In Re Mall at One Associates, L.P.

185 B.R. 981, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 1050, 27 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 757, 1995 WL 461875
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 3, 1995
Docket16-14959
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 185 B.R. 981 (In Re Mall at One Associates, L.P.) 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 Mall at One Associates, L.P., 185 B.R. 981, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 1050, 27 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 757, 1995 WL 461875 (Pa. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Chief Judge.

A INTRODUCTION

Before this court is a Motion filed by MALL AT ONE ASSOCIATES, L.P. (“the Debtor”), at filing the owner of a single realty asset, a shopping mall located at Roosevelt Boulevard and Grant Avenue in Philadelphia (“the Mall”). The Motion appears to be presently confined to a request for reimbursement of not only considerable counsel fees of the Debtor but also expenditures by the Debtor authorized under cash collateral stipulations (“the Stipulations”), pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 506(c). The targets of the Motion are the Debtor’s two secured creditors which were parties to the Stipulations: (1) Bank of New York — National Community Division (“BNY”), the overseeured first mortgagee of the Mall; and (2) Mall at One Group, L.P. (“Group”) (collectively BNY and Group are referenced as “the Creditors”), the undersecured second mortgagee which sold the Mall to the Debtor on April 13, 1990, and repurchased it on April 11, 1995, at an auction sale conducted in accordance with the Debtor’s Fifth Amended Plan of Reorganization Pursuant to Chapter 11 of the United States Code (“the Plan”), which was confirmed on January 17, 1995.

Finding that the Third Circuit Court of Appeals (“the Appeals Court”) has recently adopted a more restrictive approach to § 506(e) motions than it had in the past and that it continues to express a hostility to single realty asset debtors, we conclude that the Motion must be, for the most part, denied. The expenditures already made from the creditors’ cash collateral cannot be effectively paid from the creditors’ collateral for the second time. Only attorneys’ fees (not paid from cash collateral) representing services devoted to leasing the Mall and conducting the auction sale contemplated by the Plan are found compensable, and from Group alone as the only creditor directly benefited thereby. Therefore, we will allow the Motion in the amount of only $10,840.50, payable by Group only.

B. PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL HISTORY

The Debtor filed the voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy case from which the Motion arises on September 20, 1993. The Debtor had four substantial pre-petition secured creditors: (1) BNY, fully secured in its claim in the amount of approximately $4.3 million, in light of the estimated value of the Mall of $7 million, which was in fact received for it at the auction sale; (2) Group, whose asserted secured claim of approximately $5.5 million was obviously undersecured; (3) ING Vastgoed One B.V. (“Vastgoed”), a Netherlands corporation with a third mortgagee on the Mall in excess of $3.8 million, which gracefully agreed to receive nothing under the Plan; and (4) the City of Philadelphia (“the City”), which asserts secured and priority claims for pre-petition real estate taxes of approximately $250,000 and administrative claims for post-petition real estate and business use and occupancy taxes totalling over $300,000. Objections by Group to the City’s claim, joined by the Debtor, were the subject of a full-day trial, the post-trial briefing addressing which is to be completed by August 11, 1995.

After filing a series of unconfirmed plans, the earliest versions of which featured subsequently-withdrawn funding proposals by Vastgoed, the Debtor filed the ultimately-confirmed Plan on December 2, 1994. The Plan, supported by Group but opposed by BNY (which appealed from the confirmation Order), provided for a sale of the Mall to a private party, New Plan Realty Trust (“New Plan”), for a price of not less than $7 million and further provided that, in the event that *985 this sale did not occur, the Mall was to go to auction.

The sale to New Plan unfortunately fell through and much contentiousness among the interested parties followed. The Debtor attempted to forestall the auction sale with a motion to modify the Plan to permit a private sale of the Mall to Delancey Investment Group, Inc. (“Delancey”) for $7,125,000. The Creditors opposed this Motion and it was denied. Group credit bid $7 million at the auction of April 11, 1995, and Delancey, allegedly faced with less favorable sale conditions than in the private sale transaction proposed earlier to the Debtor, made a cash bid of only $6 million at the auction. Delancey’s efforts to invalidate the sale to Group, joined by the Debtor, were rebuffed in a decision reported at 1995 WL 318851, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 716 (Bankr.E.D.Pa. May 23, 1995). Despite an Order accompanying that decision directing the Debtor to transfer the Mall to Group, the Debtor’s partners have resisted this transfer. BNY allowed Group to assume its mortgage and has generally supported its efforts to consummate the sale to it. However, BNY is unhappy because mortgage payments to it, which were made through the auction sale date, have now ceased pending settlement..

The rancor among the parties was the gestation for the Motion of Debtor for Allowance of Claim Pursuant to Section 506(c) of the Code and for an Order Directing Payment of Claim from Secured Parties’ Collateral at Closing on Property and/or in the Alternative for a Redistribution of Administrative Expenses Previously Paid, or Declare Plan to be in Default and Awarding the Debtor Damages for the Breach Thereof, which, as amended on June 16, 1995, is the Motion before us. The alternative relief sought in the Motion — namely a declaration that the City’s claims be paid immediately or a default by Group in the Plan auction sale requirements be declared — appears to have been abandoned. However, it must be noted that the Motion is at least partially a tactical opposition piece to the positions of Group and BNY in the case, and its demands, totalling $1,770,027.13 for expenses and $89,425.50 for counsel fees, are rather obviously inflated beyond the normal scope of recoveries sought in a § 506(c) motion. The Motion seeks attorney’s fees in connection with preparation of all versions of the Plan ($47,-450.75); negotiation of both cash collateral stipulations ($10,463.75); promulgation of new leases and renewals of existing leases at the Mall ($3,535.00); negotiation of tax issues ($4,311.50); services performed in connection with the appeal by BNY of the Plan and in defending BNY’s motions for relief and to convert this ease to Chapter 7 ($6,887.00); and actions taken in connection with the auction ($7,387.00). “Expenses” requested include all payments made by BNY during the case(!) ($924,768.10); the auctioneer’s commissions and expenses ($55,000); various maintenance expenses for the Mall (totalling $47,269.45); fit-out expenses for two tenants ($61,480.00); utility expenses to PECO ($48,-829.00); insurance costs ($28,700.78); water bills ($76,829.01); liability for unpaid taxes to the City ($223,640.49); and the tax escrow paid to BNY, as yet untapped for tax payments ($294,200.00).

It is important to note that there were apparently two cash collateral Stipulations in effect during the course of this case. The first is reflected only by a docket entry indicating that a motion of the Debtor to use the cash collateral of the Creditors, filed on April 20, 1994, was settled on June 1, 1994. The written, Second Stipulation, approved by Order of November 23, 1994, covered the time period from September 1, 1994, to January 31, 1995, or the date of entry of a conversion or confirmation Order, whichever occurred first.

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185 B.R. 981, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 1050, 27 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 757, 1995 WL 461875, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mall-at-one-associates-lp-paeb-1995.