Collins St Convertible Notes Pty Ltd v. Allegiance Coal USA Limited

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware
DecidedMarch 28, 2024
Docket24-50016
StatusUnknown

This text of Collins St Convertible Notes Pty Ltd v. Allegiance Coal USA Limited (Collins St Convertible Notes Pty Ltd v. Allegiance Coal USA Limited) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collins St Convertible Notes Pty Ltd v. Allegiance Coal USA Limited, (Del. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT DISTRICT OF DELAWARE CRAIG T. GOLDBLATT pp, 824 N. MARKET STREET JUDGE 4 WILMINGTON, DELAWARE CA fy. (302) 252-3832

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iN March 28, 2024 VIA CM/ECF Re: Inre Allegiance Coal USA Limited, et al., No. 23-10234; Collins St Convertible Notes Pty Ltd v. Allegiance Coal USA Ltd, et al., Adv. Proc. No. 24-50016 Dear Counsel: The debtors in these cases owned and operated two coal mines. Debtors filed for bankruptcy in the hopes that they could either reorganize in bankruptcy or sell their businesses on a going concern basis. The case began with, on the first day of the case, a hotly contested hearing in which the debtor sought to use cash collateral over the vigorous objection of its secured creditor, Collins St. That is rarely a hallmark of a case that is bound for a happy ending. This one turns out to be no exception to that rule. Here, after the Court granted the debtor the use of cash collateral (having found, based on the evidence presented, the secured creditor to be adequately protected) the parties reached an agreement under which the secured creditor agreed to provide the debtor with post-petition financing. The debtors’ efforts to reorganize or find a going concern buyer thereafter floundered, as a result (the debtors said) of market forces more broadly affecting coal

March 28, 2024 Page 2

prices. The case then transitioned into an orderly liquidation in chapter 11, with the debtors retaining an auctioneer to sell off their assets, primarily mining equipment. The net result is an unfortunate one. These cases are administratively insolvent. The debtors thus moved to dismiss them. That motion gives rise to the dispute now before this Court. The debtors motion to dismiss contemplates establishing a mechanism for distributing the remaining cash first to satisfy claims that are subject to the carve-out in the DIP order, and then to Collins St, the secured lender. In response to that, Collins St brought this adversary in which it seeks a declaration that the fees incurred by its counsel are senior to the carve-out from the DIP liens. Collins St thus asks for an order compelling the payment of its legal fees before any amount is distributed to the beneficiaries of the DIP carve-out. The debtors asked this Court to, in effect, bulldoze Collins St by going ahead

and entering the dismissal order in the form they had proposed without even entertaining the Collins St complaint. This Court declined that invitation, and instead directed prompt briefing on a motion to dismiss the Collins St complaint, such that the Court could consider the issue in advance of the continued hearing on the debtors’ motion to dismiss, which is now set for April 2, 2024. The Court noted that if were to grant the motion to dismiss the Collins St complaint, that would likely

resolve the only objection to the motion to dismiss, which could then be considered on the merits at the April 2 hearing. If the Court were to deny the motion to dismiss the March 28, 2024 Page 3

complaint, the April 2 hearing would then go forward as a status conference in which the Court would address with the parties the manner for bringing the dispute (and the bankruptcy case) to resolution. For the reasons described below, the Court concludes that the Collins St complaint does not state a claim for which relief can be granted. The Court will thus dismiss the complaint and go forward with the hearing on the debtors’ motion to dismiss the bankruptcy case on April 2. By way of context, § 364 of the Bankruptcy Code authorizes a debtor to grant substantial protections to a party willing to extend post-petition credit to a debtor in possession. Section 364(b) authorizes granting the lender an administrative claim under § 503(b)(2).1 Section 364(c) authorizes the Court to grant “superpriority” status to such postpetition lenders – priority over all other administrative claims and a lien on any unencumbered assets – when circumstances warrant.2 And § 364(d)

authorizes the Court to grant the new lender a lien that “primes” prepetition liens (subject to the prior lienholders’ receipt of adequate protection).3 The DIP order this Court entered in this case provided Collins St with each of these protections.4 The challenge associated with the granting of these kinds of

1 11 U.S.C. § 364(b). 2 Id. § 364(c). 3 Id. § 364(d). 4 In re Allegiance Coal USA Ltd., Bankr. D. Del. No. 23-10234-CTG, D.I. 308 (“Final DIP Order”) at ¶¶ 12, 13. March 28, 2024 Page 4

protections is that it creates the risk that, if it turns out when all is said and done that the estate has insufficient value to pay the DIP lender in full, no funds will be available to pay the administrative costs of the bankruptcy case, including those of the professionals. The usual solution to this problem is to require a “carve-out” from the DIP obligations to cover those administrative costs. “Carve outs are agreements between a secured lender and the debtor-in-possession that provide that administrative expenses may be paid out from a secured creditor’s collateral.”5 The mechanic of the carve-out is typically that upon “the termination of the DIP financing and notice from the DIP lenders to certain interested parties … a certain reserve amount will be carved-out for the payment of the fees and expenses of professionals that are incurred after the delivery of such notice.”6 The inclusion of such a “carve out” from the DIP lender’s priority status has become a standard practice in chapter 11 cases. Indeed,

the bankruptcy court for the Southern District of New York observed, almost 25 years ago, that “it has been the uniform practice in this Court ... to insist on a carve out from a super-priority status and post-petition lien in a reasonable amount designed to provide for payment of the fees of debtor’s and the committees’ counsel and possible trustee’s counsel in order to preserve the adversary system.”7

5 Brian Trust, The World of Non-core Professional Fees in Chapter 11, 051704 Am. Bankr. Inst. 73 (2004). 6 Id. 7 In re Ames Dep’t Stores, 115 B.R. 34, 38 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 1990). March 28, 2024 Page 5

Consistent with that practice, the DIP order in this case contains precisely such a carve-out. Paragraph 17 of the Final DIP Order provides that the DIP liens are subordinate to the allowed professional fees in the bankruptcy case.8 In light of this structure—in which the Code grants first priority status to the DIP obligations but provides a mechanism for the orderly administration of the bankruptcy case by “carving out” certain obligations from the liens that secure those obligations— creating a further category of priority that would come ahead of the carve-out would require some measure of acrobatic drafting. Collins St, however, contends that this feat was accomplished in paragraph 10 (and other provisions) of the DIP Order. Paragraph 10 provides that Collins St is entitled to recover its fees and expenses and makes no mention of paragraph 17. The debtors have moved to dismiss the Collins St adversary proceeding on the ground that the language of the DIP documents is clear and unambiguous and cannot

be read to grant Collins St’s claim for fees ahead of the DIP carve-out. Collins St contends that the DIP documents are more naturally read to support its reading. Moreover, it contends that its reading is sufficiently plausible that it is entitled to discovery in order to demonstrate, based on a factual record, that the parties in fact intended to adopt its reading. Because the Court concludes that the language of the relevant documents is unambiguous and does not elevate the Collins St fees over the

carve-out, the Court will grant the motion to dismiss.

8 Final DIP Order ¶ 17(iii). March 28, 2024 Page 6

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Collins St Convertible Notes Pty Ltd v. Allegiance Coal USA Limited, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-st-convertible-notes-pty-ltd-v-allegiance-coal-usa-limited-deb-2024.