Independent Examiner in FTX Bankruptcy Case
Firm Serves as Counsel to the Examiner
Recently, in Gupta v. Quincy Medical Center, 858 F.3d 657 (1st Cir. 2017), the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit clarified the limits of the bankruptcy courts’ subject-matter jurisdiction over civil proceedings. The decision, authored by Judge Lipez and joined by retired Supreme Court Justice David Souter (sitting by designation), provides a thorough analysis of the bankruptcy courts’ jurisdiction in such cases.
The decision hinges on the Court’s interpretation of 28 U.S.C. § 1334, the foundation of the bankruptcy courts’ jurisdiction. Under § 1334(a), the bankruptcy courts (via referral from the district courts) have original jurisdiction over petitions for relief under the Bankruptcy Code. Under § 1334(b), the bankruptcy courts have jurisdiction over other civil proceedings “arising under,” “arising in,” or “related to” cases filed under the Code. In Gupta, the First Circuit wrestled with the bankruptcy courts’ jurisdiction under § 1334(b).
Gupta involves claims for severance payments by former senior executives of the debtor, a hospital in the Boston suburbs. Shortly after filing its chapter 11 petition, the debtor sold its assets in a 363 sale. The asset purchase agreement (APA) obligated the purchaser to make severance payments to employees who were terminated after the sale.
The order approving the 363 sale provided that the bankruptcy court would retain jurisdiction over any disputes arising under or related to the sale contract. The debtor’s plan and the confirmation order also each provided that the bankruptcy court would retain exclusive jurisdiction to enforce orders providing for the sale of the debtor’s property.
Immediately after the sale closed, the purchaser terminated the executives. The executives sought an order from the bankruptcy court requiring payment of severance, as provided in the APA. The bankruptcy court held it had jurisdiction over the executives’ claims, emphasizing the retention of jurisdiction provisions in the sale order, plan, and confirmation order. After an evidentiary hearing, the bankruptcy court entered an order finding the purchaser liable to the executives for the severance pay.
The Court of Appeals held that the bankruptcy court’s jurisdictional analysis was wrong. The First Circuit agreed that the bankruptcy courts (like all federal courts) retain jurisdiction over the interpretation and enforcement of their prior orders, but stressed that “a bankruptcy court may not ‘retain’ jurisdiction it never had—i.e., over matters that do not fall within § 1334’s statutory grant.” Thus, if the bankruptcy court never had jurisdiction over the executives’ claims in the first place, the fact that the sale order, plan, and confirmation order purported to “retain” that jurisdiction was irrelevant.
In conducting its analysis, the bankruptcy court had never analyzed whether it purported to have “arising under,” “arising in,” or “related to” jurisdiction under § 1334(b). On appeal, the First Circuit undertook that analysis.
The First Circuit quickly rejected “arising under” jurisdiction (which exists where the Bankruptcy Code itself creates the cause of action) because Massachusetts contract law—not the Code—created the executives’ claims for severance pay.
Likewise, the Court rejected “related to” jurisdiction, which concerns claims that potentially may have an effect on the bankruptcy estate. The executives’ claims for severance pay against the purchaser, the Court of Appeals reasoned, could not conceivably impact the debtor’s estate.
The only remaining possibility was “arising in” jurisdiction. But the Court found that lacking, as well. The Court rejected the executives’ argument that the bankruptcy court had “arising in” jurisdiction because, but-for the existence of the debtor’s bankruptcy, their severance pay claims would not exist. It is not enough, the Court held, that a claim arose in the context of a bankruptcy case; in doing so, the Court specifically rejected the executives’ reliance on a “but for” test. Rather, the Court held, “for ‘arising in’ jurisdiction to apply, the relevant proceeding must have no existence outside of the bankruptcy context.” In other words, “the fundamental question is whether the proceeding by its nature, not its particular factual circumstance, could arise only in the context of a bankruptcy case.” (emphasis in original) This standard, the Court concluded, was not met: the executives’ claims as “essentially employment disputes” based on state contract law, and thus “look like [claims] that could have arisen entirely outside the bankruptcy context.”
It is no doubt tempting for practitioners and bankruptcy courts to include retention of jurisdiction clauses into orders resolving disputes in bankruptcy litigation. Gupta, however, suggests that such clauses might not be reflexively followed and that the jurisdictional foundation of the bankruptcy courts’ rulings in civil proceedings may be subjected to scrutiny.
Most everyone who has been around the business and legal worlds for even a little while is familiar with the clawback by bankruptcy trustees of money that was paid by the debtor to creditors on the eve of bankruptcy. We bankruptcy lawyers know this as the avoidance of preferential payments under Section 547 of the Bankruptcy Code. Good credit and collection folks at our clients have developed an aversion to the word “preference” because they think the Code was deliberately designed to punish the diligent and reward the lazy (and, in a sense, they’re right).
Far less familiar, even to many lawyers, is the risk of avoidance of a preferential transfer of property other than money. Section 547(b) of the Code targets “any transfer of an interest of the debtor in property” that is made “for or on account of an antecedent debt” and satisfies the other criteria of subsection (b) and is not protected by one of the defenses provided in subsection (c). “Property” is far broader than money and can include virtually anything.
So when is property other than money transferred “for or on account of an antecedent debt” that could be at risk of avoidance in the event of a bankruptcy? Here are two examples:
(1) B Company and S Company enter into an asset acquisition agreement pursuant to which, at closing, B Co. will purchase an asset from S Co. At the time of the signing of the agreement, B Co. makes a down payment of 50% of the agreed price and is obligated to pay the balance at the closing. The down payment creates a debt of S Co. that is intended to be satisfied at the closing by the transfer of the asset to B Co. When the closing occurs at some time thereafter and the asset is conveyed to B Co., a transfer on account of an antecedent debt has occurred (to the extent of the down payment) that is at risk of avoidance in a subsequent bankruptcy of S Co.
(2) S Corp., a widget wholesaler, sells a large quantity of widgets to B Corp., a retailer, on 30-day credit. On the payment date, B Corp. is unable to pay, so B Corp. and S Corp. agree that B Corp. will return the widgets to S Corp. for a credit against the unpaid price. The return of goods for credit against the account payable for those goods is a transfer of property on account of an antecedent debt that is at risk of avoidance in a subsequent bankruptcy of S Corp.[1]
An example of the first kind of transaction is found in Thompson v. McMaster (In re Fritz-Mair Manufacturing Co.), 16 B.R. 417 (Bankr. N.D. Tex. 1982), in which the defendant prepaid the debtor for an oil-field pump jack, the subsequent delivery of which the bankruptcy trustee attacked as a voidable preference. The defendant escaped with its pump jack, but only after proving at trial that it was protected by one of the defenses provided in Section 547(c). In Danning v. Bozek (In re Bullion Reserve of North America), 836 F.2d 1214 (9th Cir.), cert. den. 486 U.S. 1056 (1988), the defendant was not so fortunate. The defendant thought that he had purchased gold bullion from the debtor in exchange for a simultaneous payment of the cash purchase price long before bankruptcy. However, due to the debtor’s fraud, the bullion was not acquired and delivered to the defendant until shortly before the commencement of the debtor’s bankruptcy case, and the defendant’s payment for the bullion had in fact been a prepayment. The delivery of the bullion to the defendant was a transfer on account of an antecedent debt that had arisen at the time of the defendant’s prepayment to the debtor to which none of the defenses provided in subsection (c) applied, and the defendant was out of luck.
A return-of-goods preference is illustrated in Active Wear, Inc. v. Parkdale Mills, Inc., 331 B.R. 669 (W.D. Va. 2005), in which the debtor returned a large quantity of yarn it couldn’t pay for to the defendant, its supplier, shortly before bankruptcy. The defendant’s liability was open-and-shut, and the only thing worth fighting over with the trustee was the amount of damages.[2]
The risk of avoidance of the conveyance of assets at the closing of a purchase (and related risks arising from transacting with a financially troubled counterparty) can be greatly reduced by careful transaction planning and document drafting, and the risk of avoidance of a return of goods can be controlled by measures taken at the time of the initial extension of credit and delivery of the goods or, much less effectively and certainly, at the time of the return of the goods. Inattention to these risks until the trustee serves his summons and complaint is likely to result in litigation risk and expense that could have been prevented or substantially diminished.
[1] Section 546(c) of the Bankruptcy Code creates a safe harbor of limited value for goods that are recovered pursuant to a reclamation notice that meets the conditions of that subsection and non-bankruptcy commercial law. Other longstanding bankruptcy principles exempt a return of goods that are the seller’s collateral securing a fully secured debt.
[2] The same outcome generally prevailed under the old Bankruptcy Act that was replaced in 1978. Marks v. Goodyear Rubber Sundries, Inc. (In re M&R Plastic Co.), 238 F.2d 533 (2d. Cir. 1956)
Bankruptcy Judge Mary Kay Vyskocil recently granted chapter 15 recognition to a Russian insolvency case over objections that the foreign representative had engaged in wrongdoing. In re Poymanov, 2017 Bankr. LEXIS 2130 (S.D.N.Y. Bankr. July 31, 2017). Judge Vyskocil held that the evidence did not support the allegations of impropriety and that recognition of the Russian case as a foreign main proceeding would not violate US public policy.
Background
Serge Petrovich Poymanov (“Poymanov”) is a Russian citizen and was majority owner of Pavlovskgranit (“P-Granite”), a producer of granite. A wholly owned subsidiary, Pavlovskgranit-Invest (“P-Invest”), signed a credit agreement with Sberbank of Russia to borrow up to RUB 5.1 billion. Poymanov used the funds to buy the remaining shares of P-Granite. P-Granite also borrowed RUB 1.39 billion from Sberbank.
P-Granite and P-Invest later defaulted. Sberbank Capital accelerated the debt, sought full payment, and filed insolvency cases against both P-Granite and P-Invest in Moscow. Suintex Limited, a creditor, filed an action to have Poymanov recognized as insolvent under Russian bankruptcy law (the “Russian Insolvency Proceeding”).
Last November, another company, PPF Management LLC (“PPF”), filed a lawsuit in the Southern District of New York (the “New York Action”) against 22 defendants, including Sberbank, Suintex, the petitioner, and a receiver appointed to oversee the estate of P-Invest. PPF asserted that it had been assigned the claims by Poymanov and his wife. The suit alleged that the defendants had conspired to eliminate P-Granite and seize its assets, which is known in Russia as a “reiderstvo.”
In March, the bankruptcy administrator in the Russian Insolvency Proceeding, Alekseyev Vladimirovich Bazarnov (the “Foreign Representative” or “Petitioner”), filed the chapter 15 case to seek recognition of the Russian Insolvency Proceeding as a foreign main proceeding. The Petitioner also sought a stay of the New York Action, asserting that the claims belonged to Poymanov and should be pursued by the Petitioner. PPF Management opposed the relief sought.
The Decision
Judge Vyskocil held a two-day evidentiary hearing and recently issued an opinion granting recognition. Her decision first analyzed if she had jurisdiction over the chapter 15 case. Bankruptcy Code section 109 provides that only an entity that has a residence, domicile, or property in the United States, or a municipality, can be a debtor. Judge Vyskocil ruled that section 109 was satisfied because the Petitioner had transferred funds to an attorneys’ trust account in New York. Those funds, Judge Vyskocil found, were property that belonged to Poymanov.
Judge Vyskocil also ruled that the Russian Insolvency Proceeding merited recognition as foreign main proceeding under Bankruptcy Code section 1517. First, Russia was the debtor’s “center of its main interests.” Second, the Foreign Representative was a person or body duly appointed and recognized by the Russian court to administrator and reorganize or liquidate the debtor’s assets. Finally, the Petitioner submitted sufficient documentary evidence to support the chapter 15 petition.
But PPF argued that recognition should be denied because doing so would violate public policy, citing Bankruptcy Code section 1506. The public policy exception applies only if the relief sought is “manifestly” contrary to US public policy. This test is narrowly construed and applies only under circumstances that conflict with fundamental policies of the United States. In re Poymanov, 2017 Bankr. LEXIS 2130 at *33-34.
PPF asserted that the Petitioner concealed certain agreements, failed to conduct proper due diligence on the source of certain payments, the Petitioner’s wire transfer of the retainer payment constituted circumstantial evidence of illegal activity, the Petitioner had conflicts of interest, and the Russian bankruptcy was part of a corporate raiding scheme. After considering the evidence, however, Judge Vyskocil held that the allegations lacked merit and that the public policy exception would not be applied.
Finally, the Petitioner asked Judge Vyskocil to stay the New York Action. Upon recognition of a foreign proceeding in a chapter 15 case, the automatic stay in Bankruptcy Code section 362 applies to the debtor and property of the debtor located in the United States. See U.S.C. § 1520. The Petitioner argued that the assignment of the claims was not valid and that at least a portion of the claims brought in the New York Action belonged to Poymanov.
At issue in the Russian Insolvency Proceeding was whether the assignment of the claims in the New York Action was proper under Russian law. Judge Vyskocil said she would decide if the stay applies to the New York Action after the Russian court issues its decision concerning the assignment. In the meantime, Judge Vyskocil said, if PPF proceeds with the New York Action, it would do so “at its peril.” In re Poymanov, 2017 Bankr. LEXIS 2130 at *43.
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