In re Digital Community Networks, Inc.

496 B.R. 243, 24 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. B 186, 2013 WL 4519411, 2013 Bankr. LEXIS 3477, 58 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 110
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedAugust 27, 2013
DocketCase No. 8:06-bk-01702-MGW
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 496 B.R. 243 (In re Digital Community Networks, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Digital Community Networks, Inc., 496 B.R. 243, 24 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. B 186, 2013 WL 4519411, 2013 Bankr. LEXIS 3477, 58 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 110 (Fla. 2013).

Opinion

Chapter 11

MEMORANDUM OPINION ON CROSS-MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

Michael G. Williamson, United States Bankruptcy Judge

The Debtor and SW Florida Communications, LLC have sued Bay Village of Sarasota in state court under a cable services contract. Bay Village says it is excused from performance under that contract because it was previously rejected in this bankruptcy case. The state court has refused to decide that issue because it says the question of whether the cable service contract is property of the estate is exclusively the province of this Court. This Court must now decide whether the cable services contract was rejected in this bankruptcy case.

The Court concludes that it was not. The Debtor could not have assumed or rejected that contract since the Debtor did not own it as of the petition date. Three years before filing this ease, the Debtor had assigned the cable service contract to a limited liability company it created, and that limited liability company, in turn, sold the contract (along with the rest of its assets) to an investor. While it is true the Debtor listed the contract in its schedules and otherwise took the position it owned the contract, the Debtor is not judicially estopped from now taking a contrary position in state court because its previous claim of ownership was in an effort to recharacterize the sale of that contract as a disguised loan and was not intended to [245]*245make a mockery of the judicial system. Accordingly, for the reasons discussed below, the cable services contract was not part of the bankruptcy estate and was never rejected during this bankruptcy case.

Background

The Debtor is a cable service provider.1 It typically provided cable services to mul-ti-unit locations, such as apartment complexes and condominium associations.2 The Debtor financed its operations by creating a separate limited liability company for each location, assigning the cable service contract for that location to the limited liability company, and then selling a 99% or 100% interest in the limited liability company to investors.3 The Debtor would then retain the right to repurchase the 99% or 100% interest in the limited liability company for a specified amount.4 Bay Village is a 300-plus unit life-care facility located in Sarasota, Florida.5

The Debtor contracts to provide cable services to Bay Village

In December 2000, the Debtor and Bay Village entered into two contracts.6 The first contract was a Contract for Bulk Cable Service.7 Under the cable service contract, the Debtor agreed to provide cable services to Bay Village, and Bay Village agreed to pay the Debtor $9.15 per month for each unit for those services.8 The second contract was an Exclusive Right to Provide Cable Service.9 That agreement, sometimes referred to as the cable easement, gave the Debtor an easement to install its cable equipment and the exclusive right to provide cable services to Bay Village.10 Under both agreements, then, the Debtor had the exclusive right to provide cable service to Bay Village for 15 years.

Woolf Cable Television Service acquires BVC

Consistent with its typical financing arrangement, the Debtor created Bay Village Cable, LLC (“BVC”) and assigned the cable service contract and the cable easement to BVC in January 2003.11 It is unclear whether the Debtor immediately sold its interest in BVC to an investor at that time. It appears that the Debtor originally had an investor for BVC in 2003 but later needed a replacement investor.12 What is clear, however, is that in June 2005, BVC entered into a contract to sell its cable television service business with respect to Bay Village to Woolf Cable Television Service, LLC (“Woolf’).13

According to the sale agreement between BVC and Woolf, BVC agreed to sell its equipment, licenses, inventory, and the other assets it used in its cable services business to Woolf for $175,000.14 The sale agreement included an exhibit identifying [246]*246the assets that Woolf was purchasing.15 One of the assets identified was the right to provide cable services to Bay Village:

All rights, now and in the future of [the Debtor] to provide cable television services to [Bay Village] ... including, but not limited to services rendered under an agreement by and between [the Debtor] and [Bay Village] dated December 22, 2000, which was assigned to [BVC] pursuant to an Assignment of Cable Easement from [the Debtor] dated January 15, 2003.16

As part of the sale transaction, Woolf and BVC also entered into a repurchase agreement.17 Under the terms of that agreement, the Debtor had the right to purchase all of Woolfs membership interests.18 The purchase price was set at $234,467.19 And the purchase option could be exercised four years after Woolf acquired BVC. In the meantime, the Debtor agreed to provide management services to Woolf in connection with the cable service contract.20

The Debtor proposes to obtain the cable service contracts in bankruptcy

Ten months after BVC sold its assets to Woolf, the Debtor filed for bankruptcy. It appears from the Court’s review of the record in this case that the Debtor had developed its game plan from the outset: the Debtor was going to reacquire the limited liability companies holding the cable service contracts (including BVC) either by exercising the repurchase options or by recharacterizing the sales of those limited liability companies as disguised loans rather than true sales.

Consistent with this game plan, the Debtor initially claimed the right to obtain ownership of the cable service contracts in its schedules. In particular, the Debtor listed the easement agreement with Bay Village (and thirty-one other communities) on schedule A.21 On schedule B, the Debtor identified its interests in fourteen limited liability companies — although for some reason it failed to include BVC.22 The Debtor also listed the executory contracts identified on schedule G in response to the question asking the Debtor to identify any other personal property not listed on schedule B.23 And the executory contracts listed on schedule G included the cable service contract with Bay Village, as well as the management and repurchase agreements with Woolf.24 All of that was consistent with the Debtor’s statement in its case management summary that the “bulk” of the Debtor’s assets included repurchase options with the various limited liability companies and numerous management contracts for cable facilities.25

Next, the Debtor outlined its plan to exercise its rights to obtain ownership of those valuable cable service contracts in one of two ways. In its initial disclosure statement, the Debtor explained that it intended on borrowing $4 million to exercise its rights under the various repurchase agreements to reacquire the limited [247]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
496 B.R. 243, 24 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. B 186, 2013 WL 4519411, 2013 Bankr. LEXIS 3477, 58 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-digital-community-networks-inc-flmb-2013.