IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
________________________________
No. 96-30116
________________________________
In the Matter of GIOVANNI ZEDDA AND
JANET GAUDET ZEDDA,
Debtors,
FERDIE JOSEPH GAUDET,
Appellant/Cross-Appellee,
versus
WILBUR J. BABIN, JR.,
Trustee-Appellee/Cross-Appellant.
__________________________________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Louisiana
___________________________________________________
January 7, 1996
Before WISDOM, JONES, and WIENER, Circuit Judges.
WIENER, Circuit Judge:
In this bankruptcy case, Appellant/Cross-Appellee Ferdie J.
Gaudet (Gaudet) appeals the judgment of the district court that
affirmed the bankruptcy court’s decision holding that (1) a counter
letter and an act of sale and addendum by Gaudet’s daughter, co-
debtor Janet Gaudet Zedda (Janet), to Gaudet were fraudulent
transfers, avoidable by the bankruptcy trustee Wilbur J. Babin
(Trustee) under 11 U.S.C. §548(a)(2), and (2) the fraudulently
transferred property belongs to the bankrupt estate and is thus
subject to administration by the Trustee. The Trustee cross-
appealed from the judgment of the bankruptcy court (on remand from
the district court) that $9,000 was a reasonably fair value for an
undivided one-fourth naked ownership interest in the property in
question and that Gaudet was entitled to reimbursement for that
amount from the subject bankrupt estate. Concluding that the
bankruptcy and district courts erred in excluding evidence of the
true nature of the counter letter and the act of sale and thus
erred in disregarding the true nature of the overall transaction,
of which the excluded documents were integral parts, we reverse and
hold that (1) the property in question is not included in the
bankrupt estate and thus not subject to administration by the
Trustee, (2) that property belongs entirely to Gaudet, and
(3) Janet received a reasonably equivalent value for her undivided
one-fourth naked ownership interest when she transferred it to
Gaudet for $9,000, mooting the issue cross-appealed by the Trustee.
In addition, we remand to the bankruptcy court so that it may
dispose of any related matters in a manner not inconsistent with
our holding.1
1
We note, for example, that the Trustee has asserted a claim
against Gaudet for $6,012.17, purportedly representing payments
made by Janet to or for the benefit of Gaudet within one year of
the filing of the petition in bankruptcy in violation of 11 U.S.C.
§548.
2
I
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
The controversy in this case concerns the immovable property
located at 238 Kenilworth Street in New Orleans, Louisiana (the
Property). It had been acquired by Gaudet and his wife, Emeldia
Friloux (Friloux), in October 1964 as their principal residence.
Gaudet and Friloux had two children, Ferdie J. Gaudet, II (Ferdie)
and Janet. Friloux died in 1980. Later that year, Janet and her
husband, Giovanni Zedda, moved into the house with Gaudet and began
paying the monthly expenses. By 1985, the home was in need of
extensive repairs and renovation, estimated to cost almost $30,000.
Gaudet and Janet discussed with Andrew J. Leaumont, then a Vice
President at Security Homestead, the possibility of Gaudet’s
obtaining a home mortgage loan to finance the work. Leaumont
advised that Gaudet probably would not qualify for a loan, as he
had been retired since 1981, had only a small fixed income of $450
per month from Social Security, and had an unfavorable debt ratio.
Knowing that such home mortgage loans are made only to qualified
individuals who own the immovable property that will be mortgaged,
Leaumont suggested that record title to the Property be placed in
Janet’s name so that she could obtain the loan.2
In August 1986, a judgment of possession was rendered in
2
Leaumont indicated that the loan could not be obtained by
Gaudet simply by having Janet co-sign or guarantee the loan for
Gaudet, as Gaudet himself would first have to qualify for the loan,
which he almost certainly would not be able to do.
3
Friloux’s succession proceedings. It recognized that Gaudet, as
the surviving spouse in community, was entitled to (1) the
ownership and possession of an undivided one-half of all community
property, including the Property, and (2) the Usufruct of the
Surviving Spouse of the other one-half of the community property.
The judgment of possession also recognized that Ferdie and Janet,
as Friloux’s children and sole heirs, were each entitled to the
naked ownership of an undivided one-fourth of the community
property, subject to Gaudet’s usufruct. That same day Gaudet,
Ferdie, and Janet executed and recorded in the Conveyance Records
for Orleans Parish an Act of Cash Sale (1986 Deed) in which Gaudet
and Ferdie transferred record title of their interests in the
subject property to Janet. That Deed recited a total cash
consideration of $85,028.86, but in truth Janet never actually paid
anything to Gaudet or Ferdie, and Gaudet remained in possession of
the property. The following February, Janet executed an Act of
Real Estate Mortgage which encumbered the Property to secure a
$30,000 home mortgage loan from Fidelity Homestead Association.
That mortgage was recorded in the Mortgage Office for Orleans
Parish on February 4, 1987.
As time passed, Ferdie became concerned about letting record
title to the Property continue to stand in Janet’s name, and his
concerns created tension within the family. Wishing to resolve the
family discord, Gaudet told Janet to do whatever was necessary to
transfer record title to the Property back into his name. On June
4
6, 1990, Janet executed a counter letter (Counter Letter), which
recited that (1) by virtue of the 1986 Deed she had acquired record
title to the Property from Gaudet and Ferdie, (2) record title had
been placed in her name for convenience only, (3) the Property
actually belonged entirely to Gaudet, (4) she had paid no cash
consideration for the Property, and (5) Gaudet had made all of the
monthly payments on the mortgage. The Counter Letter obligated
Janet, when called upon by Gaudet, to execute an act of sale
conveying to Gaudet all right, title, and interest that she has or
may have in and to the Property. The Counter Letter was recorded
in the Conveyance Records for Orleans Parish on June 8, 1990.
On October 5, 1990, Janet and Gaudet executed an Act of Sale
and Assumption (1990 Deed) in which Janet transferred record title
to the Property to Gaudet. The “consideration” recited in the 1990
Deed was the payment of $54,000 in cash plus Gaudet’s assumption of
the $26,000 mortgage balance. That same day Janet and Gaudet
executed an addendum to the 1990 Deed (Addendum) in which they
recited that (1) in the 1990 Deed Janet was, in actuality,
transferring to Gaudet only her inherited undivided one-fourth
naked ownership, subject to Gaudet’s usufruct, being the only
ownership interest she had ever had in the Property, (2) record
title to the other three-fourths interest had been transferred to
her by Gaudet and Ferdie on August 22, 1986 [in the 1986 Deed] for
convenience only and for no “consideration,” all as recited in the
Counter Letter, and (3) the actual consideration paid to Janet by
5
Gaudet in the 1990 transaction was $9,000, representing the
estimated fair market value of the undivided one-fourth naked
ownership interest in the Property which she had inherited from
Friloux. The 1990 Deed was recorded in the Conveyance Records for
Orleans Parish on October 9, 1990, but the Addendum was never filed
for record.
On March 4, 1991, Janet and her husband (collectively, the
Zeddas) filed a petition for relief under Chapter 7 of the
Bankruptcy Code. Four months later, the Property was sold, by
agreement of all parties, to a third party for $86,000. The net
proceeds of the sale, $54,383.57, are being held in suspense by the
Trustee pending the outcome of this litigation.
The Trustee filed a complaint in which he sought to avoid the
transfer of the Property as fraudulent pursuant to 11 U.S.C. §548,
or alternatively as preferential pursuant to 11 U.S.C. §547. This
complaint also sought a declaratory judgment against Gaudet. The
Trustee alleged that the transfers accomplished by execution of the
Counter Letter and the 1990 Deed were fraudulent or preferential,
in either alternative, subject to the Trustee’s powers to set them
aside and administer the Property as an asset of the bankrupt
estate.
The bankruptcy court found that the transfers effected by the
Counter Letter and the 1990 Sale constituted fraudulent transfers
under 11 U.S.C. §548(a)(2), decreed the bankrupt estate to be the
owner of the Property as of the date the Zeddas filed their
6
bankruptcy petition, and declared the entire net proceeds from the
sale to be property of the estate and subject to the administration
of the Trustee. In so doing the bankruptcy court on its own raised
the specter of §544 for the first time, in an apparent effort to
bolster the Trustee’s powers under the third party rubric by
linking that status under §544 with the power to avoid fraudulent
transfers under §548.
The district court affirmed the ruling but noted that reading
§544 into §548 would vitiate the powers of trustees under the
latter section because debtors’ transfers almost always occur
before the petition is filed. That court remanded the case to the
bankruptcy court, however, to determine whether Gaudet was entitled
to reimbursement of the $9,000 he had paid to Janet in connection
with the 1990 Deed and its unrecorded Addendum. On remand, the
bankruptcy court found that Gaudet was a good faith transferee for
value under 11 U.S.C. §548(c), so that he was entitled to a lien on
the debtors’ estate in the amount of $9,000, also finding that sum
to be a fair value for the subject interest. The district court
affirmed these findings of the bankruptcy court on remand, as well
as that court’s original rulings.
The case comes to us in the following posture: Gaudet timely
appealed the portion of the district court’s order affirming the
bankruptcy court’s decision that the Counter Letter and the 1990
Deed constituted fraudulent transfers avoidable by the Trustee
under 11 U.S.C. §548(a)(2). The Trustee timely cross-appealed the
7
portion of the district court’s order affirming the bankruptcy
court’s decision that Gaudet was a good faith transferee for value
and was entitled to a lien on the bankrupt estate for reimbursement
of the $9,000 that he had paid Janet. At bottom, we must decide
whether the Property properly belongs to Gaudet or to the Zeddas’
bankrupt estate.
II.
ANALYSIS
A. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The orders of the bankruptcy court and the district court
permitting the Trustee to avoid the Counter Letter and the 1990
Deed as fraudulent transfers under 11 U.S.C. §548(a)(2) and
decreeing Gaudet a good faith transferee for value are conclusions
of law subject to our de novo review.3 Any underlying factual
determinations of the bankruptcy court are reviewed for clear
error.4 Under this standard, we must defer to the bankruptcy
court’s factual findings unless, after reviewing all of the
evidence, we are left with a firm and definite conviction that the
bankruptcy court erred.5
B. APPLICABLE LAW
3
See In re McDaniel, 70 F.3d 841, 843 (5th Cir. 1995); In re
Young, 995 F.2d 547, 548 (5th Cir. 1993)(bankruptcy court). See
also Bridges v. City of Bossier, 92 F.3d 329, 332 (5th Cir.
1996)(district court).
4
In re McDaniel, 70 F.3d at 842-43.
5
Id at 843.
8
1. Bankruptcy Law
The bankrupt estate comprises all of the debtor’s legal and
equitable interests in property as of the commencement of the
case.6 The Bankruptcy Code vests the trustee with the power to set
aside or avoid various types of pre-petition transfers of property
of the debtor so that the trustee may marshal or increase the
potential assets of the bankrupt estate.7
In particular, Section 544, the so-called strong arm
provision, vests the trustee with the rights of (1) a creditor on
a simple contract with a judicial lien on the property as of the
commencement of the case,8 (2) a creditor with a writ of execution
against the property of the debtor that is unsatisfied as of the
commencement of the case,9 and (3) a bona fide purchaser of the
real property of the debtor as of the commencement of the case.10
In essence, §544 allows the trustee to step into the shoes of a
creditor for the purpose of asserting causes of action under state
fraudulent conveyance laws and confers on the trustee the status of
a hypothetical creditor or bona fide purchaser as of the
commencement of the case. “The commencement of the case” is
6
11 U.S.C. §541(a)(1) (1994).
7
4 COLLIER ON BANKRUPTCY ¶544.01 (15th ed. 1996).
8
11 U.S.C. §544(a)(1) (1994)(emphasis added).
9
11 U.S.C. §544(a)(2) (1994)(emphasis added).
10
11 U.S.C. §544(a)(3) (1994)(emphasis added).
9
synonymous with the filing of the bankruptcy petition.11
In addition to the strong arm provision of § 544, the Trustee
possesses a number of other specific avoidance powers,12 one of
which is the power to avoid transfers that are made by the debtor
in fraud of his creditors.13 Under §548, a transfer is fraudulent
if it (1) transfers an “interest of the debtor in property” and (2)
is made either (a) with an intent to hinder, delay, or defraud
creditors14 or (b) for less than a reasonably equivalent value and
causes or increases the debtor’s insolvency.15 Although both §544
and §548 empower the trustee to increase the assets of the bankrupt
estate by avoidance of transfers, these powers are wholly separate
11
11 U.S.C. §301 (1994).
12
The trustee’s specific avoidance powers include the avoidance
of statutory liens (11 U.S.C. §545), the avoidance of preferential
transfers of the debtor’s property to third persons (11 U.S.C.
§547), the avoidance of fraudulent conveyances (11 U.S.C. §548),
and the avoidance of certain transactions after bankruptcy (11
U.S.C. §549).
13
11 U.S.C. §548 (1994).
14
11 U.S.C. §548(a)(1) (1994).
15
11 U.S.C. §548(a)(2)(A) and (B)(i)(1994). A transfer for
less than reasonably equivalent value may also be fraudulent under
§548(a)(2) if, instead of the transfer causing or increasing the
debtor’s insolvency, the debtor (1) was engaged in or was about to
engage in business or a transaction for which any property
remaining with the debtor was an unreasonably small capital or (2)
intended to incur, or believed that he would incur, debts that
would be beyond his ability to pay as such debts matured. 11
U.S.C. §548(a)(2)(B)(ii) and (iii)(1994).
10
from and independent of one another.16
2. Louisiana Law - The Public Records Doctrine and its
intersection with §544
Louisiana law requires that specified types of instruments be
filed in the public records if they are to affect the rights of
third persons. This concept is known as the Public Records
Doctrine and is stated in the Civil Code Ancillaries as follows:
No sale, contract, counter letter, lien, mortgage,
judgment, surface lease, oil, gas or mineral lease, or
other instrument of writing relating to or affecting
immovable property shall be binding on or affect third
persons or third parties unless and until filed for
registry in the office of the parish recorder of the
parish where the land or immovable is situated. Neither
secret claims or equities nor other matters outside the
public records shall be binding on or affect such third
parties.17
A third person is defined to include the following:
[A]ny third person or third party dealing with any such
immovable or immovable property or acquiring a real or
personal right therein as purchaser, mortgagee, grantee
or vendee of servitude or royalty rights, or as lessee in
any surface lease or leases or as lessee in any oil, gas
or mineral lease and all other third persons or third
parties acquiring any real or personal right, privilege
or permit relating to or affecting immovable property.18
For purposes of §544 of the Bankruptcy Code, the Trustee
stands in the shoes of a hypothetical creditor or bona fide
16
In re Mortgageamerica Corp., 714 F.2d 1266, 1275 (5th Cir.
1983)(distinguishing §544's incorporation of state fraudulent
conveyance law from §548, a federal fraudulent conveyance
provision).
17
La. R.S. 9:2721 (Supp. 1996)(emphasis added).
18
La. R.S. 9:2722 (1991).
11
purchaser as of the commencement of the case. For purposes of
Louisiana’s Public Records Doctrine, a creditor or a purchaser is
a third person. Applying that doctrine to § 544, it is clear that
the Trustee is a third person for purposes of the public records
when he assumes the status of a hypothetical creditor or a bona
fide purchaser as of the commencement of the case. This conclusion
is supported by the Trustee’s correct assertion that he occupies
the position of a third party who is entitled to rely on the public
records.
The Trustee is wrong as a matter of law, however, when he
assumes that his third party status under §544 entitles him to rely
on the public records for purposes of §548. For §544 makes the
Trustee a third party only for purposes of exercising the specific
powers granted to him under that one section, not all powers
granted to trustees elsewhere in the Bankruptcy Code. There is
absolutely nothing in §548 that makes the Trustee a third party for
purposes of that section; neither is there anything, there or
elsewhere, that provides the linkage between §544 and §548 needed
to justify the Trustee’s assertion that his status as a third party
under §544 can be read to apply in conjunction with §548. Any
effort to make that leap of linkage is a classic “step”
transaction, an unwarranted attempt to bootstrap a nexus where none
exists. On this point we are in apparent agreement with the
district court.
Nevertheless, the Trustee as a third person is entitled to the
12
protection of the public records for purposes of marshaling assets
under §544. Consequently, the Trustee may include in the bankrupt
estate any property the record title to which stands in the
debtor’s name as of the commencement of the case, irrespective of
whether the debtor is entitled to ownership of the property, i.e.,
legal or equitable title, as distinct from record title. Section
544 may be read as relying on the principle of ostensible
ownership, which stands for the proposition that, other things
being equal, what the creditor sees ought to be what the creditor
gets.19
C. NO RECORD OWNERSHIP AS OF THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE CASE —— §544
A “snapshot” of the public records on the day that the Zeddas
filed their petition reflects a familiar Louisiana chain of title,
with record title to the Property standing in the name of Gaudet,
not Janet. As such, no third party could have taken a deed from
Janet and obtained record title, or filed a judgment against Janet
and obtained a judicial or legal mortgage, so neither could the
Trustee “take” the Property from Janet and include it in the
bankrupt estate in reliance on §544. She had no record title to
the Property on that day, nor had she for the previous five or six
months.
Perhaps the obverse fact situation best proves this point. If
19
In re Granada, Inc., 92 B.R. 501, 509 (Bankr. D. Utah
1988)(quoting In re Great Plains Western Ranch Co., Inc., 38 B.R.
899 (Bankr. C.D. Cal. 1984)).
13
this case had been one in which record title to the Property stood
in Janet’s name under a simulated cash sale deed on the day the
bankruptcy petition was filed, there is no question that the
Trustee would have claimed it as property of the estate under
authority of §544; neither is there any question but that the
bankruptcy court would have ordered the Property included in the
bankrupt estate under authority of §544. The Public Records
Doctrine would have protected a third party purchaser or judgment
creditor on that date, so under §544 it would have protected the
Trustee as well. But that is not the instant case: When, as here,
the debtor is not the holder of record title to the property at the
commencement of the case, the Public Records Doctrine, which would
not protect a third party who took a deed or a mortgage from the
debtor on that date, cannot and does not protect the Trustee, whose
rights under §544 can be no greater than those of a hypothetical
creditor or purchaser.
Clearly, then, unless we were to create a fiction that would
permit the Trustee to rely retroactively on the public records,
this case as decided by the bankruptcy court cannot stand, at least
not on authority of §544. When the Trustee is in the shoes of a
third party creditor subject to the public records by virtue of
§544, the situation can only be measured on the basis of a snapshot
of those records taken on the day of the filing of the petition.20
20
11 U.S.C. §544 (1994)(taking a snapshot of the public records
as of the commencement of the case).
14
Thus only by fictionally moving the transaction date back in time
to the day before the recordation of the Counter Letter (and thus
before the recordation of the 1990 Deed) and treating the Trustee’s
§544 right to avoid the transfer as though it had occurred on that
date, can the Trustee’s position, as approbated by the bankruptcy
court, be sustained.
We discern no authority whatsoever in §544, or elsewhere for
that matter, for making such a stretch; certainly none can be
gleaned from §548. Frankly, we are unwilling to engage in the kind
of judicial legislation that would be necessary to give the Trustee
this fictional and unauthorized power to link §§544 and 548. In
short, the Trustee is not allowed to reach back to some arbitrary,
anterior time and invoke the public records rights of a creditor or
purchaser as of that date, particularly when it is recognized that
no actual creditor or purchaser could do so. Section 544 does
nothing more than put the Trustee in the exact same shoes as those
of such a third party; it does not give the Trustee either stilts
or Seven League boots to augment the ordinary footwear of the
hypothetical creditor or purchaser.21
21
In re Wilson, 4 B.R. 605, 607 (Bankr. E.D. Wash. 1980)(citing
H.W. Glessner v. Massey-Ferguson, Inc., 353 F.2d 986 (9th Cir.
1965), cert. denied, 384 U.S. 970, 86 S. Ct. 1859 (1966)).
15
D. FRAUDULENT TRANSFER — §548
1. Actual Fraud — §548(a)(1)
As §544 is not here available to the Trustee, he must rely on
some other avoidance authority if he is to include the Property in
the Zeddas’ bankrupt estate. In this instance, he must prove that
Janet made a transfer either in actual fraud of creditors under the
intendment of §548(a)(1), or for less than a reasonably equivalent
value within the intendment of §548(a)(2). It is significant that
there was no allegation by the Trustee and no finding by either the
bankruptcy or district court that the Property was transferred in
bad faith or with actual fraudulent intent as is required if
§548(a)(1) is to appertain; that leaves only §548(a)(2).
2. Less than a Reasonably Equivalent Value — §548(a)(2)
The paramount purpose of the Bankruptcy Act is to provide
equality of distribution among creditors.22 A trustee’s avoidance
powers are intended to benefit the debtor’s creditors, as such
powers facilitate a trustee’s recovery of as much property as
possible for distribution to the creditors.23 We noted earlier that
a transfer may be avoidable under §548(a)(2) if it was a transfer
(1) of “an interest of the debtor in property,”24 (2) made on or
within one year before the date of the filing of the petition, (3)
22
In re Great Plains Western Ranch Co. Inc., 38 B.R. at 903
(quoting 4B COLLIER ON BANKRUPTCY ¶70.45 (14th ed. 1978)).
23
In re Wilson, 4 B.R. at 607.
24
11 U.S.C. §548(a) (1994).
16
for less than a reasonably equivalent value, (4) which caused or
increased the debtor’s insolvency.25 To achieve the equitable
purpose of bankruptcy law, particularly the purpose of §548(a)(2),
a trustee must look at the realities of the situation and examine
the true nature of all transactions made on or within one year of
the filing of the petition. Substance trumps form. As such,
record title, albeit crucial to the trustee’s powers under §544, is
wholly irrelevant to his powers under §548.26
3. Did Janet have an interest in the Property under state law?
To satisfy the first element of §548(a)(2), the debtor must
transfer “an interest of the debtor in the property.”27 The
bankruptcy court and the district court assumed that Janet had a
100% interest in the Property by virtue of the 1986 Deed in which
Gaudet and Ferdie transferred their interests in the Property to
Janet. That assumption is the Achilles’ heel of the holdings of
those courts, however, for whether the debtor has an interest in
the property is always a question of state law.28
Under Louisiana law, an instrument is a simulation when, by
25
11 U.S.C. §548(a) (1994).
26
See In re Mortgageamerica Corp., 714 F.2d 1266, 1275 (5th
Cir. 1983)(noting that §544 and §548 are distinct powers that come
from separate sources).
27
11 U.S.C. §548(a) (1994).
28
In re Oxford Management, 4 F.3d 1329, 1334 (5th Cir. 1993);
In re Haber Oil Co., Inc., 12 F.3d 426, 435 (5th Cir. 1994); In re
Maple Mortgage, Inc., 81 F.3d 592, 596 (5th Cir. 1996).
17
mutual agreement, it does not express the true intent of the
parties.29 Regardless of possible effects it might have on third
parties, a simulation is absolute when the parties to it intend for
the contract to produce no effects between them.30 A simulated sale
does not actually transfer ownership of the property: A sale is a
simulation when the parties have no good faith intent to transfer
ownership, i.e., when it is nothing more than a sham.31
Even though by definition a simulated sale does not effect a
transfer of ownership between the parties, it is nonetheless an
“acte juridique” or juridical act and must be supported by the
Civil Law notion of “cause” or “causa.”32 Cause, as distinguished
from the common law concept of consideration, i.e., an exchange of
equivalent values, is akin to motive, or the reason why a party
obligates himself.33 Even if there is not “something of value” akin
to common law consideration or a quid pro quo given in exchange for
the execution of the simulation, the transaction may still be valid
under Louisiana law if there is cause for its execution.34 As a
29
La. Civ. Code art. 2025.
30
La. Civ. Code art. 2026.
31
Crawford v. Fitzgerald, 532 So.2d 382, 384 (La. App. 3d Cir.
1988).
32
An obligation cannot exist without a lawful cause. La. Civ.
Code art. 1966.
33
La. Civ. Code art. 1967.
34
Simulations are not uncommon in Louisiana; neither does their
use imply anything negative or untoward. It is a typical practice
18
general proposition, the binding reconveyance obligation of the
party who receives record title to property in a simulated sale is
sufficient cause to support such a transaction.
Under Louisiana law, the transaction memorialized in the 1986
Deed was obviously an absolute simulated sale. The parties had no
good faith intent for legal or equitable ownership to pass to Janet
when they used the 1986 Deed to place record title of their
interests in Janet’s name. The true purpose —— indeed, the sole
purpose —— of the 1986 Deed was to enable Janet, as Gaudet’s
undisclosed agent, to qualify for and obtain a loan that in truth
would benefit Gaudet and the Property; and the cause for the record
title transferring transaction was supplied not only by Janet’s
agreement to take out the loan in her name for the benefit that
Gaudet would realize but also by Janet’s obligation to reconvey the
Property to Gaudet. When the Counter Letter, the 1990 Sale, and
the Addendum are viewed in pari materiae, they reveal the true
nature of the transaction: The Property had been transferred for
in Louisiana, for example, for children who have inherited the
naked ownership of a deceased parent’s share of the former
community property, subject to a usufruct in favor of the surviving
parent, to reconvey their naked ownership interests —— especially
in the case of the parents’ home —— to the surviving parent so that
he or she may enjoy full ownership of the property for the
remainder of his life, in anticipation that such property
ultimately devolves upon the children at the surviving parent’s
death. Such a transfer may be accomplished by a simulated sale in
which the children convey their interests to the surviving parent
for a recited cash consideration that in fact is never paid. In
addition, historically, because the recordation of a donation
created a cloud on the record title, a party who made a donation
often executed and recorded a simulated sale.
19
convenience only, and no cash or other assets of value were paid or
given for the transfer.
Indeed, the truth of the recitation of facts in the Addendum
was accepted by the bankruptcy court and went uncontradicted by the
evidence. Even though counter letters are customarily executed
contemporaneously with the initial transfer, the instant Counter
Letter served the same purpose by stating the realities of the
situation even at its delayed date of execution. Again, neither
the evidence nor the determinations of the bankruptcy court so much
as hint at anything collusive or post hoc about the subsequent
execution and recordation of the Counter Letter.
Notably, the lower courts did not find that the 1986 Deed is
not a simulation. But neither could they have found that the
instrument is a simulation given their refusal to consider the
Counter Letter, the 1990 Deed, and the Addendum.
Whether the 1986 Deed is a simulation is a question of
contract interpretation. By definition, the issue of simulation
involves a determination of whether the instrument under scrutiny
is something other than what meets the eye. It follows necessarily
that a proper and complete analysis of whether the 1986 Deed is a
simulation turns of necessity on consideration of extrinsic
evidence — specifically the Counter Letter, the 1990 Deed, and the
Addendum, as well as testimony credited by the court.
The lower courts’ refusal to consider these documents was
erroneous. When we consider the excluded documents and the
20
supporting testimony that is in the record, we find that the
transaction, which was cast as a sale in the 1986 Deed, is not a
sale at all, and thus is a simulation in fact and in law. Once the
Counter Letter, the 1990 Deed, and the Addendum are considered, as
they should have been, the evidence offered by the Trustee to
disprove a simulation (i.e., that Janet lived in the house, made
mortgage payments, and directed what improvements would be made) is
seen to be immaterial. This conclusion follows as a matter of law
from the undisputed documents and testimony, rendering remand for
further finding unnecessary.
As the 1986 Deed is a simulation and thus vested no true
ownership in Janet, she had no “interest in the property” (beyond
her undivided one-fourth naked ownership interest which she had
inherited from her mother35) in 1990 that she could have transferred
to Gaudet. Under §548(a)(2), that is the end of the inquiry.
4. The effect of the simulation on the Trustee
The bankruptcy and district courts ruled that evidence and
testimony about the Counter Letter and 1990 Deed would be parol
evidence and therefore inadmissible against the Trustee as a third
person entitled to the protection of the Public Records Doctrine.
But the bankruptcy and district courts erred, even to the point of
abuse of discretion, in treating the inquiry under §548(a)(2) ——
35
Janet’s transfer of her undivided one-fourth naked ownership
interest is discussed in part 5 infra.
21
the classic search for truth and the realities of transactions ——
as an evidentiary question and in disallowing evidence of the
Counter Letter and the 1990 Sale. This evidence clearly cannot be
ignored under §548(a)(2), even though it might have been properly
excluded had a §544 public records avoidance been available to the
Trustee.
The district court stated that Louisiana’s recordation law
compelled the harsh result of divesting Gaudet of property which he
never really conveyed to his daughter and for which she had never
paid anything. Implicit in this statement is the district court’s
recognition that the transaction was in actuality, as contended by
Gaudet, a simulated sale which transferred no ownership between the
parties. The district court, however, erroneously treated the
issue as an evidentiary one, thereby following the Trustee’s red
herring by employing the Public Records Doctrine and the parol
evidence rule to exclude evidence that proves the truth and reality
that is the simulation. When the Trustee successfully sold that
bill of goods to the bankruptcy court and district court, he
carried the day that never should have been carried.
Although record title and the Public Records Doctrine protect
the Trustee as a third party under §544, they are wholly irrelevant
and immaterial to a fraudulent transfer inquiry under §548. The
focus of §548(a)(2) is on actual ownership — not mere record title.
Neither the Public Records Doctrine nor the parol evidence rule can
function as a false prophet to preclude consideration of evidence
22
of the true nature of the transaction in question. After all, the
very essence of a §548(a)(2) inquiry is that self-same true nature.
When the transfer has already taken place, regardless of the
totally irrelevant fact that it occurred during the twelve months
prior to the date of the petition, the court must examine the
realities of the transaction; and the realities of this situation
reveal beyond peradventure that the 1986 transaction was a
simulated sale which had no effect on either legal or equitable
ownership.
Janet’s only actual interest in the property at any time
before the 1990 Deed was her inherited undivided one-fourth naked
ownership interest. Ironically, that was the only asset that was
not affected by the simulated 1986 Deed, and that is the only
interest that for the first and only time she actually conveyed to
Gaudet in the 1990 Deed. As that conveyance was a transfer of an
interest of the debtor in property within one year of the filing of
the petition in bankruptcy, the only remaining question is whether
Janet’s transfer of that fractional naked ownership was made for
less than a reasonably equivalent value under §548(a)(2).
5. Did Janet Transfer Her Interest for Less Than Reasonably
Equivalent Value?
Whether a transfer is made for a reasonably equivalent value
is, in every case, largely a question of fact. As such,
considerable latitude must be allowed to the trier of facts,36 for
36
4 COLLIER ON BANKRUPTCY ¶548.09 (15th ed. 1996).
23
in each case that determination depends entirely on the peculiar
facts and circumstances.37 In evaluating the 1990 Deed, the only
aspect of the transaction that the bankruptcy and district courts
examined was the common law cash consideration of $9,000 received
by Janet from Gaudet in payment for her undivided one-fourth naked
ownership. Yet both courts excluded evidence regarding the true
nature of the transaction. By way of a proffer, however, that
evidence is nonetheless in the record for all to see. On the basis
of the proffered evidence, we affirm the bankruptcy court’s
determination on remand that $9,000 is a reasonably equivalent
value given in exchange for an undivided one-fourth naked ownership
interest in this Property. On this point, both the bankruptcy and
district courts appear to be in agreement.38
III.
CONCLUSION
Janet did not hold record title to the Property on the date
the petition was filed, so the Trustee cannot include the Property
in the bankrupt estate in reliance on §544. As observed by the
district court, it is only when the debtor holds record title to
the property as of the commencement of the case that the Trustee is
entitled to invoke §544's protection of the public records in
37
In re Smith, 24 B.R. 19, 23 (Bankr. W.D. N.C. 1982).
38
See discussion regarding the district court’s remand and the
bankruptcy court’s findings on remand, near the end of section I,
Facts and Proceedings.
24
asserting his rights.
Consequently, when, as here, the debtor does not have record
title as of the commencement of the case, the Trustee must turn to,
inter alia, §548 to assert his power to avoid fraudulent transfers
previously consummated. Still, there is nothing in §548 that puts
the Trustee in a §544 third party position, so the Trustee may not
invoke the Public Records Doctrine or the parol evidence rule to
preclude a determination of the true nature of the transaction
under state law. When we examine the realities here at play, we
are left with no doubt whatsoever but that (1) the transaction
evidenced in the 1986 Deed was a simulated sale, and (2) the true
nature of the transaction is revealed in the Counter Letter, the
1990 Deed, and the Addendum.
To the extent that they were inextricably intertwined with a
simulation that did nothing but transfer mere record title as a
matter of convenience in obtaining a legitimate home improvement
loan, the Counter Letter and the 1990 Deed could not possibly have
produced transfers of an “interest of the debtor in property.” And
as whatever was transferred was surely not such an interest, then
by definition there were no fraudulent transfers within the
contemplation of §548(a)(2). Therefore, the entire proceeds from
the agreed sale of the Property belong to Gaudet and are neither
includible in the Zeddas’ bankrupt estate nor subject to
administration by the Trustee. The transfer of Janet’s undivided
one-fourth naked ownership interest to her father for $9,000 was
25
not a transfer for less than a reasonably equivalent value, but
inasmuch as Gaudet actually paid Janet the $9,000 in closing the
reconveyance by the 1990 Deed, no further liens, reimbursements, or
other adjustments are required between Gaudet and the Trustee in
that regard.
In light of the foregoing, we reverse the holdings of the
bankruptcy court as affirmed by the district court and render
judgment in favor of Gaudet, ordering the Trustee to deliver to
Gaudet the entire proceeds of the sale of the Property, together
with all accrued interest. In addition, we remand to the
bankruptcy court to dispose of any pending related matters in a
manner not inconsistent with our holding today.
REVERSED, RENDERED in part, and REMANDED in part.
26