In Re: Jab Energy Solutions II, LLC v.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJuly 15, 2025
Docket24-3044
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re: Jab Energy Solutions II, LLC v. (In Re: Jab Energy Solutions II, LLC v.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re: Jab Energy Solutions II, LLC v., (3d Cir. 2025).

Opinion

NOT PRECEDENTIAL

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT _____________

Nos. 24-3044, 24-3045 _____________

IN RE: JAB ENERGY SOLUTIONS II, LLC, Debtor

ALLISON MARINE HOLDINGS LLC Appellant

_____________________________________

On Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Delaware (District Court Nos. 1:23-cv-01083, 1:23-cv-01085) District Court Judge: Honorable Colm F. Connolly _____________________________________

Submitted Pursuant to �ird Circuit L.A.R. 34.1(a) July 7, 2025

(Filed: July 15, 2025)

Before: SHWARTZ, FREEMAN, and RENDELL, Circuit Judges. _________ O P I N I O N* _________

* �is disposition is not an opinion of the full Court and pursuant to I.O.P. 5.7 does not constitute binding precedent. RENDELL, Circuit Judge.

Allison Marine Holdings LLC (“AMH”) appeals the District Court’s order that

interpreted JAB Energy Solutions II’s (“JAB” or “Debtor”) Chapter 11 plan of liquidation

to allow the Liquidating Trustee to sue AMH for alleged breaches of corporate duties. In

so doing, the District Court disagreed with the Bankruptcy Court’s ruling that AMH was

not subject to suit under the plan. We disagree with the District Court and will reverse its

order in part, affirming in other respects. 1

I.

AMH was the sole “member” and “manager” of JAB. In re JAB Energy Sols. II,

LLC (JAB II), 663 B.R. 632, 637 (D. Del. 2024). �e issue on appeal is whether AMH is

an “Insured Person” under an insurance policy issued to AMH such that the Plan assigned

to the Trustee the right to bring certain claims against AMH.

�e confirmed plan of liquidation assigned certain claims of JAB to a Liquidating

Trust managed by a Liquidating Trustee as follows:

3.37 “D&O Insurance Assigned Claims” means . . . any and all claims and causes of action belonging to the Debtor or the Estate, only to the extent such claims and causes of action are covered under any applicable policy of insurance belonging to the Debtor or the Estate, against Brent Boudreaux and any other person qualifying as an “Insured Person” under that certain Management Liability Solutions 2.0 Insurance Policy, Policy No. DPLE320442, Policy Form Number D56100-G . . . .

1 AMH also appeals from the District Court’s ruling that the Liquidating Trustee can recover amounts in excess of those covered by insurance policies, but because we agree with AMH that it is not subject to suit, we need not reach that issue. 2 Appx 138 (emphasis added). �at definition, in turn, referred to an insurance policy

issued to AMH, which defined “Insured Person” to include “all Executives” and “all

Employees.” Appx 735. 2 “Executives” was defined as “all persons who were, now are, or

shall be directors, officers, management committee members, advisory committee

members, members of the Board of Managers or natural person general partners of the

Company.” Id.

After the plan was confirmed, the appointed Liquidating Trustee initiated two

proceedings. First, the Liquidating Trustee filed a motion in the Bankruptcy Court

seeking clarification that AMH was an “Insured Person” subject to suit under the above

definitions (and also that such a lawsuit could seek damages in excess of the insurance

policy limits). Second, the Liquidating Trustee sued AMH, Brent Boudreaux, and others

in the Southern District of Texas, alleging breaches of corporate fiduciary duties. Lefoldt

v. Boudreaux, No. 4:23-cv-3331 (S.D. Tex. filed Sept. 6, 2023).

AMH opposed the Liquidating Trustee’s motion on both procedural and

substantive grounds. Procedurally, AMH urged the Liquidating Trustee’s motion should

have been an adversary proceeding because it sought a “determin[ation]” of the

Liquidating Trust’s “interest” in JAB’s claims against AMH. Fed. R. Bankr. P. 7001(b). 3

AMH also asserted the Bankruptcy Court should have declined to consider the

Liquidating Trustee’s motion due to parallel litigation in the Southern District of Texas.

2 �e policy was issued to AMH but also covered JAB. 3 At the time this subsection was labeled subsection (2). 3 On the merits, AMH contended it was not an “Insured Person” because it was not

any of the persons listed as “Executives.” �e Bankruptcy Court concluded it did not

need to decide whether the Liquidating Trustee’s motion should have been an adversary

proceeding because any error in that regard was harmless, given that the record was fully

developed. On the merits, the Bankruptcy Court agreed with AMH that it was not an

“Insured Person.” �e Bankruptcy Court reasoned that despite being a “manager,” AMH

was not a member of JAB’s “Board of Managers,” and it would be “surprising if a

corporate entity would fit within the definition of ‘Executive,’ which term certainly brings

to mind a natural person rather than a corporation.” In re JAB Energy Sols. II, LLC (JAB

I), 655 B.R. 76, 83 (Bankr. D. Del. 2023).

On appeal, the District Court concluded the Liquidating Trustee’s motion did not

need to be an adversary proceeding because it merely sought an interpretation of the plan,

and the Bankruptcy Court did not err in deciding the motion notwithstanding the case

pending in Texas. On the merits, it disagreed with the Bankruptcy Court, and decided that

AMH was an “Insured Person” because it was JAB’s sole member-manager and therefore

belonged to a one-member “Board of Managers.” It also reasoned that because the

definition of “Executive” included the qualifier “natural person” only for general partners,

“[i]t follows as a matter of logic and grammar that the other five types of Executives need

not be natural persons.” JAB II, 663 B.R. at 643.

AMH now appeals to this Court.

4 II. 4

A.

We agree with the Bankruptcy Court that AMH is not an “Insured Person” under

the policy because it is not any of the persons listed as “Executives”: it is not a

“director[],” “officer[],” “management committee member[],” “advisory committee

member[],” “member[] of the Board of Managers,” or “natural person general partner[].”

Appx 735.

�e District Court adopted the Liquidating Trustee’s theory that AMH, as the sole

member of a member-managed LLC, is a member of JAB’s one-member “Board of

Managers.” �e problem with this theory is that JAB did not have a Board of Managers.

If the policy had said “manager,” AMH might well be included. But treating AMH as a

member of a nonexistent “Board” reads that term out of the policy. See Kuhn Constr., Inc.

v. Diamond State Port Corp., 990 A.2d 393, 396–97 (Del. 2010) (“We will read a contract

as a whole and we will give each provision and term effect, so as not to render any part of

the contract mere surplusage.”).

�e District Court was also persuaded by Black’s Law Dictionary’s definition of

“Board of Managers” as “[t]he governing body of a corporation, partnership, association,

4 �e Bankruptcy Court had jurisdiction over the Chapter 11 proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334(b) and 157, and “jurisdiction to interpret and enforce its own prior orders,” Travelers Indem. Co. v.

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