Edgewood Food Mart, Inc.

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedNovember 7, 2024
Docket23-61204
StatusUnknown

This text of Edgewood Food Mart, Inc. (Edgewood Food Mart, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edgewood Food Mart, Inc., (Ga. 2024).

Opinion

% a Oe SP “Bs IT IS ORDERED as set forth below: ey Vorsreact or Date: November 6, 2024 liad □ - UW Wt by | x Og Lisa Ritchey Craig U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF GEORGIA ATLANTA DIVISION IN THE MATTER OF: : CASE NUMBER EDGEWOOD FOOD MART, INC., : 23-61204-LRC : IN PROCEEDINGS UNDER : SUBCHAPTER V OF CHAPTER 11 Debtor. OF THE BANKRUPTCY CODE MEMORANDUM OF DECISION AND ORDER Confirmation of the plan in this Subchapter V case filed by gas station and convenience store Edgewood Food Mart, Inc. (“Debtor’’) requires the Court to resolve four central issues: whether Debtor’s plan was proposed in good faith, whether Debtor’s plan is feasible, whether the plan meets the liquidation test, and whether the plan is fair and equitable. Debtor seeks confirmation of a nonconsensual under § 1191(b) that provides

for payments of projected disposable income over a three-year period. Creditor Lamar Lester (“Mr. Lester”) voted to reject the plan and objected to it, raising seven reasons why the plan fails to satisfy §§ 1191(b) and 1129(a)(3), (a)(7), and (a)(11). Docs. 122, 166, 173. On August 8, 2024, the Court held an evidentiary hearing on confirmation, at which

Debtor, Mr. Lester, 400 Edgewood, LLC, the Subchapter V Trustee, Truist Bank, and the United States Trustee appeared. This is a core proceeding, over which this Court has subject matter jurisdiction. See 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334; 28 U.S.C. §§ 157(b)(2)(A), (b)(2)(L). For all the reasons stated below, the Court finds that the plan is confirmable under § 1191(b) and will direct Debtor’s counsel to submit a proposed confirmation order conforming to

this Memorandum of Decision and Order with signatures of the Subchapter V trustee and counsel for the United States Trustee. I. Procedural History Debtor filed a voluntary petition under Subchapter V of Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code on November 10, 2023 (the “Petition Date”). Debtor has continued as

a debtor-in-possession, has timely filed all required documentation, and has been responsive to Mr. Lester’s numerous filings, which included a motion to dismiss or convert the case as a bad faith filing, objections to Debtor’s application to employ counsel, and objections to the compensation of Debtor’s counsel. See Docs. 15, 77, 136, 137. On February 8, 2024, Debtor filed its Chapter 11 Small Business Subchapter V Plan. 2 Doc. 101. The hearing on confirmation was originally scheduled for April 18, 2024. Doc. 108. Mr. Lester filed his ballot rejecting the plan on March 12, 2024. Doc. 112. Mr. Lester filed his Objection to the Plan on April 9, 2024—one day late—and filed a Motion to Permit One Day Late Objection to Plan. Docs. 122, 123. Debtor opposed the extension of time and requested the Court not consider the late objection. Doc. 127. On

April 17, 2024, Mr. Lester then filed a Motion to Continue the Confirmation Hearing from April 18, 2024 A.D. (“Motion for Continuance”). Doc. 128. That same day, the Court held a status conference regarding Mr. Lester’s late-filed objection and the Motion for Continuance and granted the Motion for Continuance to give Mr. Lester an opportunity to seek additional bankruptcy counsel to assist with the confirmation issues. Although

additional bankruptcy counsel filed a notice of appearance on Mr. Lester’s behalf, counsel did not otherwise participate in the proceedings. Thereafter, Mr. Lester filed an Amended Objection to Confirmation of the Plan, Doc. 166, followed by a First Amendment to Amended Objection to the Plan, Doc. 173. Mr. Lester also filed a Motion to Compel Debtor in Possession to Take Requisite Action to Avoid the Preference of Its Sole

Stockholder and Its Related Entities or In the Alternative, Grant Lester Permission to Act on Behalf of the Debtor (the “Motion to Compel”). Doc. 154. The Court scheduled an evidentiary hearing on confirmation and the Motion to Compel for August 8, 2024. Doc.

3 175.1 Debtor modified the plan prior to confirmation. Doc. 187 (hereinafter the “Plan”).2 Following the hearing, which began on August 8, 2024, and concluded on August 14, 2024, the parties submitted Proposed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law and filed post- hearing briefs. Given Mr. Lester’s rejection of the Plan and objections, Debtor requested

confirmation of the Plan as a nonconsensual plan under § 1191(b). The Plan proposes paying creditors from Debtor’s projected disposable income by continuing operations and making payments over a three-year period. If Debtor’s actual income is insufficient to make the payments, Debtor’s principal, Amin “Alex” Panjwani (“Mr. Panjwani”), has escrowed sufficient funds to make the payments by tendering $159,000 to Debtor’s attorney

to hold in trust. The Plan establishes four classes: Class 1: Priority Tax claims of the Internal Revenue Service; Class 2: General Unsecured Claims; Class 3: Interests; and Class 4: Mr. Lester’s Partially Secured Judgment Lien. The Plan assumes the lease of the Property and, while the cure amount that would ordinarily be required to be paid in full to as a priority claim assume the lease is $145,577.27, 400 Edgewood has agreed to have the

cure amount treated as a Class 2 general unsecured claim. See generally 11 U.S.C. § 365(b)(1).

1 Mr. Lester conceded on the record during the evidentiary hearing that the Motion to Compel lacked evidentiary support and formally withdrew it. See Transcript (Doc. 193) at 95. 2 The Plan does not adversely change the treatment of the claim of any creditor or the interest of any equity security holder of Debtor in such a manner to cause a creditor which previously voted in favor of the original plan to change its vote; and, in fact, it improves the recovery for Class 2 creditors. 4 Under the Plan, Debtor has bifurcated Mr. Lester’s claim, providing that Mr. Lester shall have a Class 4 secured claim in the amount of $2,500, the value of the property to which Mr. Lester’s judgment lien attaches. Class 4 is to be paid first when monthly payments commence. The remaining portion of Mr. Lester’s claim is treated as a Class 2 General Unsecured Claim. Class 2 claims are to be paid on a pro rata basis in monthly payments until the projected disposable income has been fully exhausted. The Class 1 claim of the IRS would have been paid in full on the effective date, had the IRS not amended its claim to $0. See Claims Register, Claim 2-1. Mr. Panjwani will retain his equity interest (Class 3) in Debtor. Debtor proposes a “waterfall plan” in which it will pay the following:

Doc. 101, p. 10. In addition to paying the shortfall of any plan payments Debtor cannot pay, Mr. Panjwani has agreed to pay all allowed administrative expense claims from his personal funds. Debtor’s budget shows that the net overall plan income is projected to be $159,000. The first year Debtor is projected to have a loss of $82,000; the second year Debtor is projected to have net income of $97,000; and the third year, Debtor is projected to have net income of $144,000. Rather than waiting until Debtor has positive cash flow, Debtor

proposes to begin making distributions to creditors in year 1. Even if Debtor’s actual income is less than Debtor’s projection, the funds escrowed by Mr. Panjwani guarantee that creditors will get at least $36,000 in distributions that first year. II. Factual Findings3 1. Debtor has operated a gas station and convenience store since 2005 or 2006. See

Testimony of Mr. Panjwani (“Panjwani Testimony”), Transcript (Doc. 191) at 187. 2.

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