Advisory Com v. Sommers

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 3, 1997
Docket96-20694
StatusPublished

This text of Advisory Com v. Sommers (Advisory Com v. Sommers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Advisory Com v. Sommers, (5th Cir. 1997).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals,

Fifth Circuit.

No. 96-20694.

In the Matter of ADVISORY COMMITTEE OF MAJOR FUNDING CORPORATION, Debtor.

ADVISORY COMMITTEE OF MAJOR FUNDING CORPORATION, Appellant,

v.

Ronald J. SOMMERS, Appellee.

April 3, 1997.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas.

Before JOLLY, JONES and WIENER, Circuit Judges.

E. GRADY JOLLY, Circuit Judge:

This appeal presents a question of the interpretation of a bankruptcy reorganization plan, that

establishes and empowers a postconfirmation advisory committee. The only question presented is

whether the reorganization plan allows the advisory committee to hire an attorney. To answer this

question, we are required t o interpret 11 U.S.C. § 1103, which was incorporated as a term of the

reorganization plan. We hold that under section 1103, which speaks of the powers and duties of

creditors' committees, it makes no sense at all to define separately powers and duties. Instead,

powers and duties are intertwined and must be interpreted to allow the trustee effectively to carry out

the duties with which he is charged under the statute. Therefore, the advisory committee is entitled

under the plan to hire counsel if approved by the court.

I

Major Funding Corporation, a business engaged in the sale of home improvement loans as a

retirement investment, filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition in 1987. The company's bankruptcy

left approximately fifteen hundred investors holding claims totaling roughly $50 million. The

appellee, Ron Sommers, was appointed as the Chapter 11 trustee.

In 1991, the bankruptcy court confirmed the trustee's proposed Second Amended Plan of

Reorganization (the "Plan") and an accompanying Liquidating Trust Agreement (the "Trust Agreement"). These documents provided for the liquidation of the company's assets, and the

formation of a Liquidation Trust (the "Trust"), from which distributions to creditors would be paid.

Under the Plan, Sommers was again appointed as trustee to oversee the liquidation, and was given

"all the powers and duties [of a trustee] under § 1104 of the Bankruptcy Code."1

The Plan also established a postconfirmation "Advisory Committee." The Plan provided that

the Advisory Committee

shall be formed to carry out duties under 11 U.S.C. § 1103 and to advise and consult with the trustee on postconfirmation operations and expenses pursuant to the Plan of Reorganization and the Liquidating Trust.

In addition to advising the trustee, the Advisory Committee was given the power to veto the

sale or purchase of assets. If the committee vetoed an asset transaction, the Trustee could petition

the bankruptcy court to approve the transaction.

The Plan also provided:

The reasonable costs and expenses of the advisory committee relating solely to their duties under the Plan shall be treated as post-conformation administrative expenses and shall be submitted to the Trustee on a monthly basis for payment from the contingency reserve fund.

The Advisory Committee maintains that it discovered gross overspending by the Trustee in

his management of the Trust. The Advisory Committee contends that it "provided the Trustee with

written reports documenting these runaway expense levels, as well as other managerial deficiencies....

The Committee has also met with the Trustee to implore him to reduce expenses." Because these

meetings have failed to produce results acceptable to the Advisory Committee, the Committee

contends that to fulfill its obligations under the Plan, it must "retain counsel to negotiate with the

Trustee, and if necessary, file appropriate motions either to require the Trustee to implement the

Committee's recommendations or to seek his termination."

The Advisory Committee sought the bankruptcy court's permission to hire an attorney who

would be paid by the Trust. The Advisory Committee believed it had the authority to hire an

attorney, because the Plan gave the it all the duties under section 1103 of the bankruptcy code.

1 Although the Plan incorporates section 1104 of the Code, it probably intended to incorporate section 1106, which establishes the "Duties of trustee and examiner." Section 1104 merely governs the appointment of a trustee, without establishing the trustee's powers or duties. Section (a) of that section provides that a committee may hire an attorney to perform needed services.

The Trustee opposed the motion, and after a hearing, the bankruptcy court refused to allow

counsel to be paid by the Trust. The court refused on the grounds that

[t]he Plan expressly gives the Advisory Committee the duties of 11 U.S.C. § 1103, but not the powers, and this language is unambiguous, especially as compared with the express language of the Plan giving [The Trustee] the "powers and duties" under 11 U.S.C. § 1104.

Thus, the bankruptcy court interpreted the Plan only partially to incorporate the provisions

of section 1103: t he Plan truncated from its terms any and all powers provided in § 1103. As

relevant to this appeal, the bankruptcy court apparently interpreted section 1103(a) as providing a

power to hire an attorney, but not imposing a duty to do so. Consequently, the Plan gave this

Advisory Committee no power to hire an attorney, notwithstanding that a duty for the Advisory

Committee to hire an attorney might arise under other provisions of the plan, including section

1103—an odd result to be sure.

After a motion for reconsideration was denied, the Advisory Committee filed an appeal with

the district court. The district court affirmed the bankruptcy court's order without issuing an opinion.

The Advisory Committee then appealed to this court.

II

This appeal only involves questions of law, and, therefore, this court's review is de novo.2

The only question on appeal is whether the Plan that established the Advisory Committee allows the

Committee to hire counsel, at the Fund's expense, to investigate alleged misconduct by the Trustee.

We hold that under the Plan, the Committee had the duty to petition the bankruptcy court to hire an

attorney, to investigate and prosecute the alleged mishandling of the trust. Because such a duty

existed, if the bankruptcy court finds that an attorney is needed, the attorney should be paid out of

the Trust's contingency reserve fund, as provided by the Plan.

III

This case primarily involves a question of contractual interpretation; the postconfirmation

creditors' committee is a creature of contract. Its powers and duties are derived solely from the Plan.

2 Matter of Killebrew, 888 F.2d 1516, 1519 (5th Cir.1989). We interpret the Plan, using traditional tools of contractual interpretations, to determ ine the

responsibilities and powers of the Advisory Committee. Nevertheless, because the contract

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