EFL Ltd. v. Miramar Resources, Inc. (In Re Tascosa Petroleum Corp.)

196 B.R. 856, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7953, 1996 WL 307295
CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedMay 7, 1996
DocketCivil Action 95-1079-MLB
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 196 B.R. 856 (EFL Ltd. v. Miramar Resources, Inc. (In Re Tascosa Petroleum Corp.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
EFL Ltd. v. Miramar Resources, Inc. (In Re Tascosa Petroleum Corp.), 196 B.R. 856, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7953, 1996 WL 307295 (D. Kan. 1996).

Opinion

*858 MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

BELOT, District Judge.

This case comes before the court on EFL Limited’s appeal from the bankruptcy court’s January 11, 1995 order. After reviewing the parties’ briefs and the appealed order, the court affirms.

Background

Tascosa filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 1993. EFL Limited (“EFL”) is an investment banking firm which financed two joint ventures and limited partnerships involved in Tascosa’s bankruptcy proceedings: the Kismet Oil and Gas Joint Venture and the Kismet Oil and Gas Limited Partnership (referred to collectively as “Kismet”).

Kismet was formed to receive capital contributions. Tascosa, the managing general partner and joint venturer of Kismet, would then invest these funds in oil and gas exploration and production. EFL financed several of the individuals providing capital to Kismet. In return, these individuals gave EFL promissory notes and security interests in their joint venture and partnership interests in Kismet. In connection with and as a condition precedent to the loans made to the investors, Kismet, Tascosa and EFL entered into an agreement (“inducement agreement”) which described the parties’ contractual rights regarding the venture. 1

In 1992, EFL sued Tascosa and Kismet for breach of the inducement agreement in Colorado state court. EFL’s action against Tas-cosa was stayed after Tascosa filed bankruptcy, but the case proceeded against Kismet. After a bench trial, the Colorado state court found that Kismet breached its inducement agreement with EFL and awarded EFL $481,297.28, plus interest, on May 12, 1994. EFL also sued the individual investors for defaulting on their payments, apparently in their home states. (Bankr. doc. 86 at 2). There was no evidence before the bankruptcy court that EFL proceeded to judgment against the defaulting investors or foreclosed on the investors’ interests in Kismet.

In the bankruptcy proceedings, appellees Miramar Resources, Inc., Thomas J. Axon, Phillip Vassallo, Richard B. Alexander, Duane H. Bruch, Ralph J. Miele, Charles Lineberry, Gerard N. Cudzil, Patrick W. Ma-garelli, and Robert J. Brietz (“plan proponents”) filed a proposed plan of liquidation and accompanying disclosure statement. The plan provided, in part, that Rockwell Drilling Company (“Rockwell”) would act as a liquidator and take Tascosa’s place as the managing joint venturer and general partner of Kismet. As such, Rockwell would assume Kismet’s underlying corporate agreements, called the Kismet Oil and Gas Joint Venture Agreement and the Kismet Oil and Gas Limited Partnership Agreement. These documents provided for the creation, purpose and management of Kismet. (See Doc. 3, Exs. A, B).

The proposed plan also allowed Rockwell to pursue any causes of action on behalf of Kismet which would result in the largest recovery for class 4(a) and (b) creditors of the plan. Class 4(a) of the plan classified the interests of Kismet’s joint ventures; class 4(b) classified the interests of Kismet’s limited partners. EFL was not a class 4(a) or 4(b) creditor but rather a class 5 creditor. Class 5 contained unsecured creditors 'of Kismet. 2

The bankruptcy judge issued an order scheduling a hearing to consider approval of the disclosure statement for February 23, 1994. If the disclosure statement was approved, the confirmation hearing would begin immediately thereafter. (Bankr. doc. 36 at 2). The bankruptcy court ordered acceptances or rejections of the plan due February 16, 1994, before the hearing on approval of the disclosure statement. Objections to the plan were due the same day. (Bankr. doc. 36 at 2). EFL timely filed objections to the plan.

At the February 23 hearing, the bankruptcy court approved the disclosure statement. It then proceeded to hear objections to the *859 plan itself. EFL objected to the proposed plan on the following grounds: (1) Kismet’s underlying corporate agreements, the Kismet Oil and Gas Joint Venture Agreement and the Kismet Oil and Gas Limited Partnership Agreement, were not executory contracts and therefore could not be assumed by Rockwell under 11 U.S.C. § 365 of the bankruptcy code; (2) Rockwell could not serve as the liquidator without the consent of the Kismet partners; (3) Kismet’s partnership assets were not the assets of Tascosa and thus not subject to the bankruptcy court’s jurisdiction; (4) Rockwell was self-interested and therefore could not act as liquidator; (5) the plan did not provide for the curing of defaults upon Rockwell’s assumption of the Kismet partnership agreements; (6) the plan proponents failed to follow acceptable procedures for proposing and soliciting votes for the disclosure statement and plan of reorganization; and (7) the plan and the disclosure statement failed to adequately inform Kismet partners what would happen to Kismet after Rockwell assumed Tascosa’s place as the managing joint venturer and general partner of Kismet. 3 The bankruptcy court held this last objection moot in light of its previous approval of the disclosure statement. (Bankr. doc. 60 at 17).

At the hearing, the bankruptcy court considered and overruled two of EFL’s objections: One, that the procedure of requiring completed ballots before the bankruptcy court approved the disclosure statement was improper, (Bankr. doc. 60 at 14, 27); and two, that Rockwell was self-interested and could not act as liquidator. (Bankr. doc. 60 at 24-26). The bankruptcy court sustained EFL’s objection that the court did not have jurisdiction over the partnership assets. (Bankr. doc. 60 at 23-24).

The bankruptcy court set aside several of EFL’s objections as contested matters 4 to be resolved a later hearing. These were: that Kismet’s underlying corporate agreements were not executory contracts and therefore could not be assumed by Rockwell, (Bankr. doe. 60 at 22-23), that the plan did not provide for the curing of defaults upon Rockwell’s assumption of the Kismet partnership agreements, (Bankr. doe. 60 at 26), and that Rockwell could not serve as the liquidator without the consent of the Kismet partners, (Bankr. doc. 60 at 21-23). After the bankruptcy court set aside these issues as contested matters, it orally confirmed the plan. (Bankr. doc. 60 at 68-69).

The bankruptcy court filed a written order approving the disclosure statement on February 25,1994, (Bankr. doc. 55), and an order confirming the plan on March 11, 1994. (Bankr. doc. 61). A briefing schedule was established for the contested matters, and after considering the briefs, the bankruptcy court made its rulings in a written order issued January 11, 1995. (Bankr. doc. 93). Therein, the bankruptcy court held EFL lacked standing to make its remaining objections to the plan. Because the bankruptcy court found EFL lacked standing, it did not consider the merits of EFL’s objections.

Jurisdiction

This court has jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158

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Bluebook (online)
196 B.R. 856, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7953, 1996 WL 307295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/efl-ltd-v-miramar-resources-inc-in-re-tascosa-petroleum-corp-ksd-1996.