Bernstein v. Litton Systems, Inc. (In Re Frigitemp Corp.)

24 B.R. 209, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15653
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 5, 1982
Docket82 Civ. 3928 (GLG), Bankruptcy No. 78 B 468(JL)
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 24 B.R. 209 (Bernstein v. Litton Systems, Inc. (In Re Frigitemp Corp.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bernstein v. Litton Systems, Inc. (In Re Frigitemp Corp.), 24 B.R. 209, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15653 (S.D.N.Y. 1982).

Opinion

OPINION

GOETTEL, District Judge:

Litton Systems, Inc., (“Litton”) appeals from an order of Bankruptcy Judge Joel Lewittes denying a motion to dismiss the amended complaint of the trustee of the estate of Frigitemp Corp. (“Frigitemp”). 1 Litton contends that the bankruptcy court lacks summary jurisdiction over the underlying turnover proceeding brought by the trustee because the trustee has already relinquished the property which he seeks to have turned over.

The issue presented is somewhat novel. During the 1970’s, Litton’s Ingalls Shipbuilding Division (“Ingalls”) in Pascagoula, Mississippi, was under contract to build a number of warships for the United States Navy. The now bankrupt Frigitemp was the subcontractor responsible for certain insulation and joiner 2 work, with subcontracts eventually totaling more than one hundred million dollars in value. Unfortunately, Frigitemp’s financial condition deteriorated to such an extent that Litton found it necessary to agree to pay, subject to recoupment, whatever costs Frigitemp incurred after November 15, 1976. Despite Litton’s assistance, by October 1977, Frigi-temp was threatening to stop work on the subcontracts, thereby further jeopardizing the completion of the primary contracts.

Litigation between the parties ensued and originally led to a consent order that required Frigitemp to continue performance and reserved the respective right of both parties as to other issues. Nonetheless, on March 20, 1978, Frigitemp filed a petition in the bankruptcy court seeking an arrangement under Chapter XI, § 322 of the old Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C. § 722 (1976). On May 28,1979, Litton terminated Frigitemp’s subcontracts for default, pursuant to the subcontracts’ termination provisions. Litton transferred onto its payroll eight hundred Frigitemp employees and continued the joiner work in order to minimize the disruption of performance of the primary contracts. On the following day, May 29, 1979, Frigitemp was adjudicated bankrupt and the trustee was appointed and qualified.

On the day of bankruptcy, most of Frigi-temp’s capital tools and equipment (“equipment”) were located in its assigned and leased areas of operation both within and adjacent to Litton’s shipyard. Ownership of this equipment was greatly in dispute between three parties: some belonged to Frigitemp; some belonged to Litton because Litton had purchased it for Frigitemp pursuant to the modified subcontracts; and the rest arguably belonged to the United States pursuant to the terms of the primary contracts and the subcontracts. Regardless, of the ownership of each item of equipment, all of it was vital to the continuation of the primary contracts. Consequently, Litton resorted to what it now describes as “self help” to insure that it would have continued use of the equipment. On the date of bankruptcy, some of Litton’s employees broke into Frigitemp’s operational areas and began removing equipment. They continued the removal for several days. The trustee responded on June 1, 1979, by demanding that the equipment be returned. It never was.

Negotiations between the trustee and Litton began almost immediately. Two facts presented critical problems. First, the items of equipment were so commingled that it was virtually impossible to determine title to many of them. Second, Litton *211 needed even those that belonged to Frigi-temp, while the bankrupt and non-operational Frigitemp had no immediate use for them. The agreement that was reached on June 14, 1979, reflected the parties’ considerable efforts to accommodate these two factors, as well as others not here relevant. Almost two weeks of negotiations went into the agreement, the final draft of which was written by Litton but included the suggested changes of the trustee’s local attorney. 3

The language of that agreement holds the key to the resolution of the issues raised here on appeal. The critical language is contained in the fifth, sixth, and twelfth paragraphs of the agreement. In the fifth paragraph, the trustee expressly relinquished any claims to equipment for which Litton had actually paid or reimbursed Fri-gitemp’s costs. In the sixth paragraph, the parties agreed to try for thirty working days to identify the title of each piece of equipment whose title was undetermined. Pending the completion of those thirty days, the trustee “expressly grant[ed] his permission” for Litton “to continue to use” the equipment. Also in the sixth paragraph, the parties further agreed that, if title to the equipment was not clarified within thirty days, each party would retain its rights and remedies for resolution of the issues of title and of compensation for the use of the equipment. Finally, in the twelfth paragraph of the agreement, the trustee strictly limited what he was conceding by including the following general provision: “Except as expressly stated herein, nothing herein contained nor any action taken hereunder by or on behalf of ... the Trustee shall constitute or be deemed to be a waiver or relinquishment of any claim or defense.... ”

The parties failed to resolve their differences regarding title, and, on October 1, 1980, the trustee commenced a turnover proceeding in the bankruptcy court to regain the equipment that he claimed belonged to Frigitemp. Initial cross-motions for summary judgment were denied on July 9,1981, because the bankruptcy court found that summary disposition was precluded by the existence of several material issues of fact. Later, in February 1982, after the trustee had moved to dismiss some of Litton’s affirmative defenses, the bankruptcy court sua sponte raised the question of jurisdiction that is now before this Court. Judge Lewittes wanted to- know whether the terms of the June 14th agreement constituted a permanent relinquishment of possession by the trustee, which would have divested the bankruptcy court of summary jurisdiction. In response, Litton moved for a dismissal of the turnover proceedings for lack of jurisdiction. After both parties submitted memoranda of law and affidavits and orally argued this issue, the bankruptcy court on April 6,1982, issued an order denying Litton’s motion on the ground that the June 14th agreement contained no relinquishment of possession. Litton has appealed that decision.

The parties’ initial dispute about the appropriate standard of review for this Court, while interesting, need not be resolved. Whether the interpretation of the June 14th agreement involves issues of fact 4 and requiring the strict standard of review of Bankr.Proc. Rule 810, 11 U.S.C. Appendix (1976), as the trustee argues, or it merely involves the application of law to a contract that is as available for scrutiny by this Court as it was for the bankruptcy court, as Litton argues, is not critical because the same result is obtained under either standard.

Turning to the merits, the Court first must note the parties’ agreement that sections 2 and 28 of the old Bankruptcy Act, *212 11 U.S.C.

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Bluebook (online)
24 B.R. 209, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15653, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bernstein-v-litton-systems-inc-in-re-frigitemp-corp-nysd-1982.