In re Bellows

554 B.R. 219, 2016 WL 3984146
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Alaska
DecidedJuly 19, 2016
DocketCase No. J15-00245-GS [Lead Case-Jointly Administered), Case No. J15-00246-GS
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 554 B.R. 219 (In re Bellows) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Bellows, 554 B.R. 219, 2016 WL 3984146 (Alaska 2016).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM ON PLAN CONFIRMATION and FIRST BANK’S MO[222]*222TION FOR RELIEF FROM STAY1

GARY SPRAKER, United States Bankruptcy Judge

Hearings on approval of debtors Kenneth Bellows’ and Fly-In-Fish, Inc.’s joint Disclosure Statement, confirmation of the debtors’ Plan of Reorganization, and First Bank’s Motion for Relief From Stay, were held on March 8 and 16, 2016. The court has thoroughly considered the evidence presented and the arguments of counsel. For the reasons stated below, the court will deny final approval of the debtors’ Disclosure Statement and confirmation of the Plan. The court will also deny First Bank’s Motion for Relief From Stay,, and shall set a status conference to discuss how the case should proceed in light of this decision.

I. CASE BACKGROUND.

On August 17, 2015, debtors Kenneth Bellows and Fly-In-Fish Inn, Inc., separately filed voluntary chapter 11 petitions. An order for joint administration was subsequently entered, and the debtors now seek confirmation of a joint Plan of Reorganization. Their major secured creditor, First Bank, opposes confirmation and seeks relief from stay. All other classes of creditors, including the general unsecured creditors in Class 1, support confirmation of the-Plan.2

The debtors’ business revolves around the Fly-In-Fish Inn (“the Inn”), a mixed use property located on the waterfront in Sitka, Alaska, that includes a small hotel, a restaurant and bar, and some rental apartments.3 Two related, non-debtor entities are also involved in the Inn’s operation— Air Sitka, Inc. (“Air Sitka”)- and Pilot House, Inc. (“Pilot House”).

Mr. Bellows, his sister, Marlys Dee Hanson, and their brother Ronald D. Bellows, created the debtor entity Fly-In-Fish Inn, Inc. (“FIFII”), for the purpose of running the hotel. The Inn also operates a restaurant, which serves alcohol under a liquor license held by the Pilot House. The Inn was built, and the business was opened, roughly ten years ago. First Bank provided the funds to construct the Inn. Presently, the real property on which the Inn is located is jointly owned by Mr. Bellows and his sister, Marlys Dee Hanson.4 First Bank holds a first deed of trust on the realty, and a security interest in the debtors’ business personal property. Mr. Bellows and Ms. Hanson are guarantors on this loan, as well. As of the date the petitions were filed, the total due on the loan was $1,792,051.48.5

[223]*223The Inn is situated on real property-abutting tidelands property that Mr. Bellows leases, individually, from the City and Borough of Sitka (“Sitka”). First Bank also holds a security assignment of the Sitka tidelands lease as further collateral for its loan. Mr. Bellows operates an air taxi service through non-debtor Air Sitka, out of a two-story building on a float he owns that is situated on the leased tideland property.6 Mr. Bellows is the sole shareholder of Air Sitka. The air taxi business preceded the Inn. It operates in a symbiotic relationship with the Inn, as each generates business for the other. Air Sitka does not pay rent for the use of either the float or the tidelands property.7

The debtors’ schedules, and Disclosure Statement, reflect that Ken Bellows is the sole shareholder and owner of all three corporate entities involved in the Inn’s operation — corporate debtor FIFII, Air Sit-ka, and the Pilot House, the entity that owns the liquor license used in the Inn’s restaurant and bar. First Bank has challenged these representations.8 When questioned as to the present ownership of debtor FIFII and the Pilot House, Mr. Bellows conceded that his sister still owns a one-third interest in both, but indicated that she had agreed not to take anything on account of her interest.9 Ms. Hanson is not listed as a creditor or equity holder in the debtors’ schedules, but has participated in the bankruptcy to some degree. She has written two letters regarding this proceeding, which indicate that she attended the § 341 meeting of creditors, and is aware of the joint debtors’ efforts to reorganize.10 The letters do not renounce her interests in either FIFII or the Pilot House.

Ms. Hanson is not only a co-owner of the Inn. She also managed the Inn until September of 2012.11 The Disclosure Statement attributes the debtors’ bankruptcy filing to poor management by Ms. Hanson, coupled with the 2007 economic recession, which negatively impacted the tourism industry in Southeast Alaska. After Ms. Hanson ceased managing the Inn, the debtor borrowed money from friends and acquaintances to keep the business afloat. First Bank commenced a non-judicial foreclosure in 2015. The two bankruptcy petitions were filed one day prior to the scheduled foreclosure sale.

The debtors’ Plan proposes to continue, operation of the Inn while marketing the business for sale, with the ultimate goal of selling the Inn by January 31, 2021. With [224]*224the exception of Mr. Bellows’ equity interest, placed in Class 7 of the plan, all classes of claims are impaired. The secured claim of First Bank, the sole Class 2 creditor, is allowed in the amount stated on its proof of claim, $1,792,051.00. But, under the plan, the loan period is extended by two years, the interest rate is reduced from 7% to 6%, and the monthly payments are reduced from $18,500.00 to $18,000.00.12 The payment schedule is also shifted, to provide for no monthly payments in the months of January through March, rather than the current schedule which excuses payments from December through February. First Bank’s claim is to be paid in full on sale of the Inn.

Other secured creditors, junior to First Bank, are individually separated into Classes 3, 4, 5, and 6. They receive similar treatment, e.g., their claims are allowed as filed, but the interest rate and/or payment terms have been adjusted. Further, the Plan does not guarantee full payment to these creditors; their recovery depends on the price at which the Inn is ultimately sold, and is capped by the available proceeds net of closing costs, taxes, and First Bank’s debt. These creditors have not objected to their proposed treatment under the Plan, however.

The joint debtors also have $154,391.00 in priority tax debt that they propose to pay, with interest, over a five year term, or whenever the Inn is sold. Finally, the general unsecured creditors, placed in Class 1, are to receive four annual payments, commencing January 1, 2018, and continuing until January 1, 2021. The first two payments will be equal to 2% of the Inn’s gross revenue for the preceding year, and the second two payments will increase to 4% of the Inn’s gross revenue. The annual payments will be prorated among the allowed claims within Class 1, but will terminate if the Inn is sold before 2021. On sale of the Inn, the 'Class 1 unsecured claims will receive a pro-rata distribution of 50% of the net proceeds, after payment of closing costs, and of all secured, administrative, and priority claims. The Plan explains that unsecured creditors could potentially receive 100% of their claims, if the Inn and tidelands lease can be sold for at least $2.8 million.

First Bank is the only creditor who voted to reject the Plan, and objected to final approval of the Disclosure Statement and confirmation.13

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
554 B.R. 219, 2016 WL 3984146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bellows-akb-2016.