ASHINC Corp. v. AMMC VII

683 F. App'x 131
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 23, 2017
Docket16-2206
StatusUnpublished

This text of 683 F. App'x 131 (ASHINC Corp. v. AMMC VII) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ASHINC Corp. v. AMMC VII, 683 F. App'x 131 (3d Cir. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION ***

MELLOY, Circuit Judge.

Appellants Yucaipa American Alliance Fund I, L.P., Yucaipa American Alliance (Parallel) Fund I, L.P., Yucaipa American *134 Alliance Fund II, L.P., and Yucaipa American Alliance (Parallel) Fund II, L.P. (together, “Yucaipa”) appeal the District Court’s order affirming the Bankruptcy Court’s order granting summary judgment for BDCM Opportunity Fund II, LP, Black Diamond CLO 2005-1 Ltd., and Spectrum Investment Partners (collectively, “BD/S”), Appellees. We will affirm.

I.

Allied Systems Holdings, Inc. (“Allied”) declared bankruptcy in 2005. 1 Allied emerged from that bankruptcy in 2007. Allied financed its emergence from bankruptcy by entering into various loan agreements. In 2012, Allied defaulted on one of those agreements, and a group of creditors filed an involuntary petition for bankruptcy against Allied in bankruptcy court. This appeal arises, from that involuntary bankruptcy and involves questions of contract interpretation regarding the rights of lenders under the loan agreement.

When Allied emerged from bankruptcy in 2007, Yucaipa became Allied’s majority shareholder with control over Allied’s board of directors. To finance Allied’s emergence from bankruptcy, Allied entered into the First Lien Credit Agreement (“Credit Agreement”). Pursuant to the Credit Agreement, Allied borrowed $265 million of First Lien Debt from numerous lenders. The First Lien Debt was comprised of: (1) $180 million of Term Loans; (2) a revolving credit facility of $85 million (“Revolving Loans”); and (3) a synthetic letter of credit facility of $50 million (“LC Commitments”). BD/S acquired First Lien Debt pursuant to the Credit Agreement. At the time of the motion for summary judgment in the Bankruptcy Court in the instant case, the outstanding First Lien Debt was $244,047,530.

Under the Credit Agreement, amendments required either the consent of the Requisite Lenders or the consent of all affected Lenders. Credit Agreement § 10.5. Consent of all affected Lenders was required only in certain situations listed in § 10.5(b), including if the amendment had the effect of “amending] the definition of ‘Requisite Lenders’ or ‘Pro Rata Share.’” Id. § 10.5(b)(ix). The Credit Agreement defined “Requisite Lenders” as “one or more Lenders having or holding Term Loan Exposure, LC Exposure and/or Revolving Exposure and representing more than 50% of the sum of (i) the aggregate Term Loan Exposure of all Lenders, (ii) the aggregate LC Exposure of all Lenders and (iii) the aggregate Revolving Exposure of all Lenders.” Credit Agreement § 1.1, “Pro Rata Share” means “(i) with respect to all payments, computations and other matters relating to the Term Loan of any Lender, the percentage obtained by dividing (a) the Term Loan Exposure of that Lender by (b) the aggregate Term Loan Exposure of all Lenders.” Id. Additionally, “Term Loan Exposure” means, “with respect to any Lender, as of any date of determination, the outstanding principal amount of the Term Loans of such. Lender....” Id.

Under the Credit Agreement, before it was amended, Yucaipa was prohibited from being assigned any debt. See id. (defining “Eligible Assignee” and expressly excluding the Sponsor, Yucaipa). Further, only original Lender signatories to the Credit Agreement and Eligible Assignees that subsequently become Lenders pursu *135 ant to an Assignment Agreement could act as Requisite Lenders. Id.

In April 2008, a majority of Lenders approved the Third Amendment 2 to the Credit Agreement, which allowed Yucaipa to acquire a limited amount of Term Loans. Specifically, the Third Amendment made Yucaipa a “Restricted Sponsor Affiliate” and amended the definition of “Eligible Assignee” to provide that “no Restricted Sponsor Affiliate may be an Eligible Assignee with respect to a sale, assignment or transfer of Commitments, Revolving Loans or LC Deposits.” Third Amendment § 2.1(c). Thus, Yucaipa was effectively prohibited from acquiring any First Lien Debt other than Term Loans. Further, as the District Court summarized, Yucaipa was:

[Prohibited from acquiring Term Loans exceeding the lesser of (i) 25% of the outstanding Term Loan Exposure or (ii) $50 million in principal amount of Term Loans ([Third Amendment] §§ 2.7(c), 2.7(e)); required to make a capital contribution to Allied of no less than 50% of the aggregate principal amount of any Term Loans that Yucaipa obtained within 10 days of the date of acquisition (id. § 2.7(e)); prohibited from exercising any and all voting rights it would otherwise have as a Lender ‘for all purposes’ (id. §§ 2.1(e), 2.7(a), 2.7(b), 2.7(e)); and' subject to a broadly worded covenant not to sue (id. § 2.7).

J.A. 6. The Third Amendment also amended the definition of “Term Loan Exposure,” providing that “with respect to any provisions of this Agreement relating to the voting rights of Lenders ... the aggregate outstanding principal amount of the Term Loans of all Restricted Sponsor Affiliates shall be disregarded for purposes of this definition of ‘Term Loan Exposure.’ ” Third Amendment § 2.1(e). Yucai-pa did not acquire any First Lien Debt following the execution of the Third Amendment.

In February 2009, ComVest Investment Partners III, L.P. (“ComVest”) purchased approximately 55% of the First Lien Debt and became the Requisite Lender. In August 2009, Allied and ComVest entered into the Fourth Amendment, which changed the definition of “Term Loan Exposure” back to the original definition included in the Credit Agreement, removed the restrictions on the amount and type of debt Yucaipa could acquire, allowed Yucai-pa’s debt to be counted in the Requisite Lender calculation, and allowed Yucaipa’s debt to have voting rights.' ComVest was the only Lender that consented to the Fourth Amendment. Contemporaneously with the execution of the Fourth Amendment, ComVest and Yucaipa executed an Assignment Agreement whereby Yucaipa purchased all of ComVest’s First Lien Debt. Following this transaction, Yucaipa declared itself the Requisite Lender. Currently, Yucaipa holds $134,835,690 of First Lien Debt, including $114,712,087 of Term Loans and $20,123,602 of LC Commitments.

In January 2012, BD/S filed suit in New York state court, seeking a declaration that the Fourth Amendment was void and that Yucaipa was not the Requisite Lender. The court granted summary judgment in favor of BD/S, finding that the Fourth Amendment was invalid because § 10.5 of the Credit Agreement required unanimous consent from all Lenders, which was not given. See BDCM Opportunity Fund II, LP v. Yucaipa Am. Alliance Fund I, LP, No. 650150/2012, 2013 WL 1290394 at *5, 2013 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1993 at *14 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. Mar. 8, 2013). Thus, the court held, given that the Fourth Amendment *136 was invalid, Yucaipa was not the Requisite Lender. See id. at *6, 2013 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1993 at *16.

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683 F. App'x 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashinc-corp-v-ammc-vii-ca3-2017.