’s property imme-
    diately attaches.48
    The total amount of the security pledged in the security
    agreement was not more than Michael was obligated to pay
    under the demand note in the principal amount of $450,000.
    The IRS action was ultimately settled when the IRS and
    42
    See 37 C.J.S., supra note 20.
    43
    See In re SMTC Mfg. of Texas, 
    421 B.R. 251
    , 295 (W.D. Tex. 2009).
    44
    See § 36-702(13). See, also, § 36-702(2)(i).
    45
    See United States v. New Britain, 
    347 U.S. 81
    , 
    74 S. Ct. 367
    , 
    98 L. Ed. 520
    (1954).
    46
    See 
    id. 47 26
    U.S.C. § 6321 (2012).
    48
    See Citizens Nat. Trust & S. Bank of Los Angeles v. U.S., 
    135 F.2d 527
         (9th Cir. 1943).
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    Michael agreed the lien could be satisfied by payment of
    $450,000. At that time, the IRS’ claims under the lien were
    in a total amount of $1.2 million. Even if we were to give
    credence to Atelier and Korth’s argument that Michael’s estate
    was not at the time of the security agreement encumbered in
    the amount of $1.2 million, because Michael “disputed” the
    IRS’ claims, the settlement determined that “valid lien[s]”49
    encumbering Michael’s property were at a minimum equal
    to the value of the property parted with through the security
    agreement. Accordingly, if any property or interest in property
    were parted with through the security agreement, such property
    was fully encumbered and thus excluded as an “asset” under
    the UFTA.50
    We acknowledge that the facts of this case may be unique
    inasmuch as the IRS liens were extinguished shortly after the
    agreement was made—although we note there are still IRS
    liens outstanding in the principal amount of $234,064.71. This
    case is also unique because the security agreement was an
    indirect part of the settlement transaction. We have not found
    a case addressing a similar factual scenario under the UFTA,
    let alone one that addresses within such context whether
    “valid liens” continue to exist through the doctrine of equi-
    table subrogation.
    But, again, we must review this case based on the theories
    presented below. Consistent with their theory that the security
    agreement itself was the “asset,” Atelier and Korth asserted
    below that the “transfer” occurred at the time the security
    agreement was executed. Certainly, at no point did Atelier
    and Korth argue that the challenged “transfer” occurred after
    the IRS released its liens. Nor did Atelier and Korth seek to
    amend their pleadings to identify something other than the
    abstract security agreement as the “asset,” the transfer of which
    they sought avoidance to the extent necessary to satisfy their
    49
    See § 36-702(2)(i).
    50
    § 36-702(2)(i).
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    claims.51 Even if we consider Atelier and Korth’s oral argument
    that under § 36-707(2), there had been a “transfer” immedi-
    ately before the commencement of the action, they have never
    identified what interest was sufficiently choate to be “property”
    “immediately before the commencement of the action,” how
    it was capable under applicable law of perfection, or when
    Michael had “acquired rights in the asset transferred.”52
    In sum, Atelier and Korth failed to identify and prove there
    was any “property” at issue in these cases, let alone that any
    “property” transferred in relation to the security agreement was
    not excluded under § 36-702(2)(i) as a possible “asset” by vir-
    tue of the IRS liens. Atelier and Korth thus failed to prove by
    clear and convincing evidence that there was a “transfer” under
    the UFTA, which is a necessary hurdle to any fraudulent trans-
    fer claim. Because we conclude that Atelier and Korth failed to
    prove the threshold element of their fraudulent transfer claims
    that there was a “transfer,” we do not address whether Michael
    committed actual fraud under § 36-705(a)(1) in making said
    “transfer” or Laura’s good faith defense.
    We agree with the district court’s ultimate conclusion that
    Atelier’s and Korth’s fraudulent transfer actions lacked merit.
    Atelier and Korth do not assert on appeal that their claim in
    CI 16-3789 was meaningfully different from their claim in
    CI 15-299, and we agree with the district court that its judg-
    ment on the merits in CI 15-299 rendered judgment as a matter
    of law appropriate on the fraudulent transfer claim made in
    CI 16-3789. We affirm the orders of dismissal.
    2. Merits of Frivolousness Determination
    [14] We turn next to the merits of the district court’s find-
    ing that the claims were frivolous and attorney fees were
    appropriate under § 25-824(2). On appeal, we will uphold a
    lower court’s decision allowing or disallowing attorney fees for
    51
    See § 36-709(a).
    52
    See § 36-707(4).
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    frivolous or bad faith litigation in the absence of an abuse of
    discretion.53 A judicial abuse of discretion exists when the rea-
    sons or rulings of a trial judge are clearly untenable, unfairly
    depriving a litigant of a substantial right and denying just
    results in matters submitted for disposition.54
    Section 25-824(2) provides that the court shall award rea-
    sonable attorney fees and costs against any attorney or party
    who has brought or defended a civil action that alleged a claim
    or defense which a court determines is frivolous or made in
    bad faith. Section 25-824(5) elaborates:
    No attorney’s fees or costs shall be assessed if a claim or
    defense was asserted by an attorney or party in a good
    faith attempt to establish a new theory of law in this state
    or if, after filing suit, a voluntary dismissal is filed as to
    any claim or action within a reasonable time after the
    attorney or party filing the dismissal knew or reasonably
    should have known that he or she would not prevail on
    such claim or action.
    [15-17] Frivolous for the purposes of § 25-824 is defined
    as being a legal position wholly without merit, that is, without
    rational argument based on law and evidence to support a liti-
    gant’s position in the lawsuit.55 It connotes an improper motive
    or legal position so wholly without merit as to be ridiculous.56
    Any doubt whether a legal position is frivolous or taken in bad
    faith should be resolved in favor of the one whose legal posi-
    tion is in question.57
    We conclude that the district court’s reasons and rulings on
    frivolousness were untenable. In finding the actions frivolous,
    the court reasoned that it should have been discoverable at the
    53
    Chicago Lumber Co. of Omaha v. Selvera, supra note 8.
    54
    State v. Ettleman, 
    303 Neb. 581
    , 
    930 N.W.2d 538
    (2019).
    55
    Lincoln Lumber Co. v. Fowler, 
    248 Neb. 221
    , 
    533 N.W.2d 898
    (1995).
    56
    See White v. Kohout, 
    286 Neb. 700
    , 
    839 N.W.2d 252
    (2013).
    57
    Sports Courts of Omaha v. Meginnis, 
    242 Neb. 768
    , 
    497 N.W.2d 38
         (1993).
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    time of the pleadings that there was no “possible factual, legal,
    a combination of the two” that would have led to any conclu-
    sion other than that Laura received the security agreement in
    good faith “to protect her interest.” The court seemed to articu-
    late a similar conclusion with regard to whether Michael had
    acted with actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud any credi-
    tor or whether he had received a reasonably equivalent value
    in exchange for the security agreement. In concluding that
    Atelier and Korth should have known they would be unable
    to prove Michael acted with actual intent, or prove construc-
    tive fraud under a theory that Michael did not receive reason-
    ably equivalent value for the transfer, the court indicated that
    Atelier and Korth should have known there could be no fraud
    when there was a superior IRS lien that was the impetus for the
    loan transaction.
    We agree with Atelier, Korth, Koukol, and Derr that claims
    of actual intent are dependent upon credibility and, as such,
    would in only the rarest of circumstances be so wholly without
    merit as to be ridiculous. Likewise, even if we were to impose
    an objective standard on the good faith defense, an issue we
    do not decide here, it would have been difficult to predict with
    certainty what a reasonable person would think regarding the
    transaction at issue in this case. Further, it is not at all clear
    that an action can be frivolous under § 25-824 for the reason
    that a plaintiff should have predicted a defendant would prove
    an affirmative defense. While there is some logic to the district
    court’s implicit position that as a matter of law, there can be
    no bad faith or actual fraudulent intent when the position of
    the debtor’s creditors is improved by virtue of the transaction,
    there is no case law that squares with the facts of this case and
    directly supports that legal conclusion.
    We have concluded that there was no “[a]sset,” “[t]rans­
    fer[red]” by the security agreement, primarily because there
    was no “[p]roperty.”58 But to the extent it could be appropriate
    58
    See § 36-702. See, also, § 36-707.
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    to affirm the court’s discretionary finding of frivolousness as a
    right result reached for the wrong reason,59 we cannot say that
    it was ridiculous or with improper motive for Atelier and Korth
    to try the case under the theory that the “property” was the
    agreement itself. As already illustrated, there is little case law
    exploring inchoate interests in the context of proving the exis-
    tence of “property” that was an “asset” “transferred.” And we
    have not found a case where a court has explicitly addressed
    whether a security agreement, abstracted from any identified
    “property,” is an “asset.”
    While Atelier’s and Korth’s legal positions were “perhaps
    strained and farfetched,” that alone does not make them frivo-
    lous.60 Again, all doubts as to whether a legal position is frivo-
    lous or taken in bad faith should be resolved in favor of the
    one whose legal position is in question.61 This case presented a
    unique factual scenario implicating questions of law that have
    never before been addressed by this court. The court abused
    its discretion in finding the actions frivolous under § 25-824.
    We find no merit to any suggestion that we should affirm the
    court’s sanctions award under its inherent powers instead.
    VI. CONCLUSION
    We reverse the awards of sanctions but otherwise affirm the
    judgments of dismissal.
    Affirmed in part, and in part reversed.
    59
    See In re Interest of Jordan B., supra note 21.
    60
    White v. Kohout, supra note 
    56, 286 Neb. at 710
    , 839 N.W.2d at 261.
    61
    Sports Courts of Omaha v. Meginnis, supra note 57.