MEMORANDUM DECISION ON DEFENDANTS’ SUPPLEMENTAL MOTION TO DISMISS THE COMPLAINT
JAMES L. GARRITY, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.
The Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors appointed in these chapter 11 cases (the “Committee”) commenced this adversary proceeding on behalf of Commodore International Limited (“CIL”) and Commodore Electronics Limited (“CEL” and, together with CIL, the “debtors”) to recover damages arising from, among other things, the defendants’ alleged breach of their fiduciary duties. The defendants are former officers
and directors of the debtors. They have moved for an order dismissing the complaint. The Committee filed papers in opposition to the motion. We grant it.
Facts
The relevant facts are not in dispute. CIL is the parent company of CEL and other affiliated entities formerly engaged in the world-wide manufacture of personal computers and related products under the “Commodore” and “Amiga” brand names. CIL and CEL are Bahamian corporations and are the subject of liquidation proceedings pending in the Supreme Court for the Commonwealth of The Bahamas (the “Supreme Court”). Franklyn R. Wilson and MacGregor N. Robinson (the “Liquidators”) are the court-appointed liquidators of those entities. CIL and CEL also are chapter 11 debtors in this court. Both courts approved a protocol (the “Protocol”) relating to certain aspects of these dual proceedings.
With the Liquidators’ consent, we have entered orders authorizing the Committee to prosecute various lawsuits on behalf of the debtors. By order dated on or about March 13, 1997, as supplemented by one dated on or about April 12, 1997, we authorized the Committee, on behalf of the debtors, to pursue preferential transfer claims against various third parties in the United States under §§ 547, 548 and 550 of the Bankruptcy Code. By order dated March 26, 1997, we authorized the Committee to pursue claims against former CEL/CIL directors and officers on the debtors’ behalf. Defendants deny that they received notice of those orders or had an opportunity to be heard on them.
On or about April 3, 1997, the Committee commenced an action against Transpacific Company Limited (“TPC”), a Bahamian corporation controlled by Irving Gould, a defendant herein.
See Commodore International Ltd. v. Transpacific Corp. (In re Commodore International Ltd.),
Case Nos. 94-B-42185 and 42186, Adv.Pro. No. 97-8294A. In that action, the Committee seeks to avoid certain payments by the debtors to TPC totaling approximately $10 million, as preferences and/or fraudulent transfers under §§ 547(b), 548 and 550 of the Bankruptcy Code. TPC has filed a motion to dismiss that action.
On or about April 2, 1997, the Committee commenced this adversary proceeding. In substance, in its complaint, the Committee contends that, notwithstanding the repeated warnings of debtors’ outside auditors, the defendants failed and neglected to maintain adequate financial controls on behalf of the debtors and failed and refused to correct chronic internal accounting deficiencies, all of which contributed to debtors’ financial collapse. It identifies a series of alleged fraudulent and preferential transfers of assets to insiders and affiliates, including the transactions which are the subject of the TPC litigation. The Committee alleges that by permitting the debtors to dispose of asserts when they were hopelessly insolvent, the defendants breached their fiduciary duties and engaged in corporate waste and mismanagement.
The defendants contend that the Liquidators violated Bahamian law when they delegated their authority to commence this litigation to the Committee. Accordingly, they applied to the Supreme Court for leave to commence a proceeding in that court seeking a declaration under controlling Bahamian law that the claims alleged against them herein can be prosecuted only by the Liquidators, and then only by leave of the Supreme Court. On or about July 24, 1997, the Supreme Court granted the defendants leave to initiate those proceedings, and they did. On or about December 8, 1997, the Supreme Court entered a Judgment declaring, among other things, that the Liquidators breached their statutory duties by authorizing, or acquiescing in, the commencement of this adversary proceeding by the Committee. More specifically, Justice Strachan of the Supreme Court granted the following declarations:
A Declaration that [CEL and CIL] are not at liberty to institute, and or maintain, and or to prosecute, any action against the [defendants] in the United States Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York whether acting by and through any creditor or Committee of creditors or otherwise, and in particular, by and through the Official Committee of Unsecured Cred
itors of [CIL and CEL] ... except by and through [the Liquidators] and with the approval of the [Supreme Court] pursuant to Section 212
of
The Companies Act of 1992.
A Declaration that the [Liquidators] are in breach of their statutory duties and are or have been derelict in their duties as Officials of [the Supreme Court] in that they have caused, or authorized, or otherwise acquiesced in the commencement and the continuing prosecution of [the Committee’s U.S. lawsuit] without the sanction of [the Supreme Court] or its directions in that regard.
On or about November 5, 1997, the Liquidators commenced a lawsuit (the “Bahamian Litigation”) on behalf of CIL and CEL in the Supreme Court against the defendants. As the Committee concedes, the factual allegations and claims in that lawsuit are substantively similar to those made by the Committee on behalf of the debtors herein.
Moreover, it is undisputed that if the defendants are found liable under Bahamian law, the Liquidators are asking the Supreme Court to order the defendants to pay any damage award to the CEL and CIL.
See
Summons at 9.
Discussion
We have subject matter jurisdiction of this adversary proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334(b) and 157(a) and the “Standing Order of Referral of Cases to Bankruptcy Judges” of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, dated July 10, 1984 (Ward, Acting C.J.). This is a core proceeding.
See
28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(A) and (0).
The only argument that we are considering in the context of this supplemental motion to dismiss the complaint is whether the pendency of the Bahamian Litigation divests the Committee of any standing that it may have to prosecute this adversary proceeding. The defendants correctly contend that under
Unsecured Creditors Comm. v. Noyes (In re STN Enterprises),
779 F.2d 901, 904 (2d Cir.1985)
(“STN”)
,
a creditors’
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MEMORANDUM DECISION ON DEFENDANTS’ SUPPLEMENTAL MOTION TO DISMISS THE COMPLAINT
JAMES L. GARRITY, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.
The Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors appointed in these chapter 11 cases (the “Committee”) commenced this adversary proceeding on behalf of Commodore International Limited (“CIL”) and Commodore Electronics Limited (“CEL” and, together with CIL, the “debtors”) to recover damages arising from, among other things, the defendants’ alleged breach of their fiduciary duties. The defendants are former officers
and directors of the debtors. They have moved for an order dismissing the complaint. The Committee filed papers in opposition to the motion. We grant it.
Facts
The relevant facts are not in dispute. CIL is the parent company of CEL and other affiliated entities formerly engaged in the world-wide manufacture of personal computers and related products under the “Commodore” and “Amiga” brand names. CIL and CEL are Bahamian corporations and are the subject of liquidation proceedings pending in the Supreme Court for the Commonwealth of The Bahamas (the “Supreme Court”). Franklyn R. Wilson and MacGregor N. Robinson (the “Liquidators”) are the court-appointed liquidators of those entities. CIL and CEL also are chapter 11 debtors in this court. Both courts approved a protocol (the “Protocol”) relating to certain aspects of these dual proceedings.
With the Liquidators’ consent, we have entered orders authorizing the Committee to prosecute various lawsuits on behalf of the debtors. By order dated on or about March 13, 1997, as supplemented by one dated on or about April 12, 1997, we authorized the Committee, on behalf of the debtors, to pursue preferential transfer claims against various third parties in the United States under §§ 547, 548 and 550 of the Bankruptcy Code. By order dated March 26, 1997, we authorized the Committee to pursue claims against former CEL/CIL directors and officers on the debtors’ behalf. Defendants deny that they received notice of those orders or had an opportunity to be heard on them.
On or about April 3, 1997, the Committee commenced an action against Transpacific Company Limited (“TPC”), a Bahamian corporation controlled by Irving Gould, a defendant herein.
See Commodore International Ltd. v. Transpacific Corp. (In re Commodore International Ltd.),
Case Nos. 94-B-42185 and 42186, Adv.Pro. No. 97-8294A. In that action, the Committee seeks to avoid certain payments by the debtors to TPC totaling approximately $10 million, as preferences and/or fraudulent transfers under §§ 547(b), 548 and 550 of the Bankruptcy Code. TPC has filed a motion to dismiss that action.
On or about April 2, 1997, the Committee commenced this adversary proceeding. In substance, in its complaint, the Committee contends that, notwithstanding the repeated warnings of debtors’ outside auditors, the defendants failed and neglected to maintain adequate financial controls on behalf of the debtors and failed and refused to correct chronic internal accounting deficiencies, all of which contributed to debtors’ financial collapse. It identifies a series of alleged fraudulent and preferential transfers of assets to insiders and affiliates, including the transactions which are the subject of the TPC litigation. The Committee alleges that by permitting the debtors to dispose of asserts when they were hopelessly insolvent, the defendants breached their fiduciary duties and engaged in corporate waste and mismanagement.
The defendants contend that the Liquidators violated Bahamian law when they delegated their authority to commence this litigation to the Committee. Accordingly, they applied to the Supreme Court for leave to commence a proceeding in that court seeking a declaration under controlling Bahamian law that the claims alleged against them herein can be prosecuted only by the Liquidators, and then only by leave of the Supreme Court. On or about July 24, 1997, the Supreme Court granted the defendants leave to initiate those proceedings, and they did. On or about December 8, 1997, the Supreme Court entered a Judgment declaring, among other things, that the Liquidators breached their statutory duties by authorizing, or acquiescing in, the commencement of this adversary proceeding by the Committee. More specifically, Justice Strachan of the Supreme Court granted the following declarations:
A Declaration that [CEL and CIL] are not at liberty to institute, and or maintain, and or to prosecute, any action against the [defendants] in the United States Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York whether acting by and through any creditor or Committee of creditors or otherwise, and in particular, by and through the Official Committee of Unsecured Cred
itors of [CIL and CEL] ... except by and through [the Liquidators] and with the approval of the [Supreme Court] pursuant to Section 212
of
The Companies Act of 1992.
A Declaration that the [Liquidators] are in breach of their statutory duties and are or have been derelict in their duties as Officials of [the Supreme Court] in that they have caused, or authorized, or otherwise acquiesced in the commencement and the continuing prosecution of [the Committee’s U.S. lawsuit] without the sanction of [the Supreme Court] or its directions in that regard.
On or about November 5, 1997, the Liquidators commenced a lawsuit (the “Bahamian Litigation”) on behalf of CIL and CEL in the Supreme Court against the defendants. As the Committee concedes, the factual allegations and claims in that lawsuit are substantively similar to those made by the Committee on behalf of the debtors herein.
Moreover, it is undisputed that if the defendants are found liable under Bahamian law, the Liquidators are asking the Supreme Court to order the defendants to pay any damage award to the CEL and CIL.
See
Summons at 9.
Discussion
We have subject matter jurisdiction of this adversary proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334(b) and 157(a) and the “Standing Order of Referral of Cases to Bankruptcy Judges” of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, dated July 10, 1984 (Ward, Acting C.J.). This is a core proceeding.
See
28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(A) and (0).
The only argument that we are considering in the context of this supplemental motion to dismiss the complaint is whether the pendency of the Bahamian Litigation divests the Committee of any standing that it may have to prosecute this adversary proceeding. The defendants correctly contend that under
Unsecured Creditors Comm. v. Noyes (In re STN Enterprises),
779 F.2d 901, 904 (2d Cir.1985)
(“STN”)
,
a creditors’
committee can sue in the debtor’s name only-in instances where the debtor unjustifiably fails to bring suit or abuses its discretion in refusing to sue to recover a preferential transfer. The defendants argue that the Committee cannot exercise its qualified right to assert the companies’ claims herein, because the Liquidators are asserting the same claims directly on behalf of the companies in the Bahamian Litigation. The Liquidators contend that we must deny this motion because
STN
is inapposite. They maintain that there is no unity of estates among the debtors in possession in these chapter 11 cases, and the entities in liquidation in The Bahamas. They contend that when they act on behalf of CEL and CIL in The Bahamas, they do so as official liquidators under the laws of The Bahamas, and when they act on behalf of CEL and CIL in the United States, they do so as debtors in possession under United States law. Thus, they deny that the debtors have commenced any action against the defendants in The Bahamas, or elsewhere.
See
Transcript of Hearing (“Tr.”) 59:1-10;
see
also id.
61:13-62:5.
The claims underlying this lawsuit belong to CEL and CIL and can be asserted either directly by them or derivatively on their behalf. The Liquidators are asserting those claims directly on behalf of the companies in the Bahamian Litigation. Although these chapter 11 cases and the Bahamian liquidation proceedings are separate plenary proceedings pending in different courts, the Protocol joins them in order to provide “a framework for the efficient and effective administration of the bankruptcy cases for CEL and CIL in both the United States and The Bahamas.” Protocol p. 5. One way that the Protocol achieves that goal is to provide that the Liquidators constitute the corporate governance of CEL and CIL, and to vest them with the rights, powers and duties of debtors in possession in the CEL and CIL chapter 11 cases.
Thus, the same
individuals who are authorized under United States law (and the Protocol) to sue the defendants in the first instance, have done so, albeit in The Bahamas, pursuant to a Summons that is substantively identical to the Committee’s complaint.
We agree with the defendants that
STN
is relevant to this motion.
The Committee insists that under
STN,
our central consideration should be whether its prosecution of this adversary proceeding is in the best interests of the estate. They contend that the defendants cannot give a single reason why we should disregard the consensual division of labor between themselves and the Liquidators, especially when allowing them to prosecute these claims makes economic sense and their counsel, rather than the Liquidators’, are most knowledgeable about the facts underlying these claims. According to the Committee, the Protocol unambiguously provides that claims against debtors’ officers and directors might be prosecuted in the United States.
See
Protocol ¶ (4).
We disagree with the Committee’s reading of
STN.
Contrary to the Committee’s assertions, the
STN
court’s concern was whether the debtor unjustifiably refused to pursue litigation, not whether the committee was better equipped to pursue that litigation, or the forum it chose was more favorable to the estate.
See STN,
907 F.2d at 904. Moreover, while the Protocol provides that claims against the defendants can be prosecuted in the United States, under
STN
the Committee and the debtors cannot simultaneously prosecute substantively identical actions.
The Committee argues that the Bahamian Litigation has been adjourned
sine die
since December of 1997, that it was filed merely as “place saving” litigation to toll the expiration of any statute of limitations governing claims against the proceeds of defendants’ insurance policies, and that it has always been the view
of both the Committee and the Liquidators that the Bahamian Litigation should remain dormant pending the outcome of this adversary proceeding. Thus for the Committee, there is nothing improper about separate actions raising essentially the same claims proceeding in different jurisdictions where, as here, there are legitimate concerns as to whether an action will be allowed to proceed in the forum selected by the plaintiff.
Whether the Liquidators filed the Bahamian Litigation as “place saving” litigation and only to toll applicable statutes of limitation is irrelevant to the
STN
analysis. What is relevant is that the Liquidators have brought the action and it is substantively identical to this lawsuit. In any event, the defendants are actively pursuing that litigation in The Bahamas.
The Committee also maintains that it has satisfied
STN
because the Liquidators refused to proceed with the litigation in this court. To be sure, the Liquidators consented to the Committee bringing this lawsuit. However, thereafter, the Supreme Court held that under Bahamian law, the Liquidators erred in so consenting, and the Liquidators commenced the Bahamian Litigation. Under the Protocol, the Supreme Court’s determination may dispose of this motion. That is because the intent of the Liquidators and the Committee in executing the Protocol was
that the assets of the estate be liquidated and distributed and that the cases be administered in as economical and efficient a manner as may appear practicable under the circumstances, with one court deferring to the judgment of the other where feasible and the subject matter of a particular matter, action, proceeding, contested matter or adversary proceeding being determined in one court, where feasible.
Protocol ¶ E;
see also id.
at 2.
We should defer to the judgment of the Supreme Court on the issue of whether the Liquidators violated Bahamian law when they agreed to permit the Committee to commence this action, even though the Liquidators are appealing that ruling. In any event, we need not rest upon the effect of the Supreme Court’s ruling. By application of the legal principles enunciated in
STN,
we find that the Liquidators’ commencement of the Bahamian Litigation divests the Committee of standing to bring this litigation, irrespective of the outcome of the appeal in The Bahamas. To that end,
In re Nicolet, Inc.,
80 B.R. 733 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1987) and
Official Creditors’ Committee of
Wesco
Products Co. v. Alloy Automotive Co. (In re Wesco Products Co.),
22 B.R. 107 (Bankr.N.D.Ill.1982), are instructive.
In Wesco, the official committee of unsecured creditors obtained bankruptcy court approval and sued certain creditors of the debtor alleging fraud, misrepresentation, breach of fiduciary duty and breach of contract.
See
22 B.R. at 109. Approximately four months later, the debtor filed its own amended complaint against the same defendants alleging substantially identical claims.
See id.
The defendants in the committee’s adversary proceeding moved to dismiss the complaint based upon, among other things, the committee’s lack of standing to bring the action on behalf of the estate.
See id.
at 108. The court found that under § 1103(5) of the Bankruptcy Code, the committee had an implied right to bring an adversary proceeding on behalf of the estate, but that it could invoke that right only when the debtor unjustifiably failed to bring suit or otherwise abused its discretion in performing its duties as representative of the estate.
See id.
The court granted the motion, finding that by filing a substantially identical adversary proceeding, the debtor was acting in good faith and performing its duties, thereby precluding the committee from invoking its implied right to bring the action.
See id.
In
Nicolet,
a creditors’ committee moved for an order authorizing it to bring an action
on behalf of the estate against various entities seeking to avoid allegedly fraudulent and/or preferential transfers. However, pending final submissions of the parties with respect to that motion, the debtor filed its own adversary complaint alleging the same causes of action.
See
80 B.R. at 735-36. For this reason, the court denied the committee’s motion, stating that:
[w]hile several considerations coalesce to cause us to observe that the Committee would have been entitled to file a legal action, in its own name, if the Debtor had persisted in its refusal to do so, we are forced to conclude that the Debtor’s institution [of its own suit] must result in our denial of the Committee’s motion at this time.
Id.
at 737;
see also id.
at 740 (“We therefore decide that, solely because the DIP has instituted suit against two targets of the Committee’s Motion, that Motion must be denied.”).
The Committee distinguishes those cases on the grounds that those debtors intended to pursue their litigation and did not explicitly assert a preference for the creditors’ committee to pursue the claims against the defendants. Neither factor is relevant to our analysis and, in any event, the Bahamian Litigation is proceeding in The Bahamas. Moreover, if the Committee is dissatisfied about how the Liquidators are conducting its litigation, it can petition that court to intervene therein. The Committee also contends that in both cases, the debtor commenced its action in the same court in which the committee intended to proceed, rather than a distant and inconvenient forum disfavored by creditors. That factor likewise is irrelevant to our analysis. In any event, the Committee has local counsel in The Bahamas and has appeared in that court on several occasions.
Conclusion
We dismiss the complaint.
SETTLE ORDER.