In Re James River Coal Co.

355 B.R. 45, 2006 Bankr. LEXIS 3048, 2006 WL 3247343
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 14, 2006
Docket303-04095
StatusPublished

This text of 355 B.R. 45 (In Re James River Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re James River Coal Co., 355 B.R. 45, 2006 Bankr. LEXIS 3048, 2006 WL 3247343 (Tenn. 2006).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

MARIAN F. HARRISON, Judge.

This matter is before the Court upon motions to dismiss and/or motions for summary judgment filed by various defendants in the relevant adversary cases. The issue before the Court in these adversary cases is whether the Plan of Reorganization and other “plan documents” adequately preserved certain preference causes of action and certain “insider” causes of action, thus avoiding the res judicata effects of confirmation. 1

Three groups of defendants have filed such motions: (1) general preference defendants who allegedly were paid within 90 days of bankruptcy, (2) insider defendants who are charged with, among other things, breach of fiduciary duty, deepening insolvency, fraudulent conveyances, civil conspiracy, unlawful distribution of corporate assets, and rescission, and (3) a third distinct preference defendant, Rothschild Inc., which served as financial advisor to the debtors, approved by Court order entered on May 23, 2003. 2

After reviewing the voluminous pleadings and memoranda, which were well written by all sides, and after the argument of counsel, the Court finds that the motions by the general preference defendants and the insider defendants should be denied.

I. UNDISPUTED FACTS

James River Coal Company and related entities (collectively, the “debtors”) filed for bankruptcy on March 25, 2003. A Plan *47 of Reorganization was confirmed on April 22, 2004. This Plan and related Liquidating Trust Agreement contemplated the establishment of a trust to garner and distribute all assets. Specifically, with regard to potential causes of action, the Plan contained the following provisions:

1.1(108) “Unsecured Creditor Liquidating Trust Assets ” means (a) the Trust Causes of Action; (b) the Rabbi Trust Assets; and (c) the right to receive the Coal Act Refund.
1.1(10) “Causes of Action” means all rights, claims, causes of action, defenses, debts, demands, damages, obligations, and liabilities of any kind or nature under contract, in tort, at law, or in equity, known or unknown, contingent or matured, liquidated or unliquidated, and all rights and remedies with respect thereto, including, without limitation, causes of action arising under Chapter 5 of the Bankruptcy Code or similar state statutes.
1.1(104) “Trust Causes of Action ” means all Causes of Action arising prior to the Effective Date that either (a) accrued to the Debtors as debtors in possession under Chapter 5 of the Bankruptcy Code, including, but not limited to, any and all such Causes of Action against parties who are identified on the Schedules; or (b) accrued to (i) unsecured creditors of the Debtors under applicable non-bankruptcy law prior to the Commencement Date, but are deemed under the Bankruptcy Code and applicable interpretive case law to be derivative of the Estates’ interests and therefore became property of the Estates upon the commencement of the Chapter 11 Cases; or (ii) the Debtors or their Estates, in either case including, but not limited to, the Identified Actions; provided, however, that Trust Causes of Action shall not include (x) Causes of Action expressly released or discharged under the Plan, including, but not limited to, Causes of Action against the Senior Secured Lenders released pursuant to Section 4.2(i) of the Plan; and (y) the Retained Actions.
1.1(93) “Schedules ” means the schedules of assets and liabilities and the statements of financial affairs filed by the Debtors pursuant to section 521 of the Bankruptcy Code and Bankruptcy Rule 1007, as such may be amended or supplemented from time to time.
1.3 Plan Documents. All Plan Documents are incorporated into the Plan by this reference as if set forth in full herein.

The Disclosure Statement at page 6 further provides as follows:

The assumed value of the Unsecured Creditor Liquidating Trust is $3 million, but the actual value may be higher, depending on a number of factors related to the outcome of potential lawsuits and the possibility of future legislation by the United States Congress, all of which are impossible to predict. ... Among the expenses of the trust are the fees and expenses of the Trustee, the fees and expenses of the advisory board established under the Plan to advise the Trustee (the “Trust Advisory Board ”), and any professional advisors the Trustee retains to investigate and pursue the Trust Causes of Action. It is impossible to predict the likely recoveries, if any, from such lawsuits.

The Chart in the Disclosure Statement at page 8 gives the Trust “the right to the net proceeds, if any, of the lawsuits related to the Trust Causes of Action.”

The Disclosure Statement at page 29 states in 4.2:

The Trust Causes of Action give the Trustee the right to bring certain lawsuits against third parties for, among *48 other things, the recoveries of preferences and fraudulent conveyances. The Debtors are unable to estimate the likely recoveries, if any, from pursuit of the Trust Causes of Action. The Trustee and the Trust Advisory Board will have sole responsibility for determining the costs and benefits from pursuing individual lawsuits, and whether and how to pursue those actions. The costs of the Trustee’s fees, and the fees of Trustee Professionals, as well as the costs and fees of the Trust Advisory Board, will all have to be paid from lawsuit recoveries or any other Cash available to the trust, before any Cash distributions can be made to the General Unsecured Creditors on account of the Trust Causes of Action. For additional information concerning the Trust Causes of Action, see Section VI.[E].3.c (Treatment of Claims and Interests Under the Plan — Certain Identified Trust Causes of Action) of this Disclosure Statement.

In addition, the Plan set forth the following specific Actions Preserved:

(d) Actions Preserved. On the Effective Date, ... (B) any and all Trust Causes of Action shall be preserved and shall vest with the Unsecured Creditor Liquidating Trust. Specific Causes of Action included in the Trust Causes of Action consist of the following (collectively, the “Identified Actions ”):
(i) Fraudulent Conveyance — Potential Defendants: James D. Dotson, First Reserve Corporation, First Reserve Fund Y, L.P., First Reserve Fund V-2, L.P., First Reserve Fund YI, L.P., John Tellman, Derrick Varney;
(ii) Voluntary Conveyance — Potential Defendants: James D. Dotson, First Reserve Corporation, First Reserve Fund V, L.P., First Reserve Fund V-2, L.P., First Reserve Fund VI, L.P., John Tellman, Derrick Varney;
(iii) Breach of Fiduciary Duty and Negligence — James B. Crawford, James D. Dotson, A. Hugh Ewing, III, John A. Hill, Benjamin A. Guill, George S. Slocum, John C. Bumgar-ner, Jr., Edward A. Snyder, William A. MacCauley;

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355 B.R. 45, 2006 Bankr. LEXIS 3048, 2006 WL 3247343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-james-river-coal-co-tnmb-2006.