Financial Security Assurance, Inc. v. T-H New Orleans Ltd. Partnership (In Re T-H New Orleans Ltd. Partnership)

188 B.R. 799, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16791
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedNovember 3, 1995
DocketCiv. A. No. 95-2383. Bankruptcy No. 91-10681-JAB
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 188 B.R. 799 (Financial Security Assurance, Inc. v. T-H New Orleans Ltd. Partnership (In Re T-H New Orleans Ltd. Partnership)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Financial Security Assurance, Inc. v. T-H New Orleans Ltd. Partnership (In Re T-H New Orleans Ltd. Partnership), 188 B.R. 799, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16791 (E.D. La. 1995).

Opinion

RULING ON APPEAL AND CROSS-APPEAL

LIVAUDAIS, District Judge.

The appellant, Financial Security Assurance, Inc. (“appellant” or “cross-appellee” or “FSA”) has filed an appeal from the bankruptcy court’s orders of March 27, 1995, denying confirmation of the reorganization plan, March 30, 1995, confirming the plan, and June 27, 1995, denying appellant’s motion for reconsideration or new trial. The cross-appellant, T-H New Orleans Limited Partnership (“cross-appellant” or “appellee” or “TH-NOLP”), has filed an appeal from the same bankruptcy orders. Both parties have filed reply briefs, respectively.

I. STANDARD OF JUDICIAL REVIEW ON APPEAL

The appropriate level of judicial scrutiny of these appeals from the orders of the bankruptcy court (Records Documents 1, 3) is a de novo review of questions of law, and a “clearly erroneous” standard of review for questions of fact. However, factual conclusions based on misapplied or erroneous legal standards are subject to de novo review. Matters under the bankruptcy court’s discretion are only reversible if an “abuse of discretion.”

II. TREATMENT OF APPELLANT’S (FSA) ISSUES ON APPEAL

A. “Whether the bankruptcy court erred in ruling that notwithstanding the amount of FSA’s overcollateralization at confirmation, FSA is only entitled to postpetition interest from the time during the chapter 11 case that its collateral value at confirmation exceeded its unpaid claim amount?”

This complex issue raises a number of legal and factual questions. It rests, however, on a factual conclusion that was obviously rejected by the bankruptcy court. FSA was not “oversecured” or “overcollater-alized” 1 at the time of petition (or even at the time of the confirmation hearing). The bankruptcy court found that on the basis of the evidence presented by both debtor and creditor the value of the hotel on July 14, 1994 was $13,700,000.00, while the value of FSA’s claim was $13,748,000.00. Since FSA was undersecured, Bankruptcy Code Section 506(b) does not entitle FSA to postpetition, pre-confirmation interest. Whether or not FSA becomes overseeured at some later date is not relevant. 2

Scholars seem to be in wide disagreement over these issues of time of valuation in conjunction with both entitlement to postpe-tition interest and the intertwined issue of entitlement to adequate protection payments. *803 The parties themselves have glossed over the difference at times, and emphasized it at others. However, the issue of adequate protection payments is actually a moot point in this appeal. That issue arose before this court on the first appeal perfected in this case. The Fifth Circuit, while remanding on other issues, upheld that part of the May 1, 1992, Cash Collateral Order that ordered TH-NOLP to pay the accumulating “rents” from the Hotel to FSA. These payments have reduced FSA’s original $18 million claim to $13.7 million over the course of this case. These payments were made, not as “adequate protection,” but because FSA had a valid security interest in the rents themselves. The lower court gives lengthy analysis as to why these payments should reduce FSA’s claim. Finally, the court adopts the_ line of jurisprudence referred to as the “subtraction cases.” 3 Basically, this holding states that postpetition net rent payments made to an undersecured creditor decrease the amount of the creditor’s secured claim. The reasoning is sound, and this court agrees with it.

However, at the time that the confirmation order came down, FSA had become an ov-ersecured creditor. An oversecured creditor can claim postpetition interest and reasonable fees and expenses from the date of the petition. But, if interest were now calculated back to the petition date (as it should be), then the amount of FSA’s claim would again exceed the value of the Hotel, and FSA would be an undersecured creditor. This anomalous result would occur either because the payments made by the debtor would actually have been applied to postpetition interest, resulting in no payment on principal; or, the amount of postpetition interest would have been added to the amount of FSA’s claim, increasing it more than the amount by which the payments reduced the claim. To avoid this “vicious circle,” it seems clear that FSA must either be “legally” ov-ersecured or underseeured, irrespective of whether they later become “factually” un-derseeured or oversecured.

This still leaves unanswered the issue of when such valuation and determination of status occurs. The Code says little about valuation, except that a valuation should be based on all available circumstances and should be done for a specific purpose. While “[n]o rule is stated ... because no rule is possible ...” most courts and scholars agree that a valuation for this purpose, that is for determining over/under-secured status, should be done at the time of petition. RICHARD I. AARON, BANKRUPTCY LAW FUNDAMENTALS, § 12.06 (Clark Boardham Callaghan 1993); see also, In re Frengel, 115 B.R. 569 (Bankr.N.D.Ohio 1989.) This conclusion rests on policy reasons that allow the reorganizing debtor to reap the benefits of appreciation of the secured asset in order to give the debtor the incentive to maintain and improve the asset. This policy argument would fail, however, if the asset is appreciating on its own and with no input from the debtor or if the original mortgage on the asset was designed to give the creditor the benefit of the appreciation. This asset, the hotel, would not increase or even maintain its value without continual upkeep by the debtor, even given the bright future of hotels in the New Orleans area (i.e. tourists don’t stay in “bad” or closed hotels.) And, appellant offered no evidence that the mortgage included as a benefit to the creditor the appreciation of the hotel.

Valuation at the petition date admittedly “comes at a price of distorting calculation upon which the confirmation is premised.” AARON, Id. But this distortion is accepted because of the need to establish a static estimation of a fluid value and make determinations from it. This also has the positive effect, in furtherance of the policy goal, of giving the debtor a “fresh start” through reorganization. FSA is correct when it argues that no Code section nor court decision allows for repeated valuations of an asset in order to establish the propriety of postpetition interest. Once a creditor is deemed undersecured, he is always so for purposes of the reorganization plan.

Even though the determination of entitlement to postpetition interest is made early in the case, the calculation of such interest *804 must occur at the end of the postpetition, pre-confirmation period. Matter of Seip, 116 B.R. 709 (Bankr.D.Neb.1990.) The Code mandates this date in § 506, since the amount of the equity cushion remaining is the maximum amount of postpetition interest which the creditor may receive. As a result, a legally oversecured creditor (i.e.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 B.R. 799, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/financial-security-assurance-inc-v-t-h-new-orleans-ltd-partnership-in-laed-1995.