In Re Innovative Communication Co., LLC

358 B.R. 120, 2006 WL 3708071
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware
DecidedDecember 14, 2006
Docket19-10334
StatusPublished

This text of 358 B.R. 120 (In Re Innovative Communication Co., LLC) 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 Innovative Communication Co., LLC, 358 B.R. 120, 2006 WL 3708071 (Del. 2006).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION 1

JUDITH K. FITZGERALD, Bankruptcy Judge.

Before the court are various motions to determine whether venue of these cases should be in the Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware or in the District Court for the Virgin Islands, Bankruptcy Division (“USVI”). Involuntary chapter 11 cases were filed against Innovative, Emerging and Prosser 2 in Delaware on February 10, 2006. Thereafter, on July 31, 2006, Innovative, Emerging and Prosser filed voluntary chapter 11 cases in the USVI. In the Delaware involuntaries, Debtors filed motions to transfer venue to the USVI. The petitioning creditors and the Rural Telephone Finance Cooperative (“RTFC”), a secured creditor, oppose a transfer 3 and assert that venue is appropriate in Delaware.

*122 Background

The procedural history and relationships of these cases is complex but relevant to the venue motion. The Virgin Islands Telephone Corporation (“Viteleo”), a non-debtor, is an indirect subsidiary of Debtor Innovative Communication Company, LLC (“ICC-LLC”) and is indirectly owned by Emerging. ICC-LLC is a holding company that owns approximately 51 percent 4 of Debtor Emerging, itself a holding company. Emerging’s direct, wholly owned, subsidiary is Innovative Communication Corporation (“ICC Corp.”). ICC Corp. has various operating subsidiaries. The subsidiaries are cable companies in the USVI which own and operate the cable television system in St. Thomas, St. Croix, and St. John. 5 Vitelcom Cellular, Inc., a nondebtor, operates a cellular wireless company in the USVI. Daily Publishing Co., Inc., another nondebtor, owns and operates the largest daily newspaper in the USVI. These entities (the “ICC Operating Companies”), along with several other operating companies in the USVI and elsewhere, are all subsidiaries of ICC Corp. The ICC Operating Companies (except Daily Publishing) are, or function as, public utilities, the disruption of whose operations will have a major impact on citizens of the USVI and other Caribbean countries. Each of these entities, as well as ICC-LLC and Emerging, guaranteed loans made by the RTFC to ICC-LLC.

ICC-LLC is a Delaware limited liability company with its principal place of business in the USVI. ICC-LLC is wholly owned by Jeffrey Prosser. 6 Emerging is also a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in the USVI. ICC Corp. owns Viteleo and the ICC Operating Companies. ICC Corp., Viteleo and the USVI ICC Operating Companies are formed under USVI law and have their principal places of business in the USVI. Vitelco’s annual revenues exceed $65 million and it, with the ICC Operating Companies, is the single largest employer in the USVI. Viteleo operates under a franchise granted by the USVI government. Ownership and control of Viteleo and its operations are regulated by the USVI Public Service Commission.

The Greenlight Entities’ principal place of business is in New York. Their claim against ICC-LLC derives from a judgment for $56,341,843 (plus interest) entered in the Delaware Chancery Court against ICC-LLC, Innovative Communications Corporation (“Old ICC”) (a dissolved USVI company) 7 and Prosser. The Greenlight Entities have a separate judgment against Emerging in the amount of *123 $28,548,915 (plus interest) and both judgments 8 arise from the privatization of Emerging. 9 These judgments are now final. 10 The Greenlight Entities domesticated the Delaware judgments in the USVI and therefore submitted to jurisdiction there. See, e.g., Covington Industries, Inc. v. Resintex, A.G., 629 F.2d 730, 738 (2d Cir.1980)(“by attempting to register the judgment pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1963 in New York, the plaintiff had waived any question as to the personal jurisdiction of the New York Court”). 11

RTFC is a Virginia based cooperative lender which provides financing to telecommunication companies. It is a controlled entity of the National Rural Utilities Cooperative Corporation (“CFC”) which is also RTFC’s sole source of funds. 12 Since 1987, RTFC has acted as ICC Corp.’s principal lender.

The lending relationship between RTFC and ICC Corp., a nondebt or, was the subject of litigation in the USVI District Court (a foreclosure action alleging non-monetary defaults). A company called “New ICC,” see note 8, supra, is the primary borrower of RTFC and it is this debt that is the basis of the guarantees of Prosser, Emerging and ICC-LLC. Two of the actions in the USVI had been commenced by RTFC in Virginia and were transferred to the USVI by order of the Virginia court. Motions to retransfer to Virginia were de *124 nied. RTFC sought recusal of the USVI judge to whom the case was transferred. That motion was denied and the Court of Appeals denied RTFC’s appeal.

After the Delaware Chancery Court issued its opinion, see note 9 and accompanying text, supra, RTFC and the Green-light Entities entered into a joint venture under an intercreditor agreement. Debtors assert that the agreement constitutes a purchase of the judgments by RTFC from the Greenlight Entities and that the purpose of the agreement was to obtain the Greenlight Entities’ consent to act as RTFC’s “proxy” to file the involuntary petitions. Debtors assert that if RTFC’s liens were found to be valid, or the Chancery Court’s judgments reversed on appeal, the Greenlight Entities would not have recovered from the sale of ICC-LLC’s assets but would recover through RTFC’s claims. Debtors also contend that RTFC would benefit as well because on its own it could not have filed the involuntary petitions inasmuch as its judgments were under contest in the USVI. 13 However, the judgments are now final and unappealable. The issue is also moot for venue purposes by virtue of Debtors’ own voluntary filings in the USVI.

The Debtors conclude that the filing of the involuntary petitions by the Greenlight Entities is simply a litigation tactic by RTFC to liquidate ICC Corp., Vitelco, and the ICC Operating Companies. RTFC was in litigation in the USVI with ICC Corp., but that case, too, has been terminated. In light of the foregoing, the Debtors seek venue in the USVI where, they assert, there is a logical, legal and regulatory nexus inasmuch as the ICC-LLC’s most valuable assets (Emerging, ICC Corp., Vitelco, and the ICC Operating Companies) operate and will be affected.

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Bluebook (online)
358 B.R. 120, 2006 WL 3708071, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-innovative-communication-co-llc-deb-2006.