Clarendon National Insurance v. Coal Stripping, Inc. (In re Coal Stripping, Inc.)
This text of 215 B.R. 500 (Clarendon National Insurance v. Coal Stripping, Inc. (In re Coal Stripping, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
MEMORANDUM OPINION1
The matter before the court is the Motion for Payment of Administrative Expense filed on behalf of Van-American Insurance Company and Clarendon National Insurance Company. Van-American seeks administrative expense status of its claim for annual premiums for reclamation bonds.2 The premium obligation exists by virtue of an Annual Premium Agreement between Debtor and Van-American. See Memorandum in Support of Motion for Payment of Administrative Expense (hereafter “Movants’ Brief’) at Exhibit C. Van-American is the underwriter and Clarendon is named as the surety in the Reclamation Surety Bonds. Movants’ Brief at Exhibits A, B.3 The matter was submitted to the court on briefs, the issue having been raised at the plan confirmation hearing held on August 29,1997.
Debtor was’ engaged in coal mining in West Virginia. West Virginia law requires that mining operators post a bond to secure reclamation obligations. On April 28, 1993, Clarendon, as surety, issued reclamation surety bonds, one in the face amount of $67,000 to cover Debtor’s surface mining operations on 66.74 acres of land in Monongalia County, West Virginia, and another in the face amount of $38,000 to cover Debtor’s operations on 37.45 acres of land in the same county. Movants’ Brief at Exhibits A, B. In conjunction with the issuance of the surety bonds, Debtor and Van-American executed an Annual Premium Agreement by which Debtor agreed, inter alia, to pay Van-American a two percent annual premium on the anniversary of each bond until each was released. Movants’ Brief at Exhibit C.
This case was filed on November 19, 1996. In their brief, movants state that Debtor failed to pay the premiums on the two bonds for the 1996 and 1997 premium years (which commenced April 28 of each year). The motion seeks payment only for the 1997 premium which was invoiced to Debtor on or about April 5, 1997, for the one-year period commencing April 28, 1997. Thus, we address only the 1997 premium.4 The 1997 premium was a postpetition debt and if it represented an “actual, necessary cost” or expense of preserving the estate, it will be entitled to administrative expense status.
[502]*502Debtor contends that the 1997 premium is not an administrative expense because movants knew Debtor did not need bonds because it had ceased mining and movants had been advised that Debtor was liquidating. This argument is without merit and misses the point. The bonds represent a joint and several obligation of Debtor (as principal) and Clarendon (as surety) to pay up to the amount of the bonds if Debtor fails to “faithfully perform all of the requirements ... of the Code of West Virginia....” Movants’ Brief at Exhibits A and B. West Virginia law requires the bond to be posted and states:
The period of liability for bond coverage begins- with the issuance of a permit and continues for the full term of the permit plus any additional period necessary to achieve compliance with the requirements in the reclamation plan of the permit.
W.Va.Code § 22-3-11. The liability on the bond is the surety’s and goes to the State of West Virginia.5 The liability for the premium is owed by Debtor to Van-American. That Debtor is statutorily required to perform reclamation6 does not make the payment of the premium to Van-American an actual and necessary expense of preserving this Debtor’s chapter 11 estate. The bond, required so that damage inflicted by mining will be corrected at no cost to taxpayers,7 remains in effect by operation of law until reclamation is performed, whether or not Debtor pays the premium to Van-American. The status of movants’ claim for payment of the bond premium turns on the parties’ obligation under the Annual Premium Agreement.
The Annual Premium Agreement is a prepetition contract between Debtor and Van-American and required Debtor to pay Van-American a premium. Movants argue that the Annual Premium Agreement is an executory contract. A contract is executory when substantial performance remains due by both parties, such that “the failure of either to complete performance would constitute a material breach excusing performance of the other”. In re Columbia Gas System, Inc. (Enterprise Energy Corp. v. U.S.), 50 F.3d 233, 239 (3d Cir.1995). Movants contend that Debtor’s obligation constitutes an executory contract because Debtor was obliged by its agreement with Van-American to comply with West Virginia statutes and regulations governing reclamation. Van-American asserts that its obligation to comply with West Virginia law governing sureties was a significant obligation. We find that the Annual Premium Agreement is not an executory contract. First, the Agreement contains no reference to Debtor’s obligation to comply with state law. It provides only for payment of the premium and posting of collateral in the amount of 25 percent of the face amount of the bond and states: “Other fees, conditions and charges, if applicable. N/A ”. Movants’ Brief at Exhibit C. If another contract .exists, it is not a matter of record.8 According to the record before us Debtor’s only obligation under the Annual Premium Agreement is to pay the annual premium to Van-American. Debtor’s reclamation obligations are owed to the State of West Virginia. Likewise, Van-American and Clarendon owe their obligations to comply with West Virginia surety law to West Virginia, not to Debtor. The bond was posted and [503]*503is irrevocable and Van-Ameriean owes no farther performance to Debtor.
Furthermore, even if the obligations are as Van-Ameriean recites, when the only obligation under a contract is to pay money, the contract is not executory. See In re Oxford Royal Mushroom, Products, Inc., 45 B.R. 792, 794 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1985), citing H. R.Rep. No. 95-595, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. 347 (1977), reprinted in 1978 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin. News 5787, 6303-04. The only obligation under the Annual Premium Agreement was Debtor’s to pay the premium. Accordingly, Van-American’s claim to administrative expense status fails under an executory contract theory.9
In the Matter of Jartran, Inc., 732 F.2d 584 (7th Cir.1984), is illustrative of the point. In Jartran, an agency committed to advertising space for Jartran before Jartran filed a chapter 11 petition. Jartran was to pay for the ads after they ran but filed its chapter 11 before the ads ran. The advertising agency’s claim for an administrative expense for the cost of the ads was denied because, even though Jartran enjoyed the benefit of the ads while it was a debtor-in-possession, no inducement by the debtor was necessary to trigger the advertising agency’s performance postpetition. In Jartran, as in the case before us, the liability for the advertising costs was incurred irrevocably prepetition. In the matter at bench the bonds were obtained prepetition and were irrevocable, regardless of whether Debtor paid the premium to Van-American in succeeding years.
[Wjhile [debtor] enjoyed the benefits ...
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215 B.R. 500, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 2004, 31 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 1064, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clarendon-national-insurance-v-coal-stripping-inc-in-re-coal-stripping-pawb-1997.