In Re Greater Southeast Community Hospital Foundation, Inc.

267 B.R. 7, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1481, 2001 WL 1134890
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedJuly 9, 2001
Docket99-1159
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 267 B.R. 7 (In Re Greater Southeast Community Hospital Foundation, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Greater Southeast Community Hospital Foundation, Inc., 267 B.R. 7, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1481, 2001 WL 1134890 (D.D.C. 2001).

Opinion

DECISION RE DEBTORS’ OBJECTION TO CLAIMS OF THE PLAN ADMINISTRATION COMMITTEE FOR THE GREATER SOUTHEAST - HEALTHCARE DEFINED CONTRIBUTION PLAN AND THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA NURSES ASSOCIATION

S. MARTIN TEEL, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

The debtors in these jointly administered. cases are participating employers in the Greater Southeast Healthcare System Defined Contribution Pension Plan (“the Pension Plan” or “the Plan”). The court addresses the objection of three of the debtors to the administrative claims filed by the Pension Plan, through its Plan Administration Committee (“the Plan Committee”) and the District of Columbia Nurses Association (“DCNA”). 1 The three claims at issue arise out of the Pension Plan: (1) a claim against the debtors for contribution to the Pension Plan for the year 1999; (2) a claim against the debtors for contribution to the Pension Plan for the year 1998; and (3) a claim against the debtors for the costs and expenses of the Plan Committee. The court concludes with respect to the principal issues that:

the contribution claim for 1999 is, first, owed (because the employees were still employees on December 31, 1999), and, second, entitled to administrative expense treatment (because the event brig- *10 gering liability was a postpetition event — employment on December 31, 1999); 2
the undisputed liability for the contribution claim for 1998, ,to the extent the final triggering event of liability occurred on or after November 28, 1998, is in its entirety entitled to priority under and subject to the dollar limitations of 11 U.S.C. § 507(a)(4), but is not entitled to treatment as an administrative claim (despite provisions in a postpetition collective bargaining agreement calling for benefits to remain unchanged); 3 and the postpetition expenses of the Plan Committee are entitled to administrative expense treatment for the period ending May 1, 2000, but not thereafter (because of a May X, 2000, amendment of the Pension Plan).

The debtors filing the objection — -Greater Southeast Community Hospital Foundation, Inc. (“the Foundation”); Greater Southeast Community Hospital Corporation (“GSCHC”); and Greater Southeast Management Company (“the Management Company”) — will be referred to as “the debtors.” Together with the remaining debtor, the Fort Washington Nursing Home, Inc., and certain non-debtor entities, they are part of the Greater Southeast Healthcare System. The claims are principally the result of the employment by GSCHC of numerous employees as an operating hospital, and as a practical matter the Foundation and the Management Company play a minor role in the disputes. The Foundation is the parent company of all of the other entities in the System. The Management Company provides management services to the other entities (such as processing payroll for them).

I

ADMINISTRATIVE CLAIM FOR 1999 PLAN CONTRIBUTION

The dispute to which the court first turns is the debtors’ contention that they are not obligated to make any contribution to the Plan for the year 1999 because the employees failed to satisfy a condition necessary to the receipt of the contribution, namely, that they be employed on the last day of the calendar year. The debtors maintain that the employees were no longer employees of the debtors as of December 31, 1999 because the debtors consummated an asset purchase agreement on December 30, 1999, at which time the employees’ employment was terminated.

A.

FACTS

1.

Relevant Provisions in the Pension Plan

Pursuant to Article 4.2 of the Plan 4 the debtors are- required to make an annual *11 contribution of 3% of each eligible employees’ compensation, provided that the employee is employed on the last day of the calendar year and is credited with one year of service. 5 The annual 3% contribution is also required if a participant dies, retires after age 65 or becomes disabled during the Plan Year regardless of the amount of hours worked, but the debtors have not objected to the administrative claim for the 1999 Plan contribution claim to the extent it is based on such eligibility. 6

2.

The Debtors’ Financial Decline and Bankruptcy

Dr. George Gilbert was the CEO of the debtors from July 1998 to December 30, 1999. According to Dr. Gilbert, GSCHC ran a profit in 1995 and 1996. However, in 1997 there was an abrupt change in GSCHC’s financial standing which found GSCHC burdened with several million dollars in losses by the end of that year. In 1998 GSCHC also suffered losses approaching 40 million dollars. 7 Soon after taking over as CEO, Dr. Gilbert retained Rutherford & Cohen as financial advisors in order to obtain a cash flow projection and to identify where productivity cuts could be made. Rutherford & Cohen concluded that expenses were exceeding revenues by 3 million dollars per month and that GSCHC would not be able to meet its December 1998 payroll. 8 As a result of these findings, Dr. Gilbert initiated a series of cost saving measures, such as reductions in personnel and closing physician practices and unprofitable units. These cuts alone were insufficient and other areas for savings were also identified such as an across-the-board pay cut and termination of the funding of the sick leave payout and the Pension Plan. By the spring of 1999, although GSCHC had made significant inroads into alleviating expenses, it was still losing 1.82 million dollars per month. Accordingly, GSCHC began to solicit an alliance partner although that effort generated only one response from Doctors Community Hospital (“Doctors”). 9

A second evaluation of the GSCHC’s financial health was completed by Arthur Anderson at the behest of the bondholders. *12 Arthur Anderson indicated that it would be unlikely that the hospital could survive and that it should be liquidated. Notwithstanding that forecast, GSCHC developed a turnaround plan that required a capital infusion of 22 million dollars. The turnaround plan included a 5% across-the-board pay cut and elimination of the Pension Plan benefit. In conjunction with the turnaround plan, the board approved a resolution in March 1999 to terminate the Pension Plan benefit, but ultimately, Dr. Gilbert elected never to give notice to implement the termination lest it harm employee morale. Meanwhile, the District of Columbia rejected GSCHC’s turnaround plan in May 1999. At that point, GSCHC had completely run out of funds, prompting Dr. Gilbert to inform the District of Columbia that the hospital would close.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
267 B.R. 7, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 1481, 2001 WL 1134890, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-greater-southeast-community-hospital-foundation-inc-dcd-2001.