In Re Cumberland Farms, Inc.

142 B.R. 593, 1992 WL 164192
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedMay 1, 1992
Docket15-13612
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 142 B.R. 593 (In Re Cumberland Farms, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Cumberland Farms, Inc., 142 B.R. 593, 1992 WL 164192 (Mass. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION

JAMES F. QUEENAN, Jr., Chief Judge.

The Real Estate Lenders Committee (the “Lenders Committee”) moves for authority to employ Ropes & Gray (the “Firm”) as counsel to the Lenders Committee effective as of May 28, 1992. Set forth here are my findings of fact and conclusions of law. The permissibility of such employment presents a novel question.

Cumberland Farms, Inc. (the “Debtor”) is engaged in several related businesses. Under the trade name of “Gulf” it sells gasoline at retail in the northeast plus Ohio and Florida through some 2700 gasoline stations. Under its own trade name, it operates food convenience stores in the same market area at about 1,000 locations, of which about 650 have the Debtor’s gasoline stations in front. The Debtor owns substantially all of its gasoline and convenience store locations. It also sells gasoline at wholesale and home heating oil at retail. These latter operations are facilitated by an affiliate’s ownership of an oil refinery. Finally, the Debtor owns and operates a dairy and a bakery through which it supplies its own convenience stores and sells products to independently owned stores under private labels.

Many of the Debtor’s real estate properties are encumbered by mortgages held by some seventy-seven lenders (the “Lenders”). They are the creditors now represented by the Lenders Committee. Prior to the filing of the chapter 11 petition, the Debtor fell behind in its payments to many of the Lenders, although it remained current on its trade debt. As a result, it entered into negotiations with the Lenders. To facilitate these negotiations, the Lenders formed a committee composed of those owed the larger loan balances.

Following the filing of the chapter 11 petition, the United States Trustee appointed the Lenders Committee at the request of several of the Lenders. The Debtor opposed that request. Eight of its nine members are lending institutions. The ninth, Graimark Realty Advisors, is the assignee of claims held by The Resolution Trust Company. With perhaps some minor overlapping, the mortgages held by each Lender cover real estate not included in the mortgages of the other Lenders. The aggregate indebtedness owed the Lenders is approximately $245,000,000. Some portion of this figure may well be unsecured due to deficiencies in real estate values.

The unsecured trade debt totals approximately $40,000,000. The United States Trustee has appointed an Unsecured Creditors’ Committee (the “Unsecured Committee”). That committee has retained as its counsel Pepper, Hamilton & Scheetz, a law firm enjoying a national reputation in the representation of committees. The Unsecured Committee has employed Price Wa-terhouse as its accountant.

I conclude, for five largely independent reasons, that the requested employment should be denied. First, the employment would bring no benefit to the bankruptcy estate because neither the Lenders Committee nor the Firm would perform any function essential to the reorganization which is not performed by the Unsecured Committee. The Unsecured Committee and its counsel are obligated to perform four basic functions: (i) monitoring the Debtor’s business operations to be sure that the operations are enhancing the chances of a successful reorganization, (ii) monitoring the Debtor’s activities in representing the estate, particularly in court proceedings, to be sure that those activities are beneficial to the estate and promotive of a successful reorganization, (iii) negotiating with the Debtor on the Debtor’s chapter 11 plan, (iv) where the Debtor has a conflict of interest or is derelict in its duties, representing the estate in specific *595 matters after court authorization. Prior to the petition filing, the predecessor to the Lenders Committee may have performed the first two of these functions. There is no sense in the Lenders Committee performing any of these functions during the chapter 11 case now that the Unsecured Committee is in place. Moreover, to the extent that any of the Lenders are unsecured by reason of deficiencies in their mortgage values, the Lenders derive benefit from the activities of the Unsecured Committee as well as that Committee’s counsel and accountant.

Second, the interests of the Lenders are so largely individualistic that their interests are only minimally advanced by a collective representation. Unlike an unsecured creditor who looks only to general estate assets for payment, a Lender looks primarily to its own collateral for payment. Although a Lender may well prefer gradual (and possibly full) payment through reorganization rather than immediate payment through foreclosure, the Lender’s prime concern is with its own'collateral. That concern distinguishes a Lender from an unsecured creditor. It is not well served by a committee and its counsel who are equally obligated to advance the mortgage interests of other Lenders. The Lenders lack of commonality of security interests is simply inconsistent with any collective representation of their secured claims. See In re Wekiva Development Corp., 22 B.R. 301 (Bankr.M.D.Fla.1982) (appointment of secured creditors’ committee denied because interests of secured creditors are rarely identical). The circumstances here are quite different from the situation where a number of lenders share common collateral. There a secured lenders committee serves the security interests of all. And there the expenses of committee counsel are properly added to the debt to the extent permitted by section 506(b) rather than being paid from unencumbered estate property, which is the requested source of any payment to the Firm.

Third, if there is any minimal benefit that can be provided by the Lenders Committee and its counsel, the benefit flows to the Lenders and not to the bankruptcy estate. The Lenders Committee and its counsel may, for example, develop through their collective wisdom an effective strategy to combat a proposed cramdown of their secured claims under section 1129(b)(2)(A). That strategy would help them but not the estate whose funds pay the Firm. There is no analogy here to the plan bargaining activities of counsel to the Unsecured Committee. The estate pays for those services because unsecured creditors are its prime beneficiaries.

Fourth, many of the proposed services of the Firm are duplicative of the services that will be performed by either counsel to the Debtor or counsel to the Unsecured Committee; at best they have a tangential relationship to the security interests of the Lenders. The motion sets forth the following among the services that the Firm would perform:

a. the examination of the officers and directors of the Debtor and other parties affiliated with the Debtor with respect to the assets, liabilities and operations of the Debtor;
b. the identification of claims and causes of action which should be prosecuted by the Debtor and the identification and prosecution of such claims and causes of action as may be asserted by the [Lenders] Committee;
c. the examination of proofs of claim to be filed in this case;
f. analyzing, at the [Lenders] Committee’s request, any actions between and among the Debtor, its affiliates, its creditors and any insiders of the Debtor which the [Lenders] Committee believes warrant analysis or investigation;
g.

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Bluebook (online)
142 B.R. 593, 1992 WL 164192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cumberland-farms-inc-mab-1992.