Consumer Bankruptcy Journal Winter 2018 | Page 41
UP AGAINST THE WALL
To avoid this result, the court opted to
use a more functional rule, where the
minimum requirement for status as a
transferee is dominion over the money
or other asset, i.e., the right to put the
money to one’s own purposes. This is
known as the “dominion test.”
The keys to this test are “whether the
recipient of funds has legal title to
the and whether the recipient has the
ability to use the funds as he sees fit.
The first party to establish dominion
over the funds after they leave the
transferor is the initial transferee;
other transferees are subsequent
transferees.
By adopting the harsher dominion test,
the Ninth Circuit rejected the more
lenient “control test,” which requires
courts to “view the entire transaction
as a whole to determine who truly had
control of the money.”
Bello clearly would have been the initial
transferee under the control test.
The Ninth Circuit opinion then
explains how the majority of courts
have dealt with cases involving the
misappropriation of corporate funds by
company directors, officers, or other
insiders.
According to the Ninth Circuit, most
courts use a “one-step transaction”
analysis, where the principal of a debtor
corporation
who
misappropriates
company funds to satisfy personal
obligations is not an initial transferee.
These courts reason that “[t]he mere
power of a principal to direct the
allocation of corporate resources does
not amount to legal dominion and
control,” which is required for initial-
transferee status. In re Video Depot,
127 F.3d at 1199.
So, in a triumph of form over substance,
the Ninth Circuit found “[s]imply directing
a transfer, i.e., such as directing a
debtor to transfer funds, is not enough.”
A principal, therefore, may establish
dominion “by first directing a transfer
into his or her personal bank account
and then making the payment from his
personal account to the creditor.” See
In re Video Depot, 127 F.3d at 1199.
But a principal does not establish
dominion by misdirecting company
funds directly to a third party for
personal gain. In that situation, the
principal is not a transferee at all but,
rather, is the party for whose benefit the
transfer was made. In re Global Prot.,
546 B.R. at 624.
applying the dominion test, Judge
Nguyen believed the defendants were
not initial transferees.
What this means in your world?
This decision adds additional risks to
these “third-party” checks. So when in
doubt, insist the payor, whether person
or entity, is the actual recipient of your
goods or services.
UPDATE – A petition has been filed for
hearing en banc.
In reaching this decision, the Ninth
Circuit considered and rejected two BAP
decisions: Poonja
v. CharlesSchwab &
Co. (In re Dominion
Corp.), 199 B.R.
410, 415 (B.A.P. 9th
Cir. 1996), and Ross
v. John Mitchell, Inc.
(In re Deitz), 94
B.R. 637, 642–43
(B.A.P.
9th
Cir.
1988).
Dissenting, Judge
Nguyen wrote that
the result of the
majority’s decision
was not equitable.
She
wrote
that
the court should
consider adopting
the “control test”
used
by
other
circuits, or at least
returning to a hybrid
“dominion
and
control” approach.
In addition, even
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Winter 2018
CONSUMER BANKRUPTCY JOURNAL
41