Stacking MCAs and Fraud Accusations After Default
When you stack a second, third, or fourth MCA on top of an existing one — and then default — the funder’s lawyer doesn’t just sue you for breach of contract. They sue you for fraud. And once fraud is on the table, everything changes. The personal guarantee gets harder to escape, bankruptcy stops being a clean exit, and in some cases, you’re looking at criminal referral.
This is the part most brokers won’t tell you when they’re selling you that 4th position.
Short answer: Stacking, by itself, is a breach of your MCA agreement. But when you stack and then default, the original funder will almost always allege fraud, because every MCA agreement has a representation that you won’t take on additional financing. The moment you signed the second MCA, you arguably made a false statement to the first funder. That’s the hook they use to pierce the personal guarantee, defeat bankruptcy discharge, and in some cases, refer you for criminal prosecution.
If you’ve stacked, and you’re behind, read every word of this before you talk to anyone.
What stacking actually is
Stacking is when you take a second MCA, while a first one is still outstanding. Most business owners don’t think of it as stacking. They think of it as, “I needed cash, and the first funder wouldn’t give me more, so I went to a second one.” That’s stacking. You don’t need to be on your fifth position for it to count. Two is stacking.
Every MCA agreement in the market has some version of this clause:
- You will not take on additional financing without the funder’s written consent
- You will not pledge your receivables to another party
- You will not enter into any agreement that interferes with the funder’s right to collect
The clause is called the anti-stacking provision, or the exclusivity clause, depending on the agreement. It is in every single MCA contract. Brokers know this. Funders know this. And they know you didn’t read it.
Why stacking turns into a fraud claim
Here’s where it gets serious. When you signed your first MCA, you made representations. One of them was that you wouldn’t take on additional financing. The moment you took the second MCA, you breached that representation. Under traditional contract law, that’s a breach. Annoying, but civil.
But — and this is the move funders’ lawyers make — they don’t sue you for breach. They sue you for fraudulent inducement. The argument goes like this:
- You knew, at the time you signed, that you intended to stack
- You made a false representation that you wouldn’t
- The funder relied on that representation when advancing the money
- You defaulted, the funder lost money, and that loss was caused by your fraud
If they can prove this, three things happen, and all of them are bad.
First, the personal guarantee becomes ironclad. Most personal guarantees in MCA agreements have language saying the guarantor is liable for any fraud, misrepresentation, or breach of the warranties. Fraud lights up that clause.
Second, bankruptcy stops working the way you think it does. Under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2), debts incurred through fraud are non-dischargeable in personal bankruptcy. So even if you file Chapter 7, the MCA debt — with the fraud judgment attached — follows you out the other side. You filed bankruptcy, lost the business, lost the assets, and you still owe the funder. This is the trap.
Third, in egregious cases, the funder refers it to a prosecutor. This is rare, but it happens. Wire fraud charges have been brought against business owners who submitted falsified bank statements to get additional MCAs while existing MCAs were outstanding. Once it’s criminal, the calculus is no longer about money.
What triggers a fraud accusation specifically
Not every stack turns into a fraud claim. The funders are looking for specific triggers, and if you’ve hit any of these, assume the fraud claim is coming:
- You submitted bank statements to the second funder that didn’t show the first MCA’s daily debits. Either the statements were doctored, or you opened a new bank account specifically to hide the debits. Either way, that’s the gun
- You signed a sworn statement, in the second MCA application, that you had no other outstanding advances
- You used a different entity name, a DBA, or a sister LLC, to apply for the second MCA, to avoid detection by the first funder
- You changed your payment processor, mid-deal, to redirect receivables away from the first funder
- You closed the bank account the first funder was debiting from, and opened a new one at a different bank, and didn’t tell them
Any one of these, and you’re not just a defaulting borrower anymore. You’re a fraud defendant. The funder’s lawyer will plead it that way in the complaint, because it gives them every leverage point they need.
What happens procedurally when fraud gets pleaded
When the funder files suit, they’ll typically file in New York, regardless of where your business is located. The MCA agreement has a forum selection clause that puts you in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, usually in a county like Nassau, or Erie, or Orange. You’ll be defending a lawsuit in a courtroom you’ve never been to, in front of a judge who sees thirty of these cases a week.
The complaint will have multiple counts. Breach of contract is the easy one. But the fraud count is the dangerous one. Here’s the order of what happens:
- The funder files the complaint, and along with it, an order to show cause for a confession of judgment, or in some states, an emergency restraining order against your bank accounts
- If you signed a confession of judgment (and most MCA agreements signed before 2019 had them, and many still do under different names), the judgment gets entered against you within days, without a hearing
- The funder gets a judgment that includes the full accelerated balance, default fees, attorney fees, and in fraud cases, often punitive damages
- The judgment gets domesticated in the state where you live, and where your business operates
- Bank levies, UCC enforcement, and asset seizure follow, sometimes within a week of the judgment
The fraud allegation isn’t decorative. It’s structural. It changes what the funder can take, what you can keep, and what bankruptcy can do for you.
What you can actually do if you’ve stacked and defaulted
Don’t talk to the funder’s collector. Don’t email them. Don’t try to “explain” what happened. Anything you say will end up in an affidavit attached to the fraud complaint. I’ve seen business owners hand the funder’s lawyer a confession, in writing, by email, while trying to negotiate.
Get a lawyer who has actually defended MCA cases. Not a general business litigator. Not your cousin who does real estate closings. Someone who has been in the New York Supreme Court on these specific cases, who knows the funders, who knows their counsel, and who understands the difference between a breach defense and a fraud defense. The settlement posture is completely different.
Pull every document you signed. Every MCA agreement, every bank statement you submitted, every email exchange with the broker. The fraud claim lives or dies on what you represented in writing, and what you knew at the time. If the broker submitted the bank statements without your review — and this happens constantly — that’s a defense. If you signed a sworn application that the broker filled out without your knowledge, that’s a defense. You need the paper.
Understand that bankruptcy is not the escape hatch you think it is, if fraud has been pleaded and proven. A § 523(a)(2) finding survives Chapter 7. You can still file, and you can still get rid of other debts, but the MCA debt with the fraud judgment will follow you. This is why you defend the fraud allegation hard, at the front end, before judgment, not after.
Settlement is almost always available, even with fraud pleaded, if you have a credible defense and counsel who knows how to use it. Funders want money, not litigation. The fraud count is leverage, not always a goal. A good defense lawyer will use the weaknesses in the funder’s fraud theory to negotiate the principal down, drop the fraud allegation in the settlement agreement, and structure a payment plan that doesn’t blow up your guarantee or your ability to file later if you have to.