In re: iSun, Inc., et al.

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJune 16, 2026
Docket24-11144
StatusUnknown

This text of In re: iSun, Inc., et al. (In re: iSun, Inc., et al.) 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: iSun, Inc., et al., (Del. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF DELAWARE

In re: Chapter 7

iSun, Inc., et al.1 Case No. 24-11144 (TMH)

Debtors. (Jointly Administered)

MEMORANDUM OPINION

When a company sells its assets, the deal documents are supposed to say what is being sold and who is selling it. Most of the time they do. This dispute arises out of the rare case in which the parties dispute whether the seller is a seller at all. In August 2024, this Court approved the sale of substantially all the assets of iSun, Inc. and its eleven affiliated debtors to Clean Royalties, LLC. The asset purchase agreement attached to the sale motion described the sellers, on its cover page, as iSun and “each of its affiliates or subsidiaries.” The schedule of acquired assets conveyed all the debtors’ accounts receivable and listed, by name, three construction contracts belonging to one particular debtor, iSun Industrial, LLC,

1 The Debtors in these Chapter 7 cases, along with the last four (4) digits of their federal tax identification numbers, are: (i) iSun, Inc. (“iSun”) (0172); (ii) Hudson Solar Service, LLC (“Hudson”) (1635); (iii) Hudson Valley Clean Energy, Inc. (“Hudson Valley”) (8214); (iv) iSun Corporate, LLC (“iSun Corporate”) (4391); (v) iSun Energy, LLC(“iSun Energy”) (1676); (vi) iSun Industrial, LLC (“iSun Industrial”) (4333); (vii) iSun Residential, Inc. (“iSun Residential”) (3525); (viii) iSun Utility, LLC (“iSun Utility”) (4411); (ix) Liberty Electric, Inc. (“Liberty”) (8485); (x) Peck Electric Co. (“Peck”) (5229); (xi) SolarCommunities, Inc. (“SolarCommunities”) (7316); and (xii) Sun CSA 36, LLC (“Sun CSA”) (collectively referred to as the “Debtors”). whose receivables made up the great bulk of what was being sold. But the agreement’s preamble defined the sellers as those entities “listed on the signature page,” and the unsigned signature pages attached to the court-approved version

omitted iSun Industrial. No one appears to have noticed at the time. iSun Industrial signed the final agreement, the sale closed, and the parties went about their business. That business included the counterparties to those three construction contracts, Standard Solar, Inc. and its affiliated project entities. The day after the sale order was entered, a Saturday morning in the depth of summer, their counsel emailed Clean Royalties’ counsel to say they had seen that the sale order was

entered and wanted to discuss the contracts. For the next month, the parties negotiated over the receivables on the shared premise that Clean Royalties now owned them. The negotiations failed, Clean Royalties sued in Vermont state court to collect, and the Standard Solar entities counterclaimed for money damages. Only then, while preparing those counterclaims, did their counsel make what he candidly described at argument as his find: iSun Industrial never appeared on

the form purchase agreement’s signature page. From that omission, the Standard Solar entities now construct their defense to this motion. In their telling, iSun Industrial never sold anything, Clean Royalties owns nothing, and the entire course of dealing that followed the sale was a negotiation over assets that were never conveyed. The argument has the appeal of simplicity. It asks the Court to read two documents and take them at their word. But the word of a contract is the whole of it, not a single page read in isolation. Read in its entirety, and together with the

sale order that approved it, the stalking horse agreement admits of only one sensible construction. Every debtor, including iSun Industrial, was authorized to sell, and the receivables and contract rights that the schedules conveyed by name were in fact conveyed. The Standard Solar entities’ contrary reading would reduce whole provisions of the agreement to surplusage, would erase the consideration at the center of the bargain this Court approved, and would attribute to sophisticated parties the intention to sell all the debtors’ receivables while silently excluding the

debtor that held nearly all of them. The record also establishes that the Standard Solar entities received the notice that due process requires, a conclusion their own conduct confirms, because parties who email the purchaser within a day of a sale order’s entry have plainly been apprised of the sale. The motion to enforce the sale order is accordingly granted.

The Standard Solar entities are enjoined from prosecuting their affirmative counterclaims against the purchaser, though their defenses, including recoupment, remain theirs to assert in Vermont, where the question of what is actually owed on these receivables will be litigated. Factual and Procedural Background

A. The Parties and the EPC Contracts

iSun, Inc. and eleven affiliates, including iSun Industrial, commenced these cases on June 3, 2024. The cases were later converted to chapter 7.2 Before the petition date, iSun Industrial was party to three engineering, procurement, and construction contracts (the “EPC Contracts”) for solar projects in Vermont with Trolley Tracks Solar, LLC, Stone Mill Solar, LLC, and Halladay Solar, LLC (each an “SS Entity”).3 Each SS Entity is affiliated with Standard Solar, Inc., and each EPC Contract directed that notices to the owner be sent care of Standard Solar.4 On May 20, 2024, Standard Solar issued notices terminating each EPC Contract for convenience.5 B. The Sale Process and Sale Order

The Court entered the Bidding Procedures Order on July 3, 2024,6 designating Clean Royalties as the stalking horse bidder. The form of asset

2 See Order Granting Debtors’ Motion to Convert These Chapter 11 Cases to Cases Under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code [D.I. 666]; Motion of Clean Royalties, LLC to Enforce the Sale Order Against Halladay Solar, LLC, Stone Mill Solar, LLC, Trolley Tracks Solar, LLC, and Standard Solar, Inc. [D.I. 805], Ex. 15 at 1 n.1 (hereinafter, styled as Ex.) (the “Vanderbeek Decl.”). 3 Exs. 17–19. 4 Exs. 17–19; Transcript of June 9, 2026 Hearing at 22:1-11 (hereinafter, the “June 9 Tr.”) [D.I. 891]. 5 Exs. 4–6. 6 Order (A) (I) Approving Bid Procedures in Connection With the Sale of Substantially All of the Debtors Assets, (II) Scheduling an Auction and a Sale Hearing, (III) Approving the Form and Manner of Notice Thereof, (IV) Authorizing the Debtors to Enter Into the Stalking Horse Agreement, (V) Approving Procedures for the Assumption and Assignment of Contracts and Leases, and (VI) Granting purchase agreement attached to the sale papers was thereafter revised in connection with, among other things, a settlement with the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors, pursuant to which the schedule of Acquired Assets was

expanded to include all the Debtors’ accounts receivable.7 The Court entered the Sale Order on Friday, August 23, 2024,8 approving the Amended and Restated Asset Purchase Agreement (the “Stalking Horse Agreement” or “APA”) “including any amendments, supplements and modifications thereto,”9 and approving the sale of the Acquired Assets to Clean Royalties free and clear of all Interests pursuant to sections 363(b) and (f).10 The unsigned APA approved under the Sale Order recites that:

THIS AMENDED AND RESTATED ASSET PURCHASE AGREEMENT is made and entered into as of this 9th day of July, 2024 (the “Execution Date”), by and among (i) Clean Royalties, LLC (“Purchaser”), and (ii) iSun, Inc. and each of its affiliates or subsidiaries listed on the signature page of this Agreement (each, a “Seller” and collectively, “Sellers”).11

Related Relief; and (B) (I) Approving the Purchase Agreement; (II) Approving the Sale of Substantially All of the Debtors’ Assets Free and Clear; (III) Approving the Assumption and Assignment of Contracts and Leases; and (IV) Granting Related Relief [D.I. 183]. 7 June 9 Tr. at 43:5–13; D.I. 286, 358, 371.

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In re: iSun, Inc., et al., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-isun-inc-et-al-deb-2026.