In Re: Frontier Communications Corporation

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJune 8, 2021
Docket7:20-cv-06268
StatusUnknown

This text of In Re: Frontier Communications Corporation (In Re: Frontier Communications Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re: Frontier Communications Corporation, (S.D.N.Y. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK ___________________________________________ IN RE: FRONTIER COMMUNICATIONS CORP.,

Debtor, 7:20-cv-6268-CM ___________________________________________ TSUEI YIH HWA Appellant, v. FRONTIER COMMUNICATIONS CORPORATION, et al.

Appellees _____________________________________________ DECISION AND ORDER DISMISSING THE APPEAL AS EQUITABLY MOOT McMahon, J: Tsuei Yih Hwa (Tsuei), proceeding pro se, appeals from an order of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York. The order denied motions by Summer Ridge Group Ltd. to dismiss Frontier Communications Corporation’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings, and also denied Tsuei’s motion for the appointment of either a Chapter 11 trustee pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 1104(a)(1) and (2), or an examiner pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 1104(c)(1). Because the effective date of the plan has passed and the plan of reorganization has been substantially consummated, the appeal is dismissed as equitably moot. I. Background A. Bankruptcy Beginnings Debtor Frontier Communications Corporation filed a voluntary petition for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on April 14, 2020. (Bankr. Case No. 20-22476-rdd, Bankr. Dkt. No. 1). In May and June of 2020, Summer Ridge Group, Ltd., a Taiwan-based corporation, filed a series of pro se motions urging the Bankruptcy Court to dismiss Frontier’s Chapter 11 proceedings as fraudulent. (Bankr. Dkt. Nos. 265, 290, 525). Summer Ridge is a creditor of Frontier, as it holds several unsecured Frontier corporate bonds through UBS AG Singapore. (Bankr. Dkt. No. 290 at

66, Annex 1). Its motions were signed by two individuals: Pan Chiu-Chiang and Rick Tsuei, both of whom listed the same address in Taipei. Summer Ridge’s motions asked the Bankruptcy Court “to restore the status quo prior” to Frontier’s filing for Chapter 11. (See, e.g. Bankr. Dkt. No. 265 at 3). The motions’ vague arguments claimed that Frontier’s bankruptcy was fraudulent (i.e., that Frontier should be ineligible for Chapter 11 protection) for two main reasons. First, that Frontier affected a goodwill impairment in 2019 to fraudulently undervalue its assets so that it could qualify for bankruptcy. Second, that Frontier selectively repaid debts it owed to certain unsecured creditors before others prior to filing for bankruptcy. (E.g. id. at 6). As evidence, Summer Ridge attached several pages of its own financial analyses of Frontier’s assets, several of Frontier’s investor updates and public SEC

filings, and excerpts from accounting standards guidelines. (See Bankr. Dkt. No. 290). On June 1, 2020, Tsuei Yih Hwa, the current appellant and a Singaporean national, filed a pro se motion “according to 11 U.S. Code § 1104” for the bankruptcy court “to appoint a trustee or examiner to investigate” Frontier for possible accounting fraud and bankruptcy fraud. (Bankr. Dkt. No. 428 at 1). Tsuei claimed that he was an “unsecured bondholder” and “also a shareholder” of Frontier but did not file any documents with the Bankruptcy Court evincing that claim. (Ibid.). Tsuei’s one-paragraph submission stated that he was relying on Summer Ridge’s arguments in support of his motion, but he did not file anything with the Bankruptcy Court that detailed the extent of the relationship (if any) that he might have had with Summer Ridge. Tsuei, in his individual capacity, also did not join any of Summer Ridge’s motions nor did he file an independent motion to dismiss. He did not explain why – beyond “the evidence presented in” Summer Ridge’s motions – it was necessary to appoint a trustee or examiner. (Ibid.). For the purposes of this decision, the Court assumes that Mr. Tsuei Yih Hwa is the “Rick Tsuei” who

signed Summer Ridge’s motions because Tsuei filed a copy of his Singapore identification card on appeal which lists “Rick Tsuei” as an alias. (Dkt. No. 16 at 26). On June 13, 2020, the Bankruptcy Court noticed a teleconference hearing for June 29, 2020 to decide any and all objections that interested parties may have had to Frontier’s proposed “adequate protection order” which, among other things, proposed a schedule for Frontier to pay off its unsecured debt. (Bankr. Dkt. No. 516). In preparation for the hearing, Frontier filed an opposition to both Summer Ridge’s and Tsuei’s motions on June 23, 2020. (Bankr. Dkt. No. 570). B. June 29, 2020 Hearing and Subsequent Orders Neither Tsuei nor a representative from Summer Ridge appeared at the June 29th conference. (Transcript of June 29, 2020 hearing, Bankr. Dkt. No. 742 at 82). Frontier’s counsel

informed the Bankruptcy Court that it had sent Summer Ridge and Tsuei notices referencing the dial-in procedure to the teleconference on June 24, and had also sent a message asking for a list of parties of who would be appearing on June 25. (Id. at 83). Frontier continued sending notices on June 26 and 27, encouraging a representative from Summer Ridge or Tsuei to sign up for the teleconference. Frontier’s counsel did not receive any response to these inquiries. However, it was clear that Summer Ridge had notice of the hearing because on the morning of June 27, it emailed Judge Drain’s chambers a list of files it intended to use for the hearing. (Id. at 84). But Summer Ridge never communicated with the Court nor with Frontier’s attorneys after that email, not even after a Frontier attorney sent one last reminder to log in to the teleconference on the morning of the hearing. Judge Drain thus concluded that Summer Ridge and Tsuei “definitely have notice” since “They’ve been in contact with the clerk’s office repeatedly,” and thus proceeded to consider the motions on the record he had before him. (Id. at 83). The Bankruptcy Court denied Summer Ridge’s motions to dismiss as being improperly

filed by a corporation proceeding pro se. The Court observed that Summer Ridge’s actions “illustrated why the law is clear that a corporation or a similar entity, legal entity, needs to appear in Federal Court by counsel.” (Id. at 84). It explained: The filing of these motions, the failure to schedule hearings on them, the se[nd]ing them ex parte to chambers before advised otherwise, and the content of the motions and the format of the motion and the preparation with this hearing all illustrate why . . . the law of the land is that corporations and other legal entities need to appear by counsel, and they [Summer Ridge] haven’t. I need to have counsel vouch for pleadings, subject to Rule 11, incorporated by Bankruptcy Rule 9011, and I don’t have counsel here on this. And for that reason, I will disregard each of these motions filed by Summer Ridge. (Id. at 85).

The Bankruptcy Court ultimately withheld any ruling on the merits because, “There’s a basic level here of compliance that needs to be met and it hasn’t been met here.” (Ibid.). The Court instructed Frontier’s counsel to submit an order dismissing each of Summer Ridge’s motions on that basis. The Bankruptcy Court next considered Tsuei’s pro se motion to appoint a trustee or examiner to investigate allegations of fraud. In relevant part, 11 U.S.C § 1104 provides that: (a) At any time after the commencement of the case but before confirmation of a plan, on request of a party in interest or the United States trustee, and after notice and a hearing, the court shall order the appointment of a trustee—

(1) for cause, including fraud, dishonesty, incompetence, or gross mismanagement of the affairs of the debtor by current management . . . or

(2) if such appointment is in the interests of creditors, any equity security holders, and other interests of the estate . . .

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In Re: Frontier Communications Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-frontier-communications-corporation-nysd-2021.