SEC 174 Settlement Order
SEC 174 Settlement Order
SEC 174 Settlement Order
Defendants.
Alysson Mills, in her capacity as the court-appointed receiver (the “Receiver”) for Arthur
Lamar Adams (“Adams”) and Madison Timber Properties, LLC (“Madison Timber”), through
undersigned counsel, respectfully files this Motion for Approval of Proposed Settlement with
First Valley National Corp. and its wholly owned subsidiary First National Bank of Clarksdale
1.
In exchange for the Receiver’s release of any claims against FNBC arising from FNBC’s
alleged role in the Madison Timber Ponzi scheme (which FNBC denies) and a channeling
injunction, FNBC agrees to make a cash payment of $4,000,000.00 to the Receiver and to
provide the Receiver with a 60 day “Tender Period” from the “Effective Date” of the Settlement
Agreement during which the Receiver may satisfy all outstanding loans by FNBC to Oxford
1
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Springs, LLC (“Oxford Springs”), on which $4,552,113 is currently owed, by making a lump
2.
The value of the proposed settlement to the Receivership Estate is far greater than the
$4,000,000.00 cash payment by FNBC and the 60 day “Tender Period” within which the
Receiver may satisfy all outstanding loans by FNBC to Oxford Springs, on which $4,552,113 is
Receivership Estate’s owning a 100% interest in Oxford Springs and retaining all of the proceeds
3.
The Receiver takes seriously her obligation to maximize the value of the Receivership
Estate’s claims against third parties, and if she does not finalize a settlement with FNBC on the
proposed terms, she will file a lawsuit to pursue the Receivership Estate’s claims. But the
Receiver believes the proposed settlement is preferable to a lawsuit under the circumstances.
Settlement now avoids the likelihood of drawn-out litigation and the risk of adverse rulings and
4.
The Receiver is also mindful that the proposed settlement with FNBC is the first with a
party who was not a recruiter for Madison Timber. The Receivership Estate has many claims,
filed and to-be-filed, against third parties. The Receiver appreciates FNBC’s cooperation in
reaching an early resolution that results in a substantial benefit to the Receivership Estate.
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5.
The proposed Settlement Agreement [Exhibit A] provides that FNBC’s cash payment of
$4,000,000.00 to the Receiver, together with the 60 day “Tender Period” in which the Receiver
will have the option to satisfy all outstanding loans from FNBC to Oxford Springs, on which
$4,552,113 is currently owed, will allow the Receivership Estate to satisfy all outstanding debt of
Oxford Springs and achieve 100% ownership of Oxford Springs. The accompanying
6.
sometimes called a “bar order,” which would bar any person or non-regulatory entity1 from
separately asserting claims against FNBC arising out of, in connection with, or relating to
FNBC’s banking relationship with Adams and/or Madison Timber and any role that FNBC may
be alleged to have had in the Madison Timber Ponzi scheme (which FNBC denies). Those
7.
The Receiver is mindful that victims of the Madison Timber Ponzi scheme, as the
ultimate beneficiaries of the Receivership Estate, have a substantial interest in the Receivership
Estate’s claim against FNBC and the proposed resolution of it. The Receiver believes it
appropriate to allow interested parties an opportunity to be heard before the proposed settlement
is approved. The Receiver thus proposes notice and hearing as described in the accompanying
memorandum and set forth in the proposed Order Setting Hearing [Exhibit C] to give victims
1
To be clear, the U.S. Attorney’s Office, the F.B.I., the S.E.C., and the Mississippi Secretary of State,
among other law enforcement bodies, are not affected by the proposed settlement. The Receiver does not
purport to recommend any settlement that would interfere with their separate work.
3
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and interested parties a full and fair opportunity to be heard. The Receiver believes the proposed
notice and hearing is efficient and desirable under the circumstances, given the particular
interests at stake.
______________________
WHEREFORE, for the reasons stated here and in the accompanying memorandum, the
Receiver respectfully requests that the Court enter the proposed Order Setting Hearing so that the
proposed settlement may be presented and, if the Court agrees after notice and hearing,
approved.
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CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I certify that I electronically filed the foregoing with the Clerk of Court using the ECF
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Defendants.
EXHIBIT B
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Before the Court is the Motion for Approval of Proposed Settlement with First Valley
National Corp. and its wholly owned subsidiary First National Bank of Clarksdale (“FNBC”)
filed by Alysson Mills, in her capacity as the court-appointed receiver (the “Receiver”) for
Arthur Lamar Adams (“Adams”) and Madison Timber Properties, LLC (“Madison Timber”).
The motion asks the Court to approve the Receiver’s proposed settlement with FNBC. In
exchange for the Receiver’s and Receivership Estate’s release of any claims against FNBC
arising from FNBC’s banking relationship with Adams and Madison Timber and any role that
FNBC may be alleged to have had in the Madison Timber Ponzi scheme (which FNBC denies)
and a channeling injunction, FNBC agrees to make a cash payment of $4,000,000.00 to the
Receiver and provide the Receiver with a 60 day “Tender Period” from the “Effective Date” of
the Settlement Agreement within which the Receiver may satisfy all outstanding loans by FNBC
to Oxford Springs, LLC (“Oxford Springs”), on which $4,552,113 is currently owed, by making
After notice and hearing, and after having considered the filings and arguments of
BACKGROUND
The Receiver has a duty “to take custody, control, and possession of all Receivership
Property, Receivership Records, and any assets traceable to assets owned by the Receivership
Estate” and to investigate and “bring such legal actions based on law or equity in any state,
federal or foreign court as the Receiver deems necessary or appropriate in discharging her duties
as Receiver.”1
1
Docket No. 33, Securities & Exchange Commission vs. Adams, et al., No. 3:18-cv-252 (S.D. Miss).
EXHIBIT B
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Oxford Springs
Oxford Springs is a Delaware limited liability company formed in 2014. Its sole asset is
the property with the intent to develop an upscale neighborhood with an equestrian park and golf
course near Oxford, Mississippi. There has been no actual development on the property.
The Receivership Estate owns Adams’s 47.5% interest in Oxford Springs. Of the
remaining interests, Patrick Sands owns 47.5% and Mike Billings owns 5%.
FNBC
FNBC holds two deeds of trust over Oxford Springs’s property. Oxford Springs
purchased the property in two separate transactions and for each obtained a loan from FNBC:
Oxford Springs purchased the first approximately 2,300 acres (“Parcel 1”) on April 29,
2015 for $5,158,031.54. In connection with that purchase, it borrowed $4,224,812 from FNBC,
and FNBC obtained a deed of trust over the approximately 2,300 acres as well as personal
Oxford Springs purchased the additional approximately 100 acres (“Parcel 2”) on
September 23, 2016 for $1,000,000. In connection with that purchase, it borrowed $1,000,000
from FNBC, and FNBC obtained a deed of trust over the approximately 100 acres as well as
FNBC’s loans to Oxford Springs are cross-collateralized, and the current total balance is
$4,552,113.
EXHIBIT B
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Attempted sale
Oxford Springs entered a contract to sell Parcels 1 and 2 earlier this year. That sale failed
after the buyer declined to purchase Parcel 2 and sought to adjust the purchase price accordingly.
Oxford Springs could have sold only Parcel 1 to the buyer, but after paying off FNBC’s loans
and other debts and dividing what remained among Oxford Springs’s members, the Receivership
Estate would have received little, if any, proceeds from the sale. The Receiver refused to sell
The failed sale caused the Receiver’s counsel to reassess the Receivership Estate’s
options. Oxford Springs’s property is valuable and can be sold for several millions of dollars, but
no sale will meaningfully benefit the Receivership Estate so long as it must first pay off FNBC
and Oxford Springs’s other members. To maximize Oxford Springs’s value to the Receivership
Estate, the Receiver’s counsel devised a plan to own 100% of Oxford Springs and to sell its
Separately, FNBC was one of Madison Timber’s multiple banks and is a likely defendant
in a lawsuit by the Receivership Estate. The Receiver presented FNBC with a draft complaint
asserting claims arising from FNBC’s banking relationship with Adams and Madison Timber
and any role that FNBC may be alleged to have had in the Madison Timber Ponzi scheme (which
FNBC denies).
the Receiver and provide the Receiver with a 60 day “Tender Period” from the “Effective Date”
of the Settlement Agreement within which the Receiver may satisfy all outstanding loans by
EXHIBIT B
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FNBC to Oxford Springs, on which $4,552,113 is currently owed, by making a lump sum
payment of $4,000,000.00 to FNBC in exchange for the Receiver’s release of any claims against
FNBC arising from FNBC’s banking relationship with Adams and Madison Timber and any role
that FNBC may be alleged to have had in the Madison Timber Ponzi scheme (which FNBC
Sands owns a 47.5% interest in Oxford Springs and is a guarantor of FNBC’s two loans
to Oxford Springs.
Separately, Sands was a Madison Timber investor and is a likely claimant of the
Receivership Estate to the extent he still holds outstanding Madison Timber promissory notes.
Sands agreed to convey to the Receivership Estate his 47.5% interest in Oxford Springs
and also release the Receivership Estate of any claim by him to amounts due under his
outstanding Madison Timber promissory notes in exchange for the Receiver’s obtaining from
FNBC a release of his guarantees of FNBC’s loans to Oxford Springs. Simultaneously with the
filing of her motion to approve her proposed settlement with FNBC, the Receiver filed a motion
Billings is a defendant in the lawsuit styled Alysson Mills v. Michael D. Billings, et al.,
No. 3:18-cv-679 (S.D. Miss.), in which the Receiver alleges he received millions of dollars in
“commissions” in exchange for his recruitment of new investors to Madison Timber. On July 9,
EXHIBIT B
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2019, the Receiver filed a motion for approval of a proposed settlement with Billings.2 As part
of that proposed settlement, Billings agreed to convey to the Receivership Estate his 5% interest
in Oxford Springs. As of this filing, the Court has not approved the proposed settlement.
Intended result
Through the proposed settlements with FNBC, Sands, and Billings, the Receivership
Estate will own 100% of Oxford Springs and can sell its property free and clear of Oxford
Springs’s debt to FNBC. The proceeds of a future sale will go entirely to the Receivership Estate.
The Receiver and FNBC have undertaken thoughtful negotiations and the Receiver
believes that settlement with FNBC is in the Receivership Estate’s best interest.
The Receiver advises the Court that FNBC was one of Madison Timber’s multiple banks
therefore the Receivership Estate has potentially substantial claims against FNBC arising from
FNBC’s banking relationship with Adams and Timber and any role that FNBC may be alleged to
have had in the Madison Timber Ponzi scheme (which FNBC denies). But the Receiver believes
the proposed settlement is preferable to a lawsuit under the circumstances. A lawsuit’s result is
never guaranteed. A lawsuit can take a long time to litigate to final judgment, and often a final
judgment is appealed. Settlement now avoids the likelihood of drawn-out litigation and the risk
of adverse rulings.
The Receiver also advises the Court that settlement now gives the Receivership Estate the
opportunity to sell a valuable piece of property and retain all of its proceeds. In exchange for a
release of the Receivership Estate’s claims against it and a channeling injunction, FNBC will
make a cash payment of $4,000,000.00 to the Receiver and provide the Receiver with a 60 day
2
Docket No. 59, Alysson Mills v. Michael D. Billings, et al., No. 3:18-cv-679 (S.D. Miss).
EXHIBIT B
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“Tender Period” from the “Effective Date” of the Settlement Agreement within which the
Receiver may satisfy all outstanding loans by FNBC to Oxford Springs, on which $4,552,113 is
currently owed, by making a lump sum payment of $4,000,000.00 to FNBC, but the value of the
proposed settlement to the Receivership Estate is far greater. The proposed settlement with
FNBC will result in Sands conveying his 47.5% interest in Oxford Springs to the Receivership
Estate; that conveyance, coupled with the anticipated conveyance of Billings’s 5% interest, will
ensure the Receivership Estate owns 100% of Oxford Springs. By allowing the Receivership
Estate to retain all of the proceeds of from the future sale of Oxford Springs’s property, the
proposed settlement represents a value to the Receivership Estate that far exceeds $4,552,113.
For all these reasons, the Receiver recommends settlement with FNBC on the proposed
called a “bar order,” which would bar any person or non-regulatory entity3 from separately
asserting claims against FNBC arising out of, in connection with, or relating to Adams and/or
Madison Timber. Those claims instead would be “channeled” through the Receivership Estate.
The Court, mindful that victims of the Madison Timber Ponzi scheme have a substantial
interest in the Receiver’s claims against FNBC and the proposed resolution of it, allowed
interested parties an opportunity to be heard before the proposed settlement was approved. The
Court entered an Order Setting Hearing, filed in the Court’s public record for the case styled
Securities & Exchange Commission vs. Adams, et al., No. 3:18-cv-252 (S.D. Miss). The Order
3
To be clear, the U.S. Attorney’s Office, the F.B.I., the S.E.C., and the Mississippi Secretary of State, among other
law enforcement bodies, are not affected by the proposed settlement. The Receiver does not purport to recommend
any settlement that would interfere with their separate work.
EXHIBIT B
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Setting Hearing instructed the Receiver to publicize the Order Setting Hearing, the proposed
Settlement Agreement, the proposed Order Approving Settlement, and instructions for
submitting comments or objections on her website and in any forthcoming Receiver’s Report.
Victims or other interested parties who wished to submit comments or objections were
advised to do so at least five days prior to the Court’s hearing, either by submitting the comments
or objections to the Court or to the Receiver, who submitted them to the Court. Victims or other
interested parties who wished to address the proposed settlement at the hearing were given an
opportunity to be speak.
The Court is satisfied that the notice and hearing provided gave victims and interested
parties a full and fair opportunity to be heard and gave the Court the benefit of their opinions as
the Court assessed the proposed settlement’s merits. The notice and hearing provided was
efficient and desirable under the circumstances, given the particular interests at stake.4
ORDER
After notice and hearing, and after having considered the filings and arguments of
counsel, the Court finds that the terms of the Settlement Agreement are adequate, fair,
reasonable, and equitable; and that a bar order is appropriate. The Settlement Agreement should
1. The terms used in this Order Approving Settlement that are defined in the
Settlement Agreement between the Receiver and FNBC, unless expressly otherwise defined
4
The Court takes no position on whether notice or hearing is appropriate prior to the Court’s approval of possible
future settlement with other parties.
EXHIBIT B
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2. This Court has “broad powers and wide discretion to determine the appropriate
relief in an equity receivership,” including the “inherent equitable authority to issue a variety of
‘ancillary relief’ measures in actions brought by the SEC to enforce the federal securities laws.”
S.E.C. v. Kaleta, 530 Fed. App’x 360, 362 (5th Cir. 2013) (Kaleta I) (quoting S.E.C. v. Wencke,
622 F.2d 1363, 1369 (9th Cir. 1980)). These “ancillary relief” measures include “injunctions to
stay proceedings by nonparties against the receivership” and “bar orders to secure settlements in
receivership proceedings and to ‘preserve the property placed in receivership pursuant to SEC
actions.’” S.E.C. v. Stanford Int’l Bank, Ltd., No. 3:09-cv-00298-N, 2017 WL 9989250, at *2
(N.D. Tex. Aug. 23, 2017) (quoting Kaleta I, 530 Fed. App’x at 362). See also Zacarias v.
Stanford Int’l Bank, Ltd., No. 17-11073, 2019 WL 3281687, at *9 (5th Cir. July 22, 2019)
(“Again, the receivership solves a collective-action problem among the Stanford entities’
defrauded creditors, all suffering losses in the same Ponzi scheme. It maximizes assets available
to them and facilitates an orderly and equitable distribution of those assets. . . . It was no abuse of
discretion for the district court to enter the bar orders to effectuate and preserve the coordinating
function of the receivership.”); see also id. at *8 (“The bar order functioned to channel investors’
recovery into the receivership distribution process and ‘did not interfere with or improperly
extinguish the [investors’] rights.’”) (quoting S.E.C. v. Stanford Int’l Bank, Ltd., 927 F.3d 830,
3. This Court has jurisdiction over the subject matter of this action, and the Receiver is
4. The notice provided by this Court in the Order Setting Hearing and by the Receiver
through her website and her Receiver’s Report was reasonably calculated, under the
circumstances, to apprise all interested parties, and in particular, victims of the Madison Timber
EXHIBIT B
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Ponzi scheme, of the Settlement Agreement and the releases and bar order provided therein. The
notice was also reasonably calculated, under the circumstances, to apprise all interested parties,
and in particular, victims of the Madison Timber Ponzi scheme, of their right to object to the
Settlement Agreement and the releases and bar order provided therein and to appear at the
hearing on the motion. The notice was adequate, sufficient, and the best notice practicable and
5. The Settlement Agreement was reached after a full investigation of the facts by the
Receiver. The Settlement Agreement was negotiated, proposed, and entered into between the
Receiver and FNBC in good faith and at arm’s length. The parties were well-represented and
competent to evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of all claims and defenses.
6. The value of the Settlement Agreement to the Receivership Estate is far greater than
the $4,000,000.00 cash payment that FNBC will make to the Receiver and the 60 day “Tender
Period” from the “Effective Date” of the Settlement Agreement within which the Receiver may
satisfy all outstanding loans by FNBC to Oxford Springs, on which $4,552,113 is currently
owed, by making a lump sum payment of $4,000,000.00 to FNBC Settlement Agreement will
result in the Receivership Estate’s owning a 100% interest in Oxford Springs and retaining all of
7. The bar order enjoining any person or non-regulatory entity5 from commencing or
prosecuting any causes of action against FNBC arising out of, in connection with, or relating in
any way arising out of or relating to FNBC’s banking relationship with Adams or Madison
5
To be clear, the U.S. Attorney’s Office, the F.B.I., the S.E.C., and the Mississippi Secretary of State, among other
law enforcement bodies, are not affected by the Settlement Agreement or Bar Order. The Court does not purport to
approve any settlement that would interfere with their separate work.
10
EXHIBIT B
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Timber of any investment in the Madison Timber Ponzi scheme is necessary and appropriate
ancillary relief to this settlement. See Kaleta I, 530 Fed. App’x at 362.
8. The parties and their counsel have at all times complied with the requirements of
9. The Court finds that the Settlement Agreement is, in all respects, fair, reasonable,
and adequate, and in the best interests of all parties claiming an interest in or asserting any claim
against FNBC or the Receivership Estate. The Court further finds that a bar order is a necessary
component to achieve the Settlement Agreement and to ensure maximum recovery to the
Receivership Estate.
10. The Settlement Agreement, the terms of which are fully set forth in the document
itself, is hereby fully and finally approved. The parties are directed to implement and
consummate the Settlement Agreement in accordance with its terms and with this Order
Approving Settlement.
11. The Court hereby permanently bars, restrains, and enjoins any person or non-
other proceeding, and/or asserting or prosecuting any claims or causes of action against FNBC
arising out of, in connection with, or relating in any way arising out of or relating to FNBC’s
banking relationship with Adams and/or Madison Timber, or any investment in the Madison
Timber Ponzi scheme. Such causes of action are instead channeled “into the receivership
12. Nothing in this Order Approving Settlement or the Settlement Agreement and no
admission or concession of any violation of any statute or law, of any fault, liability, or
11
EXHIBIT B
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wrongdoing, or of any infirmity in the claims or defenses of any party in any other proceeding by
13. FNBC shall deliver or cause to be delivered the Settlement Payment in accordance
14. Without in any way affecting the finality of this Order Approving Settlement, the
Court retains continuing and exclusive jurisdiction over the parties for the purposes of, among
Settlement Agreement, including, without limitation, the releases and bar order described in the
15. The Court expressly finds and determines, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil
Procedure 54(b), that there is no just reason for any delay in the entry of this Order Approving
Settlement, which is both final and appealable, and immediate entry by the Clerk of the Court is
expressly directed.
16. This Order Approving Settlement shall be filed in the Court’s public record and
shall be served by counsel for the Receiver, via email, first class mail or international delivery
service, on any person or entity that filed an objection to approval of the Settlement Agreement.
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EXHIBIT B