In re Highgate Manor of Cortland

13 B.R. 363, 1981 Bankr. LEXIS 3107
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedAugust 21, 1981
DocketBankruptcy Nos. 76-1849-L, 76-1616-L
StatusPublished

This text of 13 B.R. 363 (In re Highgate Manor of Cortland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Highgate Manor of Cortland, 13 B.R. 363, 1981 Bankr. LEXIS 3107 (D. Mass. 1981).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM ON OBJECTION OF NEW YORK STATE TO CONFIRMATION

THOMAS W. LAWLESS, Bankruptcy Judge.

The issue before the Court in this proceeding is whether the amended plan of arrangement proposed by Highgate Manor of Cortland and Highgate Hall of Cortland County, Inc. (the “Debtors”) may be confirmed over the objection of a class of unsecured creditors. The objecting class of creditors is composed exclusively of the claims of New York State (“New York”)1 which have arisen as a result of alleged Medicaid overpayments made to the Debtors.

On November 16, 1979, the Debtors filed a motion to amend the plan of arrangement which had previously been filed in the proceeding and to confirm the proposed amended plan. The proposed amendment sought to divide the unsecured creditors of the Debtors into two separate classifications. One class (Class 5) would be composed of those trade creditors who had supplied essential goods and services to the Debtors shortly before the commencement [365]*365of the chapter proceedings, and the second class (Class 6) would include all the claims of New York which, as noted above, arose from alleged Medicaid overpayments. At the hearing held on the motion, I determined that in view of the fact that the issue of confirmation might require a full eviden-tiary hearing, it would be appropriate to first consider only the motion to amend and defer to a later date consideration of whether the amended plan, if allowed, should be confirmed. The issue of the propriety of the proposed amendment was briefed by the parties, and in an order issued February 22, 1980,2 over the objection of New York, I allowed the motion to amend. The order further found that the amended plan of arrangement had been accepted by the requisite majorities of each class of creditor except the class containing the claims of New York (/. e., Class 6).3 New York alone objects to confirmation of the amended plan of arrangement.

Thus, at this time the issue before the Court is whether the Debtors’ amended plan of arrangement may be confirmed over the objection of New York. The Debtors4 and New York agree that the resolution of this issue is governed by Section 461(11) of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C. § 861(H).5 That section, commonly referred to as the cram-down provision, together with Section 468 of the Act, 11 U.S.C. § 868 6 provide that a plan of arrangement may be confirmed over the objection of a class of non-assenting creditors (i. e., crammed down) as long as the objecting creditors receive adequate protection for the value of their claims.

The Debtors maintain that the amended plan of arrangement adequately protects the value of New York’s claim and thus permits a cram down of the arrangement over New York’s objection. The Debtors contend that in this proceeding since the total secured indebtedness owed by the Debtors substantially exceeds the value of its assets, in the absence of a plan of arrangement (i. e. upon a liquidation of the [366]*366Debtors’ estates) the unsecured creditors, including New York, would receive nothing on their claims. In view of the fact that under the proposed plan of arrangement, New York will receive a distribution on its claim ($20,000.00, less the amount paid to the Class 5 creditors or approximately $15,-000.00), the Debtors conclude that New York’s otherwise valueless claim is clearly adequately protected under the plan of arrangement. In support of these assertions the Debtors rely not only upon the evidence adduced at the hearing but even more significantly upon the stipulation entered into by all the parties to the proceeding on August 13, 1980.7 In that stipulation the parties inter alia explicitly agreed that if the proposed plan is confirmed New York “will receive approximately $15,000 on its total disputed claims of approximately $475,000, which payment will be greater than this creditor is likely to receive from the Debtors’ estate in the event of distribution of proceeds following liquidation thereof...” The parties further agreed that in the event of a liquidation New York would “likely receive no distribution” on its claim.

New York, on the other hand, asserts that in the context of this proceeding, “adequate protection” under Section 461(11) of the Act should be given a more expansive interpretation than simply the protection of the value of its claim. New York points out that, in addition to its status as an unsecured creditor, New York participates in the proceeding as the administrator of the New York State Medicaid Program and that it is the payments under that program which are the principal source of income and revenue for the Debtors. Based on these considerations, New York contends that it has more at stake in this proceeding than merely the value of its unsecured claim, and that its interest here includes protecting the integrity of its Medicaid Program. According to New York, therefore, if the Debtors’ plan of arrangement impinges on the integrity of the Medicaid Program or otherwise violates requirements of that program, the plan would fail to satisfy the adequate protection requirement of Section 461(11) of the Act.

In this context, New York argues that since various aspects of the Debtors’ plan of arrangement do have an adverse impact on the New York State Medicaid Program, the plan cannot be found to have adequately protected its interests. New York relies primarily on two aspects of the plan as demonstrating the plan’s adverse impact of the Medicaid Program. First, New York points out the plan does not provide for the full recoupment by New York of all of its claim against the Debtor’s for alleged pre-petition Medicaid overpayments. New York asserts that Medicaid law requires the full recovery of all Medicaid overpayments, and that any plan which does not provide for a full recoupment does not adequately protect New York. And secondly, New York contends that the plan provides for certain increased payments to the Debtors’ mortgagees which are not reimbursable under the Medicaid Program. New York maintains that the impact of such unreim-bursable payments will be to divert payments from patient care and affect the feasibility of a successful arrangement. Therefore, despite the fact that it recognizes that it will receive more under the plan of arrangement on its claim than it would under a liquidation, New York nevertheless contends that it will suffer greater harm to its interests under the plan than under a liquidation. Thus, it concludes that since the plan does not adequately protect its interests the plan may not be confirmed over its objection.

Section 461(11) of the Bankruptcy Act requires that the plan of arrangement adequately protect the value of the objecting creditors’ claims. The language of that section that “an arrangement shall provide . . . adequate protection for the realization by [the class of objecting creditors] of the value of their debts” makes explicit that the requirement of adequate protection relates specifically to the protection of the value of the creditor’s claim. Thus, contrary to New York’s position, the section is [367]*367not intended to require a plan of arrangement to protect a creditor in every conceivable way.

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13 B.R. 363, 1981 Bankr. LEXIS 3107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-highgate-manor-of-cortland-mad-1981.