18-2098-bk
In re: Alice Phillips Belmonte
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
August Term, 2018
Submitted: May 30, 2019 Decided: July 25, 2019
Docket No. 18-2098-bk
IN RE: ALICE PHILLIPS BELMONTE,
Debtor.
HAROLD D. JONES,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
— v. —
THE BRAND LAW FIRM, P.A.
Defendant-Appellant.
B e f o r e:
CALABRESI, LYNCH, and LOHIER, Circuit Judges.
Defendant-Appellant the Brand Law Firm (“Brand”) appeals from a
judgment of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York
(Azrack, J.) affirming a decision of the Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District
of New York (Trust, J.) ordering it to remit $59,432 to the trustee of Alice
Belmonte’s bankruptcy estate. The amount that Brand was ordered to remit was
part of the proceeds of an unauthorized post-petition transfer by the debtor of the
estate’s property. Brand argues that the order violates 11 U.S.C. § 550(d),
prohibiting a trustee from recovering illegally transferred property more than
once. We disagree, and AFFIRM the judgment.
Robert N. Michaelson, Rich Michaelson Magaliff, LLP, New
York, NY for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Craig A. Brand, The Brand Law Firm, P.A., Orlando, FL for
Defendant-Appellant.
GERARD E. LYNCH, Circuit Judge:
While an involuntary bankruptcy petition was pending against her, Alice
Belmonte (the “Debtor”), executed a second mortgage on property of her
bankruptcy estate in exchange for a $250,000 loan. She then transferred the loan
proceeds to the Brand Law Firm (“Brand”) as payment for representing her in a
criminal proceeding. Harold D. Jones, the trustee of the Debtor’s estate (the
“Trustee”), sought to have the mortgage and the transfer of the $250,000 loan
avoided as illegal post-petition transfers of the estate’s property. He also sought
2
to recover for the estate the $250,000 that had been illegally transferred to Brand.
Brand opposed, arguing that the Trustee’s recovery of any part of the $250,000
from Brand violated 11 U.S.C. § 550(d), which limits a trustee to a single recovery
of the illegally transferred property. The Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern
District of New York (Alan S. Trust, J.) avoided the two post-petition transfers
and also ordered Brand to remit $59,432 of the proceeds of the loan to the
Trustee. The United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York
(Joan M. Azrack, J.) affirmed the bankruptcy court’s order. Both the bankruptcy
court and the district court rejected Brand’s argument that the Trustee’s recovery
of the $59,432 from Brand constituted a double recovery for the estate. For the
reasons that follow, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
BACKGROUND
On October 5, 2012 (the “Petition Date”), an involuntary petition for
bankruptcy was filed against the Debtor pursuant to Section 303(b) of the
Bankruptcy Code in the Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of New York.
The Debtor hired Craig Brand, a criminal defense and commercial litigator, and
the proprietor and sole employee of Brand, to represent her in the bankruptcy
proceedings.
3
On December 13, 2012, the bankruptcy court entered an order enjoining
the Debtor from transferring any property pending resolution of the involuntary
petition. At such time, the Debtor and her husband, William Belmonte
(“Belmonte”), owned the home and property located at 5 Crescent Court,
Wading River, Suffolk County, New York (the “Crescent Court Property”), as
tenants by the entirety. The Crescent Court Property was subject to a first
mortgage dated October 4, 2011, issued by the Debtor and Belmonte in favor of
People’s United Bank in the original principal sum of $460,000. As of the Petition
Date the Debtor estimated the value of the Crescent Court Property at $721,000.
Under state law, the Debtor, as a tenant by the entirety with her husband,
possessed an undivided 50% interest in the home’s equity, meaning that half of
the roughly $260,000 equity cushion in the Crescent Court Property belonged to
the Debtor.
On April 8, 2013, the bankruptcy court held a trial on the involuntary
petition against the Debtor. Then, on April 26, 2013, the court adjudicated the
Debtor bankrupt and entered an order for relief against her, placing her into
Chapter 7 bankruptcy. At that time the Debtor’s interest in the Crescent Court
Property, which consisted of half of the equity in the Crescent Court Property
4
that was unencumbered by the first mortgage (roughly $130,000), became
property of her bankruptcy estate (the “Estate”). By force of 11 U.S.C. § 362, an
automatic stay was imposed prohibiting the transfer of property belonging to the
Estate.
On October 17, 2013, the Debtor was arrested pursuant to a 49-count
indictment filed in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, New York
County, which alleged, inter alia, that the Debtor had engaged in a scheme to
defraud, and had committed grand larceny against, certain creditors of the
Estate. The Debtor hired Brand and two other attorneys, Brian D. Waller and
Thomas A. Sadaka, to represent her in the criminal proceedings.
In order to fund her defense in the criminal case, Patrick Thompson, a
personal friend of the Debtor, agreed to lend $250,000 (the “Thompson Loan”) to
the Debtor and her husband, secured by a lien on the Crescent Court Property
(the “Second Mortgage”). In January 2014, Craig Brand drew up the paperwork
for the transaction by which Belmonte and the Debtor executed a promissory
note in favor of Thompson, and by which Belmonte, on his own behalf and via
power of attorney for the Debtor, executed the Second Mortgage in favor of
5
Thompson. At the time that the Second Mortgage was executed both Thompson
and Belmonte knew of the bankruptcy case pending against the Debtor.
To effectuate the funding of the Debtor’s criminal defense, Thompson
wired the $250,000 loan from one of his wholly owned subsidiaries to Brand in
two separate installments. Per an agreement between Brand and the Debtor’s
other two criminal defense attorneys Brand transferred $73,147 to Sadaka and
$54,490 to Waller as payment for their legal services. Brand retained $118,864 of
the Thompson Loan.
On November 21, 2014, the Trustee filed an adversary proceeding in the
bankruptcy court against the Debtor, Belmonte, and Thompson, seeking to avoid
the Second Mortgage. The Trustee alleged that the mortgage was a transfer of the
Estate’s property that violated the automatic stay on any transfers of the Estate’s
property. He thus sought to have the transaction avoided pursuant to 11 U.S.C.
§ 549, which allows a trustee to avoid a transfer of property of an estate that
occurs after the commencement of the bankruptcy case and is not otherwise
authorized by the Bankruptcy Code or by the court. On February 27, 2015, the
bankruptcy court approved a settlement between the Trustee and Thompson, in
which the adversary proceeding against Thompson was dismissed, the Second
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Mortgage was avoided pursuant to § 549, and the lien created by the Second
Mortgage was preserved for the benefit of the Debtor’s Estate pursuant to § 551.
In April 2015, the Trustee filed an adversary proceeding against Belmonte
seeking to force the sale of the Crescent Court Property pursuant to 11 U.S.C.
§ 363(h), which allows a trustee to sell property in which the estate has an
interest, despite the interest of a non-debtor co-owner, if various criteria are
satisfied. A trial in that proceeding was held on March 29, 2016, and the
bankruptcy court subsequently entered an oral order denying the forced sale.
The bankruptcy court recognized that the Estate held a lien on the Crescent Court
Property by virtue of the avoided Second Mortgage, and that a sale would allow
the Trustee to realize the value of the Estate’s interest in the property for the
benefit of the creditors. However, mindful that the Crescent Court Property was
owned as a tenancy by the entirety,1 the bankruptcy court refused to approve the
sale of the Crescent Court Property on the ground that noneconomic
factors—Belmonte’s and his daughter’s interest in remaining in their
home—outweighed the economic benefit to the Estate.
1
Sometime after the trial, the Debtor and Belmonte divorced, which would have
converted their interests in the Crescent Court Property from a tenancy by the
entirety to a joint tenancy.
7
Almost simultaneously with his filing the proceeding against Belmonte to
compel the sale of the Crescent Court Property, the Trustee also filed a complaint
in the bankruptcy court against Brand, seeking to have the Thompson Loan
avoided. The Trustee alleged that the money the Debtor obtained from the
Thompson Loan was property of the Estate, because the loan was secured by the
Crescent Court Property and 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(6) makes the “[p]roceeds,
product, offspring, rents, or profits of or from property of the estate” also
property of the estate. Because the transfer took place when the Debtor was not
authorized to transfer Estate property, the Trustee concluded, the transfer of the
Thompson Loan to Brand was avoidable pursuant to § 549. The Trustee therefore
sought to recover the value of the Thompson Loan proceeds from Brand
pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 550(a), which allows a trustee to recover from the
transferee “the property transferred, or . . . the value of such property” to the
extent that a transfer is avoided under § 549, “for the benefit of the estate.”
In the answer to the complaint, Brand alleged that the Trustee’s claim was
barred by the election of remedies doctrine and the prohibition on double
recovery, as a result of the Trustee’s settlement with Thompson avoiding the
Second Mortgage and preserving the lien created by the Second Mortgage for the
8
benefit of the Estate. In a June 28, 2016, interlocutory order, the bankruptcy court
rejected Brand’s contention that, because the Trustee had successfully avoided
the Second Mortgage, he was prohibited from recovering any of the loan
proceeds as a double recovery. See Jones v. Brand (In re Belmonte), 551 B.R. 723, 732
(Bankr. E.D.N.Y. 2016). The bankruptcy court reasoned that, “until finally paid,
litigants may look to multiple parties to recover the same loss” and that here the
Trustee had not recovered any of the $250,000 allegedly borrowed by the Debtor
and transferred to the defendants. Id.
The bankruptcy court held a bench trial in the Thompson Loan avoidance
and recovery case against Brand on November 2 and 3, 2016. On March 16, 2017,
the bankruptcy court ruled that the Thompson Loan transfer to Brand was
avoidable under § 549 as an unauthorized transfer of the Estate’s property. The
only contested issue with respect to whether the Thompson Loan was avoidable
was whether the Thompson Loan itself was property of the Estate. The court
found that it was, reasoning as follows:
The Debtor’s interest in her home was, without
question, property of the bankruptcy estate once the
order for relief was entered, which happened . . . eight
months before the . . . $250,000 loan was made. While
the $250,000 was nominally transferred to [Brand] by an
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entity allegedly owned or controlled by Patrick
Thompson, the true transaction based upon the record
was a loan being made by Mr. Thompson or his entity
to the Debtor and her non-filing spouse. That loan
transaction was clearly evidenced by a note and
mortgage drafted by Mr. Brand which created a lien
against the Debtor’s interest in her home and therefore a
lien against this estate’s interest in the Debtor’s home.
Under Section 541(a)(6), property of the estate clearly
includes proceeds, products, offering, rents, or profits
from property of the estate.
J. App’x at 598. The bankruptcy court concluded that because the Debtor
transferred the Thompson Loan to Brand eight months after the entry of the
order for relief in her Chapter 7 case, when she had no legal right to exercise
control over property of the Estate, the transfer was avoidable pursuant to § 549.
The court then considered whether the Trustee, having successfully
avoided the Thompson Loan pursuant to § 549, could also recover “the property
transferred” or “the value of such property” pursuant to § 550(a). The court
concluded that it could, and that the Trustee was entitled to a judgment for one-
half of the Thompson Loan.2
2
The court reasoned that, because the Thompson Loan was secured by a
mortgage on the Crescent Court Property, in which the Estate held a 50%
interest, half of the loan proceeds, or $125,000, was recoverable by the Trustee.
10
Although the bankruptcy court concluded that $125,000 of the Thompson
Loan was recoverable by the Trustee, it held that only $59,432 was recoverable
from Brand. That sum represented half of the $118,864 from the Thompson Loan
that Brand retained after it paid the Debtor’s other criminal defense attorneys.3
In its post-trial ruling, the bankruptcy court also addressed an objection
filed by Thompson to the Estate’s ability to recover any amount of the Thompson
Loan received by Brand on the ground that such recovery would amount to a
double recovery for the Estate, since the Second Mortgage had already been
avoided. The court rejected this argument, explaining:
The fact that the Court voided the second lien granted
in favor of Mr. Thompson’s entity does not by any
circumstances create the prospect for a double recovery
by the estate. The estate simply succeeded to any lien
rights claimed by Mr. Thompson’s entity against the
Debtor’s home. But recovering the fruits of that
unauthorized transfer does not result in a double
recovery.
J. App’x at 587.
3
The bankruptcy court entered judgment solely against Brand because the record
indicated that each of the payments were made to Brand and not to Craig Brand
individually.
11
Brand appealed to the district court, reiterating the argument made in
Thompson’s objection. It argued that when the Trustee settled with Thompson,
and the Second Mortgage was avoided and the lien created by it was preserved
for the Estate, the Trustee was restored to the position he had been in before the
unauthorized transfers took place. The Trustee’s recovery of an additional
amount violated § 550(d)’s proscription that “[t]he trustee is entitled to only a
single satisfaction under subsection (a) of this section” because the Trustee had
already recovered the equity encumbered by the Second Mortgage. Thus, Brand
argued that by recovering both the lien created by the Second Mortgage and any
portion of the Thompson Loan, the Estate had obtained a double recovery.
The district court issued an opinion and order on June 7, 2018, rejecting
Brand’s double recovery theory and affirming the bankruptcy court’s judgment.
The court concluded that Brand conflated two separate, if factually related,
transactions: (i) the transfer of the Second Mortgage to Thompson; and (ii) the
transfer of the $250,000 Thompson Loan to Brand. The district court explained
that the avoidance of the Second Mortgage simply allowed the Debtor’s Estate to
assume the lien rights to the Crescent Court Property that had been improperly
transferred to Thompson. That did not bar the Trustee from seeking to recover
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the loan proceeds the Debtor received from Thompson and then transferred to
Brand.
The district court entered judgment on June 15, 2018, affirming the
bankruptcy court’s rulings. Brand now appeals from that judgment.
DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
A district court’s rulings when sitting as an appellate court in a bankruptcy
case are subject to plenary review. Denton v. Hyman (In re Hyman), 502 F.3d 61, 65
(2d Cir. 2007). “The factual determinations and legal conclusions of the
[b]ankruptcy [c]ourt are, therefore, reviewed independently by this Court.” Id.
We review the bankruptcy court’s findings of fact for clear error and its legal
conclusions de novo. Id.
The bankruptcy court has broad discretion in applying § 549’s post-
petition transfer avoidance provision as well as in ordering the return of
transferred property or its value pursuant to § 550. See, e.g., Sapir v. C.P.Q.
Colorchrome Corp. (In re Photo Promotion Assocs., Inc.), 881 F.2d 6, 8 (2d Cir. 1989)
(noting bankruptcy court’s broad discretion in applying § 549(a)); see also Bankr.
Receivables Mgmt. v. Lopez (In re Lopez), 345 F.3d 701, 705 (9th Cir. 2003) (“The
13
bankruptcy court’s choice of remedies is reviewed for an abuse of discretion.”);
Feltman v. Warmus (In re Am. Way Serv. Corp.), 229 B.R. 496, 531 (Bankr. S.D. Fla.
1999) (“[T]he Code permits the court, in its discretion, to award both a money
judgment and recovery of the property in kind, provided that the Trustees are
limited to a single satisfaction.”); Hirsch v. Gersten (In re Centennial Textiles, Inc.),
220 B.R. 165, 176–77 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 1998) (“[S]ince the Bankruptcy Code does
not provide guidance on when the Court should order payment of the value of
property rather than order the return of the property itself, it is within the
Court’s discretion to make such a determination.”).
B. The Trustee’s Recovery of a Portion of the Thompson Loan from
Brand Does Not Constitute a Double Recovery in Violation of
§ 550(d).
Because the Thompson Loan transfer was avoided pursuant to § 549, the
Trustee was permitted to seek recovery of either the transferred property or its
value pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 550, which states, in relevant part:
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this section, to the
extent that a transfer is avoided under section 544, 545,
547, 548, 549, 553(b), or 724(a) of this title, the trustee
may recover, for the benefit of the estate, the property
transferred, or, if the court so orders, the value of such
property, from --
14
(1) the initial transferee of such transfer or the
entity for whose benefit such transfer was made;
or
(2) any immediate or mediate transferee of such
initial transferee.
The plain language of § 550(a) thus grants the Trustee the right to seek recovery
of the Thompson Loan from Brand.
On appeal, Brand revives its argument that the Trustee’s recovery of the
Thompson Loan under § 550(a) constitutes a double recovery for the Estate in
violation of § 550(d), which states that “[t]he trustee is entitled to only a single
satisfaction under subsection (a) of this section.” Brand argues that, through the
Trustee’s settlement with Thompson, which avoided the Second Mortgage and
preserved the lien created by it for the benefit of the Estate, the Trustee had
already recovered the Debtor’s equity interest in the Crescent Court Property for
the Estate. It contends that the settlement with Thompson restored the Estate to
its pre-transfer position and that the Estate suffered no monetary damage as a
result of the Second Mortgage. Thus, Brand argues that the bankruptcy court and
the district court erred in concluding that the Thompson Loan was an additional
recoverable asset of the Debtor’s Estate.
15
We disagree, and conclude that the Trustee’s recovery of a portion of the
Thompson Loan from Brand does not violate the single satisfaction rule of
§ 550(d). At the outset, we note that the bankruptcy court held that the
Thompson Loan, which was secured by the Crescent Court Property, was a
“proceed[]” of the Estate pursuant to § 541(a)(6). Brand argued before the district
court that the Thompson Loan is not a proceed, and the district court disagreed.
On appeal, Brand does not argue and, thus, has abandoned any claim that the
district court erred in arriving at this conclusion. We therefore assume without
deciding that the Thompson Loan is a proceed of the Estate for the purpose of
resolving this appeal. See, e.g., Biedeger v. Quinnipiac Univ., 691 F.3d 85, 98–99 &
n.6 (2d Cir. 2012); State St. Bank & Tr. Co. v. Inversiones Errazuriz Limitada, 374 F.3d
158, 172 (2d Cir. 2004). Brand’s argument hinges entirely on its reading of the
double recovery provision of § 550(d). But Brand misapplies that provision to the
facts of this case.
Section 550(d) most commonly applies in cases where § 550(a) enables a
trustee to recover the value of transferred property from more than one
transferee, “possibly allowing the trustee to recover more than the value of the
avoided transfer.” See Dobin v. Presidential Fin. Corp. of Del. Valley (In re Cybridge
16
Corp.), 312 B.R. 262, 268 (D.N.J. 2004). For example, had the Trustee here
recovered $125,000 from Brand, and then subsequently sought to recover
approximately $125,000 in proceeds of the Thompson Loan that was transferred
by Brand to Sadaka and Waller, resulting in the collection of $125,000 two times
over, § 550(d) would clearly be violated.
Brand’s § 550(d) argument is different, however. Brand contends that,
when the Trustee successfully avoided the Second Mortgage, the Estate was
restored to the position it was in before the avoided transfers, and that, as a
result, recovering any amount of the Thompson Loan proceeds from it constitutes
a double recovery for the Estate. But Brand misapprehends the nature of
bankruptcy law, the language of § 550(d), and the economic realities of this case.
At the time the Trustee sought to recover the Thompson Loan from Brand,
the Trustee had not realized any part, let alone all, of the value of the Debtor’s
equity interest in the Crescent Court Property. The Trustee’s settlement with
Thompson gave the Trustee the rights of a lien creditor with respect to the
Crescent Court Property. But in itself, a mortgage carries only a right to foreclose
on a debtor’s property in the event of default. See DeGiacomo v. Traverse (In re
Traverse), 753 F.3d 19, 29 (1st Cir. 2014) (“Just because the preserved mortgage
17
entitles the estate to benefit from the sale of [the debtor’s] property . . . does not
mean that the trustee is by that fact empowered to sell the property so as to
immediately realize that benefit.”). Here, moreover, the bankruptcy court
prohibited the Trustee from forcing a sale of the Crescent Court Property.
Because the Trustee was unable to liquidate the Estate’s equity in the
Crescent Court Property, preservation of the lien did not create any realized
value for the Estate’s creditors. The Trustee’s settlement with Thompson did not
provide for any payment to the Estate, let alone payment of the roughly $130,000
equity value of the Debtor’s interest in the Crescent Court Property. Thus, while
the lien on the Crescent Court Property was preserved for the benefit of the
Estate, the Trustee’s only route to realize any recovery for the Estate from the
unlawful transfer of Estate property by the Debtor was by seeking the proceeds
of the Thompson Loan.
Section 550(a) authorizes the Trustee to pursue recovery from all available
sources until the full amount of unlawfully transferred Estate property is fully
realized for the Estate’s creditors. See Freeland v. Enodis Corp., 540 F.3d 721, 740
(7th Cir. 2008) (“[T]he trustee can recover from any combination of the entities
mentioned [in § 550] subject to the limitation of a single satisfaction.”) (quoting 5
18
COLLIER ON BANKRUPTCY ¶ 550.02[4] at 550–16 (Alan N. Resnick et al. eds., 15th
ed. 2007)); Aalfs v. Wirum (In re Straightline Invs., Inc.), 525 F.3d 870, 883 n.3 (9th
Cir. 2008) (“Although the statute contains the conjunction ‘or,’ at least one court
has held that the remedies of the value of the property or the property itself are
not mutually exclusive, and the bankruptcy court may award a judgment that
involves both types of recovery, as long as it does not result in double recovery
for the estate.”) (citing Feltman, 229 B.R. at 531); Burtrum v. Laughlin (In re
Laughlin), 18 B.R. 778, 781 (Bankr. W.D. Mo. 1982) (“[T]he value of the transferred
property should be restored to the estate, even if composite elements of that
value must come from more than one transferee.”). By recovering a portion of the
Thompson Loan proceeds from Brand, the Trustee merely expedited the ultimate
satisfaction of the claim for the benefit of the creditors.
Brand cites McCord v. Agard (In re Bean), 252 F.3d 113 (2d Cir. 2001), in
which we held that the trustee had obtained a double recovery when the
bankruptcy court ordered both a turnover of title to real property and a money
judgment equal to the fair market value of that property. But even a cursory
review of the facts of that case reveals why it is easily distinguishable. In Bean,
the debtor sold the title to real property of the estate to the defendants for
19
$165,000. Id. at 115. The debtor then used the proceeds of the sale to pay off two
mortgages on the property totaling $87,761.65, a broker’s commission of $9,990,
and city and state transfer taxes of $2,310. Id. He then remitted the remaining
$59,949.35 proceeds of the sale to the trustee. Id. The trustee brought an action in
the bankruptcy court claiming that the sale of the property was an unauthorized
post-petition transfer under § 549(a). Id. The bankruptcy court granted summary
judgment in favor of the trustee against the defendants ordering both that the
purchasers turn over title of the property to the estate, and that the defendants
pay a money judgment in the amount of the property’s fair market value. Id. The
trustee admitted that since he had recovered the $60,000 net proceeds of the sale
and the title to the real property, the further award of the $165,000 fair market
value of the property was a windfall to the estate. Id. at 116.
On appeal, we explained that the precise question was “whether § 550(a)(1)
of the Code requires a bankruptcy court to permit a trustee to recover from the
transferee and for the benefit of the estate, the fair market value of property that
was the subject of an avoidable transfer, even after that trustee has already
recovered the equity value of the property from the transferor.” Id.
20
The issue before us is different from that in Bean precisely because the
Trustee here has not recovered the equity value of the Second Mortgage. Unlike
the debtor in Bean, the Debtor and Belmonte realized $250,000 in net proceeds by
granting a mortgage to Thompson, remitted none of that money to the Estate,
and instead transferred the entire proceeds directly to Brand. The Estate realized
none of the equity value of the Second Mortgage for the benefit of the creditors
and, notably, did not obtain title to real property.4
In Seaver v. Mortg. Elec. Registration Sys., Inc. (In re Schwartz), 383 B.R. 119,
126 (8th Cir. B.A.P. 2008), a Bankruptcy Appellate Panel of the Eighth Circuit
explained that “[i]n certain instances avoidance of a transfer is sufficient to undo
the preferential transfer and make the estate whole . . . [such as where] the
4
That fact also distinguishes this case from the out-of-circuit cases that Brand
cites in which avoidance and preservation of a lien were deemed enough to make
the estate whole. See Rodriguez v. Drive Fin. Servs., L.P. (In Re Trout), 609 F.3d
1106, 1109 (10th Cir. 2010) (concluding that where a trustee successfully avoided
a preferential vehicle lien under 11 U.S.C. § 547, the trustee was not entitled to a
money judgment equal to the value of the avoided liens under § 550(a) on facts
before it, even though “there may be circumstances involving nonpossessory
liens in which the Trustee is also entitled to permissive recovery under § 550(a)”);
Schnittjer v. Linn Area Credit Union (In re Sickels), 392 B.R. 423, 426 (N.D. Iowa
2008) (concluding that “ordering [the transferee] to pay the trustee the value of its
secured claim would allow the trustee to collect twice on the secured claim—once
from [the transferee] and again by realizing on the preserved mortgage)
(emphasis added) (alterations omitted).
21
avoidance results in the value of the avoided lien becoming available for
liquidation and distribution to creditors.” However, where (as here) avoidance
does not result in the avoided lien becoming available for liquidation and
distribution to creditors, § 550(d)’s single satisfaction rule is no obstacle to
recovery by the Estate from other sources.
The Trustee here freely and correctly concedes that he is entitled to recover
the value of the Crescent Court Property only once, whether as a result of his
rights as the holder of the Second Mortgage, or from the recovery of the
Thompson Loan proceeds. Appellee’s Br. at 8–9. If the Trustee is eventually able
to liquidate the Debtor’s equity interest in the Crescent Court Property, his
recovery will be the amount of the Debtor’s equity interest less the $59,432 he has
already recovered from Brand. But the Trustee’s present recovery of a portion of
the Thompson Loan from Brand is not barred by § 550(d).
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district
court.
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