In Re Hsf Holding, Inc.

421 B.R. 716, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 54, 2010 WL 129668
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJanuary 13, 2010
Docket19-10398
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 421 B.R. 716 (In Re Hsf Holding, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Hsf Holding, Inc., 421 B.R. 716, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 54, 2010 WL 129668 (Del. 2010).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

WALSH, Bankruptcy Judge.

This opinion is with respect to the motion brought by HSF Holding, Inc. (“HSF”) and Hawaii Superferry, Inc. (“Su-perferry” and collectively with HSF, the “Debtors”), pursuant to 11 U.S.C. §§ 105(a) and 554(a), for entry of an order approving abandonment of Debtors’ estates’ interests in a spare main engine (the “Spare Main Engine”). (Doc. # 111.) For the reasons discussed below, I will grant the motion.

BACKGROUND

The Court’s detailed relevant facts set forth below are as stipulated to by the parties in the Joint Statement of Facts and an amendment thereto. (Doc. ## 255 and 271.)

On April 9, 2004, the Debtors entered into two separate shipbuilding contracts with Austal USA, LLC (“Austal”) for the construction of two 105 meter high-speed passenger and vehicle ferries, the “Alakai” (the “Alakai Shipbuilding Contract”) and the “Huakai” (the “Huakai Shipbuilding Contract”). On or about October 26, 2005, the parties amended the Huakai Shipbuilding Contract to include the delivery of the Spare Main Engine with the Alakai. The parties intended to use the Spare Main Engine on the Alakai or the Huakai. The Spare Main Engine and the main engines on the Alakai and Huakai were manufactured in Germany by special order and were not available from stock.

In October 2005, the United States Department of Transportation’s Maritime Administration (“MARAD”) guaranteed the financing facility for the construction of the Alakai and the Huakai (each a “Vessel” and collectively, the “Vessels”). As a guarantor, MARAD, among other things, received a promissory note and entered into a MARAD Security Agreement, as amended and restated, with Superferry. Pursuant to the MARAD Security Agreement, Superferry agreed to “grant, sell, convey, assign, transfer, mortgage, pledge, set over and confirm” to MARAD a “continuing security interest in all the right, title and interest” it -had in certain collateral “whether now owned or existing hereafter arising or acquired.” The collateral included, in relevant part, all of Superfer-ry’s interest in the Alakai Shipbuilding Contract, the Huakai Shipbuilding Contract (collectively, the “Shipbuilding Contracts”) and “[c]ommencing on the Delivery Date of each Vessel, all goods, whether equipment or inventory appertaining to or relating to such Vessel, whether or not on board or ashore and not covered by [MAR-AD’s Preferred Mortgage].... ” The Hua-kai Shipbuilding Contract was amended on October 26, 2005, to require Austal to deliver the Spare Main Engine to Superferry with the delivery of the Alakai.

During the construction of the Alakai and the Huakai, Austal retained owner *719 ship of the Vessels and their “Components.” The term “Components” included “everything which forms or is intended to form part of the Vessel or to be placed in or on the Vessel and ... includes the hull, engines, machinery, appliances, appurtenances, equipment, gear, [and] fittings .... ” However, during the construction of the Vessels, Austal agreed to give a “first priority lien on, and a security interest in, the Vessel” to “a collateral trustee to hold on behalf of the [Superferry], MARAD and the financial institution [ABN Amro Bank N.V.] providing the Refund Guarantees.... ”

In accordance with the Shipbuilding Contracts, among other things, the collateral trustee, Wilmington Trust Company, on October 27, 2005 filed the UCC-1 financing statement (the “10-27-05 UCC-1”) giving MARAD (ahead of Superferry and the ABN Amro Bank N.V.) a first priority security interest in all of Austal’s “right, title and interest in and to the Collateral ... under the [Shipbuilding] Contracts.” The 10-27-05 UCC-1 expressly provided that the term “collateral” includes

“any and all present and future materials, components, engines, boilers, machinery ... spare and replacement parts ... installed or to be installed on the Vessels .... and any and all other appurtenances thereto, appertaining or belonging to the Vessels, whether now or hereafter acquired, and whether on-board or later to be onboard.... The Collateral also includes any and all present and future rights to any proceeds derived or to be derived from ... appropriation and other disposition of the Collateral.”

(Doc. # 255, ex. D)(emphasis added).

Further, once the MARAD Security Agreement was executed, MARAD on October 28, 2005 filed the UCC-1 financing statement (the “10-28-05 UCC-1”) perfecting MARAD’s security interest in, among other things, “[a]ll of [Superferry’s] right, title and interest in and to .... (1) the Shipbuilding Contracts] dated April 9, 2004, as amended from time to time, ... for the construction of [the Vessels], together with all other contracts, whether now in existence or hereafter entered into, relating to the construction of the Vessels .... [and] (12)[a]ll proceeds of the collateral described ... above.” Thus, pursuant to the 10-27-05 UCC-1 and the 10-28-05 UCC-1 (which explicitly covered spare and replacement parts, as well as the Shipbuilding Contracts), MARAD had a perfected security interest in the Vessels.

On May 30, 2007, Austal delivered the Alakai and the Spare Main Engine to Su-perferry and contemporaneously executed a Preferred Mortgage in MARAD’s favor that was recorded the same day with the United States Coast Guard National Vessel Documentation Center (the “National Documentation Center”). MARAD’s Preferred Mortgage provides, in relevant part:

[Superferry] has granted, conveyed, mortgaged, pledged, confirmed, assigned, transferred and set over, and by these presents does grant, convey, mortgage, pledge, confirm, assign, transfer and set over unto [MARAD] a one hundred percent interest in the whole of the [Alakai], which is more fully described in its certificate of documentation, together with all of its boilers, engines, machinery, masts, spares, rigging, boats, anchors, cables, chains, tackle, tools, pumps and pumping equipment, apparel, furniture, fittings, and equipment, spare parts and all other appurtenances to the [Alakai] appertaining or belonging, whether now owned or hereafter acquired whether on board or not and all additions, improvements, renewals and *720 replacements hereafter made in or to the [Alakai] or said appurtenances.

(Emphasis added).

The Preferred Mortgage, which incorporated the MARAD Security Agreement, also covers the Huakai and specifically states that the amount of the debt covered by the Preferred Mortgage is $139,781,000, which is the amount MARAD guaranteed for the financing of both Vessels.

Superferry put the Alakai into operation in August 2007, and used it to transport passengers and vehicles between the Hawaiian islands until March 2009. Super-ferry purchased the Spare Main Engine and brought it to Hawaii to minimize downtime if one of the Alakai’s main engines failed and had to be replaced. Su-perferry also intended to use the Spare Main Engine on the Huakai if one of its main engines failed after that Vessel was placed into service. This would permit Superferry to provide high speed ferry service with minimal disruption.

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Related

United States v. Huakai (O.N. 1215902)
768 F. Supp. 2d 832 (E.D. Virginia, 2011)
United States v. Alakai (O.N. 1182234)
815 F. Supp. 2d 948 (E.D. Virginia, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
421 B.R. 716, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 54, 2010 WL 129668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hsf-holding-inc-deb-2010.