In Re Bergt

241 B.R. 17, 43 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 18, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 1384, 1999 WL 1016982
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Alaska
DecidedOctober 22, 1999
Docket19-00060
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 241 B.R. 17 (In Re Bergt) 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 Bergt, 241 B.R. 17, 43 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 18, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 1384, 1999 WL 1016982 (Alaska 1999).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION DENYING REJECTION OF WOOD RIVER, LTD.’S RIGHT OF FIRST REFUSAL BECAUSE IT IS NOT EXECUTORY AND § 365(a) IS NOT AN AVOIDING POWER

HERBERT A. ROSS, Bankruptcy Judge.

Contents Page

1. INTRODUCTION.18-19

2. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND.18-19

3. ISSUES.19

4. ANALYSIS.19

4.1. Ninth Circuit Case Law Establishes That the Right of First Refusal is Not an Executory Contract When There Was No Sale Pending at the Time of Bankruptcy.19

4.2. Rejection of a Right of First Refusal on Property of the Estate Does Not Result in “Avoiding” the Property Interest of the Nondebtor Holder of the Rip'ht..•.20-21

.. .21 4.2.1. Law Review Articles by Michael Andrew and Jay Westbrook.

24-25 4.2.2. The Basics and Some Case Law Regarding Rejection of Executory Contracts Applying the Andrew-Westbrook Analysis .

27-28 4.2.3. Ninth Circuit Case Law Does Not Foreclose the Andrew-Westbrook Approach and Some Supports It.

4.2.4. Secondary Authority Generally Adopts the Andrew-Westbrook Approach co CO

5. CONCLUSION CO

1. INTRODUCTION — Debtors want to sell several lots, acquired prepetition subject to a right of first refusal (RFR) in favor of adjoining lot owners. They moved to reject the RFR as an executory contract, 1 and impliedly avoid the RFR.

An adjoining lot owner opposed on the grounds that the RFR is not an executory contract subject to rejection. Should the court approve the rejection of the RFR?

Under the controlling case law, the RFR is not an executory contract subject to rejection. More importantly, rejection is not an avoiding power.

2. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND — These are jointly administered chapter 11 cases. The debtors *19 have an approved disclosure statement and are seeking confirmation. They propose a liquidating plan involving the sale of a number of physical assets, mostly real property scattered around Alaska, to a local telecommunication company, GCI.

Included as part of the package are lots which were acquired before bankruptcy by debtor Alaska International Industries, Inc. (AIII), subject to an RFR in favor of other lot owners in the subdivision. Under the RFR, AIII must offer the lots it wants to sell to the other lot holders in the subdivision on the same terms offered to a •third party purchaser so the other lot owners can preempt the sale for their own benefit.

Wood River, Ltd. is owner of lots in the subdivision, and claims the right to exercise an RFR to match the offer AIII has to sell the lots to GCI. AIII disputes that the RFR still exists on various grounds (including abandonment, unclean hands, waiver, or the fact that it is part of a package deal), but this Memorandum only concerns the pure bankruptcy issue of whether the RFR is an executory contract which can be rejected under 11 U.S.C. § 365(a).

The debtors argue that rejection of the contract will benefit the estate by facilitating the package sale to GCI, which may be in jeopardy if the lots are not included. Implicit in debtors’ motion is the assumption that, upon approval of the rejection, Wood River, Ltd.’s RFR will evaporate and it will become an unsecured creditor of the bankruptcy estate. Parenthetically, the unsecured creditors of AIII will receive only a very small percentage of their claims under the proposed plan.

Wood River, Ltd. defends on the ground that the RFR is not an executory contract.

At oral argument, the court questioned whether rejection was, in fact, an avoiding power, and if the question of whether the RFR was an executory contract was of any consequence.

3. ISSUES — The issues are: (a) is. the RFR an executory contract subject to rejection, and if so, (b) does rejection of the RFR result in avoiding its enforcement by the.nondebtor holder of the RFR?

4. ANALYSIS—

4.1. Ninth Circuit Case Law Establishes That the Right of First Refusal is Not an Executory Contract When There Was No Sale Pending at the Time of Bankruptcy — The 9th Circuit has recently held that an option agreement, at least one that is not in the process of being exercised at the time the bankruptcy is filed, is not an executory contract. 2 This was in the en banc decision in the Robert L. Helms Construction case, which overturned a prior 9th Circuit decision holding that an option agreement was per se an executory contract. 3

The court adhered to the “Countryman” test in defining an executory contract. It set out the Countryman test of whether a contract was executory as follows:

... a contract is executory if “the obligations of both parties are so unperformed that the failure of either party to complete performance would constitute a material breach and thus excuse the performance of the other.” [citation omitted] 4

*20 The en banc panel concluded that if an option was not in the process of being exercised at the time of the bankruptcy, it was npt an executory contract. On the other hand, one of the situations in which an option might be executory is if it had been exercised, but closing had not taken place when the bankruptcy was filed. 5

The question is whether the RFR in the present proceeding has attributes sufficiently similar to the option in the Robert L. Helms Construction case so that the Helms decision controls the treatment of the RFR. Although AIII argues that there are distinctions, I conclude that an option to sell real property and an RFR with respect to real property are so close in concept that, notwithstanding their differences, an RFR would be determined to be or not to be an executory contract under the same test as enunciated in the Helms case. That is, if there was not a sale pending when the bankruptcies were filed, the RFR is not an “executory contract.”

An RFR is defined in Black’s Law Dictionary as:

Right to meet terms of proposed contract before it is executed; e.g. right to have first opportunity to purchase real estate when such becomes available, or right to meet any other offer. The holder of such a right has the option to purchase the grantor’s real estate on the terms and conditions of sale contained in a bona fide offer by a third party to purchase such real estate, provided it is an offer that the grantor is otherwise willing to accept. See also Option, [italics added]

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Bluebook (online)
241 B.R. 17, 43 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 18, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 1384, 1999 WL 1016982, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bergt-akb-1999.