Dow Corning Corp. v. Claimants' Advisory Committee (In Re Settlement Facility Dow Corning Trust)

517 F. App'x 368
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 8, 2013
Docket11-2632
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 517 F. App'x 368 (Dow Corning Corp. v. Claimants' Advisory Committee (In Re Settlement Facility Dow Corning Trust)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dow Corning Corp. v. Claimants' Advisory Committee (In Re Settlement Facility Dow Corning Trust), 517 F. App'x 368 (6th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

McKEAGUE, Circuit Judge.

In this case arising from its Chapter 11 reorganization, Dow Corning Corporation seeks Time Value Credits to account for the timing of certain payments it made to the Depository Trust set up for the benefit of breast implant tort claimants. The district court denied Dow’s requests except for the instances where the Funding Payment Agreement expressly provides for Time Value Credits. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

Bankruptcy

The saga of the Dow Corning silicon breast implant litigation settlement has been told before, so we will not repeat it here. See, e.g., In re Dow Corning Corp., 255 B.R. 445 (E.D.Mich.2000), aff'd and remanded, 280 F.3d 648 (6th Cir.2002). Suffice it to say that faced with thousands of lawsuits brought by women who had received silicon breast implants that it manufactured, Dow Corning Corporation (“Dow”) filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on May 15, 1995. The Bankruptcy Court confirmed the Amended Joint Plan of Re *369 organization (the “Plan”) on November BO, 1999. Much litigation followed, and the Plan finally took effect on June 1, 2004.

The Plan outlines the procedures for resolving breast implant claims. Claimants can choose to settle their claims through a Settlement Facility or litigate their claims against a Litigation Facility. Plan § 5.4. Claims and administrative expenses are paid with monies held in a trust known as the Depository Trust (the “Trust”). Plan § 5.B. The responsibilities of the Trustee are enumerated in a Depository Trust Agreement (the “Trust Agreement”), the first version of which was dated March 27, 2001.

The Funding Payment Agreement

Dow’s payment obligations are set forth in a Funding Payment Agreement (the “Funding Agreement”), which is the document at the center of this appeal. The Funding Agreement requires Dow to make payments to the Trust 1 up to a maximum aggregate amount of $3.172 billion. Funding Agreement § 2.01. However, the Funding Agreement does not require Dow to make this payment all at once, but spreads out Dow’s payment obligations over time. To account for the timing of these payments, the Funding Agreement provides that Dow’s funding obligation cannot exceed a net present value of $2.35 billion, calculated as of the Effective Date (June 1, 2004). Funding Agreement § 2.01. To compare the net present value of Dow’s payment stream with the net present value funding cap, all payments— with a possible exception identified below — must be discounted to the Effective Date using a rate of 7% per year compounded annually. Funding Agreement § 2.01; Plan §§ 1.102, 5.3. 2

The method by which Dow fulfills its payment obligations under the Funding Agreement is remarkably complicated. We need not describe all the details of the Funding Agreement, but several aspects of the Funding Agreement are important for purposes of this appeal.

First, before the Effective Date, Dow made a series of payments totaling $985 million. Funding Agreement § 2.01(a). When executing the Plan, the parties anticipated that appeals might be filed that would delay the Plan’s implementation. Plan § 7.4. To prepare for that contingency, the Plan provided that Dow would make an initial payment of $985 million to the Trust to “be held in escrow pending the outcome of the appeal, with any interest accruing thereon to be held as part of the fund.” Plan § 7.4. The Plan further provided that these funds could be used for administrative expenses by the Settlement Facility to prepare “to begin processing Claims promptly after the Effective Date.” Plan § 7.4. If the confirmation of the Plan was upheld on appeal, these funds would be disbursed to pay claims; if the confirmation of the Plan was overturned on appeal, the remaining funds would be returned to Dow. Plan § 7.4. Of course, the confirmation of the Plan was in fact *370 appealed, so these payments were made— mostly in 2001 — pursuant to a detailed provision in the Trust Agreement. See Trust Agreement § 4.01(a). Collectively, they are referred to as the “Initial Payment.” Funding Agreement § 2.01(a).

Another important aspect of the Funding Agreement is that Dow’s payment obligations are spread out over time. The Funding Agreement creates a series of sixteen “Funding Periods.” Funding Agreement § 2.01(b). Each Funding Period lasts exactly one year, and the first begins exactly one year after the Effective Date. Funding Agreement § 2.01(b). Each Funding Period has a corresponding “Annual Payment Ceiling” which determines Dow’s maximum payment obligation during that Funding Period. Funding Agreement § 2.01(b). Every three months, the Claims Administrator sends Dow a notification informing Dow of the amount of claims and expenses expected to be paid out in excess of reserves each month. Funding Agreement § 2.02(a). At the end of each month, the Claims Administrator sends Dow a notification informing Dow of the actual claims and expenses paid out in excess of reserves during the preceding month. Funding Agreement § 2.02(b). Dow must promptly pay that amount. Funding Agreement § 2.02(b)(i). Dow is not required to pay more than necessary to cover the actual claims and expenses paid in excess of reserves, Funding Agreement § 2.02(b)(iii), and cannot be required to pay more than the Annual Payment Ceiling. Funding Agreement § 2.02(b)®.

But the Annual Payment Ceilings really only limit Dow’s obligations with respect to cash payments. “Insurance Proceeds” 3 received by Dow before the Effective Date were required to be held in trust by Dow and paid to the Trust 90 days after the Effective Date. Funding Agreement § 2.01(a)(ii). After the Effective Date, Insurance Proceeds are supposed to be paid by the insurers directly to the Trust, and if Dow receives Insurance Proceeds, it must transfer them to the Trust immediately, whether or not they exceed the applicable Annual Payment Ceiling. Funding Agreement §§ 2.01(a)®, 2.02(c). Of course, requiring Insurance Proceeds to be paid to the Trust without regard to the Annual Payment Ceilings means that Dow’s payment of cash and Insurance Proceeds during a Funding Period could exceed the Annual Payment Ceiling. Recognizing this fact, the Funding Agreement provides that when Dow’s payments during a Funding Period exceed the applicable Annual Payment Ceiling, Dow receives a credit for the excess amount that operates to reduce the Annual Payment Ceding in a future funding period. 4 As explained in more detail below, sometimes this credit is applied to the very next Annual Payment Ceiling, and sometimes it is applied to an Annual Payment Ceiling farther in the future.

In addition to crediting the nominal value of the excess amount against a future Annual Payment Ceiling, the Funding Agreement sometimes also expressly credits the time value of the excess amount. This so-called “Time Value Credit” recognizes that Dow has essentially paid its obligation early, and credits Dow for the *371 timing of the payment as well as the nominal amount.

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Bluebook (online)
517 F. App'x 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dow-corning-corp-v-claimants-advisory-committee-in-re-settlement-ca6-2013.