Antioch Co. Litigation Trust v. Hardman

438 B.R. 598, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 113745, 2010 WL 4054384
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedOctober 14, 2010
DocketBankruptcy No. 3:08-bk-35741. No. 3:09-cv-00445
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 438 B.R. 598 (Antioch Co. Litigation Trust v. Hardman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Antioch Co. Litigation Trust v. Hardman, 438 B.R. 598, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 113745, 2010 WL 4054384 (S.D. Ohio 2010).

Opinion

*600 DECISION AND ENTRY: (1) AFFIRMING THE ORDER OF THE BANKRUPTCY COURT (Docs. 1-65, 1-66) (2) DENYING APPELLEES’ MOTION TO STRIKE (Doc. 17); (3) GRANTING APPELLEES’ MOTION FOR LEAVE (Doc. 17); (4) DENYING APPELLANTS’ REQUEST FOR SANCTIONS; AND (5) CLOSING THIS CASE

TIMOTHY S. BLACK, District Judge.

This case is an appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Ohio. Appellant, the Antioch Company Litigation Trust, W. Timothy Miller Trustee (hereinafter “Appellant”), appeals the Bankruptcy Court’s Decision Denying Appellant’s Motion to Enforce the Confirmation Order and Granting Appel-lees’ Motion to Abstain From A Decision. (Docs. 1-65, 1-66). This Court has jurisdiction to hear this appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158.

I. BACKGROUND

The Antioch Company (“Debtors”) was founded in 1926 and engaged in the business of selling scrap-booking supplies. (Doc. 1-8). The leadership of Debtors during the time in question consisted significantly of Lee Morgan, and his daughter, Asha Morgan Moran, who, over the span of years, served in various capacities as officers and directors of Debtors. (Id.) Also of great significance, Morgan and Moran allegedly served as fiduciaries of Debtor’s Employee Stock Ownership Plan (“ESOP”).

Beginning in 1979, Debtors were partially owned by the ESOP, which gave employees shares of the company according to their seniority. (Id.) In 2003, however, Debtors entered into a transaction (the “2003 ESOP Transaction”) that would eventually result in the Debtors being wholly owned by the ESOP. The 2003 ESOP Transaction, however, left Debtors in a difficult financial situation and eventually lead to Debtors filing voluntary petitions for relief under the Bankruptcy Code in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Ohio.

In January 2009, the Bankruptcy Court entered a Confirmation Order confirming Debtors’ Second Amended Joint Prepacked Plan of Reorganization of Debtors (“Confirmation Order”). (Doc. 1-42,1-43). Pursuant to the Confirmation Order, “Debtors and their Estates” retained certain claims against third-parties which the Plan termed “Litigation Claims and ... Business Litigation Claims.” (Doc. 1-42). According to the Confirmation Order and Plan, “[o]n the Effective Date, 1 the Debtors and their Estates shall cause the Litigation Claims to be contributed, transferred, and assigned to the Litigation Trust.” (Id.)

The Litigation Trust was established so that certain unpaid creditors would have “the possibility of meaningful recoveries” and that ESOP Participants “would have some possibility of distributions on their equity interests” if and when the Trustee prevailed in asserting the Litigation *601 Claims and collected on such judgments. (Doc. 5).

The Plan defines Litigation Claims as “claims, rights of action, suits or proceedings by any Debtor or Estate, whether in law or in equity, whether known or unknown, that any Debtor or Estate may hold against any person ... but excluding ... all Business Litigation Claims.” (Id.) Appellant contends that Litigation Claims include “any claims for breach of fiduciary duty, any claims arising with respect to the ESOP, or any other claims or causes of action assigned to the Litigation Trust.” (Id.)

The Confirmation Order also stated that ESOP Participants retained certain claims. Specifically, the Confirmation Order provides that:

[n]othing herein ... is intended to effectuate a transfer of any ESOT Participant Claims to the Litigation Trust or to any third-party. Such ESOT Participant Claims shall survive the entry of this Confirmation Order and will remain the sole and exclusive property of each such Holder of an ESOT Allocated Stock Interest^]
As used in this paragraph, “ESOT Participant Claims” means any and all claims, causes of action or rights of any Holder of an ESOT Allocated Stock Interest other than claims, causes of action or rights asserted derivatively by, through, or on behalf of the Debtors or their Estates.

(Doc. 1^12). In other words, any right the individual ESOP Participants possessed to assert derivative suits “by, through or on behalf of the Debtor[ ]” corporations were assets transferred or assigned to the Litigation Trust. However, the ESOP Participants retained all other claims as their “sole and exclusive property[.]” (Id.)

In March 2009, Bonnie Fish, Christopher Mino, Monica Lee Woosley, Lynda Hardman, all of whom were ESOP Participants, along with and Evolve Bank & Trust, Trustee of the ESOP (Fish, Mino, Woosley, Hardman and Evolve Bank are collectively referred to herein as the “Fish Plaintiffs”), filed suit (the “Fish Litigation”) in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois (“Illinois District Court”) on behalf of the ESOP, and against Greatbanc Trust Company (former Trustee of the ESOP at the time of the 2003 ESOP Transaction), Lee Morgan, Asha Morgan Moran and Chandra Attiken (collectively referred to as the “Fish Litigation Defendants”), alleging that the Fish Litigation Defendants breached fiduciary duties arising under ERISA and engaged in ERISA prohibited transactions. (Doc. 1-53).

In July 2009, Appellant filed a Motion in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Ohio purportedly seeking an order enforcing the Confirmation Order against the Fish Plaintiffs (“Motion to Enforce”). (Id.) Appellant argued that the claims asserted by the Fish Plaintiffs, while styled as ERISA claims, are in fact Litigation Claims that can only be pursued by the Litigation Trust. (Id.) The Motion to Enforce reaches this conclusion by arguing that Debtors, not the ESOP, were parties to the 2003 ESOP Transaction and because the Fish Plaintiffs pursue remedies allegedly not available under ERISA. (Id.) The Motion to Enforce requested an Order requiring that the Fish Plaintiffs “immediately dismiss the Fish Litigation, without prejudice, and to refrain from filing the same or similar claims in any other court.” (Id.)

Following the filing of Appellant’s Motion to Enforce, the Fish Litigation Defendants moved the Illinois District Court to hold the Fish Litigation “in abeyance until the United States Bankruptcy Court for *602 the Southern District of Ohio issues its ruling on a petition seeking enforcement of a Confirmation Order that would require the Plaintiffs to dismiss this case.” Fish v. Greatbanc Trust Co., No. 09 C 1668, 2009 WL 2515116, *1 (N.D.Ill., Aug.17, 2009).

In a Memorandum, the Illinois District Court stated that it “contemplates the likely denial of the Motion to hold this action in abeyance” because, essentially, “more is needed to justify what the trustee is seeking to do — and as indicated at the outset, that justification should be made before this Court rather than being tendered solely to the Bankruptcy Court in Ohio.” Id.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
438 B.R. 598, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 113745, 2010 WL 4054384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/antioch-co-litigation-trust-v-hardman-ohsd-2010.