In Re Curlew Valley Associates

14 B.R. 506, 5 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 255, 1981 Bankr. LEXIS 2820, 8 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 495
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Utah
DecidedOctober 8, 1981
Docket19-20995
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 14 B.R. 506 (In Re Curlew Valley Associates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Curlew Valley Associates, 14 B.R. 506, 5 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 255, 1981 Bankr. LEXIS 2820, 8 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 495 (Utah 1981).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION ON JUDICIAL SUPERINTENDENCE, TERMINATION, AND REPLACEMENT OF A TRUSTEE UNDER CHAPTER 11

RALPH R. MABEY, Bankruptcy Judge.

INTRODUCTION

This case raises the issues whether a mistake in business judgment by a trustee appointed under Section 1104(a)(1) 1 justifies either judicial interference with his conduct under Section 1108 or his termination and replacement under Section 1105.

Debtor, an agribusiness, owns a 24,000 acre farm in northern Utah and southern Idaho. Its principal crops are alfalfa hay, alfalfa seed, barley, and wheat. It filed a petition under Chapter 11 in May, 1980, and worked the farm as a debtor in possession until a trustee was appointed in December, 1980. The case was dismissed pursuant to Section 1112(b) on April 3, 1981. The dismissal, however, was conditioned upon failure to obtain confirmation of a plan before July 4. This deadline was later extended to August 1.

The trustee discounted the prospects for rehabilitation, and commenced preparations for liquidation which would occur through *508 either dismissal or implementation of a creditors’ plan which had been recently filed. 2 His program, in part, involved substitution of hay baling for hay cubing. This, in his view, among other things, allowed greater predictability of expenses, swifter disposition of hay, and more flexibility, since conversion to baling still permits cubing, but the reverse is not true.

Debtor gainsayed the views of the trustee and requested an injunction against his program. Baling, it argues, is agronomically unsound, will result in a $500,000 loss of crop proceeds, and will defeat its opportunity to confirm a plan (which is predicated on cubing).

At a hearing held July 20, on the eve of the hay harvest, the trustee asked for denial of the injunction on the ground that the decision to bale was made in good faith and for sound reasons and therefore could not be countermanded by the court. Debtor, on the other hand, because it feared substantial and irreversible economic consequences, asked the court to look behind the decision, to examine the expertise and data upon which it rested, and to weigh the best interests of the estate. 3

The court, given the emergency status of the case, ruled from the bench. It concurred with the trustee and refused to hear the debtor’s evidence. The debtor immediately moved to terminate the trustee and replace him with the debtor in possession. A hearing on this matter was scheduled for *509 the next day. Renewed argument was held on the scope of the trustee’s discretion and on his termination and replacement. The court ruled by telephone in the evening, reaffirming its refusal to interfere with the trustee and denying the motion to terminate and replace him. This memorandum decision elaborates the basis for these rulings.

JUDICIAL SUPERINTENDENCE OF THE TRUSTEE

The governing statute is Section 1108 which provides: “Unless the court orders otherwise, the trustee may operate the debtor’s business.” Debtor reads Section 1108 to mean that the court may limit, as well as bar, the trustee’s operation of the estate. This reading, however, ignores the reason for its enactment, and its construction in light of other provisions and policies of the Bankruptcy Code.

The thrust of Section 1108 is that the trustee may operate the debtor’s business. In other words, he may, but need not, manage the estate as a going concern, rather than in liquidation. Section 1108 thus reflects the policy of Chapter 11 to preserve, where possible, the going concern value of enterprises while recognizing that, in some instances, there will be no disparity between going concern and liquidation value, or that going concern may be less than liquidation value. See, e. g., 5 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 1108.03 (15th ed. 1980). In these cases, the trustee should have far-reaching discretion to operate, intermit, or debar the debtor’s business.

Since, however, operation of the debtor’s business is the norm, see, e. g., H.R.Rep. No. 95-595, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. 404 (1977), U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1978, p. 5787, the “orders otherwise” language of Section 1108, at most, allows the court to direct the trustee, where he may not elect, to discontinue an enterprise. Hence, the “orders otherwise” language dovetails with Sections 305(a) and 1112(b) which authorize the suspension, dismissal, or conversion of a case. It does not express or imply a power in the court to condition the trustee’s management of the estate. 4

The debtor, in contrast, reads Section 1108 as restricting the trustee who, from its standpoint, must operate the debt- or’s business “as he found it.” This argument, however, overlooks the permissive “may”: the trustee may, but need not, run the business; if he has discretion to cease operations as a whole, he may modify them in part. Likewise, debtor’s construction of the term, “debtor’s business,” is incompatible with Chapter 11 as a whole. Strictly speaking, there is no debtor’s business once a petition has been filed creating an estate under Section 541 and a new entity, the debtor in possession, to manage that estate. Moreover, a rule requiring the trustee to mimic the debtor may vitiate the basis for appointment of a trustee which in this case involved fraud and mismanagement, and the need for their correction. Surely debtor cannot mean that the trustee must seek court approval under Section 1108 to rectify abuses which were the reason for his appointment in the first instance. 5

This interpretation of Section 1108 is consistent with and complements other provisions in the Code. The relationship of Section 1108 with Sections 305(a) and 1112(b) *510 has already been mentioned. A further example is Section 1107(a) which confers the powers of a trustee on a debtor in possession “subject to. . . such limitations or conditions as the court prescribes.” Section 1107(a) thus permits judicial oversight where the debtor in possession acts as trustee. This permission does not appear in Section 1108. Such particularized draftsmanship suggests a desire to monitor debtors in possession but to allow fuller rein for trustees in the management of the estate. 6

Similar inferences may be drawn from 28 U.S.C. Section 959(a), Section 1104(c) and *511 Section 1105 which allow suits against trustees, substitution of one trustee for another, and replacement of a trustee with the debt- or in possession. Congress allowed and delimited these remedies for errant trustees, and thus sought to preclude the implication of others. In specific instances such as Section 1107(a), where it was willing to tolerate judicial surveillance, it knew how to say so.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 B.R. 506, 5 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 255, 1981 Bankr. LEXIS 2820, 8 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-curlew-valley-associates-utb-1981.