In Re Congoleum Corp.

414 B.R. 44, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 91924
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedOctober 2, 2009
DocketCivil Action 09-1337 (JAP)
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 414 B.R. 44 (In Re Congoleum Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Congoleum Corp., 414 B.R. 44, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 91924 (D.N.J. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

JOEL A. PISANO, District Judge.

On February 27, 2009, Judge Ferguson of the Bankruptcy Court denied confirmation of the fourteenth plan of reorganization 1 (the “Plan”) submitted over the last five years by the Plan Proponents 2 /Appel-lants. She then dismissed the bankruptcy case. It is the appeal of those two Orders that is currently before the Court. This Court has jurisdiction to hear the instant appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(a). Oral argument was held on this matter on July 1, 2009. For the reasons stated below, this Court reverses in part and affirms in part the Bankruptcy Court’s Order denying confirmation of the Plan, and reverses and vacates the Order dismissing the Debtors’ bankruptcy cases. Further, this Court withdraws the reference pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(d) for this matter and will conduct additional hearings on the case.

I. Background

A. The Debtors’ Asbestos Liability and Prior Litigation

Congoleum is a manufacturer of floor tile and other products based in Mercer-ville, New Jersey. The company owns and operates four plants, two of which are located in New Jersey, and employs approximately 600 employees. “Since 2005, Congoleum has generated cumulative earnings before interest, taxation, and amortization (‘EBITDA’) of approximately $74 million, including the generation of approximately $7 million during 2008 despite a recession and severe downturn in its end markets of residential and manufactured housing.” (Declaration of Howard N. Feist, III, Joint Appendix, Vol. L, A169, ¶ 4.) 3 Before 1974, Congoleum’s floor tiles contained asbestos fibers within them, and Congoleum stopped producing asbestos-containing sheet vinyl products in 1983. Beginning in 1981 and continuing through 2002, Congoleum was subject to approximately 70,000 tort suits alleging bodily injury due to exposure to its asbestos-containing floor tiles. (See A1890-92.) Congoleum’s primary insurance carriers settled some 33,000 of these claims, at a cost of about $13.5 million. (Id.) “As of September 30, 2002, over 99% of claims incurred by [Congoleum] have settled, on average, for amounts less than $102 per claimant.” (Id. at A1392.) Most of these claims were settled by Congoleum’s primary insurers, all of whom subsequently claimed Congoleum had exhausted its coverage by August 2002. (See A170-71, ¶¶ 11-14.)

Counsel for the Debtors noted at oral argument that settlement of asbestos *48 claims was particularly difficult because of the frequent latent nature of asbestos-related injuries. (Transcript of Oral Argument at 9, In re Congoleum Corp., 09-1337 (July 1, 2009).) 4 As a result of this latency issue and the claimed exhaustion of Congoleum’s primary insurance coverage, in February 2001, Congoleum sought to enter into a “coverage in place” agreement with its excess insurers, under which the parties could agree on how asserted claims against Congoleum would be handled and paid by its insurers. After a series of unsuccessful negotiations, some of Congo-leum’s excess insurers initiated insurance coverage litigation in the Superior Court of New Jersey, seeking a declaration that the excess insurers had no obligation to defend or indemnify Congoleum’s asbestos claims (the “Coverage Action”).

Throughout the pendency of the Coverage Action, Congoleum continued its efforts at settling the various asbestos cases percolating throughout the tort system. In July 2001, a New York jury returned damages-only verdicts for asbestos claimants Kenneth Cook and Richard Arse-neault in the amounts of $18.1 million and $15.8 million, respectively, during the first phase of a reverse, bifurcated trial (i.e. before liability was determined) against Congoleum and other defendants. Perry Weitz, an attorney based in New York, represented Cook and Arseneault at the damages-trial. Discovery for the liability phase of the case concluded in September 2002, shortly after Congoleum’s primary insurers claimed exhaustion of its coverage limits.

On August 26, 2002, Congoleum provided its excess insurers with a report regarding its asbestos claims and reiterated its desire to enter into a coverage-in-place agreement. After its primary insurers claimed exhaustion on August 28, 2002, “Congoleum settled 131 ... trial-listed cases in the tort system solely for a promise to pay and/or assignment of insurance rights” (the “Pre-Petition Settlement Agreements”) for a total of approximately $25 million to be secured by Congoleum’s insurance recoveries. (A174, ¶ 24; Letter from Don Golemme, Congoleum Risk Manager, to Arthur Pergament, Pergament Advisors, dated Feb. 12, 2004, A1075-1079.) For example, Congoleum reached a settlement in principle with Richard Com-stock, an asbestos claimant, for $225,000 in August 2002 (“Comstock settlement”). Of that sum, one of Congoleum’s primary insurers paid $168,577.34 to Comstock. Payment of Comstock’s claim exhausted Congoleum’s primary insurance coverage limits so the $56,422.66 balance owed to Comstock under the settlement remained unpaid. Congoleum’s attempts to obtain a coverage-in-place agreement were unsuccessful.

B. The Pre-Packaged Bankruptcy Scheme

As of October 2002, Congoleum’s negotiations with its insurers remained stalled. By October 2002, Congoleum’s excess insurers had not disbursed any funds for payments of asbestos claims and were instead awaiting a decision in the Coverage Action to assess their exposure. 5 Therefore, “[i]n October 2002, *49 Congoleum began simultaneously seeking coverage and considering the option of a pre-packaged bankruptcy for resolving its ... asbestos liabilities.” (A181, ¶ 46.) This decision coincided with Congoleum’s settlement with Cook and Arseneault. Weitz had rejected Congoleum’s initial offer of $2 million for each plaintiff in early September 2002, and had indicated that he was unwilling to settle for less than $10 million per plaintiff. On the eve of the liability trial, due in part to a poor outcome with a mock jury trial and differing, pessimistic predictions from experts about Congoleum’s anticipated liability, Congoleum agreed to Weitz’s settlement demand of $8 million each for Cook and Arseneault. However, at a September 23, 2002 meeting, Howard Feist, III, Congo-leum’s Chief Financial Officer, informed Weitz that “Congoleum did not have the financial resources exclusive of its insurance to pay a settlement in [that] amount.” (A177, ¶ 33.) Per Weitz’s recommendation, Congoleum contacted Scott Gilbert, of GHR, a purported expert in pre-packaged bankruptcies. Gilbert and GHR were retained by Congoleum on October 1, 2002. (A177, ¶ 35.) On that same day, October 1, 2002, Gilbert and Weitz agreed to an $8 million settlement for both Cook and Arseneault, with $800,000 to be paid in cash, and an assignment of insurance proceeds for the remaining $7.2 million for each case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
414 B.R. 44, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 91924, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-congoleum-corp-njd-2009.