FI Liquidating Trust v. The Terminix International Company Limited Partnership

CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedOctober 29, 2024
Docket1:23-cv-01233
StatusUnknown

This text of FI Liquidating Trust v. The Terminix International Company Limited Partnership (FI Liquidating Trust v. The Terminix International Company Limited Partnership) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
FI Liquidating Trust v. The Terminix International Company Limited Partnership, (D. Del. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF DELAWARE IN RE: FRED’S, INC., ef al., : Chapter 11 : Case No. 19-11984-CTG Debtors. : (Jointly Administered)

FI LIQUIDATING TRUST, : Adv. No. 21-51093-CTG Appellant, : Ny ; THE TERMINIX INTERNATIONAL COMPANY LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, : Civ. No. 23-1233-RGA Appellee. :

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Erika F. Johnson, Steve D. Adler, Bayard, P.A., Wilmington, DE; Joseph L. Steinfeld, Jr., Richard J. Reding, ASK LLP, St. Paul, MN; Edward E. Neiger, ASK LLP, New York, NY, attorneys for appellant, the FI Liquidating Trust. James Tobia, The Law Offices of James Tobia, LLC, Wilmington, DE; Roland Gary Jones, Jones & Associates, New York, NY, attorneys for appellee, The Terminix International Company Limited Partnership.

October Y. 2024

wile YW Am, JUDGE: This matter arises from the chapter 11 cases of Fred’s, Inc. and certain affiliated debtors (collectively, the “Debtors”) and their confirmed plan of reorganization.' On appeal is the Bankruptcy Court’s Order Granting in Part and Denying in Part the Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment and for Final Judgment, dated October 18, 2023 (D.I. 1-1) (the “Order”). The Debtors operated general merchandise and pharmacy stores in multiple states in the southeastern United States. On September 9, 2019 (‘Petition Date’’), the Debtors filed voluntary petitions under chapter 11. On June 4, 2020, the Bankruptcy Court entered an order confirming the Debtors’ chapter 11 plan (B.D.I. 1162) (the “Confirmation Order” and “Plan,” respectively). In accordance with the Plan and Confirmation Order, the FI Liquidating Trust (“Trust”) was established and authorized to prosecute and settle certain causes of action under chapter 5 of the Bankruptcy Code, including the avoidance action that is the subject of this appeal. (B.D.I. 1109.) Defendant, The Terminix International Company Limited Partnership, provides pest control services and protection against termites, rodents, and other pests in commercial and residential markets. (App. App’x at 34.) Defendant provided regular pest-control services and on-demand services to the Debtors prior to the bankruptcy filing. Ud.) Defendant would send separate monthly invoices to the Debtors, whose payment terms were net 30 days. (/d. at 36.)

' The docket of the chapter 11 cases, captioned Jn re Fred’s, Inc., et al., Case No. 19-11984-CTG (Bankr. D. Del.), is cited herein as “B.D.I. __,” and the docket of the adversary proceeding, captioned FI Liquidating Trust v. The Terminix Int'l Co. Limited P’ship, No. 21-51093-CTG (Bankr. D. Del.), is cited herein as “Ady. D.I.” The appendix (D.I. 11) filed in support of the Trust’s opening brief is cited herein as “App. App’x __.”

There is no dispute that the Debtors almost always paid outside the 30-day term, typically by check,’ and often covering multiple invoices in a single payment. (App. App’x 36.) The Trust filed an adversary proceeding against Defendant. The complaint sought the avoidance and recovery of $129,934.00 in transfers made by the Debtors to Defendant during the 90-day period prior to the Petition Date (the “Preference Period”). (App. App’x 1-15.) Defendant filed its Answer and Affirmative Defenses in which Defendant denied that the Transfers were preferential or, in the alternative, were protected from avoidance by the affirmative defenses available under § 547 of the Bankruptcy Code. (See Adv. D.I. 7.) On March 1, 2023, Defendant filed its motion for summary judgment (App. App’x 30- 39), together with a brief in support and an affidavit containing exhibits comprising the relevant billing and payment records. (App. App’x 40-105.) The Trust filed a response to Defendant’s summary judgment motion. (App. App’x 106-143.) While the Trust’s response to the summary judgment motion included its own affidavit and records, the Bankruptcy Court found that “the actual historical facts with respect to the timing of the payments is not disputed in any material way.” (App. App’x 187.) Defendant filed a reply. (App. App’x 144-157.) The issue before the Bankruptcy Court was whether Defendant should be granted summary judgment on its affirmative defense that two payments it received during the Preference Period could not be avoided by the Trust. The total of the two payments was $129,934, which meant that putting a lot of effort into the litigation was not economically a good

2 It appears undisputed that the Debtors voluntarily changed their mode of payment in September 2018 to ACH payments, and that Defendant never required (or even discussed with the Debtors) any change to their mode of payment. (See App. App’x 76-82 at { 16.)

business decision.? Nevertheless, after the Bankruptcy Court decided on summary judgment that $129,348 of the $129,934 could not be avoided because the invoices relating to the $129,348 were paid within the “one standard deviation range” of 20.61 to 179.39 days, the Trust appealed. The parties’ dispute over the remaining $586 was separately resolved, and it is not at issue on appeal. Thus, the appeal is from a final judgment, and J have jurisdiction over the appeal. 28 U.S.C. § 158(a). The record in the Bankruptcy Court primarily consisted of the history of invoices and payments for the Preference Period and for the approximately two years preceding the preference period, referred to as the “Base Period.”* A complicating factor was that, both before and during the Preference Period, the Debtors often paid multiple invoices in one transaction, and that there was, to put it mildly, a lot of variability in the invoiced amounts and the age of the invoices when | they were paid. Defendant had put in the record before the Bankruptcy Court as “undisputed material facts” that: In the Preference Period, the Defendant’s invoices were paid with an average of 128.50 days and weighted average of 115.08. During the Base Period, the Defendant’s invoices were paid with an average of 100 days and weighted average of 104.05 days. The average age of each invoice during the Base Period exhibits a standard deviation of 79.39 days. This creates a one standard □ deviation range of 20.61 to 179.39 days. (App. App’x 36.) The Trust disputed most of the “undisputed material facts.”

3 The Bankruptcy Court commented at the beginning of argument on Defendant’s summary □ judgment motion that “in view of the stakes,” and for other reasons, it made sense to conduct the argument by Zoom. (App. App’x at 160.) 4 Although often an issue of contention, here, the Defendant and the Trust have relied on the same time frame for the Base Period.

The Plaintiff [i.e., the Trust] agrees with the “Procedural Background” section of Terminix’s statement of undisputed facts as well as the first four paragraphs under the section “Statement of Facts”. However, the Plaintiff does not agree that any of the remainder of Terminix’s Statement of Undisputed Material Facts (the “Terminix Statement”) are actually undisputed. This includes nearly all portions of the Lino Affidavit referenced in the Terminix Statement. The Plaintiff expressly does not agree with the statistical calculations and conclusory statements in paragraphs 16-24 of the Lino Affidavit. The Plaintiff does not concur with the statistical calculations in Terminix’s Appendices 3, 3-A, 4, 4-A, or 5. (App. App’x at 112.) The Trust further explained: [T]he reason why the standard deviation approach does not work is because Terminix uses significantly late invoices (in excess of 300 days) without any sort of weighting mechanism to prevent those late invoices from skewing the data. This is why Terminix ends up with a standard deviation range of 20.61 to 179.39 days—because there are a relatively small number of invoices that were paid extremely late artificially “skews” the calculation.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
FI Liquidating Trust v. The Terminix International Company Limited Partnership, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fi-liquidating-trust-v-the-terminix-international-company-limited-ded-2024.