In Re Allied Artists Industries, Inc.

35 B.R. 737
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 16, 1983
Docket83 Civ. 2984 (RLC)
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 35 B.R. 737 (In Re Allied Artists Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District 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
In Re Allied Artists Industries, Inc., 35 B.R. 737 (S.D.N.Y. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION

ROBERT L. CARTER, District Judge.

Sumiré Anstalt and Somerville House Management, Ltd. (together, “Somerville”) and Filmtransac, A.G. appeal from a March 3,1983 Order of the Bankruptcy Court (Gal-gay, J.) denying their applications for orders requiring Allied Artists Pictures Corporation (“Pictures”), the debtor in a Chapter XI proceeding, to pay them monies owing under film distribution contracts as priority administration claims. Somerville also appeals from the Bankruptcy Court’s denial of its alternative request for an order compelling the debtor to assume or reject its distribution contracts with Somerville. For the reasons that follow, the Bankruptcy Court’s order is affirmed in part, vacated and remanded in part.

BACKGROUND

In April, 1979, Pictures, Allied Artists Industries, Inc. and Allied Artists Television Corporation each filed a petition in the Bankruptcy Court seeking an arrangement under Chapter XI of the Bankruptcy Act of 1898. The Court permitted the petitioners to retain control of their businesses as debtors in possession. On March 14, 1980, the Bankruptcy Court entered an Order approving an agreement between the debtors and Lorimar Productions, Inc. (“Lorimar”) which, inter alia, provided for the sale of substantially all of Pictures’ assets to Lori-mar. Half of the $4,500,000 purchase price was paid upon closing and the balance fell due on April 24, 1981.

One provision of the Bankruptcy Court’s order authorized Pictures to assume its distribution contracts with independent movie producers and to assign those contracts to Lorimar. However, certain independent producers, appellants among them, objected to the assignment of their distribution agreements to Lorimar, contending that bankruptcy termination clauses in their contracts with Pictures left Pictures no distribution rights to assign. As a result, the Court expressly withheld authorization for Pictures to assign those contested contracts. Approximately one year later, after conducting independent negotiations and receiving consideration from Lorimar, appellants withdrew their objections to the assignment of their distribution contracts to Lorimar. The central question raised on appeal is whether, as appellants contend, Pictures assumed those contracts once appellants withdrew their objections, or if, as appellees maintain and the Bankruptcy Court ruled, no such assumption has taken place. Only if Pictures did, in fact, assume its distribution contracts with Filmtransac and Somerville are appellants entitled to have the monies owed them by Pictures under those contracts paid as priority administration claims.

I

As the parties have framed it, the issue before the Court is whether the Bankruptcy Court’s March 14, 1980 Order provided for the automatic assumption and assignment by Pictures of its distribution contracts with independent producers once the latter withdrew their objections, or if the Order contemplated further Court approval before Pictures could assume the previously contested contracts. 1 The text of the Order *739 would appear to support the former conclusion. The third decretal paragraph, which withholds authorization to assign contested (Exhibit D) contracts, does authorize their assumption.

ORDERED, that Industries, Pictures and Television are authorized to assume all distribution contracts with outside producers and participants granting distribution rights to Industries, Pictures or Television for motion pictures and all other contracts, leases or other agreements necessary to the carrying out of the transactions contemplated by the Lorimar Offer and to assign such contracts, leases or other agreements (except the contracts with respect to the films set forth on Exhibit D hereto) to Lorimar in accordance with the Lorimar Offer ...

Bankruptcy Court Order of March 14, 1980, Decretal ¶ 3, at p. 4. The sixth paragraph provides that these contracts can be assigned to Lorimar either by Court order or by the consent of the independent producers:

ORDERED, that Lorimar is hereby directed to furnish the Creditors’ Committees for Pictures, Industries and Television every sixty (60) days after the date of closing for a period of three (3) years a certification verified by an officer of Lo-rimar setting forth each motion picture on Exhibit D hereto the distribution contract with respect to which has been assigned to Lorimar during the preceding 60-day period either by consent of the third party claiming an interest or ownership in such motion or by court order ...

Id., Decretal ¶ 6, at p. 6.

The only impediment to the assumption and assignment of Exhibit D contracts at the time of the March 14, 1980 Order was the independent producers’ contention that those contracts had been terminated. That impediment could be removed either by a judicial determination of the contracts’ validity or by the independent producers’ withdrawal of their objections. The Order required only that Lorimar notify the Creditors Committees of any assignment of a contract that resulted from such a court determination or withdrawal of objections. It did not require that Pictures again petition for permission to assume and assign the contract.

The March 14, 1980 Order was entered after a lengthy hearing during which the Court and counsel for the interested parties discussed the details of the Lorimar deal. A review of the transcript of that proceeding indicates that all parties understood that the assumption and assignment of the independent producers’ distribution contracts would follow, as a matter of course, once the independent producers acknowledged, or the Court held, that those contracts had not been terminated and that they were, therefore, assignable. For example, counsel for the Pictures Creditors’ Committee stated:

Your Honor, there is no possibility of assuming an agreement which is in dispute until your Honor resolves the dispute .. .
Now that dispute has to be resolved. If it is resolved that they have no right of [termination], then, yes, we have assumed it and we have the burden of paying him the pre-petition, but we also can assign it.
If the court says they are right, they have terminated it, our notification of assumption is meaningless because we have no right to assume....

Transcript of March 14, 1980 Hearing, at p. 68. Counsel for Lorimar stated:

There are two concepts. From the concept of an outside producer, as your client, the assumption process has to do with the withdrawal of the objection process in one package.
So that when our negotiations [with Filmtransac] are complete they [Pictures] assume the obligation and it is assigned to us, [you, Filmtransac] get the money that you are owed and we distribute Pa-pillion [one of the Exhibit D films].

Id. at p. 67. Counsel for Pictures stated:

The order provides that the order authorizes us to assume all distribution con *740 tracts.

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35 B.R. 737, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-allied-artists-industries-inc-nysd-1983.