In Re Applied Safety, Inc.

200 B.R. 576, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 1132, 29 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 979, 1996 WL 523697
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 13, 1996
Docket18-18479
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 200 B.R. 576 (In Re Applied Safety, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Applied Safety, Inc., 200 B.R. 576, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 1132, 29 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 979, 1996 WL 523697 (Pa. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Chief Judge.

A INTRODUCTION

Before this court for determination is whether we should confirm the First Amended Plan of Reorganization (“the Plan”) of APPLIED SAFETY, INC. (“the Debtor”) in the face of the rejecting vote and objections to confirmation of the Plan (“the Objections”) filed by Breed Technologies, Inc. (“Breed”). The Plan, proposed by a debtor which has ceased doing business, attempts to realize its only real asset, assertion of legal rights against Breed, financing same by recoveries allegedly due from Breed. Not surprisingly, none of the Debtor’s creditors other than Breed oppose the Plan, or would be likely to oppose any plan which presents any glimmer of recovery of their claims. Equally predictable are Breed’s vociferous objections to the Plan.

Since the Plan separately classifies Breed, and neither the Debtor nor Breed is willing to commit to Breed’s designation as a secured or an unsecured creditor, the Debtor is obliged to establish either that Breed is unimpaired or is unable to preclude confirmation under 11 U.S.C. §§ 1129(b)(2)(A) and 1129(b)(2)(B). As we conclude rather easily that Breed is impaired and that the Debtor cannot meet the requirements of § 1129(b)(2)(A) or § 1129(b)(2)(B), the Plan cannot be confirmed.

Nor, after some reflection, do we think that any plan could be confirmed unless and until the status of Breed’s claim is resolved. A hearing on the Debtor’s objection to that claim is scheduled on September 18, 1996. In light of the apparent importance of that issue, we will designate that disposition for hearing on a must-be-heard basis.

At this point, prior to that hearing, we are unwilling to conclude that the Debtor could not achieve confirmation of a plan, since the limited record before us presents the prospect that the Debtor could succeed in asserting rights against Breed and in formulating a confirmable plan. However, given that this *579 case is now almost a year old, and that the filing anniversary will probably pass before the status of Breed’s claim is resolved, the Debtor will likely receive only one additional clear chance at confirmation before conversion to Chapter 7 will result.

B. PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL HISTORY

The Debtor filed the instant voluntary Chapter 11 case on October 6, 1995. The filing appears to have been timed to stay a Florida state court suit by Breed seeking recission of a contract providing for the payment of royalties to the Debtor from Breed on sales of retrofit automobile driver’s-side air bags on vehicles unequipped with same by their manufacturers. Through the Plan, the Debtor seeks to impose upon Breed the same terms as it alleges are contained in the aforementioned contract. Breed, however, wants to avoid the contract, and asserts, in the Florida litigation, as well as here, that the Debtor has no valid right to collect any royalties from it.

There was virtually no activity in this case, except establishing April 26, 1996, as the deadline for the Debtor’s filing of a plan in this case after a status hearing of January 17, 1996, until February 15, 1996. On that date, Breed filed a “haymaker” motion, seeking in the alternative dismissal of this case as a “bad faith” filing which would not lead to confirmation, conversion of this ease to Chapter 7, or relief from the automatic stay. After a hearing of March 20, 1996, on this motion, concluding that the Debtor’s claims against Breed had potential merit but that a forum selection clause in the parties’ contract requiring litigation in Florida appeared enforceable, see In re Diaz Contracting, Inc., 817 F.2d 1047, 1050-55 (3d Cir.1987), we entered an Order denying this motion with the statement that

[although in a liquidation mode, funding [of a plan] is supported by a non-frivolous claim of the Debtor against the Movant. Since the issues in state court litigation could be tried in what may be more efficient forums related to this case, stay relief to proceed "with critical litigation in a Florida state court should not be granted at this time.

The transcript of the hearing on this motion, incorporated into the instant record, established that the Debtor was formed for the purpose of marketing automotive safety equipment. In particular, the founders of the Debtor wanted to develop and market an air bag devise that could be used to retrofit existing cars with driver’s-side air bags. To this end, the Debtor sought out Breed, which manufactured air bag equipment, and convinced it of the viability of developing such a product. Subsequently, on November 8, 1993, the parties entered into a contract designated as a Distribution Agreement (“the Distribution Agreement”) giving the Debtor a nonexclusive right to distribute the air bag products which Breed was by this time beginning to manufacture. The Debtor’s obligation under the Distribution Agreement was to set up a network of installers to sell the air bags in the consumer market. The Distribution Agreement provided that the Debt- or would be paid a commission for each aft-bag sold, the retail price of which was estimated to be $550 per bag.

Pursuant to the Distribution Agreement, Breed delivered about 2,000 air bags to the Debtor with the understanding that the Debtor would pay for them with proceeds from future sales. Payment was initially due 90 days after delivery. Thereafter, the Debtor began to develop a dealer network and, in fact, did sell about 1,000 of the bags it received, but it was never able to pay Breed for the bags that were already delivered. Breed claimed to be owed in excess of $600,-000 for those bags.

In summer 1994, at which time Breed still had not been paid, Breed gave the Debtor notice that it was terminating the Distribution Agreement. The parties then negotiated a new agreement, which is the contract presently at issue, whereby the parties arranged the dissolution of their relationship. This contract, which is designated simply as the “Agreement” but which Breed references, perhaps accurately, by what will be our designation, “the Termination Agreement,” requires the Debtor to return all aft-bags in its possession to Breed in exchange *580 for credit against its debt. Further, the Termination Agreement also requires Breed to pay the Debtor a royalty of $30 for each air bag Breed was later able to sell, half of which was to be retained by Breed and applied toward payment of the Debtor’s debt.

Over the next year, the parties’ relationship continued to deteriorate, and by summer 1995, Breed filed the above-referenced law suit against the Debtor in a local Florida state court to rescind the Termination Agreement. In that suit Breed claims to have been defrauded by the Debtor because, according to Breed, the Debtor’s installer network was based on promises by the Debtor to installers which were not disclosed to Breed and that the Debtor must have known Breed would not be able to fulfill.

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Bluebook (online)
200 B.R. 576, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 1132, 29 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 979, 1996 WL 523697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-applied-safety-inc-paeb-1996.