In Re Manville Forest Products Corp.

43 B.R. 293, 11 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 735, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 4867
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedOctober 5, 1984
Docket18-23863
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 43 B.R. 293 (In Re Manville Forest Products Corp.) 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 Manville Forest Products Corp., 43 B.R. 293, 11 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 735, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 4867 (N.Y. 1984).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND DETERMINATION OF ISSUES SUBMITTED UNDER PLAN OF REORGANIZATION

BURTON R. LIFLAND, Bankruptcy Judge.

On August 26, 1982, Manville Forest Products Corporation, the above-captioned debtor (“MFPC”), filed a petition for reorganization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (“the Code”). MFPC is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Manville Corporation. It is a manufacturer of timber, paper, and other wood products. It has never mined, manufactured or sold asbestos or any asbestos-containing product. Therefore, arguably it faces no liability for the asbestos claims asserted against Johns-Manville Corporation and the other Man-ville subsidiaries which also filed for Chapter 11 protection contemporaneously with MFPC. See In re Manville Forest Products Corp., 31 B.R. 991, 992 (S.D.N.Y. 1983).

MFPC and certain of its institutional creditors have submitted the within dispute for determination by this Court. These institutional creditors consist of The Prudential Insurance Company of America, Aetna Life Insurance Company, the Travelers Insurance Company, Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York, The First National Bank of Commerce, and Continental Illinois National Bank & Trust Company of Chicago, among others. In addition, Bankers Trust Company (secured) and several other individual creditors are long-term lenders in this proceeding. These creditors will be referred to collectively as the “long-term lenders”. The essential facts are not in dispute.

I. Factual Background

As of the date of the bankruptcy petition MFPC had long term debt outstanding under the terms of eight loan agreements and three issues of tax exempt bonds. MFPC was also a party to five identical assumption agreements with five insurance companies. Under the terms of each of these loan agreements (collectively, the “Loan Agreements”), the filing of a petition in bankruptcy constituted an event of default. Upon the occurrence of such event of default, each long-term lender had the option of accelerating the entire principal amount of its debt by notifying MFPC, in writing, of its intent to do so. 1 All but one of the *296 lenders failed to notify MFPC of its default after the bankruptcy petition was filed.

In addition to the default occasioned by the Chapter 11 filing, MFPC also committed a second event of default under the lending agreements. Between August 26, 1982, the date the petition was filed, and April 5, 1984, MFPC failed to make installment payments of principal or interest on most of the long term loan agreements in question. 2

On October 17, 1983 MFPC filed a plan of reorganization with the Bankruptcy Court (“the Plan”). In the Plan, MFPC deals with the long-term lenders by dividing them into three classes: Secured Lenders, Lenders Under Tax Exempt Bond Issues, and Unsecured Institutional Lenders. The Plan provides that the defaults under each of the loan agreements in question will be cured, the debts will be deaccelerat-ed, and the long-term lenders will be compensated pursuant to Code Section 1124(2). 3 For purposes of resolving this dispute the long-term lenders do not seek a determination based upon the secured or unsecured status of their claims.

MFPC’s Plan was confirmed by this Court on March 26, 1984. Although the Plan is consensual in most respects, the long-term lenders were unable to reach an agreement with MFPC on the extent of the cure necessary to leave the long-term lenders unimpaired, as that term is defined in Code Section 1124. Both MFPC and the long-term lenders agree that in order to be left unimpaired under the Code, each long-term lender must be compensated for “any damages incurred as a result of any reasonable reliance” on the acceleration clauses in question. However, the parties disagree as to the amount of compensation necessary to satisfy the requirements of the Code. The long-term lenders argue that “adequate compensation” under the terms of section 1124(2)(C) requires that they be granted interest on the entire accelerated amounts of the debts, as well as interest on the defaulted installment payments of principal and interest. MFPC, on the other hand, contends that the debt was never accelerated to begin with, because the long-term lenders failed to notify MFPC of their intent to accelerate as required under the terms of the loan agreements. Further, MFPC argues that even if the contracts were properly accelerated, the ability to deaccelerate and reinstate a defaulted contract under 1124(2) precludes the obligation to pay any post-default obligation. Finally, MFPC argues that the obligation to pay interest on interest which accrues post-petition is to be governed by state law, which in this case prohibits such payments.

Rather than delay consummation of a Plan, the parties have agreed to submit *297 these two unresolved issues of law to this court for determination.

The issues which the parties have put before this Court for determination are as follows:

1) whether MFPC is required to pay interest on the entire accelerated indebtedness under the long-term Loan Agreements;

2) whether MFPC is required to pay interest on the overdue interest payments, and if so, whether the appropriate rate of interest is the contract rate or the market rate.

MFPC has agreed with its creditors to pay the post-default interest rate on all principal installments which remained unpaid between August 26, 1982 and April 5, 1984. Therefore, the question of whether a debtor must cure defaults by paying the post-default interest rate to leave a creditor “unimpaired” under Section 1124 of the Bankruptcy Code is not before the Court.

II. Acceleration and Deacceleration of Debt under the Code

The first issue which this Court must address is whether MFPC is required to pay interest on the entire accelerated indebtedness in order to leave the long-term lenders unimpaired under the provisions of Code Section 1124. In this context the Court will first determine whether, and in what circumstances, a debt which is unma-tured as of the date of a bankruptcy filing will be deemed accelerated for the purposes of appropriate compensation to creditors in this reorganization plan.

A. Acceleration of Debt

MFPC’s first contention is that in order to accelerate the entire debt due under the loans, the long-term lenders were required to notify MFPC of their intent to accelerate the debt, as required by the terms of the various contracts. Their failure to do so, alleges MFPC, precludes the lenders from asserting their claims for interest on the accelerated debt. The long-term lenders, on the other hand, take the position that the debts due under the various long-term agreements in question were automatically accelerated at the time of the filing of the petition by operation of Section 502(a) of the Code, 4 irrespective of any contractual clause requiring notice.

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Bluebook (online)
43 B.R. 293, 11 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 735, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 4867, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-manville-forest-products-corp-nysb-1984.