In re Fundamental Long Term Care, Inc.

515 B.R. 352, 25 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. B 133, 2014 Bankr. LEXIS 3470, 2014 WL 4068229
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedAugust 15, 2014
DocketCase No. 8:11-bk-22258-MGW
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 515 B.R. 352 (In re Fundamental Long Term Care, 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 Fundamental Long Term Care, Inc., 515 B.R. 352, 25 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. B 133, 2014 Bankr. LEXIS 3470, 2014 WL 4068229 (Fla. 2014).

Opinion

Chapter 7

MEMORANDUM OPINION ON MOTION TO COMPROMISE

Michael G. Williamson, United States Bankruptcy Judge

The Chapter 7 Trustee, the state-court receiver for Trans Healthcare, Inc. (“THI”), and six probate estates (the “Probate Estates”) that sued THI and the Debtor’s wholly owned subsidiary, Trans Health Management, Inc. (“THMI”), for negligence in state court have reached a compromise resolving all of the claims among them. Under the compromise, the THI Receiver has agreed to withdraw its defense of THI in the lawsuits filed by the Probate Estates. That compromise is contingent on this Court entering a bar order prohibiting any third parties from suing the THI Receiver for withdrawing its defense of THI. The Court must now determine whether to approve the parties’ proposed compromise.

The Court concludes the proposed bar order — an essential term of the compromise — is not fair and equitable to the enjoined parties. The enjoined parties— principally THI’s shareholders, investors, and lenders, as well as entities and individuals that allegedly received THMI’s assets as part of a “bust out” scheme — specifically bargained for the right to defend THI against any liability. Because the bar order strips the enjoined parties of a valuable right they expressly bargained for without providing them any benefit in return, the bar order is not fair and equitable, and as a consequence, the compromise cannot be approved.

Factual Background

The genesis of this entire bankruptcy case — and all of the litigation it has spawned — is six negligence cases the Probate Estates filed against THI and THMI in state court between 2004 and 2009.1 [355]*355Initially, THI defended itself and THMI against the six negligence claims. After THI filed for receivership in 2009, its court-appointed receiver continued defending both entities. But in April 2010, the THI Receiver instructed the lawyers defending THI and THMI to withdraw as counsel of record in the negligence cases.2 Not long after their counsel withdrew, a $110 million default judgment was entered against THI and THMI following an “empty chair” trial in the case filed by the Estate of Jackson.

That is when the Probate Estates’ end game became apparent: the Probate Estates intended on rolling up a number of third parties who allegedly participated in a scheme to divest THMI of all of its assets (perhaps worth hundreds of millions of dollars) several years earlier.3 So the Probate Estates initiated proceedings supplementary against THI’s shareholders and investors,4 THI’s primary lenders,5 and the entities that allegedly received THMI’s assets (as well as the individual owners of those entities).6 The Debtor was one of the entities the Estate of Jackson pursued in proceedings supplementary. In September 2011, the Estate of Jackson obtained a $110 million judgment against the Debtor and others, and then three months later, it forced the Debtor into this involuntary chapter 7 case.

That led the THI Receiver and the third-party targets (i.e., THI’s shareholders, investors, and lenders, as well as the parties that allegedly received THMI’s assets) to scramble to find a way to defend the remaining five negligence cases. In particular, two eases were set for trial within two months of this bankruptcy case being filed: the Nunziata case was scheduled for trial on January 9, 2012; Webb was scheduled for trial on February 6, 2012. In an effort to ensure the remaining cases did not go undefended, the targets entered into a settlement agreement with the THI Receiver on January 5, 2012.7

Under the January 5 agreement, Fundamental Administrative Services (“FAS”) agreed to defend THI, the THI Receiver, and the THI receivership estate (as well as the THI subsidiaries that filed for receivership) from any claims arising out of the negligence cases filed by the Probate Estates.[356]*3568 FAS agreed to deposit $800,000 in escrow to fund the costs of that defense. General Electric Capital Corporation (“GECC”), one of THI’s lenders, likewise agreed to contribute up to $200,000 toward the defense costs.9 The January 5 agreement also specifically provided that FAS would ask the receivership court to declare that the THI Receiver had the right to assign its duty to defend THI to FAS.10

Whether the Maryland receivership court ever did so is unclear, but what is clear is that FAS fairly immediately delegated the duty to defend THI back to the THI Receiver, and the THI Receiver immediately set out to retain counsel for THI and THMI. Newly retained counsel for THMI attempted to appear on the company’s behalf in the Nunziata case on the morning of trial.11 But the court in that case would not let counsel appear. Likewise, the court in Webb would not let newly retained counsel appear for either THI or THMI. Because the state courts would not let newly retained counsel appear on behalf of THI and THMI, both of those cases proceeded to empty-chair trials, and the juries ultimately returned more than $1 billion in verdicts combined.

Shortly after the jury verdict in Webb, which came back less than a month after the order for relief in this case, the Chapter 7 Trustee began seeking turnover of all documents belonging to THMI, including THMI’s litigation files from the negligence cases.12 At the time, the Trustee was investigating potential causes of action against the lawyers who had previously withdrawn their defense of THMI. She apparently was also considering taking control of THMI’s defense of the negligence cases. The Trustee’s attempts to obtain those files touched off a number of hotly contested disputes with the THI Receiver and others.

For starters, the Trustee and THI Receiver fought over who had the right to control THMI’s defense — not only of the three cases that had not yet gone to trial but the appeals of the three that had.13 Part of that fight included whether THMI’s litigation files were privileged and, if so, who had the right to invoke the privilege on THMI’s behalf since THMI had no officers, directors, or employees.14 Perhaps more significant, the Trustee fought with the THI Receiver (and others) over whether she was entitled to communications between the THI Receiver and the attorneys defending THI and THMI under the co-client exception to the attorney-client privilege.15

While the Court has ruled on both of those issues,16 the THI Receiver nevertheless is still incurring substantial costs in this bankruptcy case. For instance, the Court has ruled that the Trustee (standing in the shoes of THMI) is entitled to THMI’s litigation files, including certain communications between the THI Receiver [357]*357and lawyers defending THI and THMI.17 But there are still fights over whether particular documents fall within the category of documents the Court ruled the Trustee is entitled to. On top of that, the THI Receiver is required to review documents turned over to the Trustee under the co-client exception to see whether any of them can be produced to third parties. And of course, the THI Receiver is still incurring costs defending THI in the negligence cases.

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Bluebook (online)
515 B.R. 352, 25 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. B 133, 2014 Bankr. LEXIS 3470, 2014 WL 4068229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-fundamental-long-term-care-inc-flmb-2014.