In Re Lehigh Valley Professional Sports Clubs, Inc.

260 B.R. 745, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 300, 2001 WL 336834
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 28, 2001
Docket13-20643
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 260 B.R. 745 (In Re Lehigh Valley Professional Sports Clubs, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Lehigh Valley Professional Sports Clubs, Inc., 260 B.R. 745, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 300, 2001 WL 336834 (Pa. 2001).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

DIANE WEISS SIGMUND, Bankruptcy Judge.

Before the Court is the Debtor’s Motion for Authority to Obtain Secured Post-Petition Financing Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 364(d) (the “Motion”). 1 Significantly the Motion was filed September 26, 2000 as the Debtor’s operations were about to cease 2 and seeks authority nunc pro tunc to August 16, 2000 for financing from the League. 3 The Motion, having been filed on an expedited basis, was scheduled for hearing on October 23, 2000. The Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors (the *747 “Committee ) filed a 16-page objection (the “Objection”) on October 2, 2000. With the future of the case in limbo, the Debtor, with the support and concurrence of the League, continued the hearing to December 4, 2000 and then January 30, 2001 consistent with a pending asset sale of motion. On January 30, a further continuance was requested but denied, and the matter was set down for evidentiary hearing on March 1, 2001. During the adjourned hearing periods the League continued to pay certain of the Debtor’s bills and expenses. The Motion seeks authority to borrow nunc pro tunc to August 16, 2000 an amount equal to the aggregate expenditures 4 made by the League from August 16 to December 8, 2000 for which the League would be granted a first lien and security interest pursuant to § 364(d). For the reasons set forth below, the Motion is denied.

BACKGROUND

After an initial unsuccessful attempt early in the case to deprive the Debtor of an opportunity to reorganize by seeking to pierce debtor’s exclusive right to file a plan, the League cooperated with the Debtor in its efforts to field a baseball team during the 2000 season. It was common knowledge to all parties that the operation of a baseball team without having a permanent stadium is a losing economic proposition, and indeed the Committee objected to the Debtor so doing. However, the League insisted on the Black Diamonds playing, contending that the failure to do so would be a breach of the Debtor’s membership agreement and cause for its termination. The Debtor, in its business judgment, decided not to take the risk. Based on the expert testimony produced during the exclusivity contest of potential value of the League membership and Flah-erty’s overly optimistic assurances of the Debtor’s ability to fund the 2000 season through personal contributions and investment capital, the Committee’s objection was not sustained. As a result the team was fielded and struggled through the entire season to pay its expenses.

On or about August 15, 2000, the Debt- or’s financial situation reached crisis proportions. Flaherty was not infusing any more funds, and the Debtor could not secure further tranches of capital from investors to fund the facility approved by the Court under § 364(d). 5 The ball players learned of the Debtor’s lack of cash and threatened not to play. An emergency motion was filed in this Court by the League seeking relief from the stay. It was heard at 5:30 p.m. on August 16 shortly before that night’s game was to commence. Recognizing that the emergency could be ameliorated by paying the players, I suggested that the League loan to the Debtor funds sufficient to pay that week’s payroll and that given the emergency, I was prepared, on its oral motion, to grant it protection for the amounts advanced. Transcript of 8/16/00 hearing (“N.T.”) at 17. This would allow the game to be played which was not only in the Debtor’s best interest so as not to put its membership at risk of termination but also in the League’s best interest to preserve the integrity of its schedule and prevent loss to the other member team. Id. For *748 reasons never made clear, 6 the League rejected that approach, opting instead to make loans to the players directly. N.T. 22-28.

Joe Klein, the Executive Director of the League, testified in support of the Motion. He stated that the Debtor was unable to make the payroll on August 15, and the players were refusing to play the August 16 game in Aberdeen, Maryland. To head off the crisis, the night before the League had made a loan to the players who endorsed their checks to the League. 7 The Debtor’s checks were then held until the Debtor had sufficient funds whereupon they were negotiated by the League and used to repay the player loans. This drill was repeated with the payrolls of August 31, September 15 and September 30, 2000. Only the Debtor’s promises to make good on the paychecks endorsed and held by the League were not fulfilled. The League has not been repaid these loans to the players and while contending that it has not waived repayment from the players, seeks in the first instance recovery from the Debtor.

Contemporaneously with the payroll transaction, the Debtor asked the League to assist with the funding of operations for the balance of the 2000 season. The Debt- or estimated that it would require an additional $200,000. Exhibit D-12. The League’s response to that request was not disclosed. However, it is apparent from Exhibit D-l that beginning August 16 and continuing through December 8, 2000, the League was paying the costs that were necessary to complete the playing season. 8 In addition to player salaries and meal money, the League paid charges for hotels, transportation, equipment and supplies directly to the obligees. The Debtor never obtained authorization to borrow funds from the League before these third party payments were made.

In this and numerous prior hearings, League representatives have stressed the impact that the Debtor’s inability to honor its financial and performance commitments has on its reputation and credibility with the public. Unfavorable media attention resulting from a League member’s failure to pay its debts casts a negative shadow on the League as well as the team. The League’s responsibility is to ensure the smooth functioning of the baseball season so as to instill confidence in the public that supports its activities with their entertainment dollars. Because of the collective nature of a baseball league, the members are interdependent in certain respects. Thus, the inability of the Black Diamonds to play not only harms the Debtor but also the other teams who are scheduled to play with it. Accordingly, when asked why the League continued to advance these sums to pay Debtor’s expenses, Joe Klein stated that it was necessary for the integrity of *749 the League and credibility with the media and public. Moreover, the League needed the Black Diamonds to show up to maintain the schedule or other of their teams would suffer.

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Bluebook (online)
260 B.R. 745, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 300, 2001 WL 336834, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-lehigh-valley-professional-sports-clubs-inc-paeb-2001.