Cedar Shore Resort v. Paul Mueller

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedDecember 13, 2000
Docket00-1389
StatusPublished

This text of Cedar Shore Resort v. Paul Mueller (Cedar Shore Resort v. Paul Mueller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cedar Shore Resort v. Paul Mueller, (8th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

No. 00-1389 ___________

In re Cedar Shore Resort, Inc., * * Debtor. * * Cedar Shore Resort, Inc. * * Appellant, * Appeal from the United States * District Court for the District v. * of South Dakota. * Paul Mueller and Mary Pat Mueller, * * Appellees. * ___________

Submitted: October 20, 2000 Filed: December 13, 2000 ___________

Before HANSEN, MURPHY, and BYE, Circuit Judges. ___________

MURPHY, Circuit Judge.

Cedar Shore Resort, Inc. (Cedar Shore), filed for bankruptcy protection after it was served with a shareholder lawsuit. Following an evidentiary hearing, the bankruptcy court1 found that Cedar Shore had filed in bad faith and dismissed its

1 The Honorable Irvin N. Hoyt, United States Bankruptcy Judge for the District of South Dakota. petition. The district court2 affirmed the decision of the bankruptcy judge, and Cedar Shore appeals from its judgment of dismissal. We affirm.

I.

Cedar Shore operates a resort facility in Oacoma, South Dakota. During its early years the resort suffered a series of misfortunes, including a fire, an explosion, harsh weather conditions, and flooding, and Cedar Shore initially had difficulty generating a profit and fulfilling its loan obligations to its principal lender, Norwest Bank. The bank did not threaten or initiate any type of foreclosure proceedings against the resort, however, and the parties worked together to modify the loan agreement in a mutually acceptable manner. In 1997 Norwest amended the loan agreement so that Cedar Shore would only be required to make interest payments on its debt.

Later that year Cedar Shore hired a consultant who described it as a "bankrupt company" and urged that it either file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy or reorganize its debt. The board of directors unanimously voted not to file. Instead, Cedar Shore worked with Norwest to restructure the terms of its loan agreement. Under the terms of a plan reached in February 1998, Norwest agreed to reduce the corporate debt it was owed by almost $2 million in exchange for a $500,000 capital contribution by Cedar Shore shareholders. The Cedar Shore board scheduled a shareholder meeting for April 1998 to vote on the proposal.

Before the meeting could take place, shareholders Paul and Mary Pat Mueller brought an action in state court against Cedar Shore, its officers and directors, and its management company. The suit alleged minority shareholder oppression, waste, and mismanagement; breach of fiduciary duty; and tortious interference with prospective

2 The Honorable Lawrence L. Piersol, Chief United States District Judge for the District of South Dakota.

-2- business advantage. The Cedar Shore board held a meeting on March 12, 1998 to discuss its response to the Mueller lawsuit. The members of the board, many of whom had been named as defendants in the lawsuit, did not take any action to investigate the Muellers' claims. Instead, the board voted to file for bankruptcy.

Cedar Shore filed a petition under Chapter 11 on May 20, 1998, and its attorney decided shortly thereafter that the Muellers' claims were really derivative in nature, that they were actually raised on behalf of the corporation, and that they were meritless. The attorney later testified that he had spent approximately sixty hours doing his analysis. He admitted that his study had not come "anywhere close" to the type of investigation typically undertaken in similar cases.

Cedar Shore entered into a settlement agreement with its officers, directors, and management company in which the claims were treated as derivative. See Fed. R. Bank. P. 9019(a). Under the agreement Cedar Shore was to release its claims against the other parties in exchange for their promise not to seek indemnification from it. Cedar Shore then moved the bankruptcy court to approve the agreement. After the bankruptcy court agreed that most of the claims were derivative and thus belonged to the estate, Cedar Shore amended the settlement agreement to provide for a $30,000 payment to each officer and director.

The Muellers opposed the settlement agreement and moved to dismiss the bankruptcy petition as being filed in bad faith. Cedar Shore then moved for approval of a reorganization plan that it filed which was essentially identical to the agreement that it had reached with Norwest in February 1998, before the Mueller lawsuit.

The bankruptcy court scheduled a hearing to evaluate the motions. The Muellers presented evidence that Cedar Shore had already solved most of its financial problems and that its bankruptcy filing was motivated by a desire to rid itself of their lawsuit rather than to effectuate a legitimate reorganization. Cedar Shore president Edward

-3- Geddes admitted on cross examination that the corporate revenues in 1997 and 1998 had significantly exceeded those from previous years and that the management team was "pleased with the bottom-line performance of the resort." He also acknowledged that Cedar Shore had anticipated operating at a loss for several years and had not expected a profit until 2000. He admitted that shortly before filing for bankruptcy, he had told a group of Cedar Shore creditors that business was going very well and had exceeded expectations for the year and that the resort was paying all of its bills. The bank had not threatened to sue Cedar Shore for delinquent loan payments, nor had it instituted any collection proceedings against it. Geddes acknowledged that none of Cedar Shore's thirty-one other creditors had threatened any sort of litigation or collection actions against it. He also admitted that after filing its bankruptcy petition, the corporation had focused most of its efforts on "attempting to settle the Mueller claims in the confines of the bankruptcy estate" rather than on reorganizing its finances. The Muellers presented evidence that Cedar Shore's bankruptcy schedules failed to list and value properly all personal property and to account for approximately one million dollars in furnishings and equipment.

Cedar Shore presented witnesses who testified that the corporation had filed bankruptcy in order to protect its loan restructuring agreement with the bank, not to rid itself of the Mueller lawsuit. Geddes testified that the bank had indicated that it would not go through with the restructuring agreement unless it was confirmed by the bankruptcy court. According to bank officer Terry Johnson, Norwest feared that Cedar Shore shareholders would not make their required capital contributions if they were distracted by the lawsuit. Johnson testified that the bank wanted court approval of the restructuring agreement in order to ensure the shareholder payments, but he admitted that Norwest did not specifically require confirmation of the plan by the bankruptcy court.

After considering the evidence, the bankruptcy court found that Cedar Shore's primary motivation in filing Chapter 11 was to protect itself from the shareholder action

-4- and dismissed its petition for bad faith under 11 U.S.C. § 1112(b).

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