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Fraudulent conveyance

A fraudulent conveyance or fraudulent transfer is the transfer of property to another party to prevent, hinder, or delay the collection of a debt owed by or incumbent on the party making the transfer, sometimes by rendering the transferring party insolvent.[1] It is generally treated as a civil cause of action that arises in debtor/creditor relations, typically brought by creditors or by bankruptcy trustees against insolvent debtors, but in some jurisdictions there is potential for criminal prosecution.[2]

Overview edit

A transfer will be fraudulent if made with actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud any creditor. Thus, if a transfer is made with the specific intent to avoid satisfying a specific liability, then actual intent is present. However, when a debtor prefers to pay one creditor instead of another, that is not a fraudulent transfer.[citation needed]

There are two types of fraudulent transfer—actual fraud and constructive fraud. Actual fraud typically involves a debtor who as part of an asset protection scheme donates his assets, usually to an "insider", and leaves himself nothing to pay his creditors. Constructive fraud does not relate to fraudulent intent, but rather to the underlying economics of the transaction, if it took place for less than reasonably equivalent value at a time when the debtor was in a distressed financial condition. It is important to note that the actual distinction between the two different types of fraud is what the intentions of the debtor were. For example, where the debtor has simply been more generous than they should have or, in business transactions, the business should have ceased trading earlier to preserve capital (see generally, wrongful trading). In a successful lawsuit, the plaintiff is entitled to recover the property transferred or its value from the transferee who has received a gift of the debtor's assets. Subsequent transferees may also be targeted, although they generally have stronger defenses than immediate transferees.

Although fraudulent transfer law originally evolved in the context of a relatively simple agrarian economy, it is now widely used to challenge complex modern financial transactions such as leveraged buyouts.

Fraudulent transfer liability will often turn on the financial condition of the debtor at a particular point in the past. This analysis has historically required "dueling" expert testimony from both plaintiffs and defendants, which often led to an expensive process and inconsistent and unpredictable results. Courts and scholars have recently developed market-based approaches to try to make this analysis simpler, more consistent across cases, and more predictable.[3]

Badges of fraud edit

Evidence of actual intent is rarely available to a creditor for it would require proof of someone’s inner thoughts. Because of that, creditors often have to rely on circumstantial evidence of fraud. To prove actual intent, the courts have developed "badges of fraud", which, while not conclusive, are considered by the courts as circumstantial evidence of fraud:[4][full citation needed]

  • becoming insolvent because of the transfer;
  • lack or inadequacy of consideration;
  • family or insider relationship among parties;
  • the retention of possession, benefits or use of property in question;
  • the existence of the threat of litigation;
  • the financial situation of the debtor at the time of transfer or after transfer;
  • the existence or a cumulative effect of a series of transactions after the onset of debtor’s financial difficulties;
  • the general chronology of events;
  • secrecy of the transaction in question; and
  • deviation from the usual method or course of business.

Individual jurisdictions edit

Australia edit

Under Australian law, if a transaction is entered into by a company which subsequently goes into liquidation, and the transaction was entered into by the company for the purpose of defeating, delaying or interfering with the rights of creditors during the 10 years prior to the relation back day, the courts may set it aside.[5] The relation-back day is defined as either the day upon which the application for the company's winding-up was filed, or the date of the commencement of liquidation.[6]

Canada edit

Canadian provinces have jurisdiction over property and civil rights, which includes conveyances of property. Many provinces have statutes prohibiting fraudulent conveyances.[7] They also prohibit the granting of fraudulent preferences, which purport to give certain creditors priority over other creditors in bankruptcy.[8] However, bona fide purchasers for value without notice are generally not liable for the actions of the fraudulent conveyer.

United Kingdom edit

United States edit

In Anglo-American law, the doctrine of Fraudulent Conveyance traces its origins back to Twyne's Case,[9] in which an English farmer attempted to defraud his creditors by selling his sheep to a man named Twyne, while remaining in possession of the sheep, marking and shearing them.[10] In the United States, fraudulent conveyances or transfers[11] are governed by two sets of laws that are generally consistent. The first is the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act[12] ("UFTA") that has been adopted by all but a handful of the states.[13] The second is found in the Federal Bankruptcy Code.[14]

The UFTA and the Bankruptcy Code both provide that a transfer made by a debtor is fraudulent as to a creditor if the debtor made the transfer with the "actual intention to hinder, delay or defraud" any creditor of the debtor.

There are two kinds of fraudulent transfer. The archetypal example is the intentional fraudulent transfer. This is a transfer of property made by a debtor with intent to defraud, hinder, or delay his or her creditors.[15] The second is a constructive fraudulent transfer. Generally, this occurs when a debtor transfers property without receiving "reasonably equivalent value" in exchange for the transfer if the debtor is insolvent[16] at the time of the transfer or becomes insolvent or is left with unreasonably small capital to continue in business as a result of the transfer.[17] Unlike the intentional fraudulent transfer, no intention to defraud is necessary.

The Bankruptcy Code authorizes a bankruptcy trustee to recover the property transferred fraudulently[18] for the benefit of all of the creditors of the debtor[19] if the transfer took place within the relevant time frame.[20] The transfer may also be recovered by a bankruptcy trustee under the UFTA too, if the state in which the transfer took place has adopted it and the transfer took place within its relevant time period.[21] Creditors may also pursue remedies under the UFTA without the necessity of a bankruptcy.[22]

Because this second type of transfer does not necessarily involve any actual wrongdoing, it is a common trap into which honest, but unwary debtors fall when filing a bankruptcy petition without an attorney. Particularly devastating and not uncommon is the situation in which an adult child takes title to the parents' home as a self-help probate measure (in order to avoid any confusion about who owns the home when the parents die and to avoid losing the home to a perceived threat from the state). Later, when the parents file a bankruptcy petition without recognizing the problem, they are unable to exempt the home from administration by the trustee. Unless they are able to pay the trustee an amount equal to the greater of the equity in the home or the sum of their debts (either directly to the Chapter 7 trustee or in payments to a Chapter 13 trustee), the trustee will sell their home to pay the creditors. In many cases, the parents would have been able to exempt the home and carry it safely through a bankruptcy if they had retained title or had recovered title before filing.

Even good faith purchasers of property who are the recipients of fraudulent transfers are only partially protected by the law in the U.S. Under the Bankruptcy Code, they get to keep the transfer to the extent of the value they gave for it, which means that they may lose much of the benefit of their bargain, even though they have no knowledge that the transfer to them is fraudulent.[23]

Often fraudulent transfers occur in connection with leveraged buyouts (LBOs), where the management/owners of a failing corporation will cause the corporation to borrow on its assets and use the loan proceeds to purchase the management/owner's stock at highly inflated prices. The creditors of the corporation will then often have little or no unencumbered assets left upon which to collect their debts. LBOs can be either intentional or constructive fraudulent transfers, or both, depending on how obviously the corporation is financially impaired when the transaction is completed.

Although not all LBOs are fraudulent transfers, a red flag is raised when, after an LBO, the company then cannot pay its creditors.[24]

Fraudulent transfer liability will often turn on the financial condition of the debtor at a particular point in the past. This analysis has historically required "dueling" expert testimony from both plaintiffs and defendants, which often led to an expensive process and inconsistent and unpredictable results. U.S. courts and scholars have recently developed market-based approaches to try to streamline the analysis of constructive fraud, and judges are increasingly focusing on these market based measures.[3]

Switzerland edit

Under Swiss law, creditors who hold a certificate of unpaid debts against the debtor, or creditors in a bankruptcy, may file suit against third parties that have benefited from unfair preferences or fraudulent transfers by the debtor prior to a seizure of assets or a bankruptcy.

South Korea edit

Fraudulent conveyance or also known as action revocatoire or Pauline action (채권자취소권) is a right to preserve the debtor's property for all creditors by canceling an action by the debtor which reduces the debtor's property with a knowledge that the action harms the rights of the creditor. To exercise this right, the creditor must have a right against the debtor that is monetary and not unique and personal in nature. For instance, the right to demand to clear of the land of the building or the right to delivery the land involves land and unique and therefore not subject to Pauline action (Supreme Court of South Korea, February 10, 1995, 94da2534).

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Black, Henry Campbell; Nolan, Joseph R.; Nolan-Haley, Jacqueline M. (1990). Black's Law Dictionary (6th ed.). St. Paul, Minnesota: West Publishing Co. ISBN 0-314-76271-X.
  2. ^ Davies, Kevin; Roy, Julian (1998). "Fraud in the Canadian courts: An unwarranted expansion of the scope of the criminal sanction". Canadian Business Law Journal. 30: 210. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
  3. ^ a b Amicus Brief, In re Lyondell Chemical Company bankruptcy
  4. ^ "The Trustee's Power to Avoid Fraudulent Transfers". American Bankruptcy Institute Journal.
  5. ^ "Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), section 588FE(5)". AUSTLII. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  6. ^ "Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), section 9". AUSTLII. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  7. ^ "Fraudulent Conveyance Act". www.bclaws.gov.bc.ca.
  8. ^ "Fraudulent Preference Act". www.bclaws.gov.bc.ca.
  9. ^ (1601) 3 Coke 80; 76 E.R. 809
  10. ^ Story, William W. (1874). A Treatise On The Law Of Contracts. Boston, Massachusetts: Little, Brown, And Company. ISBN 1584776188. Retrieved 10 September 2017. Fraud Upon Third Persons, Part 4, Sec 659.
  11. ^ The term fraudulent conveyance is included within the more general term fraudulent transfer, as a conveyance is more descriptive of the transfer of title to real property. Fraudulent transfer, however, includes all types of property and in the U.S., both are generally all governed by the same law. Therefore, the transfer will be used for the remainder of this section.
  12. ^ Promulgated by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws (NCCUSL) in 1984
  13. ^ As of June, 2005, 43 states and the District of Columbia had adopted it. See NCCUSL website, NCCUSL.org 2011-02-25 at the Wayback Machine A complete copy can be found there or at South Texas College of Law, STCL.edu 2007-01-05 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ 11 USC § 548. Much of the language of this section was adopted from the Uniform Fraudulent Conveyance Act, which is the predecessor of the UFTA.
  15. ^ 11 USC § 548(1); UFTA § 4(a)(1).
  16. ^ Under the Bankruptcy Code, insolvency exists when the sum of the debtor's debts exceeds the fair value of the debtor's property, with some exceptions. It is a balance sheet test. 11 USC § 101(32)
  17. ^ 11 USC § 548(2); UFTA § 4(a)(2).
  18. ^ This is done through the mechanism of avoidance of the transfer. 11 USC § 548.
  19. ^ 11 USC § 551
  20. ^ Within two years prior to the filing of bankruptcy - 11 USC § 548(a)
  21. ^ 11 USC § 544(b) allows trustees to employ applicable state law to recover fraudulent transfers. The time period under the UFTA is in most cases four years before action is brought to recover. - UFTA § 9.
  22. ^ UFTA § 7.
  23. ^ See, Gill v. Maddalena, 176 B.R. 551, 555, 558 (Bankr.C.D.Cal. 1994) (citing 11 USC § 548(c))
  24. ^ See, for example, Murphy v. Meritor Savings Bank, 126 B.R. 370, 393, 413 (Bankr. D. Mass. 1991), in which an LBO left the corporation with insufficient cash to operate for longer than 10 days.
  25. ^ a b Coolidge, Carrie (12 December 2008). "Lessons For Madoff Investors From The Bayou Fund Ponzi Scheme". Forbes. Retrieved 10 September 2017.

fraudulent, conveyance, fraudulent, conveyance, fraudulent, transfer, transfer, property, another, party, prevent, hinder, delay, collection, debt, owed, incumbent, party, making, transfer, sometimes, rendering, transferring, party, insolvent, generally, treat. A fraudulent conveyance or fraudulent transfer is the transfer of property to another party to prevent hinder or delay the collection of a debt owed by or incumbent on the party making the transfer sometimes by rendering the transferring party insolvent 1 It is generally treated as a civil cause of action that arises in debtor creditor relations typically brought by creditors or by bankruptcy trustees against insolvent debtors but in some jurisdictions there is potential for criminal prosecution 2 Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Badges of fraud 2 Individual jurisdictions 2 1 Australia 2 2 Canada 2 3 United Kingdom 2 4 United States 2 5 Switzerland 2 6 South Korea 3 See also 4 NotesOverview editA transfer will be fraudulent if made with actual intent to hinder delay or defraud any creditor Thus if a transfer is made with the specific intent to avoid satisfying a specific liability then actual intent is present However when a debtor prefers to pay one creditor instead of another that is not a fraudulent transfer citation needed There are two types of fraudulent transfer actual fraud and constructive fraud Actual fraud typically involves a debtor who as part of an asset protection scheme donates his assets usually to an insider and leaves himself nothing to pay his creditors Constructive fraud does not relate to fraudulent intent but rather to the underlying economics of the transaction if it took place for less than reasonably equivalent value at a time when the debtor was in a distressed financial condition It is important to note that the actual distinction between the two different types of fraud is what the intentions of the debtor were For example where the debtor has simply been more generous than they should have or in business transactions the business should have ceased trading earlier to preserve capital see generally wrongful trading In a successful lawsuit the plaintiff is entitled to recover the property transferred or its value from the transferee who has received a gift of the debtor s assets Subsequent transferees may also be targeted although they generally have stronger defenses than immediate transferees Although fraudulent transfer law originally evolved in the context of a relatively simple agrarian economy it is now widely used to challenge complex modern financial transactions such as leveraged buyouts Fraudulent transfer liability will often turn on the financial condition of the debtor at a particular point in the past This analysis has historically required dueling expert testimony from both plaintiffs and defendants which often led to an expensive process and inconsistent and unpredictable results Courts and scholars have recently developed market based approaches to try to make this analysis simpler more consistent across cases and more predictable 3 Badges of fraud edit Evidence of actual intent is rarely available to a creditor for it would require proof of someone s inner thoughts Because of that creditors often have to rely on circumstantial evidence of fraud To prove actual intent the courts have developed badges of fraud which while not conclusive are considered by the courts as circumstantial evidence of fraud 4 full citation needed becoming insolvent because of the transfer lack or inadequacy of consideration family or insider relationship among parties the retention of possession benefits or use of property in question the existence of the threat of litigation the financial situation of the debtor at the time of transfer or after transfer the existence or a cumulative effect of a series of transactions after the onset of debtor s financial difficulties the general chronology of events secrecy of the transaction in question and deviation from the usual method or course of business Individual jurisdictions editAustralia edit Under Australian law if a transaction is entered into by a company which subsequently goes into liquidation and the transaction was entered into by the company for the purpose of defeating delaying or interfering with the rights of creditors during the 10 years prior to the relation back day the courts may set it aside 5 The relation back day is defined as either the day upon which the application for the company s winding up was filed or the date of the commencement of liquidation 6 Canada edit Canadian provinces have jurisdiction over property and civil rights which includes conveyances of property Many provinces have statutes prohibiting fraudulent conveyances 7 They also prohibit the granting of fraudulent preferences which purport to give certain creditors priority over other creditors in bankruptcy 8 However bona fide purchasers for value without notice are generally not liable for the actions of the fraudulent conveyer United Kingdom edit See also UK insolvency law Fraudulent Conveyances Act 1571 repealed by the Law of Property Act 1925 Insolvency Act 1986 section 423 United States edit In Anglo American law the doctrine of Fraudulent Conveyance traces its origins back to Twyne s Case 9 in which an English farmer attempted to defraud his creditors by selling his sheep to a man named Twyne while remaining in possession of the sheep marking and shearing them 10 In the United States fraudulent conveyances or transfers 11 are governed by two sets of laws that are generally consistent The first is the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act 12 UFTA that has been adopted by all but a handful of the states 13 The second is found in the Federal Bankruptcy Code 14 The UFTA and the Bankruptcy Code both provide that a transfer made by a debtor is fraudulent as to a creditor if the debtor made the transfer with the actual intention to hinder delay or defraud any creditor of the debtor There are two kinds of fraudulent transfer The archetypal example is the intentional fraudulent transfer This is a transfer of property made by a debtor with intent to defraud hinder or delay his or her creditors 15 The second is a constructive fraudulent transfer Generally this occurs when a debtor transfers property without receiving reasonably equivalent value in exchange for the transfer if the debtor is insolvent 16 at the time of the transfer or becomes insolvent or is left with unreasonably small capital to continue in business as a result of the transfer 17 Unlike the intentional fraudulent transfer no intention to defraud is necessary The Bankruptcy Code authorizes a bankruptcy trustee to recover the property transferred fraudulently 18 for the benefit of all of the creditors of the debtor 19 if the transfer took place within the relevant time frame 20 The transfer may also be recovered by a bankruptcy trustee under the UFTA too if the state in which the transfer took place has adopted it and the transfer took place within its relevant time period 21 Creditors may also pursue remedies under the UFTA without the necessity of a bankruptcy 22 Because this second type of transfer does not necessarily involve any actual wrongdoing it is a common trap into which honest but unwary debtors fall when filing a bankruptcy petition without an attorney Particularly devastating and not uncommon is the situation in which an adult child takes title to the parents home as a self help probate measure in order to avoid any confusion about who owns the home when the parents die and to avoid losing the home to a perceived threat from the state Later when the parents file a bankruptcy petition without recognizing the problem they are unable to exempt the home from administration by the trustee Unless they are able to pay the trustee an amount equal to the greater of the equity in the home or the sum of their debts either directly to the Chapter 7 trustee or in payments to a Chapter 13 trustee the trustee will sell their home to pay the creditors In many cases the parents would have been able to exempt the home and carry it safely through a bankruptcy if they had retained title or had recovered title before filing Even good faith purchasers of property who are the recipients of fraudulent transfers are only partially protected by the law in the U S Under the Bankruptcy Code they get to keep the transfer to the extent of the value they gave for it which means that they may lose much of the benefit of their bargain even though they have no knowledge that the transfer to them is fraudulent 23 Often fraudulent transfers occur in connection with leveraged buyouts LBOs where the management owners of a failing corporation will cause the corporation to borrow on its assets and use the loan proceeds to purchase the management owner s stock at highly inflated prices The creditors of the corporation will then often have little or no unencumbered assets left upon which to collect their debts LBOs can be either intentional or constructive fraudulent transfers or both depending on how obviously the corporation is financially impaired when the transaction is completed Although not all LBOs are fraudulent transfers a red flag is raised when after an LBO the company then cannot pay its creditors 24 Fraudulent transfer liability will often turn on the financial condition of the debtor at a particular point in the past This analysis has historically required dueling expert testimony from both plaintiffs and defendants which often led to an expensive process and inconsistent and unpredictable results U S courts and scholars have recently developed market based approaches to try to streamline the analysis of constructive fraud and judges are increasingly focusing on these market based measures 3 Switzerland edit Main article Insolvency law of Switzerland Under Swiss law creditors who hold a certificate of unpaid debts against the debtor or creditors in a bankruptcy may file suit against third parties that have benefited from unfair preferences or fraudulent transfers by the debtor prior to a seizure of assets or a bankruptcy South Korea edit Fraudulent conveyance or also known as action revocatoire or Pauline action 채권자취소권 is a right to preserve the debtor s property for all creditors by canceling an action by the debtor which reduces the debtor s property with a knowledge that the action harms the rights of the creditor To exercise this right the creditor must have a right against the debtor that is monetary and not unique and personal in nature For instance the right to demand to clear of the land of the building or the right to delivery the land involves land and unique and therefore not subject to Pauline action Supreme Court of South Korea February 10 1995 94da2534 See also editBayou Hedge Fund Group 25 Fraudulent Conveyances Act 1571 Bernard Madoff 25 UK insolvency law Tunneling fraudNotes edit Black Henry Campbell Nolan Joseph R Nolan Haley Jacqueline M 1990 Black s Law Dictionary 6th ed St Paul Minnesota West Publishing Co ISBN 0 314 76271 X Davies Kevin Roy Julian 1998 Fraud in the Canadian courts An unwarranted expansion of the scope of the criminal sanction Canadian Business Law Journal 30 210 Retrieved 10 September 2017 a b Amicus Brief In re Lyondell Chemical Company bankruptcy The Trustee s Power to Avoid Fraudulent Transfers American Bankruptcy Institute Journal Corporations Act 2001 Cth section 588FE 5 AUSTLII Retrieved 25 June 2015 Corporations Act 2001 Cth section 9 AUSTLII Retrieved 25 June 2015 Fraudulent Conveyance Act www bclaws gov bc ca Fraudulent Preference Act www bclaws gov bc ca 1601 3 Coke 80 76 E R 809 Story William W 1874 A Treatise On The Law Of Contracts Boston Massachusetts Little Brown And Company ISBN 1584776188 Retrieved 10 September 2017 Fraud Upon Third Persons Part 4 Sec 659 The term fraudulent conveyance is included within the more general term fraudulent transfer as a conveyance is more descriptive of the transfer of title to real property Fraudulent transfer however includes all types of property and in the U S both are generally all governed by the same law Therefore the transfer will be used for the remainder of this section Promulgated by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws NCCUSL in 1984 As of June 2005 43 states and the District of Columbia had adopted it See NCCUSL website NCCUSL org Archived 2011 02 25 at the Wayback Machine A complete copy can be found there or at South Texas College of Law STCL edu Archived 2007 01 05 at the Wayback Machine 11 USC 548 Much of the language of this section was adopted from the Uniform Fraudulent Conveyance Act which is the predecessor of the UFTA 11 USC 548 1 UFTA 4 a 1 Under the Bankruptcy Code insolvency exists when the sum of the debtor s debts exceeds the fair value of the debtor s property with some exceptions It is a balance sheet test 11 USC 101 32 11 USC 548 2 UFTA 4 a 2 This is done through the mechanism of avoidance of the transfer 11 USC 548 11 USC 551 Within two years prior to the filing of bankruptcy 11 USC 548 a 11 USC 544 b allows trustees to employ applicable state law to recover fraudulent transfers The time period under the UFTA is in most cases four years before action is brought to recover UFTA 9 UFTA 7 See Gill v Maddalena 176 B R 551 555 558 Bankr C D Cal 1994 citing 11 USC 548 c See for example Murphy v Meritor Savings Bank 126 B R 370 393 413 Bankr D Mass 1991 in which an LBO left the corporation with insufficient cash to operate for longer than 10 days a b Coolidge Carrie 12 December 2008 Lessons For Madoff Investors From The Bayou Fund Ponzi Scheme Forbes Retrieved 10 September 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fraudulent conveyance amp oldid 1193612447, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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