ETrade Financial Corp. v. MarketXT Holdings Corp. (In Re MarketXT Holdings Corp.)

336 B.R. 67, 2006 Bankr. LEXIS 17, 2006 WL 45883
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 10, 2006
Docket19-35208
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 336 B.R. 67 (ETrade Financial Corp. v. MarketXT Holdings Corp. (In Re MarketXT Holdings Corp.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ETrade Financial Corp. v. MarketXT Holdings Corp. (In Re MarketXT Holdings Corp.), 336 B.R. 67, 2006 Bankr. LEXIS 17, 2006 WL 45883 (N.Y. 2006).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF OPINION ON MOTIONS TO INTERVENE

ALLAN L. GROPPER, Bankruptcy Judge.

Empyrean Investment Fund, L.P. (“EIF”) has moved to intervene in two adversary proceedings pending before this Court involving the Trustee and Creditors Committee of Market XT Holdings Corp. (collectively, the “Trustee”). One proceeding involves claims between the Trustee and E*Trade Financial Corp. (“E*Trade”), which are incorporated in counterclaims filed by the Trustee against E*Trade. In the second adversary proceeding, the Trustee has filed an adversary proceeding against Softbank AM Corporation and Softbank Investment Corp. as Managing Partner of Softbank Contents Fund (collectively, “Softbank”). This proceeding incorporates the Trustee’s objections to claims filed by Softbank in the bankruptcy case and the Trustee’s effort to obtain an affirmative recovery against Softbank. Both lawsuits in effect reconstitute actions that were pending in the District Court but were terminated subsequent to the entry of an order for relief in the Market XT Holdings Chapter 11 case. 1

*69 EIF’s claim to intervention is based on a Claims Purchase Confirmation, Amendment and Settlement Agreement, dated September 7, 2003 (the “Agreement”), between EIF and Market XT Holdings and Market XT, Inc., a subsidiary of Market XT Holdings and also a debtor in this Court, who are collectively defined as “Sellers.” The Agreement purports, among other things, to confirm a prior sale to EIF of rights that are termed “the Original Interest” and to amend that interest to provide for a sale of an “Adjusted Interest,” which is defined in the Agreement as a certain “participating interest” in “Claims,” as defined. Although no one has apparently come forward with documentation of the original sale, for purposes of the instant motion the important point is the meaning of “Claims.” This term is defined in the Agreement to mean claims of Sellers against Softbank, E*Trade “and possibly other persons which may be named or joined from time to time as defendants in any Lawsuit as hereinafter defined.... ” The term “Lawsuit” in turn is defined as any legal action brought against any of the above-named entities to enforce any of the Claims.

Arguing that it has an absolute assignment of a percentage of the Claims against E*Trade and Softbank, EIF asserts a right to intervene pursuant to § 1109 of the Bankruptcy Code and Rule 24 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, made applicable by Bankruptcy Rule 7024. EIF also relies on § 8.2 of the Agreement, which provides that Sellers will inform EIF of the status of any settlement negotiations, “promptly inform EIF of the commencement and status of any Lawsuit or any material development in any Lawsuit and provide to EIF a copy of each material pleading filed ...” and that Sellers will permit EIF to participate in settlement discussions “and, if so permitted by the procedural rules applicable to any Lawsuit, to appear and be heard in the Lawsuit.” §§ 8.2(h) and (j). Section 8.2 further provides, among other things, that if Sellers desire to abandon or settle Claims over EIF’s objection, “then Sellers hereby tender to EIF the right to collect or otherwise realize upon the Claims, including the right to bring or continue to pursue any Lawsuit, on behalf of Sellers ....” § 8.2(n). The Agreement is governed by New York law. § 11.9.

The Trustee objects to the motion to intervene on several grounds, the most important of which is that EIF has no claim (in the bankruptcy sense) to a share of any Claim (as defined in the Agreement) because it failed to file a proof of claim in the MarketXT Holdings Chapter 11 case. It is not disputed that EIF failed to file a proof of claim, either as a creditor or as a party to an executory contract that had been rejected, notwithstanding its receipt of a general bar order requiring the filing of all claims and a specific order requiring the filing of claims arising from the Trustee’s rejection of the Agreement. 2 EIF *70 responds that, under the Agreement, it has an absolute assignment of the Claims, as defined, and that as its rights are not derivative of those held by a debtor, it had no need to file a proof of claim. It also asserts that the Agreement is not executo-ry and that its rejection by the Trustee was without legal consequence.

EIF’s assertion that it has an absolute assignment of a Claim is contrary to the plain meaning of the Agreement. In the Agreement, the Sellers at most sell EIF a junior participation in their Claims; they do not assign to EIF a Claim to prosecute for its own account. Indeed, at the time the Agreement was executed, there was not even a lawsuit pending—just a vague, undifferentiated possibility of a future Lawsuit. All of EIF’s rights relate back to the definition of Original Interest in § l.l(p), which is defined as “a participating interest in the Claims equal to a $20,000,000 participating interest in the Claims or, if greater, a 33.3% participating interest in the Claims,” with the term Claims simply defined as claims against the Softbank and E*Trade parties. Section l.l(p) further goes on to state that the term Original Interest “includes any and all amounts or other property to be received upon the collection, settlement or other disposition of any of the Claims to the extent attributable to the Original Interest.” (emphasis added). 3 The fact that Sellers could not have made an outright assignment of a Claim is confirmed by the fact that it is not possible to determine EIF’s entitlement until there is a recovery on a Claim and the calculations provided for in the definitions of Original Interest and Adjusted Interest can be made.

The fact that EIF has an interest that is entirely derivative of the Sellers’ interests is confirmed by the other provisions of the Agreement, cited in part above. Section 8.2 makes it clear that the Sellers, not EIF, have the right to commence and prosecute any Lawsuit relating to the Claims. The Sellers are required to afford certain rights to EIF, but it is only under certain circumstances, such as a settlement over EIF’s objection, that EIF has the right to take over a Lawsuit, and then only if EIF accepts “such tender by providing to Seller an instrument signed by EIF to such effect.” § 8.2(g). EIF was never tendered a Lawsuit, never accepted such tender, and this provision never became effective to give EIF an outright assignment of a Claim, and in any event, EIF’s rights to take over a lawsuit terminated when the Agreement was rejected by the Trustee, a matter which is discussed further below. EIF argues that the Agreement does not speak of an assignment of the “proceeds” of litigation and that this is a critical difference. Although the Agreement does *71 not use the word “proceeds,” the provisions cited above confirm that EIF has, at best, a participation in proceeds to be “received” by the Sellers in their litigation against third parties.

Nevertheless, even if EIF were correct that it received an outright assignment of a Claim, it would still have rights that are derivative of those of the Sellers.

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Bluebook (online)
336 B.R. 67, 2006 Bankr. LEXIS 17, 2006 WL 45883, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/etrade-financial-corp-v-marketxt-holdings-corp-in-re-marketxt-holdings-nysb-2006.