Don’t PANIC over a potential TMCC bankruptcy filing

This note was written by Richard Sommerfeld. He sent it to the entire MCA board this morning and posted it on Facebook. It has a lot of important information to help the MCA Board and MCA Homeowners better understand our situation.


Yesterday’s email update from MCA included this paragraph: “Also on the agenda is the new Contract with Troon/Icon that will require a Board vote for continued operations of all amenities. This has been a long and complicated process that has included multiple attorneys and many negotiations. It has been an arduous task for the MCA Board. Now we are at a critical juncture – approving an agreement with TMCC to avoid bankruptcy, which will shut down all amenities for an unforeseeable period of time.”

There have also been statements by MCA leadership that things get tangled and complicated if TMCC goes into bankruptcy. MCA leadership has indicated that TMCC is using this as a threat/leverage over MCA as a negotiating tool.

I am by any standard an expert on dealing with distressed/insolvent/bankrupt companies with 27 years of workout, receivership, liquidation and company turnaround experience with 2 major American banks and running my own turnaround company. I understand the accounting and legal implications of bankruptcy because I have been through the process multiple times.

This may be counter-intuitive, but the TMCC going into bankruptcy (i.e., Chapter 7) is not a bad thing. In fact, it should seriously help the MCA and the assessment paying residents. This is how it would likely play out.

A Chapter 7 bankruptcy is a matter of liquidation (Chapter 11 is to continue negotiate a business continuation which is much more complicated). The TMCC has no operations, no revenues, no members but a lot of known and unknown liabilities which means that Chapter 11 is not an option.

First, MCA is the legal owner of equipment, furniture and other assets on the premises since May 1 under the terms of the terminated lease (Clauses 8(B) and 16). According to MCA’s lawyers this includes licenses, trademarks, member lists and other intangibles. It also has possession and control of all the equipment. There is no stopping it from utilizing the equipment. If MCA is allowing TMCC to stop it from using the equipment in some way either now or through the threat of bankruptcy, that makes no sense. It also means that whatever legal advice they are receiving is questionable. The overseeing bankruptcy trustee, who is always an accountant, will easily realize MCA’s position and priority over all other unsecured creditors.

The only parties ranking ahead of MCA are the equipment lessors who have filed no less than 11 liens on the equipment which we did not know until after the TMCC terminated the lease. For those lessors whose equipment MCA chooses to retain, MCA will negotiate the lease assignment with them to take over the leases. The Transition Committee highlighted this as a top priority more than 2 months ago. The lessors will be keen to do this as they’ll move from a lessee who is unable to make the payments to one who is willing to. All of this is used equipment, much of it several years old, so the lessors will be happy to have a new lessee paying for it. There was room for the MCA to negotiate better rates in April but that ship has sailed.

FYI there are 3 basic groups of leased equipment:

1. Greenkeeping equipment. We want these leases.

2. Golf carts and GPS systems. If we aren’t operating the courses (which we shouldn’t do until a qualified lessee is signed), we don’t need them. But they are an in-demand item so if we are able to make a deal with an operator this will be a desirable asset.

3. 200 banquet chairs and 4 printer/scanners. Yes, TMCC leased banquet chairs for the clubhouse. We don’t need these and TMCC can deal with the lessors who will reclaim their assets.

There may be certain assets like licenses that would be easier to transfer with TMCC’s cooperation, but ultimately this can’t be held as leverage by TMCC if they are in Chapter 7 bankruptcy. The liquor license is already assignable under state law anyway. The overseeing accountant will get it figured out.

And things are more complicated if MCA chooses to re-open the courses and needs to do a LOT more than just maintain the courses. But MCA should be leaving the courses closed and just doing minimal maintenance. Opening the courses will cost MCA homeowners an extra $300,000 per month over the remainder of the year. RE-opening the courses is a lot more complicated and a lot more expensive. DON’T DO IT!

Also, the TMCC, an insolvent company threatening bankruptcy to intimidate our board, is wanting the MCA to indemnify the company and its directors. This is insane and would be irresponsible of the MCA to do so. I don’t care what the MCA lawyers say. It’s a very bad decision if the board agrees. Why does the TMCC want indemnifications? In 27 years of doing this work, I have never seen a bankrupt company receive indemnifications from another company that acquires its assets.

To recap: all the equipment necessary to maintain the facilities does rightfully belong to MCA (or will readily become leased by MCA) and MCA has possession of all of the equipment (again taking over the leases should have already happened long ago and is easier to achieve with TMCC in Chapter 7). MCA has all the capability and equipment it needs to maintain the facilities. Anyone who believes or says otherwise is misinformed or deliberately misleading.

If by some fluke we are short some equipment, Palm Aire has one of their 2 courses shut down for the summer due to renovation and has offered to lend MCA equipment to help out a golfing neighbor.

Letting TMCC file for bankruptcy makes them the ongoing owners of what is estimated to be $500,000 to $600,000 of net unpaid liabilities and unknown legal risks on top of either operating the golf complex or even just minimally maintain the courses until a lessee is signed. I could see a scenario when the MCA could conceivably burn through $2M+ of funds between now and the end of the year. We have no budget for the sport complex. We have no cash flow forecast from the treasurer. We have no contingency plan if their gamble fails. The TMCC made those decisions and they can live with them. But, if MCA owns the risks, then it makes a lot more sense for someone to take a shot at legal claims because MCA has deep pockets (which are actually MCA homeowners’ pockets!).

It would take some months for the liquidation to be resolved. But it would not prevent MCA from possessing (it already does possess it) and using the equipment.

Richard Sommerfeld

Meadows resident since 2020


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15 responses to “Don’t PANIC over a potential TMCC bankruptcy filing”

  1. fuzzyf0a8cc9819 Avatar
    fuzzyf0a8cc9819

    Richard, As a recovering lawyer who as both an operating chapter 11 trustee and someone who  litigated often

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  2. Larry Logan Avatar
    Larry Logan

    Well say and completely accurate. MCA’s plan is ludicrous.

    Like

  3. buffnitty Avatar
    buffnitty

    Richard:

    Thank you, thank you, thank you. We have an MCA board of proven amatures

    Liked by 1 person

  4. stevenadiaz18 Avatar
    stevenadiaz18

    This is more about protecting the personal financial concerns of TMCC officers and directors over their prospective liability for decisions they made that ultimately caused the club to fail. They desperately held on to an outdated dream with insufficient regard for tax and other liabilities which is appears they were confident MCA would cover for them. Richard is right-what benefit does the MCA get from doing that—none! So our neighbors should take their hands out of our pockets for the cost of privileges they exercised at their own risk. Most of us did not enjoy any benefit for TMCC or its existence. All the noise has simply diverted MCA from doing what we needed to have done—getting a qualified independent expert consultant to guide MCA in its own interest towards an appropriate golf tenant and lease. It’s time for the MCA board to address its sole fiduciary obligation to the members and homeowners and stop putting the interests of a tiny number of selfish TMCC directors and officers ahead of our own independent and separate concerns. This is the problem with the MCA board as they look at the issue only from the vantage of TMCC—we must correct course or continue to fail.

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  5. Richard Garrett Avatar
    Richard Garrett

    well written and appreciated. The Board must fulfill its fiduciary responsibility to the residents

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    1. Bart Machaj Avatar
      Bart Machaj

      Many thanks for your valuable input. Much can be said about experience and your experience is a valuable asset to us all.

      Like

      1. William Avatar
        William

        Great info., Richard. Can this be presented to the Board on Friday? Can we just kick out them because they do not have the community’s best interests at heart; they have their own.

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  6. wastelandloudly754f253984 Avatar
    wastelandloudly754f253984

    Excellent presentation of the facts. Thank you Richard. Still, nobody from the MCA board is listening. Why is the board so preoccupied with the MCC situation. They don’t own an inch of the MCA property. Actually, they don’t own anything. To put it bluntly, MCC is trespassing on the MCA land and should be removed by force if necessary.

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    1. Website Admin Avatar

      The one thing they do own is their ability to NOT co-operate with the formal handover of assets under the lease terms, and they seem to be using it to great effect. As Richard notes there are some licenses etc that aren’t so straightforward to “possess” and it would be more difficult to re-open the courses without those things (like the Jonas course/club software and point of sale systems). But that problem is solved (leverage eliminated) if the MCA keeps the courses closed. That also allows the MCA to focus on getting expert help and finding an operator/investor partner.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. wastelandloudly754f253984 Avatar
        wastelandloudly754f253984

        Tanks for the explanation. Agree, keep the golf courses closed until we have something concrete to decide upon.

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      2. mitchw12 Avatar
        mitchw12

        When purchase was made the mca board.who had members of tmcc and were even tmcc board members then leased tmcc for 10$ !!

        The tmcc operated with no supervision or reconciliation of money that the same mca board approved and then initiated a Renaissance program that gave tmcc free unaccountable 600,000$ and proceeded to go bankrupt by their own decisions..

        seems they’re still trying to get away with something ..trying to hide from some liability of their actions

        ..time for district attorney to see if state city laws have been broken.. why else are the 5 ,6, tmcc board members fighting so hard to disrupt any program to move forward that would offer 4000 people here some relief from added strife in a world oppressed by ever increasing unimaginable uncertainty and danger

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  7. buffnitty Avatar
    buffnitty

    If the MCA board truly represents us shouldn’t they be the ones to sue TMCC directors to recover funds spent on misrepresented or hidden financials?

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    1. mitchw12 Avatar
      mitchw12

      exactly..just shows what type of people tmcc are that the interests and wellbeing of 4000 people /neighbors are meaningless to them and maybe guilty of more than poor management decisions.?.shameful..the only thing they needed to protect was their dignity and reputation not the lost assests of a failed business..move on

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  8. John Dolcetti Avatar
    John Dolcetti

    thanks for the great report.Hopefully the MCA board will take your advice.

    Like

  9. […] terminated further negotiations with the Meadows Country Club (TMCC), where do we go from here?  TMCC has threatened bankruptcy as leverage in its negotiations with the MCA.  TMCC held no cards in the negotiations which dragged out for 2 months and, we believe, distracted […]

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