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)
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
either dismissal or implementation of a creditors’ plan which had been recently filed.
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.
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
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.
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.
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)
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.
Similar inferences may be drawn from 28 U.S.C. Section 959(a), Section 1104(c) and
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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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)
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
either dismissal or implementation of a creditors’ plan which had been recently filed.
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.
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
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.
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.
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)
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.
Similar inferences may be drawn from 28 U.S.C. Section 959(a), Section 1104(c) and
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.
Aside from these statutory bases, there are policy reasons for discouraging supervision of the trustee. First, as the court has noted elsewhere, reorganization involves the “turbulent rivalry” of many interests.
In re Alyucan Interstate Corp.,
12 B.R. 803, 806, 7 B.C.D. 1123, 1124 (D. Utah 1981). The trustee’s business decisions will affect these interests. If parties, in their own right, or as putative representatives of the estate, question these decisions, the court may be deluged with motions. This would impede the expeditious administration of estates.
Second, “[t]he reorganization process is not basically an adversary process. The reorganization process is one of controlled negotiation, much like labor negotiations are conducted between labor and management.” Trost, “Corporate Reorganizations Under Chapter VII of the ‘Bankruptcy Act of 1973’: Another View,” 48 Am.Bank.L.J. Ill, 120 (1974). These negotiations are conducted by trustees, creditor committees, debtors, and their professional representatives. These parties are equipped, through experience, expertise, and powers under the Code to shepherd the estate toward reorganization. Judicial involvement blunts the give and take which is necessary to this process and ultimately derails the objective of private control in Chapter 11.
Third, disagreements over business policy are not amenable to judicial resolution. The courtroom is not a boardroom. The judge is not a business consultant. While a court may pass upon the legal effect of a business decision, (for example, whether it violates the antitrust laws), this involves a process and the application of criteria fundamentally different from those which produce the decision in the first instance. In short, the decision calls for
business
not
legal judgment.
Fourth, and most important, a major goal of the bankruptcy reform movement was to divorce the court from ministerial duties and to confine it to adjudicative functions.
Sound reasons underly this goal. The quintessential predicate for administering justice is a neutral arbiter. A court which appoints a trustee and confers with him regularly and
ex parte
for the purpose of managing a business may find it difficult to rule impartially if those decisions in which it has participated are challenged. Impartiality is not improved by inviting input from others and transferring the decision-making from a private to a public forum. The court is nevertheless cast as a “super-trustee” and overseer of the estate, asked now to determine company policy and later to reconcile the effects of that policy on competing interests. These problems were addressed by Congress:
A bankruptcy judge may be required to grant a debtor in possession in a reorganization case authority to enter into a contract subject to certain terms and conditions. The judge may actually participate, through the debtor in possession, in negotiating the contract. He may work with the debtor in possession and a union to avert a strike that would ruin the business. He may advise the debtor in possession or the trustee in the management of the business, and issue frequent instructions for its conduct. Later in the case, that same judge may be faced with the responsibility for resolving a dispute that arises over the terms of the contract that he participated in negotiating or over the nature of the union’s obligation to the debtor. An individual that is in effect a “party” to a contract simply cannot render a fair or impartial decision concerning its interpretation.
* * * * * *
These factors add an additional dimension to the position of the bankruptcy judge. As the administrator of bankruptcy cases, and the individual responsible for the supervision of the trustee or debtor in possession, it is an easy matter for a bankruptcy judge to feel personally responsible for the success or failure of a case. Bankruptcy judges frequently view a case as “my case.” The institutional bias thus generated magnifies the likelihood of unfair decisions in the bankruptcy court, and has caused at least one occasional bankruptcy practitioner to suggest that “the bankruptcy court is the only court I appear in in which the judge is an interested party.”
These problems are particularly acute in business rehabilitation cases. In chapter X corporate reorganization cases, the judge must appoint the trustee, and then work with the trustee in the conduct of the business. The appearance of unfairness generated when the judge’s appointee appears before the judge for a hearing is magnified because the judge must work so closely with the trustee in the management of the business undergoing reorganization. Though there is no trustee in a Chapter XI or Chapter XII arrangement case, the judge works closely with the debtor in possession in the man
agement of the business. It is in these cases in which the judge’s personal responsibility for the success or failure of a case is intense, with the consequent appearance of bias in the judge’s consideration of disputes that arise in the case. H.R.Rep.No. 95-595, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. 90-91 (1977), U.S. Code Cong. & Admin. News 1978, pp. 6051, 6052.
Compromises in the Reform Act prevent complete separation of administration and adjudication. But inroads were made. There should be no regression. Unless the Code directs otherwise, a wall of separation should be erected between the court and the estate.
Whenever the court must define its role
vis a vis
the estate, it should draw the line in favor of judicial independence.
In short, the court will not entertain objections to a trustee’s conduct of the estate where that conduct involves a business judgment made in good faith, upon a reasonable basis,
and within the scope of
his authority under the Code.
This rule is consistent with the “limited purpose” of Section 1108,
see
5 Collier on Bankruptcy,
supra,
¶ 1108.03 at 1108-9, and harmonizes that statute with other provisions in the law, such as Sections 305(a), 1104(c), 1105, 1107(a), 1112(b), and 28 U.S.C. Section 959(a). It reduces administrative burdens and furthers the goal of an independent court of bankruptcy. For these reasons, the motion under Section 1108 is denied.
,
TERMINATION AND REPLACEMENT OF THE TRUSTEE
Section 1105 provides: “At any time before confirmation of a plan, on request of a party in interest, and after notice and a hearing, the court may terminate the trustee’s appointment and restore the debtor to possession and management of the property of the estate, and operation of the debtor’s business.”
Section 1105 “does not provide a fixed standard pursuant to which the court is to determine whether the trustee’s appointment should be terminated.” 5 Collier on Bankruptcy,
supra
¶ 1105.01 at 1105—1. The legislative history notes that “[t]his section would permit the court to reverse its decision to order the appointment of a trustee in light of new evidence.” H.R.Rep. No. 95-595, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. 403 (1977), U.S. Code Cong. & Admin. News 1978, p. 6359. “Presumably,” according to Collier, “the draftsmen intended that the trustee’s appointment be rescinded if the court determines that, based upon facts which were not available at the time of the original hearing under Section 1104(a), the original order of appointment of a trustee was improvidently granted.” 5 Collier on Bankruptcy,
supra
¶ 1105.01 at 1105-1—1105-2.
Collier, however, expands upon this standard. The Code was designed to supply “maximum flexibility with respect to the management of the debtor’s affairs during the pendency of the case.” It follows that Section 1105 “permits the court to terminate the appointment of a trustee where conditions have changed subsequent to the court’s order of appointment and the continued service by a trustee is not in the
interests of creditors, equity security holders, and other interests of the estate.”
Id.
This “change in circumstance” test was employed by the court in
In re Eastern Consolidated Utilities, Inc.,
3 B.R. 591, 1 C.B.C.2d 937 (Bkrtcy.E.D.Pa.1980). There a trustee was appointed because the debtor made post-petition preferential payments. Debtor, which had not opposed appointment of a trustee, later moved to terminate and replace him with the debtor in possession under Section 1105. Neither creditor who had requested appointment of a trustee resisted this motion. The court found that the post-petition payments were “the result of.. .ill-advised legal counsel,” and concluded that “the hiring of new counsel, combined with the stated intention of the principals of the debtor to comply with the requirements of the bankruptcy code, render the continued services of a trustee unnecessary.”
Id.
at 593, 1 C.B.C.2d at 939. In short, “the circumstances which gave rise to the order appointing a trustee no longer exist.”
Id.
Assuming that either the “improvidence” or the “change in circumstances” rationale is correct, neither can be applied in this case. Debtor does not argue that appointment of the trustee was improvident in light of evidence which was earlier unavailable. Nor does it point to a change in those circumstances which called for his appointment,
viz.
fraud and mismanagement.
Moreover, debtor’s position confuses the role of Sections 1104(a), 1104(c), and 1105. Section 1104(c) provides for removal of a trustee for cause (assuming an error in business judgment constitutes cause), in which case he is replaced by another trustee not the debtor. Thus, the focus of Section 1104(c), in part, is trustee misconduct. If Section 1105 is read to cover the same ground, it not only renders Section 1104(c) superfluous but also contravenes the legislative intent that, in such instances, the trustee is to be replaced with a “disinterested person.” Likewise, the purpose for appointing a trustee under Section 1104(a) could be defeated, if a debtor may be put back in place on grounds unrelated to the reasons for his removal.
For these reasons, the motion under Section 1105 is also denied.