In Re Lyondell Chemical Co.

402 B.R. 596, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 727, 51 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 128, 2009 WL 922487
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 18, 2009
Docket19-22504
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 402 B.R. 596 (In Re Lyondell Chemical Co.) 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 Lyondell Chemical Co., 402 B.R. 596, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 727, 51 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 128, 2009 WL 922487 (N.Y. 2009).

Opinion

BENCH DECISION 1 ON MOTIONS TO ENFORCE THE AUTOMATIC STAY AND FOR RELIEF FROM THE AUTOMATIC STAY

ROBERT E. GERBER, Bankruptcy Judge.

In this contested matter in the chapter 11 cases of debtor Lyondell Chemical Company and its affiliates, Lyondell seeks to “enforce the automatic stay” to block actions by (1) BASF, which secured a $170 million judgment against Lyondell in an action in New Jersey’s Superior Court for Morris County, enforcement of which was stayed after Lyondell posted a $200 million supersedeas bond (the “Supersedeas Bond”), and by (2) the New Jersey Appellate Division, before whom Lyondell’s appeal of BASF’s judgment was pending when these chapter 11 cases were filed. At the same time, BASF seeks relief from the stay to effect the continuation of Lyon-dell’s appeal of BASF’s judgment — or alternatively, relief from the stay to permit the Appellate Division to construe, reconsider, and/or modify orders the Appellate Division entered after it learned of the filing of Lyondell’s chapter 11 ease, and to permit New Jersey’s courts to rule on the implications of the Appellate Division’s actions.

The first order (the “Dismissal Order”), signed by a clerk in the name of the Appellate Division’s Presiding Judge for Administration, dismissed the appeal without prejudice to renewal — in contrast to merely staying it. The second order (the “Reinstatement Order”), entered on a request for emergent relief, temporarily reinstated the appeal; ordered Lyondell to keep the Supersedeas Bond in effect; and *599 enjoined the Sureties from returning the Supersedeas Bond’s annual premium, all pending receipt and review of opposition from Lyondell, and until further order of the Appellate Division.

But for the reasons described below, these controversies only in minor part involve technical matters as to what “compliance with the automatic stay” means or should require — or, for that matter, whether I should grant relief from the stay to permit litigation, of one sort or another, in the New Jersey state courts. It takes little in the way of great insight to understand that the most significant issue here is the continuation, or demise, of the $200 million Supersedeas Bond that Lyondell posted, before the beginning of its chapter 11 case — and which ultimately is collateral-ized by assets of the estate.

If BASF’s judgment, or part of it, ultimately is affirmed (that being a matter for the New Jersey courts to decide), or for so long as Lyondell does not prosecute its appeal, BASF will have an allowed claim in this Court for whatever the New Jersey courts have determined, to the extent not already paid. But if it turns out, as a consequence of the first of the two Appellate Divisions orders that are at issue here, that the Supersedeas Bond “self-destructed,” BASF may be left with an unsecured claim in this Court for the once-bonded liability.

With that by way of context, Lyondell seeks entry of an order from this Court, as more precisely detailed below, which it describes as “enforcing the automatic stay and the Court’s Stay Order.” Lyondell asks me to respect the Dismissal Order and to annul the Reinstatement Order. But more importantly, as a practical matter, Lyondell asks me to rule that by reason of the Dismissal Order, the Supersede-as Bond terminated, and that Lyondell needn’t maintain the very sizable reserves that must be maintained to collateralize the obligations to indemnify the sureties who issued the Supersedeas Bond should they have to make payment on it. BASF opposes that, and while it asks me to lift the stay to permit the appeal to go forward on the merits, it even more passionately asks me to lift the stay to allow the New Jersey courts to determine whether the Supersedeas Bond came to an end.

Though the issues before me include a host of arguments going back and forth with respect to the asserted termination of the Supersedeas Bond, my jurisdiction to address the various issues, and arguments for and against abstention — which I’ll address, to the extent necessary, below, including my point by point rulings on the seven separate elements of the parties’ motions before me — my rulings result in three fundamental conclusions:

(1) I will indeed enforce the automatic stay, but in accordance with my views as to what that means, which differ from those of either of the litigants. I rule that entry of the Dismissal Order — dismissing the appeal without prejudice to renewal (an order identical in substance to an order simply staying the litigation) — was not violative of the automatic stay. And I rule that entry of the Reinstatement Order — which was plain in merely reinstating the status quo as it existed prior to the entry of the of the Dismissal Order, to provide an opportunity for parties to be heard — was not violative of the automatic stay either.
(2) BASF’s motion for relief from the stay to permit, or require, Lyondell to proceed with its appeal at this time is denied. Lyondell is entitled to a breathing spell in deciding when it should proceed with the appeal, in light of the burdens of its reorganization efforts. And at least for a while, so long as Lyondell understands (as it has acknowl *600 edged) that under the Second Circuit’s decision in Teachers Insurance & Annuity Association of America v. Butler, 2 Lyondell is bound by the Superior Court judgment, unless and until that judgment is reversed or modified by a higher New Jersey court, Lyondell is entitled to a breathing spell even to decide whether it wishes to appeal.
(3) I will, however, grant relief from the stay to the extent necessary for the New Jersey courts to construe and determine the continuing viability of the Supersedeas Bond — since Lyondell has made clear that it now wishes to press its points in that regard. I will not rule on the issues involving the asserted termination of the Supersedeas Bond myself. While each of the parties contends that the Supersedeas Bond is unambiguous (in its favor, of course), I could not disagree more. To the contrary, I find the Supersedeas Bond to be anachronistically and inartfully drafted, and ultimately as ambiguous a contractual instrument as I have seen in a long time. While I, like other federal judges, determine issues under state law on a regular basis, I believe that the New Jersey courts are materially better equipped to construe the Supersedeas Bond than I am, and have a greater interest in doing so. Thus I will exercise my powers of discretionary abstention under 28 U.S.C. § 1334(c), and grant BASF limited relief from the stay to obtain rulings from the New Jersey courts as to the continuing viability of the Supersedeas Bond in light of the Appellate Division’s orders.

My Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and bases for the exercise of my discretion in connection with these determinations follow.

Facts

1. The Underlying Lawsuit

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Bluebook (online)
402 B.R. 596, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 727, 51 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 128, 2009 WL 922487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-lyondell-chemical-co-nysb-2009.