In Re Lazar

207 B.R. 668, 44 ERC (BNA) 1831, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 389, 30 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 806, 1997 WL 160173
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. California
DecidedApril 1, 1997
DocketBankruptcy No. LA 92-39039 SB, No. LA 92-39042
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 207 B.R. 668 (In Re Lazar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Lazar, 207 B.R. 668, 44 ERC (BNA) 1831, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 389, 30 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 806, 1997 WL 160173 (Cal. 1997).

Opinion

AMENDED OPINION ON DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S APPLICATION FOR ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSE PRIORITY

SAMUEL L. BUFFORD, Bankruptcy Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

This application raises the issue of whether criminal fines and penalties imposed on both the corporate and the individual debtors in this case, for failure to conduct postpetition remediation of prepetition environmental contamination, are entitled to administrative expense priority.

The court holds that, where the fines and penalties arise solely from the postpetition failure to remediate prepetition contamination, the fines and penalties do not qualify for administrative expense priority in any respect. The fines and penalties fail each of the requirements for an administrative expense claim: they are not postpetition, they are not actual and necessary, and they do not benefit the estate.

Furthermore, Congress clearly decided which fines and penalties qualify as administrative expenses. Congress limited this category to fines arising from postpetition taxes. The environmental fines in this case do not qualify.

II. FACTS

A. The Consolidated Cases

This case consists in nine substantively consolidated cases filed by corporations origi *671 nally controlled by Divine Grace Lazar and Gary Lazar. The corporate cases are jointly administered with the personal joint case of the Lazars. The Lazars and their entities owned, operated or leased some 200 retail gasoline stations in Southern California.

California Target Supply, Inc. filed the first chapter 11 case in 1991. Approximately a year later, on July 27,1992 the Lazars filed their joint personal chapter 11 case and eight additional corporate chapter 11 cases. George Schulman was appointed as chapter 11 trustee in September 1994 for all of the cases. A year later the cases were converted to cases under chapter 7, and Schulman was appointed as the chapter 7 trustee on December 28,1994.

Leaking tanks at retail gasoline stations constitute one of the most widespread environmental problems in the United States. 1 Prior to the 1990’s, gasoline stations installed single-hulled tanks, which tended to rust and develop leaks as they aged. More recently, double-hulled tanks, which are much less prone to leakage, have been required. The leaking of older gas tanks has rendered nearly every gas station in the United States an environmental disaster. The Lazars specialized in the ownership of economically marginal older stations, where the tanks were especially prone to leakage.

The Lazars were apparently some of the worst actors in the retail petroleum industry. They were the first ever to be prosecuted for the criminal violation of the California environmental laws. According to the Los Angeles County District Attorney (“DA”), the Lazars were at the head of the list for prosecution for environmental crimes because, of their falsification of gasoline tank test reports.

The environmental law enforcement authorities depend on gas station owners and operators to test their own tanks for leakage, and to report the test results to the state. Tanks are tested periodically by pumping a pressurized inert gas into the tanks, and waiting a period of time to see whether the pressure holds. If the pressure decreases beyond a certain level, the tanks are diagnosed as leaking tanks, and must be replaced (at the owner’s expense). The honest reporting of the pressure tests is an essential factor in the regulation of environmental hazards at gasoline stations.

The Lazars pleaded nolo contendere in a state criminal prosecution involving the underpayment of state taxes and the contamination of the ground at six gas stations. 2 They are now each serving eight-year state sentences for environmental crimes and tax evasion in connection with the operation of the gasoline stations. In addition, they have each pleaded guilty to federal crimes, some of which relate to the same conduct.

The state court imposed fines on each of the Lazars in the amount of $29,805,000, plus an additional $50,668,500 in penalties, 3 for a total of $80,473,500 [collective referred to hereafter as “fines”.] While the state court imposed the majority of these fines for pre-petition conduct, the court imposed a total of $11,970,000 in fines against each of the La-zars for postpetition contamination (“the postpetition fines”). These fines were imposed solely on the grounds that the defendants failed to discharge their statutory duty to remediate the prepetition contamination. The postpetition fines covered the period of time from the filing of the bankruptcy cases *672 until near the date of Sehulman’s appointment as chapter 11 trustee. 4

In addition to the Lazars as individuals, the state criminal court imposed fines and penalties in the same amount against each of four corporate debtors against whom criminal charges were brought, after they each pleaded nolo contendere. 5 The fines against the six defendants totaled $149,025,000, and the penalties totaled an additional $253,342,-500, for a grand total of $402,367,500.

A portion of the fines was imposed for the postpetition failure to remediate the prepetition environmental contamination. The total fines assessed against the six debtors for this postpetition failure was $71,820,000, and the postpetition portion of the penalties was $122,094,000, for a total of $193,914,000. The DA moves for administrative expense priority for $48,478,500, which constitutes his 25% share of the postpetition fines. There were no fines or penalties imposed for any other postpetition conduct of the debtors.

Sehulman has been busy collecting assets in this case by selling gas stations and tracing assets secreted by the Lazars (some of them in foreign countries). The trustee has sold two of the six stations involved in the criminal prosecution, and two more are in escrow. One was under lease to one of the debtors, and the trustee has rejected the lease and returned the property to the landlord. The trustee continues to operate one station, and continues to try to market it. The DA has not claimed that the contamination at any of these six properties poses an imminent danger to public health or safety.

It now appears that the bankruptcy estate in this case will have sufficient funds to pay all secured claims, and a large portion (if not all) of the administrative claims, unless the fines here at issue are awarded administrative claim priority. It is unknown whether general unsecured creditors will receive any distribution. The general unsecured creditors presumably include a large number of environmental claimants, whose claims could be huge.

It is certain that the Lazars will not receive any assets from the estate. 6 Their right to any distribution from these consolidated estates is subordinate to the fines, which exceed $400 million, even if the fines do not enjoy administrative expense priority. 11 U.S.C.A.

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Bluebook (online)
207 B.R. 668, 44 ERC (BNA) 1831, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 389, 30 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 806, 1997 WL 160173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-lazar-cacb-1997.