This appeal is from an order by a district court in California, affirming a bankruptcy court’s denial of a motion to compel arbitration in a Chapter 7 bankruptcy trustee’s adversary proceeding, in which the trustee sought avoidance of fraudulent transfers.
The trustee for EPD Investment Co. and Jerrold Pressman (collectively “EPD”) had filed an adversary proceeding against defendant John Kirkland, an attorney who acted as counsel for EPD, claiming that Kirkland transferred assets from EPD, a purported Ponzi scheme, to a family trust named the “Bright Conscience Trust.” Kirkland moved the bankruptcy court to compel arbitration of the bankruptcy proceeding, which was denied. Kirkland then appealed the bankruptcy court’s decision to the California district court, which affirmed the bankruptcy court’s decision, and an appeal followed to the Ninth Circuit.
The Ninth Circuit noted that the bankruptcy court has jurisdiction over “core proceedings,” and that in a core proceeding, “a bankruptcy court has discretion to decline to enforce an otherwise applicable arbitration provision only if arbitration would conflict with the underlying purposes of the Bankruptcy Code.” The Ninth Circuit agreed with the bankruptcy court that the trustee’s causes of action for fraudulent conveyance, subordination, and disallowance were core proceedings, “thereby giving the bankruptcy court discretion to weigh the competing bankruptcy and arbitration interests at stake.” The Ninth Circuit found that the bankruptcy court did not abuse its discretion by determining that the arbitration provisions in Kirkland’s agreements with EPD conflicted with the Bankruptcy Code’s purposes of having bankruptcy law issues decided by bankruptcy courts, of centralizing resolution of the dispute and protecting parties from piecemeal litigation, and thus affirmed the district court’s ruling.
In the Matter of EPD Investment Co., No. 14-56478 (9th Cir. May 9, 2016).
This post written by Jeanne Kohler.
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