In re 21ST Century Oncology Holdings, Inc.
This text of 597 B.R. 217 (In re 21ST Century Oncology Holdings, Inc.) 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.
Opinion
THE HONORABLE ROBERT D. DRAIN, UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE
Before the Court is the objection, dated June 30, 2018 (the "Claim Objection") under
The Court has considered these issues on uncontested facts. To the extent factual disputes are relevant, there has yet to be an evidentiary hearing.
Based on the parties' pleadings, including their submissions after the August 28, 2018 hearing (the "Hearing") and the record of the Hearing, this Memorandum of Decision explains why (1) the remaining portions of the Claim under dispute are indeed capped by
Jurisdiction
The Court has subject matter jurisdiction over the Claim Objection under
Facts
The Claim is based on 21C's prepetition termination of the Employment Contract *223without cause on September 23, 2016 and nonpayment of amounts owing thereunder.2 Claim ¶ 8. See also Amended Complaint, dated March 9, 2017, a copy of which is attached as Exhibit C to the Claim, filed by Woods against 21C in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida, 2:16 Civ. 897 at ¶¶ 60-62, 66, 74-94 (the "Complaint").
There is no dispute that Woods was a highly compensated 21C executive whose job included, among other things, lobbying on the Debtors' behalf, a role critical to the Debtors' heavily regulated business. As stated in the rider to the Claim incorporated in ¶ 8 thereof, Woods asserts an aggregate amount owing of $ 11,097,245.46 as follows, plus accruing postpetition pre-judgment interest and postpetition legal fees:
A. Contractual "severance": $ 1,000,000;3
B. All contractual bonus payments, including those that were not payable on the termination of the Employment Contract except as accelerated thereby: $ 9,000,000;
C. Prejudgment interest under Florida law as of May 25, 2017, 21C's chapter 11 petition date: $ 746,660.96;
D. Prepetition attorneys fees under Fla. Statute § 448.08 and/or29 U.S.C. § 1132 (g) : $ 335,584.50; and
E. Contractual COBRA benefit payment for 12 months: $ 15,000.
Woods' right to the unpaid severance, bonus payments, and benefits is governed by paragraph 3(b) and Art. 5 of the Employment Contract. Paragraph 3(b), appearing in an article captioned "Executive Compensation," provides,
"Performance Incentive and Other Bonuses. The Executive shall be entitled to receive the following incentive bonuses: (i) Five Million Dollars ($ 5,000,000) from the Company for achievement during the Term of a freeze on reductions in Medicare reimbursement to freestanding radiation therapy centers except for those reductions negotiated on behalf of the Company; or (ii) Two Million Five Hundred Thousand Dollars ($ 2,500,000) from the Company for achievement during the Term of the adoption of a new, multi-bundled payments system for freestanding radiation therapy centers, to which the Company elects not to participate, (iii) Two Million Five Hundred Thousand Dollars ($ 2,500,000) upon the Company's initial election to participate in any way in the system referred to in clause (ii) above, and (iv) other cash bonuses as agreed to in writing in the future between the Executive and the Chief Executive Officer with approval from the Compensation Committee. Payments under clauses (i) through (iii) above shall be made annually over a five year period, with the first payment payable within five (5) business days following the freeze, adoption or election, respectively.
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THE HONORABLE ROBERT D. DRAIN, UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE
Before the Court is the objection, dated June 30, 2018 (the "Claim Objection") under
The Court has considered these issues on uncontested facts. To the extent factual disputes are relevant, there has yet to be an evidentiary hearing.
Based on the parties' pleadings, including their submissions after the August 28, 2018 hearing (the "Hearing") and the record of the Hearing, this Memorandum of Decision explains why (1) the remaining portions of the Claim under dispute are indeed capped by
Jurisdiction
The Court has subject matter jurisdiction over the Claim Objection under
Facts
The Claim is based on 21C's prepetition termination of the Employment Contract *223without cause on September 23, 2016 and nonpayment of amounts owing thereunder.2 Claim ¶ 8. See also Amended Complaint, dated March 9, 2017, a copy of which is attached as Exhibit C to the Claim, filed by Woods against 21C in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida, 2:16 Civ. 897 at ¶¶ 60-62, 66, 74-94 (the "Complaint").
There is no dispute that Woods was a highly compensated 21C executive whose job included, among other things, lobbying on the Debtors' behalf, a role critical to the Debtors' heavily regulated business. As stated in the rider to the Claim incorporated in ¶ 8 thereof, Woods asserts an aggregate amount owing of $ 11,097,245.46 as follows, plus accruing postpetition pre-judgment interest and postpetition legal fees:
A. Contractual "severance": $ 1,000,000;3
B. All contractual bonus payments, including those that were not payable on the termination of the Employment Contract except as accelerated thereby: $ 9,000,000;
C. Prejudgment interest under Florida law as of May 25, 2017, 21C's chapter 11 petition date: $ 746,660.96;
D. Prepetition attorneys fees under Fla. Statute § 448.08 and/or29 U.S.C. § 1132 (g) : $ 335,584.50; and
E. Contractual COBRA benefit payment for 12 months: $ 15,000.
Woods' right to the unpaid severance, bonus payments, and benefits is governed by paragraph 3(b) and Art. 5 of the Employment Contract. Paragraph 3(b), appearing in an article captioned "Executive Compensation," provides,
"Performance Incentive and Other Bonuses. The Executive shall be entitled to receive the following incentive bonuses: (i) Five Million Dollars ($ 5,000,000) from the Company for achievement during the Term of a freeze on reductions in Medicare reimbursement to freestanding radiation therapy centers except for those reductions negotiated on behalf of the Company; or (ii) Two Million Five Hundred Thousand Dollars ($ 2,500,000) from the Company for achievement during the Term of the adoption of a new, multi-bundled payments system for freestanding radiation therapy centers, to which the Company elects not to participate, (iii) Two Million Five Hundred Thousand Dollars ($ 2,500,000) upon the Company's initial election to participate in any way in the system referred to in clause (ii) above, and (iv) other cash bonuses as agreed to in writing in the future between the Executive and the Chief Executive Officer with approval from the Compensation Committee. Payments under clauses (i) through (iii) above shall be made annually over a five year period, with the first payment payable within five (5) business days following the freeze, adoption or election, respectively. Any deferred payments of incentive bonuses shall be immediately accelerated and paid in full in the event of (A) the Executive's termination without Cause, termination by the Executive for Good Reason or as a result of the Executive's death or Disability or (B) upon a 'Change in Control'...."
Article 5 of the Employment Contract, captioned "Payments upon Termination," provides in relevant part,
"(a) Involuntary Termination. If the Executive's employment is terminated by the Company during the Term, the *224Executive shall be entitled to receive his Base Salary and unreimbursed expenses accrued and unpaid through the date of termination (the "Termination Date"). The Executive shall also receive any nonforfeitable benefits already earned and payable to him under the terms of any deferred compensation, incentive or other benefit plan maintained by the Company, payable in accordance with the terms of the applicable plan. The payments and benefits that the Executive shall be entitled to pursuant to this Section 5(a) are collectively referred to as the Executive's 'Accrued Compensation.'
"(b) Severance Payments. If the Executive's employment is terminated (i) by the Company without Cause or (ii) by the Executive for Good Reason, then in addition to payment of the Accrued Compensation and any deferred payments of performance incentive bonuses pursuant to Section 3(b), the Company shall also be obligated to make a series of monthly payments to the Executive for a period of twenty-four (24) months immediately following the Termination Date so long as the Executive continues to comply with Sections 8 and 9 hereof4 ...."
Paragraphs 5(d) and 5(e) of the Employment Contract provide that if Woods' employment is terminated for Cause or if Woods voluntarily terminates his employment not for Good Reason, he shall be entitled only to the Accrued Compensation. Paragraph 5(f) provides, "In order to receive the severance payments and benefits hereunder (other than the Accrued Compensation), the Executive must execute and not revoke a general release of claims in favor of the Company [in the form attached to the Contract] ... within 60 days following the Termination Date."
Thus, as provided in Employment Contract ¶ 3(b), Woods shall be entitled to three specifically described incentive bonuses, which shall be payable annually over five years after the applicable triggering event but which shall be accelerated and paid fully upon certain events, including Woods' termination without Cause. The right to such acceleration is confirmed in Employment Contract ¶ 5(b) under the heading "Severance Payments," along with the provision of twenty-four months of separate severance payments equal to Base Salary for each year. Employment Contract ¶¶ 5(d) and (e) make it clear, however, that the incentive bonuses and twenty-four months of severance payments shall not be paid if Woods is terminated for Cause or voluntarily terminates his employment without Good Reason, in contrast with "Accrued Compensation," which shall be paid to him in such circumstances, and under ¶ 5(f) they never will be paid unless he timely signs the release described therein (the "Release"). Paragraph 5(a)'s definition of "Accrued Compensation" encompasses "nonforfeitable benefits already earned and payable to [Woods] under the terms of any deferred compensation, incentive or other benefit plan maintained by [21C]..." (emphasis added). It therefore does not include the specific incentive bonuses set out in paragraph 3(b), which are not part of a 21C compensation, incentive or other benefit plan, and, in any event, would not cover them to the extent that they are not yet payable under the five-year payout terms of paragraph 3(b).
The Claim asserts that all three incentive bonuses in Employment Contract ¶ 3(b)(i)-(iii) were triggered prepetition -*225on December 28, 2015, in February 2015 and on or about July, 2015, respectively. Complaint ¶¶ 43, 46 and 49, and 52. The Claim seeks only $ 9 million of such bonuses because 21C made the initial, $ 1 million payment on the first, $ 5 million bonus in January 2016.
In addition to the two issues presently before the Court, the Debtors originally objected to $ 500,000 of Woods' "severance" claim and raised or reserved the right to raise other defenses to the Claim, including Woods' delay in executing the Release, and counterclaims. They have since waived all such objections, defenses and counterclaims, however, on the conditions that the Court decide the two remaining issues and Woods sign the Release. Hearing Tr. at 24-27; Debtors' Reply Memorandum, dated August 24, 2018, at ¶ 15.5 Implicitly, this means that the Debtors have conceded that the triggers for the incentive bonuses under Employment Contract ¶ 3(b)(i)-(iii) have occurred.
The Debtors of course continue to contend that the portion of those bonuses that were not due and payable before or on Woods' termination, except by acceleration under Employment Contract ¶¶ 3(b) and 5(b), are subject to the cap on allowance under
Discussion
A. The § 502(b)(7) Objection.
Generally speaking, claims in bankruptcy are determined under applicable non-bankruptcy law, here the law of Florida, which governs the Employment Contract,6 or ERISA to the extent that it is relevant to Woods' benefits claims. The Bankruptcy Code places its own limits on some types of claims, however, including under
*226Section 502(b) of the Bankruptcy Code provides that the Court shall determine and allow the amount of a claim subject to an objection as of the bankruptcy petition date "except to the extent that ...
(7) if such claim is the claim of an employee for damages resulting from the termination of an employment contract, such claim exceeds -
(A) the compensation provided by such contract, without acceleration, for one year following the earlier of -
(i) the date of the filing of the petition; or
(ii) the date on which the employer directed the employee to terminate, or such employee terminated, performance under such contract; plus
(B) any unpaid compensation due under such contract, without acceleration, on the earlier of such dates...."
The parties disagree about how to apply the claim cap as required by subsections (A) and (B) of section 502(b)(7). As relevant here, under those subsections, the Claim shall not be allowed in excess of (A) the compensation provided by the Employment Contract, without acceleration, for one year from the date that the Contact was terminated, plus (B) any unpaid compensation due under the Employment Contract, *227without acceleration, from the termination of the Contract.
The Debtors point out that the plain terms of the Employment Contract8 provide that the bonuses are not payable upon their triggering event but, instead, "annually over a five year period, with the first payment payable within five (5) business days following the [trigger event]." Employment Contract ¶ 3(b). Woods' right to the full amount of incentive bonus payments is accelerated only upon certain types of Contract termination, id.; see also
Woods contends, to the contrary, that the full amount of the bonuses were "earned" upon their respective triggering events and therefore that his claim for their nonpayment does not result from the subsequent termination of the Employment Contract, upon which his right to their payment was accelerated. He cites in his favor dicta to the effect that " Section 502(b)(7) does not limit a claim for which the employer has received all the consideration for which it has bargained, and all that remains to be done is for the employer to fulfill its obligations of payment." In re CPT Corp.,
*228Gee & Missler Services, Inc.,
Section 502(b)(7) caps "damages resulting from the termination of an employment contract,"
The case law is consistent with this conclusion, including In re CPT Corp.,
Claimants also made Woods' "already earned" argument in a few other cases pertaining to bonuses, whose treatment of the issue is instructive. Perhaps most aptly, in In re Handy Andy Home Improvement Ctrs.,
Other courts also have addressed the "earned" argument when distinguishing between a right to payment subject to a condition subsequent and amounts due and payable, without acceleration, at the time of contract termination, with only the latter being exempt from section 502(b)(7)'s cap. See, e.g., Newman v. Bank of New England Corp.,
No doubt Woods provided valuable services to the Debtors, but the parties chose that his right to payment under the Employment Contract for certain of those services, covered by the bonus provisions, would be payable over time, with acceleration only upon certain circumstances *230typical of severance. Given the policy behind section 502(a)(7) to "limit claims for future compensation which would have been earned had the parties continued to perform," In re Lavelle Aircraft,
Accordingly, Woods' claims for his accelerated incentive bonuses under Employment Contract ¶¶ 3(b)(i) and (ii) and 5(b) should be allowed subject to section 502(b)(7)'s cap as asserted by the Debtors. Further, if the Court finds that Woods also has a claim to the incentive bonus under ¶ 3(b)(iii), it, too, should be capped under the Debtors' interpretation of
(i) § 502(b)(7) as Applied to Prejudgment Interest. As noted above, the Claim also asserts a statutory right under Florida law to prejudgment interest.
Woods acknowledges that any right to post petition prejudgment interest is barred by
Unless otherwise barred by the Bankruptcy Code, Woods would have a right to pre petition prejudgment interest, however, on the allowed portions of his Claim if such a right existed under applicable non-bankruptcy law. See, e.g., Key Bank, N.A. v. Milham (In re Milham ),
The issue apparently has not been decided in the context of section 502(b)(7), but the statute provides guidance. Claims for damages for breach of an employment contract are capped by "the compensation provided by such contract , without acceleration, *231for one year following the earlier of" the petition date and the contract termination date, plus "any unpaid compensation due under such contract , without acceleration, on the earlier of such dates."
The Debtor's argument as to how section 502(b)(7) applies to Woods' prejudgment interest claim is too narrow, on the other hand. Because such interest is not "provided by" the Employment Contract, the Debtors are correct that it should not be allowed on the capped portion of the bonus claim, as covered by
Cases decided under the analogous cap on damages for termination of a lease under
(ii) § 502(b)(7) as Applied to Attorneys Fees. Woods' claim to attorneys fees should be viewed in the same way as his prejudgment interest claim, with the exception that there is no provision of the Bankruptcy Code comparable to
Here, Woods has not prevailed on his argument that his post-termination bonus claims are not subject to section 502(b)(7)'s cap, and, as discussed below, the Court cannot decide on this record whether Employment Contract ¶ 3(b)(ii) and (iii) provide for two mutually exclusive bonuses or, instead, whether Woods can earn both, as he contends. The Debtors have not meaningfully disputed the other elements of Woods' Claim, so there was nothing there for Woods to prevail on. Therefore, Woods is not now entitled to allowance of any postpetition attorneys fees under Florida law, although if he prevails in the dispute over whether the bonuses in ¶ 3(b)(ii) and (iii) are mutually exclusive, he might be entitled under Florida law to attorneys fees related thereto, unless they are precluded by
The parties make essentially the same arguments under section 502(b)(7) regarding Woods' right to prevailing party attorneys fees as they do with respect to his prejudgment interest claim, and the Court applies the same analysis. As discussed above, Woods' claim to attorneys fees as damages arising from termination of the Employment Contract should be read as "compensation" under
*233This latter conclusion applied in Irvine-Pacific Commer. Ins. Brokers v. Adams (In re Irvine-Pacific Commer. Ins. ),
B. Is Woods Entitled to Two or to Three Incentive Bonuses?
As discussed in note 8 above, Florida follows the plain meaning rule for the interpretation of contracts, with resort to parol evidence to discern the parties' intent permitted only if the contract's terms are reasonably susceptible to more than one interpretation. In determining whether an ambiguity exists, the Court may rely on its own logic when interpreting an ambiguous provision and should favor a rational result. Royal Oak Landing Homeowner's Ass'n v. Pelletier,
The Debtors assert two reasons for Woods' incentive bonuses under Employment Contract ¶ 3(b)(ii) and (iii) to be mutually exclusive. The first, that the bonus in ¶ 3(b)(i) is separated by a semi-colon from the other available bonuses in that paragraph, while the remaining bonuses are separated by commas, is not persuasive. The list of available bonuses following ¶ 3(b)(1) that are separated by commas includes not only the two that the Debtors contend are mutually exclusive but also, in ¶ 3(b)(iv), "other cash bonuses as agreed to in writing in the future between [Woods] and the Chief Executive Officer with approval from the Compensation Committee." Moreover, none of the bonuses listed in ¶ 3(b)(ii) through (iv), are separated by the word "or," and the last item in the list is preceded by the word "and," not "or", which suggests that each possible bonus is separate, not that they are mutually exclusive.
The Debtors' other argument is more plausible. The only difference between the triggers for the bonuses found in ¶ 3(b)(ii) and (iii) is that in ¶ 3(b)(iii) 21C has initially elected to participate in any way in the "new multi-bundled payment system for freestanding radiation therapy centers" whose mere adoption by the government, without 21C's election to participate, is the trigger for the bonus in ¶ 3(b)(ii). Thus, if one were to portray the two possible bonuses by a Venn diagram, the latter would be wholly subsumed by the former.
Under Woods' interpretation of ¶ 3(b), 21C could trigger ¶ 3(b)(iii)'s bonus on top of ¶ 3(b)(ii)'s bonus - payable, of course, over five years unless accelerated on Contract termination - by making such an election mere minutes after the payment system's adoption. Indeed, under Woods'
*234interpretation, 21C could initially elect to participate in the government's new payment system, triggering the ¶ 3b(iii) bonus, and then elect not to participate, triggering the ¶ 3(b)(ii) bonus, although 21C's subsequent election not to participate surely would connote a lesser value to 21C from the government's mere adoption of the payment system. Could it really be logical, then, that the two bonuses be separately earned when the former is so easily subsumed by the latter?
The portion of Employment Contract ¶ 3(b) that states how the bonuses are to be paid gives some context, but of only limited utility. It provides that "the first payment [of a bonus is] payable within five (5) business days following the freeze, adoption or election, respectively ." (emphasis added). A serial comma between "adoption" and "or election" clearly would have helped Woods' interpretation. Its absence is not dispositive for the Debtors' interpretation, however, because a comma's inclusion in such a series is not a strict grammatical requirement. See e.g. Telenor Mobile Commc'ns AS v. Storm LLC,
Given (a) the grammatical structure of ¶ 3(b), (b) the flip side of the Debtors' redundancy argument - that is, that if the argument were true, ¶ 3(b)(iii) could be viewed as surplusage, which Florida law cautions us to avoid - as well as Woods' at least plausible explanation of why the government's mere adoption of a new payment system could benefit 21C even if 21C did not elect to participate in it,15 the parties' intention regarding whether the two bonuses are mutually exclusive is ambiguous. Parol evidence therefore is permissible to help establish their intention beyond the Contract's plain meaning, after suitable discovery.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the portion of the Claim comprising Woods' accelerated bonuses is capped pursuant to
The Claim Objection is also granted (a) pursuant to
The Court will not allow attorneys fees incurred in connection with any portion of the Claim that the Debtors have not disputed. The Claim Objection also is granted as to Woods' claim to attorneys fees relating to his capped claim, because they are not provided by the Employment Contract as required by
The Debtors should submit an order consistent with the foregoing and schedule a pre-trial conference on the remaining open issue pertaining to the parties' intent with respect to ¶ (3)(b)(ii) and (iii) as well the amount of Woods' remaining attorneys fee claim, relating to such issue.
Related
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