In Re Ashford Hotels, Ltd.

235 B.R. 734, 1999 WL 460974
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 2, 1999
Docket99 Civ. 519(RMB)
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 235 B.R. 734 (In Re Ashford Hotels, Ltd.) 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 Ashford Hotels, Ltd., 235 B.R. 734, 1999 WL 460974 (S.D.N.Y. 1999).

Opinion

DECISION AND ORDER

BERMAN, District Judge.

INTRODUCTION

This is an appeal from an order of the Honorable Jeffry H. Gallet, United States Bankruptcy Judge, Southern District of New York, entered on November 9, 1998 *736 (“Bankruptcy Court Order”). The issues before this Court are: (i) whether Jay F. Higgins and Charles Daniel Tyree (“Appellants”) have standing to appeal from the Bankruptcy Court’s Order, and (ii) whether the Bankruptcy Court abused its discretion when it granted the Bankruptcy Trustee’s motion, dated June 4, 1998. 1 For the reasons set forth below, the Court finds that Appellants do not have standing to appeal from the Bankruptcy Court Order.

I. FACTS

Background

The parties to this appeal are involved in numerous litigations concerning events that span two countries over ten years. The Bankruptcy Court identified the following pertinent facts to this case.

Ashford Hotels, Ltd. (the “Debtor”) was formed on April 20,1988. That same year, the Debtor and its principal, William Dowl-ing (“Dowling”), participated in a hotel development project in England known as “Nuneham Park.” Allied Irish Banks, p.l.c. (“AIB”) loaned £6 million for the project to Nuneham Park Ltd. (“NPL”), of which the Debtor guaranteed £3 million.

The Debtor, along with Appellants Higgins and Tyree, and Emblem B.V. (“Emblem”), all of whom are NPL’s shareholders, are the parties to a January 1989 agreement (the “Shareholder’s Agreement”). Seven months after entering into the Shareholder’s Agreement, they entered into a second contract (the “Restructuring Agreement”). Under the Restructuring Agreement, the Debtor and Dowling were removed from Nuneham Park’s management and sold their interests to Higgins, Tyree and Emblem. The Restructuring Agreement also provided, among other things, that Higgins, Tyree, and Emblem would indemnify the Debtor and Dowling for any liability arising out of the Debtor’s guarantee of AIB’s loan to NPL. Higgins and Tyree now claim that the indemnity provision was fraudulently obtained. The validity of the Restructuring Agreement, including the indemnity provision, is the subject of an action for rescission brought by Higgins and Tyree against the Debtor in Supreme Court, New York County in 1992 (the “New York State Action”).

The Nuneham Park project was never completed and NPL defaulted on its loan to AIB. In July 1992, AIB sued the Debtor in England to enforce its guarantee. England’s High Court of Justice granted a default judgment in favor of AIB in 1992 for £3.6 million. That judgment remains unsatisfied.

In November 1992, England’s High Court of Justice appointed Mark Stephen Gill as Receiver (the “Receiver”) “of the Debtor’s right of indemnification.” The Receiver commenced an action in London (the “London Action”) on behalf of the Debtor and against Higgins, Tyree and Emblem for indemnification under the Restructuring Agreement. That action is still pending.

AIB and Dowling are also defendants in an action pending in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (the “Eastern District Action”). In the Eastern District Action, the plaintiffs, including Higgins, assert claims of common law fraud, aiding and abetting fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, and breach of contract. The law firm of Brown & Wood (“Brown & Wood”) represents AIB in the Eastern District Action.

In 1997, Higgins and Tyree filed a Note of Issue in the New York State Action. The trial was to start in early 1998. Claiming that it lacked the necessary funds to defend the New York State Action, the Debtor filed a voluntary petition for relief under chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code on December 29, 1997 before Judge Gallet in the Bankruptcy Court of the Southern District of New York (“Bankruptcy Action”).

*737 The Trustee of the Debtor’s estate in the Bankruptcy Action (Roy Babitt) has advised Judge Gallet that AIB has a significant interest in ensuring that the New York State Action is defended. Among other things, if the Debtor prevails in the New York State Action, the indemnification agreement will be affirmed and AIB can recover from Appellants in the London Action.

The Funding Agreement

In May 1998 and thereafter, with the objectives of providing for the estate’s administrative costs and defending the New York State Action, the Trustee and AIB entered into Funding Agreement and sought Bankruptcy Court approval pursuant to §§ 327 and 364 of the Bankruptcy Code. The terms, among others, of the Funding Agreement between the Trustee and AIB include the following: AIB offers to pay the Trustee $25,000 (the “Administrative Costs”) to cover the estate’s administrative expenses. 2 As a condition to AIB’s offer, the Debtor is to retain Brown & Wood as counsel in the New York State Action. AIB will pay Brown & Wood’s fees and expenses. In return, AIB will receive a claim against the estate for reimbursement of expenses incurred and funds advanced in connection with Brown & Wood’s representation of the Trustee in the New York State Action. 3 AIB reimbursement would be subordinated (only) to payment of the Trustee’s fees and expenses.

In the event that the Trustee prevails in the New York State Action, or in the event that the Receiver obtains and enforces a judgment in (or settles) the London Action and remits to AIB the “net” proceeds recovered in the London Action (the “Recovery Amount”), AIB will be reimbursed for all expenses incurred in connection with funding Brown & Wood’s representation of the Trustee in the New York State Action. The Trustee will receive the lesser of (a) $500,000, or (b) five percent of the balance of the Recovery Amount net of such reimbursement. The proceeds of the Recovery Amount will go to pay creditors of the Debtor and remaining administrative expenses, if any, of the estate. AIB’s claim against the debtor will be subordinated to those of the unsecured creditors. (Bankr. Dec. at 5).

Higgins and Tyree’s Counteroffer

Higgins and Tyree assert that they, too, made an “offer” in the Bankruptcy Court to the Trustee in response to the Funding Agreement. Their offer included the following: (1) a settlement of the New York State Action on stipulated facts proposed by them and entry of a judgment against the Debtor; (2) payment of $50,000 for the purchase of estate assets including claims against current and former officers and directors of the Debtor; and (3) subordination of Higgins’ and Tyree’s rights of recovery in the New York State Action to the rights of other creditors of the estate.

Bankruptcy Court Proceeding

The Bankruptcy Court approved the Funding Agreement between the Trustee and AIB under Bankruptcy Rule 9019, 4 finding the Funding Agreement to be both reasonable and in the best interest of the Debtor’s estate. In addition to securing $25,000 for administrative costs, the Agreement, as modified by the Bankruptcy Court, allows AIB to prosecute and defend the Trustee’s claims in both New York and London.

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235 B.R. 734, 1999 WL 460974, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ashford-hotels-ltd-nysd-1999.