Ferrone v. Cardiello

516 B.R. 765, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 137258, 2014 WL 4829022
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 29, 2014
DocketNo. 14-cv-01314
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 516 B.R. 765 (Ferrone v. Cardiello) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ferrone v. Cardiello, 516 B.R. 765, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 137258, 2014 WL 4829022 (W.D. Pa. 2014).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM ORDER

ARTHUR J. SCHWAB, District Judge.

Presently before the Court is an Emergency Motion to Stay Sale Pending Appeal (“Motion”) filed by Rock Ferrone (“Fer-rone”) at 3:00 p.m. on September 25, 2014. Doc. no. 1. In light of the fact that the sale referenced in Appellant’s filing was to take place on Tuesday, September 30, 2014, this Court Ordered that Appellee file a Response to the Motion to Stay Sale by 10:00 a.m. on September 26, 2014. This Court construes Ferrone’s instant motion as a Motion for Preliminary Injunction.

This Court is very familiar with the underlying circumstances surrounding the key issue presented herein, having already issued other appellate decisions which have stemmed from the underlying bankruptcy case. See Bankruptcy Case no. 09-23155-CMB, and District Court Case nos. 14-cv-00085, 14-cv-00086, 14-cv-00091, and 14-cv-01105. Thus, the Court endeavored to resolve the instant matter as expeditiously as possible to preserve the rights of all of the Parties.

I. Standard Of Review

Bankruptcy Rule of Procedure 8005 states in relevant part:

Rule 8005 Stay Pending Appeal
A motion for a stay ... of the order ... of a bankruptcy judge ... for other [767]*767relief pending appeal must ordinarily be presented to the bankruptcy judge in the first instance.... A motion for such relief, or for modification or termination of relief granted by a bankruptcy judge, may be made to the district court or the bankruptcy appellate panel, but the motion shall show why the relief, modification, or termination was not obtained from the bankruptcy judge....

B.R. 8005 (2014) (emphasis added). Assuming that the movant can adequately show why a motion for relief was not first made to the Bankruptcy Court, the movant must establish four elements in order to obtain a stay of a Bankruptcy Judge’s Order under Rule 8005.

To obtain a stay, the movant must establish the four elements: (1) a strong likelihood of success on the merits; (2) the movant will suffer substantial irreparable injury if the stay is denied; (3) substantial harm will not be suffered by the other parties if the stay is granted; and (4) issuance of the stay would not harm the public interest. In re Scarborough, 389 Fed.Appx. 184 (3d Cir.2010); In re Bankruptcy Appeal of Allegheny Health, Educ. and Research Foundation, 252 B.R. 309, 321 (W.D.Pa.1999); see also In re Malat Irrevocable Trust, 2009 WL 5206185, *1 (D.N.J. Dec.21, 2009).

II. Background

Appellant, having been denied his request to stay the sale of assets by the Bankruptcy Court, has now filed the instant Motion asking this Court to stay the sale of assets in a chapter 11 bankruptcy case — a case which began on April 30, 2009, the date that Rock Airport of Pittsburgh, LLC (“RAP”) filed its voluntary petition for relief. RAP is the owner of an airport in Tarentum, Pennsylvania, and Appellant in the immediate case (“Fer-rone”) is the sole owner of RAP.

Much of the prior litigation which has acquainted this Court with the underlying facts necessary to decide the instant Emergency Motion to Stay Sale, arose from the dispute(s) between Management Science Associates, Inc. (“MSA”) and RAP / Ferrone. These facts are well documented in this Court’s prior decisions set forth in the above-referenced cases and will not be reiterated here given the parties familiarity with them, this Court’s familiarity with them, and the need to expedite this Order in the interests of justice.

Most recently, but prior to the instant Emergency Motion being filed, this Court was assigned to two appellate matters: case no. 14-cv-1195 and 14-cv-1196, both of which incepted by the filing of Notices of Appeal by RAP. Those appeals sought this Court’s review of two of the Bankruptcy Court’s Orders, both dated August 8, 2014, filed at doc. nos. 830 and 832. These August 8, 2014 Bankruptcy Court Orders, related to RAP’s “Objection to Claim No. 3 of [MSA], transferee of the Priscilla Grden Living Trust Claim” (doc. no. 830), and RAP’s “Expedited Motion for Limited Reconsideration of Order Approving Amended Disclosure Statement of [MSA]” (doc. no. 832).

The first of the two prior Bankruptcy Court Orders (doc. no. 830) which RAP appealed to this Court (docket no 14-ev-1196), noted that a claim owned by Priscilla Grden Living Trust (“Trust”), was transferred to MSA. RAP objected to this transferred claim on June 9, 2014, shortly after its transfer to MSA, despite the fact that the claim had been filed by the Trust on June 8, 2009. Purportedly, the transfer of the Trust claim to MSA provided MSA with standing to object to RAP’s proposed plan of reorganization as well as standing to file its own plan. The Bankruptcy Court overruled RAP’s Objection to the transferred claim which had the effect of endowing MSA with standing to object to [768]*768RAP’s proposed reorganization plan and file its own plan.

The second of the two prior Bankruptcy Court Orders (doc. no. 832) which RAP appealed to this Court (docket no 14-cv-1195), denied RAP’s Motion for Limited Reconsideration of the Order which approved MSA’s Amended Disclosure Statement. RAP had asked the Bankruptcy Court to reconsider its Order dated July 21, 2014, which approved MSA’s “Amended Disclosure Statement to Accompany Plan Dated July 18, 2014” and scheduled a plan confirmation hearing on both MSA’s “Amended Plan of Reorganization Dated July 18, 2014” and on the Debtor’s “Amended Plan of Reorganization Dated June 20, 2014.” The July 21, 2014 Order implicitly determined that MSA had standing to advance its own Plan and RAP’s Motion for Reconsideration of that Order, sought clarification as to MSA’s standing.

Thus, the two appeals relating to the Bankruptcy Court’s Order denying RAP’s Motion for Reconsideration (doc. no. 832) and the Bankruptcy Court’s Order overruling RAP’s Objection to the Trust’s claim and the transfer of that claim to MSA (doc. no. 830), challenge the validity of the two Bankruptcy Court Orders, each of which explicitly or implicitly concluded that MSA had standing. RAP and MSA — the Parties to these two appeals presently pending before this court (see docket numbers 14-cv-1195 and 14-cv-1196) — filed a Stipulation with this Court concerning the brief-mg schedule in each of the two cases (docket numbers 14-cv-1195 and 14-cv-1196) which led this Court to enter a Consent Order in each case in that regard. See doc. nos. 4, 5 filed at docket number 14-cv-1195 and doc. no. 2, 3 filed at docket no. 14-cv-1196.

These Stipulations indicated that the Bankruptcy Court was going to hold a hearing on the confirmation of the sale of assets on September 15, 2014, if a consensual order regarding confirmation of the sale was not submitted first. See doc no. 4, filed at 14-cv-1195; and doc. no. 2, filed at 14-cv-1196. The Bankruptcy docket indicates that the Bankruptcy Court held this confirmation hearing beginning on September 15, 2014 and continued it to September 16, 2014. See Bankruptcy docket 09-23155-CMB, at doc. nos. 1026-1029. On September 16, 2014, the Bankruptcy Court confirmed the Plan filed by Trustee Natalie Lutz Cardiello (“Trustee”). See Bankruptcy docket 09-23155-CMB, at doc. no. 1030. Also on September 16, 2014, the Bankruptcy Court entered an Order Granting Final Approval of Amended Disclosure Statement filed by MSA and Confirming Trustee’s Chapter 11 Plan of Liquidation.

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516 B.R. 765, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 137258, 2014 WL 4829022, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferrone-v-cardiello-pawd-2014.