In Re Jsc Bta Bank

434 B.R. 334, 63 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1711, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 2496, 53 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 156, 2010 WL 3306885
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedAugust 23, 2010
Docket18-36579
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 434 B.R. 334 (In Re Jsc Bta Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Jsc Bta Bank, 434 B.R. 334, 63 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1711, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 2496, 53 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 156, 2010 WL 3306885 (N.Y. 2010).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION DENYING MOTION OF FOREIGN REPRESENTATIVE FOR CONTEMPT AND STAY OF ARBITRATION PROCEEDINGS

JAMES M. PECK, Bankruptcy Judge.

Introduction

On March 2, 2010, the Court entered an order in this chapter 15 case (the “Recognition Order”) granting the petition for recognition of the foreign main proceeding of JSC BTA Bank (“BTA Bank ”) currently pending in the Specialized Financial Court of Almaty City, Republic of Kazakhstan (the “Kazakh Court”). The foreign representative for BTA Bank, Anvar Galimullaevich Saidenov (the “Foreign Representative ”), is Chairman of the Management Board of BTA Bank.

Until recently, this chapter 15 case has been relatively uneventful, but that changed on July 2, 2010 when the Foreign Representative filed a Motion for Contempt and to Stay Arbitration Proceedings (the “Motion”) against Banque International de Commerce — BRED Paris, suc-cursale de Geneve, Switzerland (“BIC-BRED ”). The Motion seeks to hold BIC-BRED, the Swiss branch of a French bank, in contempt for a willful violation of the automatic stay that came into effect upon entry of the Recognition Order.

The alleged stay violation grows out of the arbitration of an uncomplicated commercial dispute between BIC-BRED and BTA Bank pending before a sole arbitrator appointed by the Geneva Chamber of Commerce and Industry in Switzerland *336 (the “Arbitration Proceeding ”). 1 The dispute is governed by Swiss law and arises out of a loan agreement dated July 29, 2008 that documents the terms of a $20 million advance from BIC-BRED to BTA Bank. The same financial difficulties that caused BTA Bank to undertake a restructuring of its financial affairs in the Republic of Kazakhstan also led to a default by BTA Bank in the repayment of this loan when due in August, 2009. In response to this payment default, BIC-BRED pursued remedies that included attachment of the shares of two Dutch companies and obtaining authorization to attach assets of BTA Bank held in Switzerland at UBS AG and Credit Suisse. While moving aggressively to protect itself in Switzerland, BIC-BRED also took steps in the main insolvency proceeding in Kazakhstan to participate as a creditor in the restructuring of BTA Bank.

The law firm of White & Case through its New York office represents the Foreign Representative in this chapter 15 case and through its London office represents BTA Bank in the Swiss arbitration. BTA Bank engaged in activities relating to the arbitration for a number of months following entry of the Recognition Order and sought, without success, to consensually suspend the arbitration in light of the restructuring of the financial affairs of BTA Bank that was then taking place in Kazakhstan pursuant to applicable local law. BTA Bank filed a statement of defense in the Arbitration Proceeding on June 21, 2010, asserting that the Recognition Order, under the authority of section 1520(a)(1) of the Bankruptcy Code, grants a worldwide stay of judicial and arbitration proceedings including the proceeding in Geneva.

The issue presented appears to be one of first impression under chapter 15 jurisprudence — whether the automatic stay that becomes applicable to “the debtor and the property of the debtor that is within the territorial jurisdiction of the United States” operates as a bar to the continuation of a pending arbitration proceeding brought against the debtor entity in a foreign jurisdiction.

Counsel for the Foreign Representative relies on a textual reading of the words used in Section 1520(a)(1) and precedent giving extraterritorial effect to the automatic stay in plenary chapter 11 cases to contend that the automatic stay applies to the debtor entity wherever the debtor may be found. Such a reading of Section 1520(a)(1), while possible in view of the words used in the text, disregards the international origins and purposes of chapter 15 and leads to absurd consequences that could not have been intended by Congress or the international experts in insolvency law who drafted the Model Law on Cross-border Insolvency on which chapter 15 is based. 2 If the provision regarding the automatic stay in chapter 15 cases were to be construed in the manner urged *337 by the Foreign Representative, even the court in the foreign main proceeding in Kazakhstan would be subject to the stay and would need permission from this Court before taking any action that might impact the foreign debtor. No rational cross-border insolvency regime would give a bankruptcy court in the United States so much unintended automatic extraterritorial power in conjunction with the recognition of a foreign proceeding.

As explained more fully below, the Court concludes that the automatic stay does not afford broad anti-suit injunctive relief to the debtor entity outside the territorial jurisdiction of the United States upon entry of an order of recognition in a chapter 15 case. This conclusion is based on the need to respect the international aspects of these Bankruptcy Code provisions, the limited and specialized definition of the term “debtor” when used in chapter 15, and the fact that cases under chapter 15 are ancillary in nature and do not create an estate within the meaning of section 541 of the Bankruptcy Code. Importantly, any application of the language of section 1520(a)(1) should reject an extraterritorial interpretation that would stay miscellaneous foreign litigation or arbitration proceedings having no meaningful nexus to property of the foreign debtor located in the United States. A more restrained reading of the section is appropriate, and in assessing the Motion, the Court has given due consideration to the disruptive consequences of a worldwide stay of all proceedings involving the debtor that would arise automatically upon recognition.

One such potentially disruptive consequence would be to convert a bankruptcy court in the United States into what amounts to a global clearing house for resolving the right to proceed in an appropriate foreign tribunal against a foreign business enterprise that may have only insignificant contacts with the United States. This broadly expansive interpretation of section 1520(a)(1) would be most unwelcome, both here and in other countries, and would improperly centralize global control of dispute resolution within an ancillary case in the United States that is meant to support, not supplant, a main proceeding in a foreign jurisdiction. Additionally, a recognition order under chapter 15 should not be the indirect means for obtaining global relief that could not otherwise have been achieved by order of the court having jurisdiction of the main foreign proceeding. Accordingly, for the reasons stated, the Motion of the Foreign Representative is denied.

Relevant Facts and Procedural History

The facts underlying the present contested matter are undisputed. BTA Bank is one of the largest banks in the Republic of Kazakhstan, where it serves more than one million retail customers.

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434 B.R. 334, 63 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1711, 2010 Bankr. LEXIS 2496, 53 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 156, 2010 WL 3306885, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jsc-bta-bank-nysb-2010.