Proportionate Responsibility Statute Does Not Apply to UFTA Claims
May 16, 2013Challenger Gaming Solutions made a loan to Mr. Earp. Shortly after the loan was made, the Earps settled an unrelated lawsuit for $1.1 million, with an initial payment to the Earps of $200,000. A few months later, Mr. Earp defaulted on his loan from Challenger, and the Earps divorced. Under the divorce decree, Mrs. Earp was awarded all the community assets, including the settlement proceeds, and Mr. Earp was ordered to assume all the couple’s debts. Challenger sued Mrs. Earp under the UFTA, contending that the transfer of settlement funds to Mrs. Earp constituted a fraudulent transfer. Mr. Earp was designated a responsible third party in Challenger’s suit. The jury found in favor of Challenger, but apportioned damages between the Earps. Challenger appealed.
The court of appeals held that the proportionate responsibility statute does not apply to UFTA claims because they do not lend themselves to a fault-allocation scheme. The focus of UFTA claims is to ensure the satisfaction of a creditor’s claim when the elements of a fraudulent transfer are proven. The UFTA allows recovery against the debtor, the transferee, or the person for whose benefit the transfer was made, but does not distinguish the forms of relief based on culpability. The court concluded that the proportionate responsibility statute conflicts with the liability scheme in the UFTA and cannot be reconciled. The court made Mrs. Earp liable for the entire award and affirmed the remainder of the trial court’s judgment.
Challenger Gaming Solutions, Inc. v. Earp, No. 05-11-01366-CV