Kelley v. Boosalis

U.S. District Court, District of Minnesota

Kelley v. Boosalis

Trial Court Opinion

                    UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 
                         DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA 

Douglas A. Kelley, in his Capacity as the           Case No. 0:18-cv-00868 (SRN/TNL) 
PCI Liquidating Trustee for the PCI 
Liquidating Trust, 
            Plaintiff, 
V.                                          ORDER RE: JURY INSTRUCTION 
 Gus Boosalis, 
            Defendant. 

John R. Marti, Andrew B. Brantingham, Christina Hanson, and J. David Jackson, Dorsey 
&  Whitney LLP,  50  South 6th  Street,  Suite  1500,  Minneapolis,  Minnesota 55402,  for 
Plaintiff Douglas A. Kelley, in his Capacity as Trustee for the PCI Liquidating Trust. 
Daniel J. Frisk and Mark A. Schwab, Schwab, Thompson &  Frisk, 820 34th Avenue East, 
Suite 200, West Fargo, ND, 58078; Don R. Grande, Don R. Grande, PC, 2700 12” Ave. 
S., Suite A, Fargo, ND 58103, for Defendant Gus Boosalis. 

SUSAN RICHARD NELSON, United States District Judge 
      On November 26, 2018, trial commenced in this fraudulent transfer action brought 
by Plaintiff Douglas A. Kelley, in his Capacity as Trustee for the PCI Liquidating Trust 
(“the Trustee”), against Defendant Gus Boosalis.  The Trustee’s claims are asserted under 
provisions of the Bankruptcy Code and the Minnesota Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act, 
(the  “MUFTA”),  
Minn. Stat. §§ 513
.41—51.   At  issue  is  the  Court’s  proposed jury 
instruction on “reasonably equivalent value,” to which Boosalis objects.  The Court heard 
argument on this issue at the November 30, 2018 jury instruction charge conference, and

requested briefing, which the parties have since filed.  (See Def.’s Jury Instr. Mem. [Doc. 
No. 101]; Pl.’s Response [Doc. No. 102].)  For the reasons set forth below, Defendant’s 
objection is overruled.                                                   

 I.   BACKGROUND                                                         
    As discussed in more detail in the Court’s November 19, 2018 Order on Motions 
in Limine [Doc. No. 86], incorporated here by reference, the Trustee was appointed to 
represent  the  interests  of  numerous  creditors  in  Chapter  11  bankruptcy  proceedings 
related  to  the  massive  Ponzi  scheme  perpetrated  by  Tom  Petters,  the  debtor  Petters 

Company, Inc. (“PCI”), and related debtor entities.  (See Second Am. Compl. ¶¶ 4–5.)  
PCI functioned as the central funding mechanism of Petters’ Ponzi scheme, whereby 
Petters  and  his  associates  sought  investors’  funds  to  allegedly  purchase  non-existent 
electronic goods.  See United States v. Reynolds, 
643 F.3d 1130, 1132
 (8th Cir. 2011); In 
re Polaroid, 
472 B.R. 22, 36
 (Bankr. D. Minn. 2012).   Petters used the funds invested by 
later investors to repay initial investors.  (See Second Am. Compl. ¶¶ 21, 28–30.)  This 

suit is one of several in which the Trustee, under the authority of state and federal 
fraudulent  transfer  statutes,  seeks  to  recover  certain  funds  that  were  paid  to  earlier, 
satisfied investors in the Ponzi scheme, and redistribute any of the recovered funds to 
later investors, who received little or no return on their investments.  See In re Petters 
Co., Inc., 
550 B.R. 457
, 461–62 (Bankr. D. Minn. 2016).                   

      Whether  each  transfer  between  PCI  and  Boosalis  was  based  on  fraud  is  a 
question of fact for the jury.  Although Boosalis may have received over $8 million in 
transfers from PCI, the Trustee seeks to recover only the interest payments that PCI made 
to Boosalis totaling at least $3,134,590.00, and not any amounts that represent the return 
of Boosalis’s principal investment.  The Trustee contends that Boosalis should have been 
aware, or, through the exercise of due diligence, should have known of the fraudulent 

nature  of  the  transactions,  which  Boosalis  disputes.  Again,  the  parties’  respective 
positions create a fact question for the jury.                            
    Boosalis has denied the Trustee’s allegations and raised a number of affirmative 
defenses, including:  (1) that the transfers were made to him for value and as payment of 
principal and interest on an antecedent debt; (2) that he took the transfers in good faith 

and without knowledge of the alleged voidability of the transfers at the time they were 
received; and (3) that PCI received reasonably equivalent value for the transfers.   
II.   DISCUSSION                                                          
    The issue of reasonably equivalent value is relevant to the Trustee’s prima facie 
case as well as Defendant’s affirmative defense.  One element of a claim for constructive 
fraud under the MUFTA requires the Trustee to show that PCI made transfers to Boosalis 

“without receiving reasonably equivalent value” in return.  Finn v. Alliance Bank, 
860 N.W.2d 638, 645
 (Minn. 2015).  And, as part of Defendant’s affirmative defense to the 
Trustee’s claim of actual fraud, Boosalis may show that he took PCI’s transfers “in good 
faith  and  for  reasonably  equivalent  value.” 1  
Id.
  As  defined  under  the  MUFTA, 
“reasonably equivalent value” means that “the value of the consideration received by the 

debtor was reasonably equivalent to the value of the asset transferred or the amount of the 
obligation incurred . . . .”  
Minn. Stat. § 513.44
.                       

1 
Minn. Stat. § 513.44
(a)(1).                                             
    The  proposed  jury  instruction,  as  amended  by  modifications  discussed  at  the 
charge conference, reads as follows:                                      
    Reasonably equivalent value may be found if the value Petters Company, 
    Inc. received from Mr. Boosalis in exchange for a payment was reasonably 
    equivalent to the value of the payment.                              

    Value  may  be  reasonably  equivalent  where  the  payment  made  to  the 
    investor satisfies a valid antecedent debt.  Any payment above the amount 
    of the principal investment is not in satisfaction of a valid antecedent debt if 
    it  was  made  in  furtherance  of a  fraud,  enabled by  a  fraud, or paid on 
    dishonestly-incurred debt.  If you find that an interest payment made by 
    Petters Company, Inc. to Mr. Boosalis was made in furtherance of a fraud, 
    enabled by a fraud, or paid on dishonestly-incurred debt, then that payment 
    does not satisfy a valid antecedent debt, and is not for reasonably equivalent 
    value.                                                               

    Boosalis  maintains  that  the  Court’s  proposed  instruction  conflicts  with  the 
Minnesota Supreme Court’s ruling in Finn v. Alliance Bank, 
860 N.W.2d 638
 (2015).  
(See generally, Def.’s Jury Instr. Mem.)  He contends that the instruction improperly 
relies  on  the  Ponzi  scheme  presumption,  rejected  in  Finn.    (Id.at  1–8.)    He  further 
contends that the transfers in question, of both principal and interest, were for reasonably 
equivalent value, (id. at 9–11), and that the promissory notes are legally enforceable.  (Id. 
at 11–20.)  Boosalis counters with the following proposed instruction on reasonably 
equivalent value:                                                         
    Reasonably equivalent value may be found if the value Petters Company, 
    Inc. received from Defendant in exchange for a payment was reasonably 
    equivalent to the value of the payment. Value may be reasonably equivalent 
    where the payment is made to satisfy an antecedent debt.  An antecedent 
    debt  includes  any  legally  enforceable  right  to  payment  against  Petters 
    Company, Inc.                                                        

(Id. at 1.)                                                               
    Prior to trial, Boosalis raised similar arguments concerning the impact of Finn, 
which the Court addressed in its Order on Motions in Limine.  (See Nov. 19, 2018 Order 
at 6, 8, 13.)  As the Court noted in that ruling, in Finn, the Minnesota Supreme Court 

rejected the application of the “Ponzi scheme presumption” to fraudulent transfer claims 
arising  under  the  MUFTA.    860  N.W.2d  at  646–50.  The  Court  disagrees  with 
Defendant’s general argument that the proposed jury instruction on reasonably equivalent 
value improperly relies on the Ponzi scheme presumption.  As the Court made clear in its 
Order on the Motions in Limine, (see Nov. 19, 2018 Order at 9–11), in light of Finn, the 

Trustee may not rely upon the Ponzi scheme presumption, but will instead be put to its 
proof of the fraud in this case.  Consistent with the Court’s ruling, the Trustee has been 
required to prove its case on a transfer-by-transfer basis.               
    In reaching its decision in Finn, the Minnesota Supreme Court identified three 
conclusive underlying presumptions on which the overall Ponzi scheme presumption is 

based:  (1) the debtor had fraudulent intent, such that all transfers from the Ponzi scheme 
were actually fraudulent; (2) with respect to constructive fraud, as a matter of law, the 
debtor was insolvent at the time of a the disputed transfers; and (3) also with respect to 
constructive fraud, a court must presume that any transfer from the Ponzi scheme was not 
for reasonably equivalent value.  
860 N.W.2d. at 646
.   The Minnesota Supreme Court 

found that these underlying presumptions did not sufficiently account for different factual 
circumstances, nor were they consistent with Minnesota law.  For instance, the Court 
found that the third underlying presumption regarding reasonably equivalent value would 
“both  establish  the  second  requirement  of  a  constructive-fraud  claim  and  negate  the 
statutory defense to an actual-fraud claim.”  
Id.
  (citations omitted).   
    In addition, the Minnesota Supreme Court found that application of the Ponzi 

scheme  presumption  would  compel  the  conclusion  “that  a  debtor  operating  a  Ponzi 
scheme cannot receive reasonably equivalent value for the ‘interest’ or ‘profits’ it pays to 
investors.”   
Id. at 649
.  As the Court noted, under the MUFTA, “the satisfaction of an 
antecedent debt can constitute reasonably equivalent value.”  
Id. at 650
.  Notably, the 
structure of the underlying Ponzi scheme in Finn involved a mixture of legitimate deals 

and  fraudulent  deals,  specifically  the  sale  of  loan  participation  interests  that  were 
fictitious as well as the sale of participation interests that were genuine.  
Id. at 642
.  The 
Finn appellants were all investors who had purchased actual, legitimate loans.  
Id. at 652
.   
Given those facts, the Minnesota Supreme Court found that the “value” given these 
investors  in  exchange  for  Ponzi  scheme  proceeds  was  for  “the  satisfaction  of  an 

antecedent debt.”  
Id. at 651
.                                            
    The Court noted that antecedent debt may take many forms, citing cases in which 
the satisfaction of antecedent debt was considered “fair consideration” for a transfer, such 
that the conveyance was not subsequently deemed fraudulent.  
Id.
 at 650–51 (citing 
Kummet v. Thielen, 
298 N.W. 245, 246
 (Minn. 1941) (involving a personal loan between 

two  spouses  and  one  spouse’s  right  to  insurance  proceeds  covering  damages  for 
household furnishings and effects); Skinner v. Overend, 
252 N.W. 418
, 418–19 (Minn. 
1934)  (finding  transfer  of  unpaid  wages  from  father  to  son,  to  which  son  was 
contractually  entitled,  did  not  constitute  a  fraudulent  conveyance).    The  Minnesota 
Supreme Court concluded that “any legally enforceable right to payment against the 
debtor is sufficient to qualify as an antecedent debt under MUFTA.”  
Id.
 at 651 (citing 
Kummet, 
298 N.W. at 247
) (noting that the obligation in question was “enforceable”).  

The Court observed that “[a]bsent the existence of a Ponzi scheme, [a promise to provide 
investors  with  disbursements  for  their  participation  interests]  would  fit  comfortably 
within the realm of antecedent debt, and satisfaction of that promise could constitute 
‘value,”  as  that  term  is  defined  in  MUFTA.      
Id.
    However,  “[w]ithout  a  legally 
enforceable contractual claim, any payment made to an investor beyond its principal 

investment is not for antecedent debt, and therefore cannot be in exchange for reasonably 
equivalent value.”  
Id.
                                                   
    Defendant cites B.E.L.T., Inc. v. Wachovia Corp., 
403 F.3d 474, 477
 (7th Cir. 
2005), In re Sharp International Corp., 
403 F.3d 43, 50
 (2d Cir. 2005), and Image 
Masters,  Inc.  v.  Chase  Home  Finance,  
489 B.R. 375, 389
  (E.D.  Pa.  2013),  for  the 

proposition that repayment of antecedent debt constitutes an exchange for reasonably 
equivalent value.   As the Court has recognized above, it does not dispute that general 
proposition, but Defendant’s cases are factually distinguishable from the record facts 
here.  The debt at issue in B.E.L.T. was not related to the transferor’s fraudulent conduct 
and the record lacked evidence of its repayment , 403 F.3d at 478, the In re Sharp matter 

apparently did not involve a Ponzi scheme, nor was there a dispute concerning the “fair 
equivalence” of the payment in question, 403 F.3d at 54, and Image Masters did not 
involve the recovery of interest payments received by the lender on a fraudulent loan.  
489 B.R. at 375
.                                                          
    Here, however, the parties dispute the question of reasonably equivalent value,  
whether PCI conducted legitimate business with Defendant’s money, and whether PCI 
made interest payments on Defendant’s investment with funds obtained as the result of 

the scheme. This Court’s proposed jury instruction on reasonably equivalent value is 
fully consistent with the disputed facts and with Finn, stating, in part, “Value may be 
reasonably equivalent where the payment made to the investor satisfies a valid antecedent 
debt.  Any payment above the amount of the principal investment is not in satisfaction of 
a valid antecedent debt if it was made in furtherance of a fraud, enabled by a fraud, or 

paid on dishonestly-incurred debt.”  (See supra at 4.)                    
    Defendant’s  proposed  instruction,  however,  leaves  the  jury  to  decide  whether 
Boosalis has a “legally enforceable” right to retain the interest payments received from 
PCI.  The question of whether an enforceable contract exists—and whether the contract 
may be considered void as against public policy—is a question of law for the Court, and 

not a question of fact for the jury.  Isles Wellness, Inc. v. Progressive N. Ins. Co., 
725 N.W.2d 90, 93
 (Minn. 2006); see also Richie Co., LLP v. Lyndon Ins. Grp., Inc., 
316 F.3d 758, 760
 (8th Cir. 2003).  A contract may be void against public policy if it is 
“injurious  to  the  interest  of  the  public  or  contravenes  some  established  interest  of 
society.”  Isles Wellness, Inc., 
725 N.W.2d at 93
.  Under Minnesota law, a contract that 

aims to deceive a third party is void.  Torpey v. Murray, 
101 N.W.2d 609
, 610 (Minn. 
1994); see also Horbach v. Coyle, 
2 F.2d 702, 706
 (8th Cir. 1924) (“A contract which has 
for its object the perpetration of a fraud on a third person is illegal and void.”)    
    While Defendant cites authority for the proposition that a contract is enforceable if 
it is merely “incidentally or indirectly” or “only remotely” connected with an illegal 
transaction, (see Def.’s Jury Instr. Mem. at 12), the jury must resolve the fact question of 

whether the promissory notes between PCI and Defendant are tangentially connected to 
the fraud or directly connected to it.                                    
    The Court’s proposed instruction, set forth above, properly instructs the jury to 
find facts regarding whether Boosalis has a valid right to retain the interest payments that 
he received from PCI.   The jury will decide the disputed fact question of whether PCI 

used  the  promissory  notes  between  PCI  and Boosalis  as  part  of  a  Ponzi  scheme  to 
defraud other investors and whether it repaid the notes with fraudulently-obtained funds.   
Defendant is free to present evidence showing that he provided value in exchange for the 
transfers.                                                                
    Accordingly,  for  all  of  the  foregoing  reasons,  the  Court  finds  its  proposed 

instruction, supra at 4, is consistent with the facts at issue here and with Minnesota law. 
Defendant’s objection is therefore overruled.                             
SO ORDERED.                                                               

    December 3, 2018                   s/Susan Richard Nelson            
                                       Susan Richard Nelson              
                                       United States District Judge      

Trial Court Opinion

                    UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 
                         DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA 

Douglas A. Kelley, in his Capacity as the           Case No. 0:18-cv-00868 (SRN/TNL) 
PCI Liquidating Trustee for the PCI 
Liquidating Trust, 
            Plaintiff, 
V.                                          ORDER RE: JURY INSTRUCTION 
 Gus Boosalis, 
            Defendant. 

John R. Marti, Andrew B. Brantingham, Christina Hanson, and J. David Jackson, Dorsey 
&  Whitney LLP,  50  South 6th  Street,  Suite  1500,  Minneapolis,  Minnesota 55402,  for 
Plaintiff Douglas A. Kelley, in his Capacity as Trustee for the PCI Liquidating Trust. 
Daniel J. Frisk and Mark A. Schwab, Schwab, Thompson &  Frisk, 820 34th Avenue East, 
Suite 200, West Fargo, ND, 58078; Don R. Grande, Don R. Grande, PC, 2700 12” Ave. 
S., Suite A, Fargo, ND 58103, for Defendant Gus Boosalis. 

SUSAN RICHARD NELSON, United States District Judge 
      On November 26, 2018, trial commenced in this fraudulent transfer action brought 
by Plaintiff Douglas A. Kelley, in his Capacity as Trustee for the PCI Liquidating Trust 
(“the Trustee”), against Defendant Gus Boosalis.  The Trustee’s claims are asserted under 
provisions of the Bankruptcy Code and the Minnesota Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act, 
(the  “MUFTA”),  
Minn. Stat. §§ 513
.41—51.   At  issue  is  the  Court’s  proposed jury 
instruction on “reasonably equivalent value,” to which Boosalis objects.  The Court heard 
argument on this issue at the November 30, 2018 jury instruction charge conference, and

requested briefing, which the parties have since filed.  (See Def.’s Jury Instr. Mem. [Doc. 
No. 101]; Pl.’s Response [Doc. No. 102].)  For the reasons set forth below, Defendant’s 
objection is overruled.                                                   

 I.   BACKGROUND                                                         
    As discussed in more detail in the Court’s November 19, 2018 Order on Motions 
in Limine [Doc. No. 86], incorporated here by reference, the Trustee was appointed to 
represent  the  interests  of  numerous  creditors  in  Chapter  11  bankruptcy  proceedings 
related  to  the  massive  Ponzi  scheme  perpetrated  by  Tom  Petters,  the  debtor  Petters 

Company, Inc. (“PCI”), and related debtor entities.  (See Second Am. Compl. ¶¶ 4–5.)  
PCI functioned as the central funding mechanism of Petters’ Ponzi scheme, whereby 
Petters  and  his  associates  sought  investors’  funds  to  allegedly  purchase  non-existent 
electronic goods.  See United States v. Reynolds, 
643 F.3d 1130, 1132
 (8th Cir. 2011); In 
re Polaroid, 
472 B.R. 22, 36
 (Bankr. D. Minn. 2012).   Petters used the funds invested by 
later investors to repay initial investors.  (See Second Am. Compl. ¶¶ 21, 28–30.)  This 

suit is one of several in which the Trustee, under the authority of state and federal 
fraudulent  transfer  statutes,  seeks  to  recover  certain  funds  that  were  paid  to  earlier, 
satisfied investors in the Ponzi scheme, and redistribute any of the recovered funds to 
later investors, who received little or no return on their investments.  See In re Petters 
Co., Inc., 
550 B.R. 457
, 461–62 (Bankr. D. Minn. 2016).                   

      Whether  each  transfer  between  PCI  and  Boosalis  was  based  on  fraud  is  a 
question of fact for the jury.  Although Boosalis may have received over $8 million in 
transfers from PCI, the Trustee seeks to recover only the interest payments that PCI made 
to Boosalis totaling at least $3,134,590.00, and not any amounts that represent the return 
of Boosalis’s principal investment.  The Trustee contends that Boosalis should have been 
aware, or, through the exercise of due diligence, should have known of the fraudulent 

nature  of  the  transactions,  which  Boosalis  disputes.  Again,  the  parties’  respective 
positions create a fact question for the jury.                            
    Boosalis has denied the Trustee’s allegations and raised a number of affirmative 
defenses, including:  (1) that the transfers were made to him for value and as payment of 
principal and interest on an antecedent debt; (2) that he took the transfers in good faith 

and without knowledge of the alleged voidability of the transfers at the time they were 
received; and (3) that PCI received reasonably equivalent value for the transfers.   
II.   DISCUSSION                                                          
    The issue of reasonably equivalent value is relevant to the Trustee’s prima facie 
case as well as Defendant’s affirmative defense.  One element of a claim for constructive 
fraud under the MUFTA requires the Trustee to show that PCI made transfers to Boosalis 

“without receiving reasonably equivalent value” in return.  Finn v. Alliance Bank, 
860 N.W.2d 638, 645
 (Minn. 2015).  And, as part of Defendant’s affirmative defense to the 
Trustee’s claim of actual fraud, Boosalis may show that he took PCI’s transfers “in good 
faith  and  for  reasonably  equivalent  value.” 1  
Id.
  As  defined  under  the  MUFTA, 
“reasonably equivalent value” means that “the value of the consideration received by the 

debtor was reasonably equivalent to the value of the asset transferred or the amount of the 
obligation incurred . . . .”  
Minn. Stat. § 513.44
.                       

1 
Minn. Stat. § 513.44
(a)(1).                                             
    The  proposed  jury  instruction,  as  amended  by  modifications  discussed  at  the 
charge conference, reads as follows:                                      
    Reasonably equivalent value may be found if the value Petters Company, 
    Inc. received from Mr. Boosalis in exchange for a payment was reasonably 
    equivalent to the value of the payment.                              

    Value  may  be  reasonably  equivalent  where  the  payment  made  to  the 
    investor satisfies a valid antecedent debt.  Any payment above the amount 
    of the principal investment is not in satisfaction of a valid antecedent debt if 
    it  was  made  in  furtherance  of a  fraud,  enabled by  a  fraud, or paid on 
    dishonestly-incurred debt.  If you find that an interest payment made by 
    Petters Company, Inc. to Mr. Boosalis was made in furtherance of a fraud, 
    enabled by a fraud, or paid on dishonestly-incurred debt, then that payment 
    does not satisfy a valid antecedent debt, and is not for reasonably equivalent 
    value.                                                               

    Boosalis  maintains  that  the  Court’s  proposed  instruction  conflicts  with  the 
Minnesota Supreme Court’s ruling in Finn v. Alliance Bank, 
860 N.W.2d 638
 (2015).  
(See generally, Def.’s Jury Instr. Mem.)  He contends that the instruction improperly 
relies  on  the  Ponzi  scheme  presumption,  rejected  in  Finn.    (Id.at  1–8.)    He  further 
contends that the transfers in question, of both principal and interest, were for reasonably 
equivalent value, (id. at 9–11), and that the promissory notes are legally enforceable.  (Id. 
at 11–20.)  Boosalis counters with the following proposed instruction on reasonably 
equivalent value:                                                         
    Reasonably equivalent value may be found if the value Petters Company, 
    Inc. received from Defendant in exchange for a payment was reasonably 
    equivalent to the value of the payment. Value may be reasonably equivalent 
    where the payment is made to satisfy an antecedent debt.  An antecedent 
    debt  includes  any  legally  enforceable  right  to  payment  against  Petters 
    Company, Inc.                                                        

(Id. at 1.)                                                               
    Prior to trial, Boosalis raised similar arguments concerning the impact of Finn, 
which the Court addressed in its Order on Motions in Limine.  (See Nov. 19, 2018 Order 
at 6, 8, 13.)  As the Court noted in that ruling, in Finn, the Minnesota Supreme Court 

rejected the application of the “Ponzi scheme presumption” to fraudulent transfer claims 
arising  under  the  MUFTA.    860  N.W.2d  at  646–50.  The  Court  disagrees  with 
Defendant’s general argument that the proposed jury instruction on reasonably equivalent 
value improperly relies on the Ponzi scheme presumption.  As the Court made clear in its 
Order on the Motions in Limine, (see Nov. 19, 2018 Order at 9–11), in light of Finn, the 

Trustee may not rely upon the Ponzi scheme presumption, but will instead be put to its 
proof of the fraud in this case.  Consistent with the Court’s ruling, the Trustee has been 
required to prove its case on a transfer-by-transfer basis.               
    In reaching its decision in Finn, the Minnesota Supreme Court identified three 
conclusive underlying presumptions on which the overall Ponzi scheme presumption is 

based:  (1) the debtor had fraudulent intent, such that all transfers from the Ponzi scheme 
were actually fraudulent; (2) with respect to constructive fraud, as a matter of law, the 
debtor was insolvent at the time of a the disputed transfers; and (3) also with respect to 
constructive fraud, a court must presume that any transfer from the Ponzi scheme was not 
for reasonably equivalent value.  
860 N.W.2d. at 646
.   The Minnesota Supreme Court 

found that these underlying presumptions did not sufficiently account for different factual 
circumstances, nor were they consistent with Minnesota law.  For instance, the Court 
found that the third underlying presumption regarding reasonably equivalent value would 
“both  establish  the  second  requirement  of  a  constructive-fraud  claim  and  negate  the 
statutory defense to an actual-fraud claim.”  
Id.
  (citations omitted).   
    In addition, the Minnesota Supreme Court found that application of the Ponzi 

scheme  presumption  would  compel  the  conclusion  “that  a  debtor  operating  a  Ponzi 
scheme cannot receive reasonably equivalent value for the ‘interest’ or ‘profits’ it pays to 
investors.”   
Id. at 649
.  As the Court noted, under the MUFTA, “the satisfaction of an 
antecedent debt can constitute reasonably equivalent value.”  
Id. at 650
.  Notably, the 
structure of the underlying Ponzi scheme in Finn involved a mixture of legitimate deals 

and  fraudulent  deals,  specifically  the  sale  of  loan  participation  interests  that  were 
fictitious as well as the sale of participation interests that were genuine.  
Id. at 642
.  The 
Finn appellants were all investors who had purchased actual, legitimate loans.  
Id. at 652
.   
Given those facts, the Minnesota Supreme Court found that the “value” given these 
investors  in  exchange  for  Ponzi  scheme  proceeds  was  for  “the  satisfaction  of  an 

antecedent debt.”  
Id. at 651
.                                            
    The Court noted that antecedent debt may take many forms, citing cases in which 
the satisfaction of antecedent debt was considered “fair consideration” for a transfer, such 
that the conveyance was not subsequently deemed fraudulent.  
Id.
 at 650–51 (citing 
Kummet v. Thielen, 
298 N.W. 245, 246
 (Minn. 1941) (involving a personal loan between 

two  spouses  and  one  spouse’s  right  to  insurance  proceeds  covering  damages  for 
household furnishings and effects); Skinner v. Overend, 
252 N.W. 418
, 418–19 (Minn. 
1934)  (finding  transfer  of  unpaid  wages  from  father  to  son,  to  which  son  was 
contractually  entitled,  did  not  constitute  a  fraudulent  conveyance).    The  Minnesota 
Supreme Court concluded that “any legally enforceable right to payment against the 
debtor is sufficient to qualify as an antecedent debt under MUFTA.”  
Id.
 at 651 (citing 
Kummet, 
298 N.W. at 247
) (noting that the obligation in question was “enforceable”).  

The Court observed that “[a]bsent the existence of a Ponzi scheme, [a promise to provide 
investors  with  disbursements  for  their  participation  interests]  would  fit  comfortably 
within the realm of antecedent debt, and satisfaction of that promise could constitute 
‘value,”  as  that  term  is  defined  in  MUFTA.      
Id.
    However,  “[w]ithout  a  legally 
enforceable contractual claim, any payment made to an investor beyond its principal 

investment is not for antecedent debt, and therefore cannot be in exchange for reasonably 
equivalent value.”  
Id.
                                                   
    Defendant cites B.E.L.T., Inc. v. Wachovia Corp., 
403 F.3d 474, 477
 (7th Cir. 
2005), In re Sharp International Corp., 
403 F.3d 43, 50
 (2d Cir. 2005), and Image 
Masters,  Inc.  v.  Chase  Home  Finance,  
489 B.R. 375, 389
  (E.D.  Pa.  2013),  for  the 

proposition that repayment of antecedent debt constitutes an exchange for reasonably 
equivalent value.   As the Court has recognized above, it does not dispute that general 
proposition, but Defendant’s cases are factually distinguishable from the record facts 
here.  The debt at issue in B.E.L.T. was not related to the transferor’s fraudulent conduct 
and the record lacked evidence of its repayment , 403 F.3d at 478, the In re Sharp matter 

apparently did not involve a Ponzi scheme, nor was there a dispute concerning the “fair 
equivalence” of the payment in question, 403 F.3d at 54, and Image Masters did not 
involve the recovery of interest payments received by the lender on a fraudulent loan.  
489 B.R. at 375
.                                                          
    Here, however, the parties dispute the question of reasonably equivalent value,  
whether PCI conducted legitimate business with Defendant’s money, and whether PCI 
made interest payments on Defendant’s investment with funds obtained as the result of 

the scheme. This Court’s proposed jury instruction on reasonably equivalent value is 
fully consistent with the disputed facts and with Finn, stating, in part, “Value may be 
reasonably equivalent where the payment made to the investor satisfies a valid antecedent 
debt.  Any payment above the amount of the principal investment is not in satisfaction of 
a valid antecedent debt if it was made in furtherance of a fraud, enabled by a fraud, or 

paid on dishonestly-incurred debt.”  (See supra at 4.)                    
    Defendant’s  proposed  instruction,  however,  leaves  the  jury  to  decide  whether 
Boosalis has a “legally enforceable” right to retain the interest payments received from 
PCI.  The question of whether an enforceable contract exists—and whether the contract 
may be considered void as against public policy—is a question of law for the Court, and 

not a question of fact for the jury.  Isles Wellness, Inc. v. Progressive N. Ins. Co., 
725 N.W.2d 90, 93
 (Minn. 2006); see also Richie Co., LLP v. Lyndon Ins. Grp., Inc., 
316 F.3d 758, 760
 (8th Cir. 2003).  A contract may be void against public policy if it is 
“injurious  to  the  interest  of  the  public  or  contravenes  some  established  interest  of 
society.”  Isles Wellness, Inc., 
725 N.W.2d at 93
.  Under Minnesota law, a contract that 

aims to deceive a third party is void.  Torpey v. Murray, 
101 N.W.2d 609
, 610 (Minn. 
1994); see also Horbach v. Coyle, 
2 F.2d 702, 706
 (8th Cir. 1924) (“A contract which has 
for its object the perpetration of a fraud on a third person is illegal and void.”)    
    While Defendant cites authority for the proposition that a contract is enforceable if 
it is merely “incidentally or indirectly” or “only remotely” connected with an illegal 
transaction, (see Def.’s Jury Instr. Mem. at 12), the jury must resolve the fact question of 

whether the promissory notes between PCI and Defendant are tangentially connected to 
the fraud or directly connected to it.                                    
    The Court’s proposed instruction, set forth above, properly instructs the jury to 
find facts regarding whether Boosalis has a valid right to retain the interest payments that 
he received from PCI.   The jury will decide the disputed fact question of whether PCI 

used  the  promissory  notes  between  PCI  and Boosalis  as  part  of  a  Ponzi  scheme  to 
defraud other investors and whether it repaid the notes with fraudulently-obtained funds.   
Defendant is free to present evidence showing that he provided value in exchange for the 
transfers.                                                                
    Accordingly,  for  all  of  the  foregoing  reasons,  the  Court  finds  its  proposed 

instruction, supra at 4, is consistent with the facts at issue here and with Minnesota law. 
Defendant’s objection is therefore overruled.                             
SO ORDERED.                                                               

    December 3, 2018                   s/Susan Richard Nelson            
                                       Susan Richard Nelson              
                                       United States District Judge      

Reference

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