Bankruptcy Court Says No Claims Permitted For Conspiracy or Aiding And Abetting Fraudulent Transfers
A recent bankruptcy court decision addressed the issue of whether people who assist a debtor’s pre-bankruptcy fraudulent transfers can be held liable for damages in the bankruptcy proceeding. In this case, a trustee hired to liquidate debtor property filed a complaint pursuant to Section 544(b) of the Bankruptcy Code against a group of people for conspiring with the debtor to make fraudulent transfers.
The court held that the same claims cannot be asserted under Florida law either because Florida law does not permit claims for either civil conspiracy to make a fraudulent transfer or for aiding and abetting a fraudulent transfer. Only the transferee shares liability with the debtor under federal bankruptcy law or Florida law. The court cited several Florida appellate decisions, including a Supreme Court case, which had dismissed claims by creditors against non-transferees for assisting a debtor’s fraudulent conveyance.
Can you give us the case citation?