Producers Livestock Credit Corporation v. Revier Brand Group, LLC

U.S. District Court, District of Minnesota

Producers Livestock Credit Corporation v. Revier Brand Group, LLC

Trial Court Opinion

                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                             
                    DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                


Producers Livestock Credit Corporation, a  Civil No. 24-56 (DWF/JFD)     
Delaware corporation,                                                    

               Plaintiff,                                                

v.                                               MEMORANDUM              
                                            OPINION AND ORDER            
Revier Brand Group, LLC, a Minnesota                                     
limited liability company; BRR Properties,                               
LLC, a North Dakota limited liability                                    
company; MNR, LLC, a Minnesota                                           
limited liability company; and Olivia                                    
Farms, LLC, a Minnesota limited liability                                
company,                                                                 

               Defendants.                                               
________________________________________________________________________  
Benjamin J. Court, Esq., Kevin P. Kitchen, Esq., Stinson LLP; Phillip J. Ashfield, Esq., 
Spencer Fane LLP, counsel for Plaintiff.                                  

Caren L. Stanley, Esq., and Drew J. Hushka, Esq., Vogel Law Firm, counsel for BRR 
Properties, LLC.                                                          

Erik A. Ahlgren, Esq., and Sarah Catherine Duffy, Esq., Ahlgren Law Office, counsel for 
MNR, LLC, and Olivia Farms, LLC.1                                         
________________________________________________________________________  
                        INTRODUCTION                                     
    This matter is before the Court on Defendant BRR Properties, LLC’s (“BRR”) 
motion to dismiss.  (Doc. No. 29.)  Plaintiff Producers Livestock Credit Corporation 

1    There is currently no attorney on record for Revier Brand Group, LLC.   
(“PLCC”) opposes the motion.  (Doc. No. 35.)  For the reasons set forth below, the Court 
denies the motion.                                                        
                         BACKGROUND                                      

I.   PLCC’s Loan                                                          
    In 2020, PLCC provided multiple loans to Revier Cattle Company (“RCC”) so 
that RCC could purchase cattle.  (Doc. No. 23 (“Am. Compl.”) ¶ 8.)  The loans were 
secured by the following:  livestock, “all feed inventory for the cattle feeding operation, 
cattle feeding supplies,” and proceeds of the same.  (Id. ¶ 12.)  Thomas Revier, who owns 

RCC, signed a guaranty, along with Libby Revier and Revier Farms Partnership (“RFP”), 
also owned by Thomas Revier.  (Id. ¶ 13.)  RCC then purchased cattle for use on its farm.  
(Id. ¶ 14.)  RCC defaulted on the loans, and PLCC obtained a monetary judgment against 
RCC, Thomas Revier, and Libby Revier for $2,592,881.95.  (Id. ¶ 21.)      
II.  Prior Loans                                                          

    Separately, RCC entered into a series of loans with Great Western Bank (“Original 
Loans”) in 2010 and 2011.  (Id. ¶ 23.)  The Original Loans were secured by RCC’s 
feedlot property and personal property, including feedlot equipment.  (Id. ¶ 24.)  The 
loans were later sold to Sandton Credit Solutions Master Fund IV, LP (“Sandton”).  (Id. 
¶  23.)                                                                   

III.  Alleged Fraudulent Scheme                                           
    In December 2021, BRR purchased the Original Loans from Sandton.  (Id. ¶ 25.)  
The total purchase price was $8,740,000.  (Id. ¶ 26.)  PLCC alleges that RFP, RCC, and 
Thomas and Libby Revier sold certain unencumbered real property and remitted the 
funds and certain mortgages to BRR for BRR to use towards the purchase of the Original 
Loans.  (Id. ¶¶ 29-31, 68-85.)  The unencumbered property included a $300,000 
mortgage, a $750,000 mortgage, a $100,000 mortgage, and proceeds from the sale of land 

entitled C4D.  (Id.)  In total, PLCC alleges that the mortgages and sales exceeded 
$4,000,000.  (Id. ¶ 85.)  PLCC further alleges that RFP, RCC, and Thomas and Libby 
Revier did not receive any consideration or value for these mortgages or sales.  (Id. ¶¶ 72, 
76, 80, 84.)  “The practical effect of this was that . . . RCC, and guarantor, RFP, funded 
nearly half of the total amount allegedly paid by BRR to purchase the Original Loans 

from Sandton.”  (Id. ¶ 32.)                                               
    In the meantime, PLCC alleges that Thomas Revier, BRR, RCC, and RFP “set in 
motion a plan to create two new entities to operate the cattle feedlot and related farm, 
stripped of the financial burdens created by RCC and RFP.”  (Id. ¶ 34.)  The two new 
entities are MNR, LLC, and Olivia Farms, LLC.  (Id. ¶ 38.)  Thomas Revier acted on 

behalf of both MNR and Olivia Farms while his daughter, Moira Revier (who was in 
college at the time), served as the figurehead of both entities.  (Id. ¶¶ 42, 44, 47, 49.)  
RCC then transferred the Feedlot Property to BRR via a Deed in Lieu of Foreclosure.  
(Id. ¶ 60.)  BRR paid RCC less than $3,000 for the purchase.  (Id. ¶ 61.)  And MNR 
leased the Feedlot Property from BRR for a term of five years, with a monthly rent of 

$64,666.67.  (Id. ¶ 62.)  BRR then foreclosed on the Feedlot Property pursuant to the 
Original Loans and purchased the Feedlot Property at a sheriff’s sale on October 6, 2022.  
(Id. ¶ 64.)  PLCC asserts that BRR collected rent from the Feedlot Property for seventeen 
months prior to the foreclosure redemption period without applying the rent to the 
Sandton debt.  (Id. ¶¶ 65-67.)  PLCC alleges that the “sole purpose of the Deed in Lieu 
was to allow MNR to start operating the Feedlot and pay rent to BRR,” which allowed 
BRR to receive the rent proceeds without applying it to the Sandton debt.  (Id. ¶ 66.) 

    MNR also entered into an equipment lease with RCC to use feedlot equipment 
(“Feedlot Equipment”), but MNR never paid RCC any of the rent.  (Id. ¶¶ 90, 91.)  RCC 
transferred its right to rents under the lease with MNR to BRR for no consideration.  (Id. 
¶ 92.)  BRR then foreclosed on the Feedlot Equipment but pocketed the rent from March 
2022 to October 2022 without applying the rent to the Sandton debt.  (Id. ¶¶ 93-95.)  

    Similarly, Olivia Farms entered into a lease with RFP to use equipment for 
farming operations (“Farm Equipment”), but Olivia Farms never paid RFP any rent.  (Id. 
¶¶ 96-97.)  RFP then transferred the right to receive rent under the lease to BRR for no 
consideration.  (Id. ¶ 98.)  BRR then foreclosed on the Farm Equipment but pocketed the 
rent without applying it to the Sandton debt.  (Id. ¶¶ 99-101.)           

    In addition, MNR began operating the feedlot with $1,325,266.57 of cattle feed 
(“Feed”) owned by RCC.  (Id. ¶ 87.)  PLCC alleges that the Feed was never subject to 
foreclosure proceedings and MNR did not provide any value to RCC in exchange for the 
Feed.  (Id. ¶¶ 88-89.)                                                    
    PLCC brings claims against BRR for fraudulent transfers under 
Minn. Stat. § 513.44
(a)(1), (a)(2) and § 513.45 and for civil conspiracy.  PLCC amended its 
complaint and now BRR moves to dismiss all claims against it.             
                          DISCUSSION                                     
    In deciding a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), a court assumes all facts in 
the complaint to be true and construes all reasonable inferences from those facts in the 

light most favorable to the complainant.  Morton v. Becker, 
793 F.2d 185, 187
 (8th Cir. 
1986).  A court may consider the complaint, matters of public record, orders, materials 
embraced by the complaint, and exhibits attached to the complaint in deciding a motion 
to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6).  Porous Media Corp. v. Pall Corp., 
186 F.3d 1077, 1079
 
(8th Cir. 1999).  To survive a motion to dismiss, a complaint must contain “enough facts 

to state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.”  Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 
550 U.S. 544, 570
 (2007).  Although a complaint need not contain “detailed factual 
allegations,” it must contain facts with enough specificity “to raise a right to relief above 
the speculative level.”  
Id. at 555
.                                      
I.   Fraudulent Transfers                                                 

    PLCC brings three claims against BRR for fraudulent transfers under 
Minn. Stat. § 513.44
(a)(1), (a)(2), and § 513.45 of the Minnesota Uniform Voidable Transactions Act 
(“MUVTA”).  BRR asserts that each claim should be dismissed for failure to state a 
claim.                                                                    
    A.   Count 1                                                         

    Count 1 involves fraudulent transfers under § 513.44(a)(1).  Section 513.44(a)(1) 
makes voidable a transfer made by a debtor if the debtor made the transfer “with actual 
intent to hinder, delay, or defraud any creditor of the debtor.”  PLCC alleges that “RCC 
and RFP transferred approximately $4,000,000.00 of real property or proceeds from the 
sale of real property to or for the benefit of BRR’s acquisition of the Original Loans from 
Sandton.”  (Am. Compl. ¶ 112.)  PLCC further alleges that BRR “received additional real 
estate through the Deed in Lieu for little to no value, thereby allowing BRR to collect 

rents from the property that should have otherwise been paid to RCC.”  (Id. ¶ 113.)  
PLCC alleges that “[t]his scheme was orchestrated with the intent to hinder, delay, or 
defraud RCC and RFP’s creditors, namely PLCC.”  (Id. ¶ 111.)              
    BRR makes a number of arguments in support of its motion to dismiss this count.  
First, BRR argues that PLCC has not pled the property involved in the $4,000,000 

transfer with particularity, as required under Rule 9(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil 
Procedure.  Specifically, BRR argues that “mortgages from Thomas and Libby Revier are 
irrelevant as to Count 1 because Count 1 does not allege Thomas and Libby Revier made 
voidable transfers.”  (Doc. No. 40 at 4.)  In addition, BRR asserts that “Count 1 does not 
allege BRR received voidable mortgages”; it only refers to “real property or proceeds.”  

(Id.)                                                                     
    The Court rejects BRR’s hyper-technical reading of the Amended Complaint.  The 
Amended Complaint clearly describes the transfers included in the $4,000,000 and 
incorporated these allegations into Count 1.  (Am. Compl. ¶¶ 68-86, 107.)  The transfers 
were made by RFP, Thomas and Libby Revier, and RCC.  (Id.)  PLCC alleges that 

Thomas and Libby Revier granted a mortgage to BRR that was not subject to the Sandton 
mortgage and in which they “did not receive any value” from BRR.  (Id. ¶¶ 75-76.)  In 
addition, PLCC alleges that the $4,000,000 included “mortgages and sales.”  (Id. ¶ 85.)  
The Court concludes that PLCC has pled each of these transfers in Count 1 with 
particularity.  Even if the Court had agreed with BRR, the Court would have allowed 
PLCC to further amend its complaint, which would have resulted in the same outcome. 
    BRR next argues that PLCC’s assertion that RCC, RFP, and Thomas and Libby 

Revier received no value for the $4,000,000 is conclusory.  BRR contends that PLCC 
was required to specifically allege that the remittance of the $4,000,000 to BRR did not 
reduce the Sandton debt.  Again, the Court disagrees with this hyper-technical argument.  
PLCC alleges that RCC, RFP, and Thomas and Libby Revier did not receive any value in 
exchange for the mortgages and proceeds.  (Am. Compl. ¶¶ 72-84.)  On a motion to 

dismiss, the Court is to give PLCC “the benefit of every reasonable inference drawn from 
the well-pleaded facts.”  Ossman v. Diana Corp., 
825 F. Supp. 870, 880
 (D. Minn. 1993) 
(internal quotations and citation omitted).  Here, the Court can infer that if BRR did not 
provide value for the $4,000,000, then that means it did not apply the $4,000,000 to the 
Sandton debt.  And again, even if the Court had agreed with BRR, the Court would have 

allowed PLCC to further amend its complaint, which would have resulted in the same 
outcome.                                                                  
    And lastly, BRR argues that because the Feedlot Property was fully encumbered, 
the Deed in Lieu did not involve a transfer of an asset and thus § 513.44(a)(1) does not 
apply.  Section 513.44(a)(1) applies to “transfers.”  A “transfer” means “every mode, 

direct or indirect, absolute or conditional, voluntary or involuntary, of disposing of or 
parting with an asset or an interest in an asset . . . .”  § 513.41(16).  “Asset” does not 
include “property to the extent it is encumbered by a valid lien.”  § 513.41(2)(i).  BRR 
argues that because the Feedlot Property, along with its rents, was secured through the 
Original Loans, it was not an asset under § 513.44(a)(1).  BRR further asserts that any 
proceeds from the sale of unencumbered land, like C4D, would have also been secured 
through the Original Loans and thus would not qualify as an asset.        

    BRR’s argument is premature.  The Court cannot determine at this stage whether 
there was equity in the Feedlot Property, rents, or other proceeds.  The Amended 
Complaint plausibly alleges that BRR pocketed assets—specifically, the rent from the 
Feedlot Property, Farm Equipment, and Feedlot Equipment, and mortgages and real 
property proceeds from unencumbered property—that was not applied to the Sandton 

debt.  In other words, PLCC plausibly alleges that there was equity in the assets securing 
the Original Loans.  Discovery and further fact-finding are required before the Court can 
conclusively determine whether these assets were fully encumbered.  The Court therefore 
denies BRR’s motion to dismiss Count 1.                                   
    B.   Count 6                                                         

    Count 6 involves fraudulent transfers under § 513.44(a)(2), which makes voidable 
as to a creditor a transfer made by a debtor “without receiving a reasonably equivalent 
value in exchange for the transfer or obligation.”  PLCC’s allegations related to Count 6 
are similar to Count 1.  PLCC alleges that RCC transferred the Feedlot Property to BRR 
for less than $3,000 and that RCC, RFP, and Thomas and Libby Revier transferred 

mortgages and real property proceeds to BRR without consideration.  (Am. Compl. 
¶¶ 155-57, 167.)  PLCC further alleges that RFP and RCC transferred their rights to rents 
from Farm Equipment and Feedlot Equipment to BRR for no consideration.  (Id. ¶¶ 159-
61, 172-74.)                                                              
    BRR again argues that the Feedlot Property is not an asset because it was fully 
encumbered.  As noted above, the Court cannot make that determination at this time 
without more information regarding the total value of the secured assets, what assets were 

used to satisfy the Sandton debt, and whether BRR acquired assets that were not used to 
satisfy the Sandton debt, without providing reasonable value.             
    Additionally, BRR argues that the RCC, RFP, and Thomas and Libby Revier 
received reasonable value for the unencumbered property because BRR provided a 
promise of forbearance in exchange for the additional collateral.  BRR cites to an email 

attached to the Amended Complaint that references an agreement for BRR to forebear 
“[a]ll actions to liquidate the personal property collateral” in exchange for various 
“mortgages on certain real estate . . . not pledged to Sandton.”  (Am. Compl., Ex. C.)  In 
response, PLCC contends that any argument related to the alleged forbearance is 
premature because there is a fact dispute regarding whether the forbearance was instead a 

front for the fraudulent scheme.  As evidence, PLCC notes that BRR did not actually 
forbear, as BRR “immediately took title to the Feedlot Property . . . and thereafter 
proceed to foreclose on the Feedlot Property.”  (Doc. No. 37 at 22.)  Nor did BRR forbear 
from enforcing its security interest in the Feedlot or Farm Equipment, as BRR “collected 
rental payments related to the equipment and foreclosed on this equipment within one 

year of acquiring the Sandton debt.”  (Id. at 22-23.)  And interestingly, any argument that 
the forbearance applied to the Feedlot and Farm Equipment directly contradicts BRR’s 
assertion that RCC and RFP had no right to the equipment following a prior state court 
order.  The Court agrees with PLCC that there is clearly a factual dispute surrounding the 
forbearance that the Court is unable to resolve at the motion to dismiss stage.  PLCC has 
sufficiently alleged that RCC, RFP, and Thomas and Libby Revier transferred mortgages 
and sales proceeds from the unencumbered property without receiving reasonably 

equivalent value.                                                         
    BRR also argues that Count 6 should be dismissed related to the Farm and Feedlot 
Equipment because the equipment is not an asset.  As noted above, the Court declines to 
make a determination on this issue at this stage of the proceedings.  In addition, BRR 
argues that a state court order gave Sandton, and later BRR, the right to repossess the 

Feedlot and Farm Equipment and therefore “RCC and RFP lacked the legal right to 
possess—let alone derive rents therefrom.”  (Doc. No. 31 at 13.)  As noted above, the 
email referencing forbearance appears to contradict this argument.  The email stated that 
“[a]ll actions to liquidate the personal property collateral will be immediately 
suspended.”  (Am. Compl., Ex. C.)  Thus, the email seems to acknowledge that RCC and 

RFP continued to possess the equipment and notes an alleged agreement to forbear from 
enforcing BRR’s security interest in the Feedlot or Farm Equipment.  Moreover, PLCC 
argues that the state court order did not transfer title of the equipment and instead merely 
gave Sandton the right to repossess the equipment.  At a minimum, these arguments 
underscore a factual dispute that the Court cannot resolve on a motion to dismiss. 

    Based on the above, the Court denies BRR’s motion to dismiss Count 6. 
    C.   Count 7                                                         
    Count 7 involves fraudulent transfers under § 513.45, which makes a transfer 
voidable as to a creditor when the transfer was made “without receiving a reasonably 
equivalent value in exchange for the transfer” and “the debtor was insolvent at that time 
or the debtor became insolvent as a result of the transfer or obligation.”  PLCC 
specifically alleges that RCC, RFP, and Thomas and Libby Revier were insolvent and 

granted BRR proceeds from the sale of land and mortgages in real property for no 
consideration.  (Am. Compl. ¶¶ 182-85, 190.)  In addition, PLCC alleges that RCC 
transferred the Feedlot Property to BRR without receiving equivalent value, and BRR 
collected rents for the Farm and Feedlot Equipment for no consideration.  (Id. ¶¶ 186-89.) 
    BRR makes the same arguments regarding the unencumbered property, rights to 

rents, and receipt of the Deed in Lieu as it made for Counts 1 and 6, which the Court 
rejects for the reasons outlined above.  In addition, BRR argues that, related to the right 
to rents, BRR was not a subsequent transferee under MUVTA, because “PLCC only 
alleges that MNR and Olivia Farms transferred economic benefits, not the property itself, 
to BRR.”  (Doc. No. 31 at 17.)  But PLCC alleges that BRR received more than mere 

economic benefits from a debtor’s property.  PLCC alleges that “RCC transferred the 
right to rents under the Feedlot Equipment Lease to BRR” and that “RFP transferred the 
right to receive rents under the Farm Equipment Lease to BRR.”  (Am. Compl. ¶¶ 92, 
98.)  Thus, PLCC asserts that BRR was a direct transferee.  The Court therefore denies 
BRR’s motion to dismiss Count 7.                                          

II.  Civil Conspiracy                                                     
    Lastly, PLCC brings a civil conspiracy claim against BRR.  PLCC alleges that 
BRR, Olivia Farms, MNR, RCC, RFP, and Thomas Revier “conspired to establish MNR 
and Olivia Farms as fraudulent successors in interest to RCC and RFP” in order to 
“transfer RCC’s and RFP’s assets away from creditors for the benefit of MNR, Olivia 
Farms, and BRR.”  (Am. Compl. ¶¶ 208-09.)  PLCC alleges that the transfers were made 
to BRR, Olivia Farms, and MNR without providing reasonably equivalent value.  (Id. 

¶ 212.)                                                                   
    To plead a civil conspiracy claim, PLCC must establish “that two or more people 
worked together to accomplish (1) an unlawful purpose or (2) a lawful act by unlawful 
means.”  Fredin v. Middlecamp, 
500 F. Supp. 3d 752
, 798 (D. Minn. 2020) (internal 
quotations and citation omitted).  “Under Minnesota law, a conspiracy is not an 

independent cause of action.”  Clarinda Color, LLC v. Nelson, No. 04-cv-4917, 
2005 WL 8162956
, at *3 (D. Minn. Nov. 23, 2005).  Instead, a conspiracy claim must be 
“supported by an underlying tort.”  D.A.B. v. Brown, 
570 N.W.2d 168, 172
 (Minn. Ct. 
App. 1997).  A civil conspiracy claim does not “change the nature of the cause of action” 
but instead “increases the number of persons potentially liable.” Clarinda Color, 
2005 WL 8162956
, at *3.  In other words, “a civil conspiracy claim . . . is merely a means for 
asserting vicarious or joint and several liability.”  Am. Comput. Tr. Leasing v. Jack 
Farrell Implement Co., 
763 F. Supp. 1473, 1489
 (D. Minn. 1991).           
    BRR argues that this claim should be dismissed because PLCC fails to plead an 
underlying tort.  PLCC alleges several violations of MUVTA by MNR, Olivia Farms, and 

BRR, including fraudulent transfer based on actual fraud, which can serve as the 
predicate tort for civil conspiracy.2  See Cedar Rapids Lodge & Suites, LLC v. Seibert, 

2    The Court need not address the full scope of PLCC’s civil conspiracy claim at this 
time.                                                                     
No. 14-cv-4839, 
2018 WL 747408
, at *18 (D. Minn. Feb. 7, 2018) (concluding that the 
“actual-fraud form of fraudulent transfer” under 
Minn. Stat. § 513.44
(a)(1) can serve as a 
“predicate tort” for civil conspiracy).  The Court therefore denies BRR’s motion to 

dismiss Count 9.                                                          

ORDER

    Based upon the foregoing, and the files, records, and proceedings herein, IT IS 
HEREBY ORDERED that BRR’s motion to dismiss is (Doc. No. [29]) is DENIED. 

Dated:  June 12, 2024         s/Donovan W. Frank                          
                             DONOVAN W. FRANK                            
                             United States District Judge                

Trial Court Opinion

                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                             
                    DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                


Producers Livestock Credit Corporation, a  Civil No. 24-56 (DWF/JFD)     
Delaware corporation,                                                    

               Plaintiff,                                                

v.                                               MEMORANDUM              
                                            OPINION AND ORDER            
Revier Brand Group, LLC, a Minnesota                                     
limited liability company; BRR Properties,                               
LLC, a North Dakota limited liability                                    
company; MNR, LLC, a Minnesota                                           
limited liability company; and Olivia                                    
Farms, LLC, a Minnesota limited liability                                
company,                                                                 

               Defendants.                                               
________________________________________________________________________  
Benjamin J. Court, Esq., Kevin P. Kitchen, Esq., Stinson LLP; Phillip J. Ashfield, Esq., 
Spencer Fane LLP, counsel for Plaintiff.                                  

Caren L. Stanley, Esq., and Drew J. Hushka, Esq., Vogel Law Firm, counsel for BRR 
Properties, LLC.                                                          

Erik A. Ahlgren, Esq., and Sarah Catherine Duffy, Esq., Ahlgren Law Office, counsel for 
MNR, LLC, and Olivia Farms, LLC.1                                         
________________________________________________________________________  
                        INTRODUCTION                                     
    This matter is before the Court on Defendant BRR Properties, LLC’s (“BRR”) 
motion to dismiss.  (Doc. No. 29.)  Plaintiff Producers Livestock Credit Corporation 

1    There is currently no attorney on record for Revier Brand Group, LLC.   
(“PLCC”) opposes the motion.  (Doc. No. 35.)  For the reasons set forth below, the Court 
denies the motion.                                                        
                         BACKGROUND                                      

I.   PLCC’s Loan                                                          
    In 2020, PLCC provided multiple loans to Revier Cattle Company (“RCC”) so 
that RCC could purchase cattle.  (Doc. No. 23 (“Am. Compl.”) ¶ 8.)  The loans were 
secured by the following:  livestock, “all feed inventory for the cattle feeding operation, 
cattle feeding supplies,” and proceeds of the same.  (Id. ¶ 12.)  Thomas Revier, who owns 

RCC, signed a guaranty, along with Libby Revier and Revier Farms Partnership (“RFP”), 
also owned by Thomas Revier.  (Id. ¶ 13.)  RCC then purchased cattle for use on its farm.  
(Id. ¶ 14.)  RCC defaulted on the loans, and PLCC obtained a monetary judgment against 
RCC, Thomas Revier, and Libby Revier for $2,592,881.95.  (Id. ¶ 21.)      
II.  Prior Loans                                                          

    Separately, RCC entered into a series of loans with Great Western Bank (“Original 
Loans”) in 2010 and 2011.  (Id. ¶ 23.)  The Original Loans were secured by RCC’s 
feedlot property and personal property, including feedlot equipment.  (Id. ¶ 24.)  The 
loans were later sold to Sandton Credit Solutions Master Fund IV, LP (“Sandton”).  (Id. 
¶  23.)                                                                   

III.  Alleged Fraudulent Scheme                                           
    In December 2021, BRR purchased the Original Loans from Sandton.  (Id. ¶ 25.)  
The total purchase price was $8,740,000.  (Id. ¶ 26.)  PLCC alleges that RFP, RCC, and 
Thomas and Libby Revier sold certain unencumbered real property and remitted the 
funds and certain mortgages to BRR for BRR to use towards the purchase of the Original 
Loans.  (Id. ¶¶ 29-31, 68-85.)  The unencumbered property included a $300,000 
mortgage, a $750,000 mortgage, a $100,000 mortgage, and proceeds from the sale of land 

entitled C4D.  (Id.)  In total, PLCC alleges that the mortgages and sales exceeded 
$4,000,000.  (Id. ¶ 85.)  PLCC further alleges that RFP, RCC, and Thomas and Libby 
Revier did not receive any consideration or value for these mortgages or sales.  (Id. ¶¶ 72, 
76, 80, 84.)  “The practical effect of this was that . . . RCC, and guarantor, RFP, funded 
nearly half of the total amount allegedly paid by BRR to purchase the Original Loans 

from Sandton.”  (Id. ¶ 32.)                                               
    In the meantime, PLCC alleges that Thomas Revier, BRR, RCC, and RFP “set in 
motion a plan to create two new entities to operate the cattle feedlot and related farm, 
stripped of the financial burdens created by RCC and RFP.”  (Id. ¶ 34.)  The two new 
entities are MNR, LLC, and Olivia Farms, LLC.  (Id. ¶ 38.)  Thomas Revier acted on 

behalf of both MNR and Olivia Farms while his daughter, Moira Revier (who was in 
college at the time), served as the figurehead of both entities.  (Id. ¶¶ 42, 44, 47, 49.)  
RCC then transferred the Feedlot Property to BRR via a Deed in Lieu of Foreclosure.  
(Id. ¶ 60.)  BRR paid RCC less than $3,000 for the purchase.  (Id. ¶ 61.)  And MNR 
leased the Feedlot Property from BRR for a term of five years, with a monthly rent of 

$64,666.67.  (Id. ¶ 62.)  BRR then foreclosed on the Feedlot Property pursuant to the 
Original Loans and purchased the Feedlot Property at a sheriff’s sale on October 6, 2022.  
(Id. ¶ 64.)  PLCC asserts that BRR collected rent from the Feedlot Property for seventeen 
months prior to the foreclosure redemption period without applying the rent to the 
Sandton debt.  (Id. ¶¶ 65-67.)  PLCC alleges that the “sole purpose of the Deed in Lieu 
was to allow MNR to start operating the Feedlot and pay rent to BRR,” which allowed 
BRR to receive the rent proceeds without applying it to the Sandton debt.  (Id. ¶ 66.) 

    MNR also entered into an equipment lease with RCC to use feedlot equipment 
(“Feedlot Equipment”), but MNR never paid RCC any of the rent.  (Id. ¶¶ 90, 91.)  RCC 
transferred its right to rents under the lease with MNR to BRR for no consideration.  (Id. 
¶ 92.)  BRR then foreclosed on the Feedlot Equipment but pocketed the rent from March 
2022 to October 2022 without applying the rent to the Sandton debt.  (Id. ¶¶ 93-95.)  

    Similarly, Olivia Farms entered into a lease with RFP to use equipment for 
farming operations (“Farm Equipment”), but Olivia Farms never paid RFP any rent.  (Id. 
¶¶ 96-97.)  RFP then transferred the right to receive rent under the lease to BRR for no 
consideration.  (Id. ¶ 98.)  BRR then foreclosed on the Farm Equipment but pocketed the 
rent without applying it to the Sandton debt.  (Id. ¶¶ 99-101.)           

    In addition, MNR began operating the feedlot with $1,325,266.57 of cattle feed 
(“Feed”) owned by RCC.  (Id. ¶ 87.)  PLCC alleges that the Feed was never subject to 
foreclosure proceedings and MNR did not provide any value to RCC in exchange for the 
Feed.  (Id. ¶¶ 88-89.)                                                    
    PLCC brings claims against BRR for fraudulent transfers under 
Minn. Stat. § 513.44
(a)(1), (a)(2) and § 513.45 and for civil conspiracy.  PLCC amended its 
complaint and now BRR moves to dismiss all claims against it.             
                          DISCUSSION                                     
    In deciding a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), a court assumes all facts in 
the complaint to be true and construes all reasonable inferences from those facts in the 

light most favorable to the complainant.  Morton v. Becker, 
793 F.2d 185, 187
 (8th Cir. 
1986).  A court may consider the complaint, matters of public record, orders, materials 
embraced by the complaint, and exhibits attached to the complaint in deciding a motion 
to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6).  Porous Media Corp. v. Pall Corp., 
186 F.3d 1077, 1079
 
(8th Cir. 1999).  To survive a motion to dismiss, a complaint must contain “enough facts 

to state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.”  Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 
550 U.S. 544, 570
 (2007).  Although a complaint need not contain “detailed factual 
allegations,” it must contain facts with enough specificity “to raise a right to relief above 
the speculative level.”  
Id. at 555
.                                      
I.   Fraudulent Transfers                                                 

    PLCC brings three claims against BRR for fraudulent transfers under 
Minn. Stat. § 513.44
(a)(1), (a)(2), and § 513.45 of the Minnesota Uniform Voidable Transactions Act 
(“MUVTA”).  BRR asserts that each claim should be dismissed for failure to state a 
claim.                                                                    
    A.   Count 1                                                         

    Count 1 involves fraudulent transfers under § 513.44(a)(1).  Section 513.44(a)(1) 
makes voidable a transfer made by a debtor if the debtor made the transfer “with actual 
intent to hinder, delay, or defraud any creditor of the debtor.”  PLCC alleges that “RCC 
and RFP transferred approximately $4,000,000.00 of real property or proceeds from the 
sale of real property to or for the benefit of BRR’s acquisition of the Original Loans from 
Sandton.”  (Am. Compl. ¶ 112.)  PLCC further alleges that BRR “received additional real 
estate through the Deed in Lieu for little to no value, thereby allowing BRR to collect 

rents from the property that should have otherwise been paid to RCC.”  (Id. ¶ 113.)  
PLCC alleges that “[t]his scheme was orchestrated with the intent to hinder, delay, or 
defraud RCC and RFP’s creditors, namely PLCC.”  (Id. ¶ 111.)              
    BRR makes a number of arguments in support of its motion to dismiss this count.  
First, BRR argues that PLCC has not pled the property involved in the $4,000,000 

transfer with particularity, as required under Rule 9(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil 
Procedure.  Specifically, BRR argues that “mortgages from Thomas and Libby Revier are 
irrelevant as to Count 1 because Count 1 does not allege Thomas and Libby Revier made 
voidable transfers.”  (Doc. No. 40 at 4.)  In addition, BRR asserts that “Count 1 does not 
allege BRR received voidable mortgages”; it only refers to “real property or proceeds.”  

(Id.)                                                                     
    The Court rejects BRR’s hyper-technical reading of the Amended Complaint.  The 
Amended Complaint clearly describes the transfers included in the $4,000,000 and 
incorporated these allegations into Count 1.  (Am. Compl. ¶¶ 68-86, 107.)  The transfers 
were made by RFP, Thomas and Libby Revier, and RCC.  (Id.)  PLCC alleges that 

Thomas and Libby Revier granted a mortgage to BRR that was not subject to the Sandton 
mortgage and in which they “did not receive any value” from BRR.  (Id. ¶¶ 75-76.)  In 
addition, PLCC alleges that the $4,000,000 included “mortgages and sales.”  (Id. ¶ 85.)  
The Court concludes that PLCC has pled each of these transfers in Count 1 with 
particularity.  Even if the Court had agreed with BRR, the Court would have allowed 
PLCC to further amend its complaint, which would have resulted in the same outcome. 
    BRR next argues that PLCC’s assertion that RCC, RFP, and Thomas and Libby 

Revier received no value for the $4,000,000 is conclusory.  BRR contends that PLCC 
was required to specifically allege that the remittance of the $4,000,000 to BRR did not 
reduce the Sandton debt.  Again, the Court disagrees with this hyper-technical argument.  
PLCC alleges that RCC, RFP, and Thomas and Libby Revier did not receive any value in 
exchange for the mortgages and proceeds.  (Am. Compl. ¶¶ 72-84.)  On a motion to 

dismiss, the Court is to give PLCC “the benefit of every reasonable inference drawn from 
the well-pleaded facts.”  Ossman v. Diana Corp., 
825 F. Supp. 870, 880
 (D. Minn. 1993) 
(internal quotations and citation omitted).  Here, the Court can infer that if BRR did not 
provide value for the $4,000,000, then that means it did not apply the $4,000,000 to the 
Sandton debt.  And again, even if the Court had agreed with BRR, the Court would have 

allowed PLCC to further amend its complaint, which would have resulted in the same 
outcome.                                                                  
    And lastly, BRR argues that because the Feedlot Property was fully encumbered, 
the Deed in Lieu did not involve a transfer of an asset and thus § 513.44(a)(1) does not 
apply.  Section 513.44(a)(1) applies to “transfers.”  A “transfer” means “every mode, 

direct or indirect, absolute or conditional, voluntary or involuntary, of disposing of or 
parting with an asset or an interest in an asset . . . .”  § 513.41(16).  “Asset” does not 
include “property to the extent it is encumbered by a valid lien.”  § 513.41(2)(i).  BRR 
argues that because the Feedlot Property, along with its rents, was secured through the 
Original Loans, it was not an asset under § 513.44(a)(1).  BRR further asserts that any 
proceeds from the sale of unencumbered land, like C4D, would have also been secured 
through the Original Loans and thus would not qualify as an asset.        

    BRR’s argument is premature.  The Court cannot determine at this stage whether 
there was equity in the Feedlot Property, rents, or other proceeds.  The Amended 
Complaint plausibly alleges that BRR pocketed assets—specifically, the rent from the 
Feedlot Property, Farm Equipment, and Feedlot Equipment, and mortgages and real 
property proceeds from unencumbered property—that was not applied to the Sandton 

debt.  In other words, PLCC plausibly alleges that there was equity in the assets securing 
the Original Loans.  Discovery and further fact-finding are required before the Court can 
conclusively determine whether these assets were fully encumbered.  The Court therefore 
denies BRR’s motion to dismiss Count 1.                                   
    B.   Count 6                                                         

    Count 6 involves fraudulent transfers under § 513.44(a)(2), which makes voidable 
as to a creditor a transfer made by a debtor “without receiving a reasonably equivalent 
value in exchange for the transfer or obligation.”  PLCC’s allegations related to Count 6 
are similar to Count 1.  PLCC alleges that RCC transferred the Feedlot Property to BRR 
for less than $3,000 and that RCC, RFP, and Thomas and Libby Revier transferred 

mortgages and real property proceeds to BRR without consideration.  (Am. Compl. 
¶¶ 155-57, 167.)  PLCC further alleges that RFP and RCC transferred their rights to rents 
from Farm Equipment and Feedlot Equipment to BRR for no consideration.  (Id. ¶¶ 159-
61, 172-74.)                                                              
    BRR again argues that the Feedlot Property is not an asset because it was fully 
encumbered.  As noted above, the Court cannot make that determination at this time 
without more information regarding the total value of the secured assets, what assets were 

used to satisfy the Sandton debt, and whether BRR acquired assets that were not used to 
satisfy the Sandton debt, without providing reasonable value.             
    Additionally, BRR argues that the RCC, RFP, and Thomas and Libby Revier 
received reasonable value for the unencumbered property because BRR provided a 
promise of forbearance in exchange for the additional collateral.  BRR cites to an email 

attached to the Amended Complaint that references an agreement for BRR to forebear 
“[a]ll actions to liquidate the personal property collateral” in exchange for various 
“mortgages on certain real estate . . . not pledged to Sandton.”  (Am. Compl., Ex. C.)  In 
response, PLCC contends that any argument related to the alleged forbearance is 
premature because there is a fact dispute regarding whether the forbearance was instead a 

front for the fraudulent scheme.  As evidence, PLCC notes that BRR did not actually 
forbear, as BRR “immediately took title to the Feedlot Property . . . and thereafter 
proceed to foreclose on the Feedlot Property.”  (Doc. No. 37 at 22.)  Nor did BRR forbear 
from enforcing its security interest in the Feedlot or Farm Equipment, as BRR “collected 
rental payments related to the equipment and foreclosed on this equipment within one 

year of acquiring the Sandton debt.”  (Id. at 22-23.)  And interestingly, any argument that 
the forbearance applied to the Feedlot and Farm Equipment directly contradicts BRR’s 
assertion that RCC and RFP had no right to the equipment following a prior state court 
order.  The Court agrees with PLCC that there is clearly a factual dispute surrounding the 
forbearance that the Court is unable to resolve at the motion to dismiss stage.  PLCC has 
sufficiently alleged that RCC, RFP, and Thomas and Libby Revier transferred mortgages 
and sales proceeds from the unencumbered property without receiving reasonably 

equivalent value.                                                         
    BRR also argues that Count 6 should be dismissed related to the Farm and Feedlot 
Equipment because the equipment is not an asset.  As noted above, the Court declines to 
make a determination on this issue at this stage of the proceedings.  In addition, BRR 
argues that a state court order gave Sandton, and later BRR, the right to repossess the 

Feedlot and Farm Equipment and therefore “RCC and RFP lacked the legal right to 
possess—let alone derive rents therefrom.”  (Doc. No. 31 at 13.)  As noted above, the 
email referencing forbearance appears to contradict this argument.  The email stated that 
“[a]ll actions to liquidate the personal property collateral will be immediately 
suspended.”  (Am. Compl., Ex. C.)  Thus, the email seems to acknowledge that RCC and 

RFP continued to possess the equipment and notes an alleged agreement to forbear from 
enforcing BRR’s security interest in the Feedlot or Farm Equipment.  Moreover, PLCC 
argues that the state court order did not transfer title of the equipment and instead merely 
gave Sandton the right to repossess the equipment.  At a minimum, these arguments 
underscore a factual dispute that the Court cannot resolve on a motion to dismiss. 

    Based on the above, the Court denies BRR’s motion to dismiss Count 6. 
    C.   Count 7                                                         
    Count 7 involves fraudulent transfers under § 513.45, which makes a transfer 
voidable as to a creditor when the transfer was made “without receiving a reasonably 
equivalent value in exchange for the transfer” and “the debtor was insolvent at that time 
or the debtor became insolvent as a result of the transfer or obligation.”  PLCC 
specifically alleges that RCC, RFP, and Thomas and Libby Revier were insolvent and 

granted BRR proceeds from the sale of land and mortgages in real property for no 
consideration.  (Am. Compl. ¶¶ 182-85, 190.)  In addition, PLCC alleges that RCC 
transferred the Feedlot Property to BRR without receiving equivalent value, and BRR 
collected rents for the Farm and Feedlot Equipment for no consideration.  (Id. ¶¶ 186-89.) 
    BRR makes the same arguments regarding the unencumbered property, rights to 

rents, and receipt of the Deed in Lieu as it made for Counts 1 and 6, which the Court 
rejects for the reasons outlined above.  In addition, BRR argues that, related to the right 
to rents, BRR was not a subsequent transferee under MUVTA, because “PLCC only 
alleges that MNR and Olivia Farms transferred economic benefits, not the property itself, 
to BRR.”  (Doc. No. 31 at 17.)  But PLCC alleges that BRR received more than mere 

economic benefits from a debtor’s property.  PLCC alleges that “RCC transferred the 
right to rents under the Feedlot Equipment Lease to BRR” and that “RFP transferred the 
right to receive rents under the Farm Equipment Lease to BRR.”  (Am. Compl. ¶¶ 92, 
98.)  Thus, PLCC asserts that BRR was a direct transferee.  The Court therefore denies 
BRR’s motion to dismiss Count 7.                                          

II.  Civil Conspiracy                                                     
    Lastly, PLCC brings a civil conspiracy claim against BRR.  PLCC alleges that 
BRR, Olivia Farms, MNR, RCC, RFP, and Thomas Revier “conspired to establish MNR 
and Olivia Farms as fraudulent successors in interest to RCC and RFP” in order to 
“transfer RCC’s and RFP’s assets away from creditors for the benefit of MNR, Olivia 
Farms, and BRR.”  (Am. Compl. ¶¶ 208-09.)  PLCC alleges that the transfers were made 
to BRR, Olivia Farms, and MNR without providing reasonably equivalent value.  (Id. 

¶ 212.)                                                                   
    To plead a civil conspiracy claim, PLCC must establish “that two or more people 
worked together to accomplish (1) an unlawful purpose or (2) a lawful act by unlawful 
means.”  Fredin v. Middlecamp, 
500 F. Supp. 3d 752
, 798 (D. Minn. 2020) (internal 
quotations and citation omitted).  “Under Minnesota law, a conspiracy is not an 

independent cause of action.”  Clarinda Color, LLC v. Nelson, No. 04-cv-4917, 
2005 WL 8162956
, at *3 (D. Minn. Nov. 23, 2005).  Instead, a conspiracy claim must be 
“supported by an underlying tort.”  D.A.B. v. Brown, 
570 N.W.2d 168, 172
 (Minn. Ct. 
App. 1997).  A civil conspiracy claim does not “change the nature of the cause of action” 
but instead “increases the number of persons potentially liable.” Clarinda Color, 
2005 WL 8162956
, at *3.  In other words, “a civil conspiracy claim . . . is merely a means for 
asserting vicarious or joint and several liability.”  Am. Comput. Tr. Leasing v. Jack 
Farrell Implement Co., 
763 F. Supp. 1473, 1489
 (D. Minn. 1991).           
    BRR argues that this claim should be dismissed because PLCC fails to plead an 
underlying tort.  PLCC alleges several violations of MUVTA by MNR, Olivia Farms, and 

BRR, including fraudulent transfer based on actual fraud, which can serve as the 
predicate tort for civil conspiracy.2  See Cedar Rapids Lodge & Suites, LLC v. Seibert, 

2    The Court need not address the full scope of PLCC’s civil conspiracy claim at this 
time.                                                                     
No. 14-cv-4839, 
2018 WL 747408
, at *18 (D. Minn. Feb. 7, 2018) (concluding that the 
“actual-fraud form of fraudulent transfer” under 
Minn. Stat. § 513.44
(a)(1) can serve as a 
“predicate tort” for civil conspiracy).  The Court therefore denies BRR’s motion to 

dismiss Count 9.                                                          

ORDER

    Based upon the foregoing, and the files, records, and proceedings herein, IT IS 
HEREBY ORDERED that BRR’s motion to dismiss is (Doc. No. [29]) is DENIED. 

Dated:  June 12, 2024         s/Donovan W. Frank                          
                             DONOVAN W. FRANK                            
                             United States District Judge                

Reference

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