In re: Dow Corning v.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 22, 2005
Docket04-1916
StatusPublished

This text of In re: Dow Corning v. (In re: Dow Corning v.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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In re: Dow Corning v., (6th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206 File Name: 05a0360p.06

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT _________________

X - In re: DOW CORNING CORP., - - Debtor. __________________________________________ - No. 04-1916

, > BEAR STEARNS GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, INC., - - Appellants, - et al.,

- - - v. - DOW CORNING CORP., et al., - Appellees. - - N Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan at Detroit. No. 01-71843—Denise Page Hood, District Judge. Argued: July 27, 2005 Decided and Filed: August 22, 2005 Before: MOORE and COLE, Circuit Judges; and WISEMAN, District Judge.* _________________ COUNSEL ARGUED: Abraham Singer, PEPPER HAMILTON, Detroit, Michigan, for Appellants. David L. Ellerbe, NELIGAN, TARPLEY, STRICKLIN, ANDREWS & FOLEY, Dallas, Texas, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Abraham Singer, Mary K. Deon, PEPPER HAMILTON, Detroit, Michigan, for Appellants. David L. Ellerbe, NELIGAN, TARPLEY, STRICKLIN, ANDREWS & FOLEY, Dallas, Texas, for Appellees.

* The Honorable Thomas A. Wiseman, Jr., United States District Judge for the Middle District of Tennessee, sitting by designation.

1 No. 04-1916 In re Dow Corning Page 2

_________________ OPINION _________________ R. GUY COLE, JR., Circuit Judge. Twenty-seven Texas plaintiffs seeking recovery for injuries resulting from allegedly faulty breast implants engaged in settlement negotiations with the implants’ manufacturer, Dow Corning Corp., a Michigan company. After the discussions reached an impasse over terms covering the consequences in the event settlement payments were not timely, Dow Corning suggested a clause requiring payments of $100 per day to each plaintiff for any time during which settlement payments were late. The plaintiffs agreed to this clause, and entered into the settlement agreement, later selling their right to settlement payments to Appellant Bear Stearns. When Dow Corning declared bankruptcy and began to miss payments under the settlement agreement, Bear Stearns attempted to enforce the clause via a bankruptcy claim. The district court, on Dow Corning’s motion for summary judgment, held that the clause was a penalty unenforceable under Texas law, and also found that a condition precedent to the contractual provision of liquidated damages had not been met. Bear Stearns now appeals, arguing that the condition precedent was in fact met, and that Dow Corning should be estopped from asserting that the clause is a penalty. Because the clause is a penalty unenforceable under Texas law, and because Texas courts preclude parties from being estopped from asserting an illegality defense, we AFFIRM the decision below. I. Following revelations that many of Dow Corning’s silicone-based breast implants were faulty, numerous suits were filed against Defendant-Appellee Dow Corning Corp. (“Dow Corning”). Twenty-seven Texas residents (“Plaintiffs”) filed suit in Texas state court in 1994, alleging various claims against Dow Corning. Dow Corning found itself “under significant pressure” to settle these twenty-seven cases, especially since any findings of fact made in these cases (the “Texas cases”) could have significant adverse effects upon Dow Corning’s position in a related multi-district case and related global settlement discussions then pending in federal court in Alabama. Dow Corning was also motivated to settle because of its view that the Texas cases were filed in a “plaintiff- friendly” forum. Dow Corning thus hired Ken Feinberg, a noted expert in settlement practice, to engage in settlement negotiations with the Plaintiffs. But for one sticking point, the negotiations went smoothly. Both parties agreed that Texas law would control the settlement agreement. Dow Corning would pay the Plaintiffs a total of $17 million over the course of several years, in a series of seven installments. This payment would be secured by an “Agreed Judgment” filed in Texas court, though the judgment would be enforced only if Dow Corning failed to make a timely settlement payment. Plaintiffs’ counsel would be responsible for determining what portion of the $17 million each individual Plaintiff would receive. Further, if Dow Corning ever were late on an installment payment, the entire settlement amount would come due. However, near the end of negotiations, Plaintiffs’ counsel insisted on a clause (the “no credit clause”) which provided that if Dow Corning ever failed to make a timely payment, it would not receive credit against the judgment for previously made payments. For example, under this clause, if Dow Corning failed to make a required final payment of $200,000 to a particular Plaintiff, that Plaintiff would be able to enforce the “agreed judgment” against Dow Corning for the full settlement amount of $1,400,000, rather than merely for the $200,000 portion of the judgment remaining unpaid. This would occur despite the fact that the Plaintiff in this example would already have received $1,200,000 of the $1,400,000 due. Plaintiffs’ counsel justified this clause by stating that it would provide a significant incentive for Dow Corning to pay scheduled payments on time. Not wishing to place itself in a position where it could potentially be required to “double- pay” a significant portion of the settlement, Dow Corning steadfastly objected to the no credit No. 04-1916 In re Dow Corning Page 3

clause. However, Dow Corning by its own admission at this time felt “a tremendous sense of urgency to finalize the settlement.” Accordingly, Dow Corning’s attorneys proposed replacing the no credit clause in each Plaintiff’s agreement with language requiring a “penalty” of $100 to be paid for each day that Dow Corning was late in paying a particular Plaintiff. After insisting that all uses of “penalty” be changed to “liquidated damages,” and after making some insignificant stylistic changes, Plaintiffs’ attorneys agreed to insert the following language proposed by Dow Corning: In the event that [Dow Corning] fails to make any payment in accordance with [the] Agreement, and Plaintiff must seek enforcement of the judgment to obtain the amounts due, then [Dow Corning] will pay to Plaintiff, as liquidated damages, the sum of One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) per day for each day that payment is not made from the date payment was due until the date Plaintiff receives the full amount due and owing under the terms of this agreement. These liquidated damages shall be in addition to the assessment of costs and interest as provided in the agreed judgment and the acceleration of installment payments as provided in [] the Agreement. The Plaintiffs’ attorneys noted at that time that if the new provision provided for a “penalty,” the provision would not be enforceable under Texas law. The parties agreed on this language, and inserted the clause into each settlement agreement. Dow Corning paid the first installment payment, totalling $4 million, on December 1, 1994. However, on May 15, 1995, Dow Corning filed for bankruptcy in the Eastern District of Michigan, and thereafter failed to make any further payments under the settlement agreement — the second installment having been due on July 1, 1995. All of the Plaintiffs timely filed claims in bankruptcy court for the amounts due under the settlement agreement. In February 1997, while the bankruptcy case was pending, the Plaintiffs all sold their claims to Appellant Bear Stearns Investment Products, Inc., and related entities (collectively, “Bear Stearns”). Bear Stearns was then substituted for the Plaintiffs in the bankruptcy case. Years later, a reorganization plan was approved for Dow Corning. The plan included payment to Bear Stearns1of the full remaining settlement amount of $13 million, plus post-petition interest of $9.6 million.

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