In Re Mid-Valley, Inc.

305 B.R. 425, 2004 WL 287142
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 11, 2004
Docket19-20271
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 305 B.R. 425 (In Re Mid-Valley, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.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 Mid-Valley, Inc., 305 B.R. 425, 2004 WL 287142 (Pa. 2004).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF ORAL OPINION READ INTO THE RECORD ON FEBRUARY 11, 2004

JUDITH K. FITZGERALD, Chief Judge.

Before the court are three motions to dismiss these jointly administered eases as bad faith filings. The motions were filed on behalf of certain insurers. Also filed on behalf of certain insurers is an objection to the appointment of Professor Eric D. Green as the future claimants’ representative. I will refer to that as the FCR from here on. The Debtors assert that the certain insurers have no standing to bring these motions. For the reasons which follow I find that the certain insurers do not have standing to raise the issues or the requested relief. They are not creditors of these Debtors; rather, the Debtors are creditors of the insurers. In addition, the insurers have suffered no injury in fact and are not threatened with injury. A finding that the insurers have no standing to bring these motions is not an adjudication that they have no standing at all with respect to these cases but only that they have no standing with respect to the issues raised in the motions. The certain insurers’ interests will be protected by the plan process when they will have the opportunity to object to the Plan to the extent that it affects their interests. The extent of the insurers’ participation in the plan process will not be addressed today. All I am addressing today is the certain insurers’ standing to seek to have these cases dismissed and to object to the appointment of Professor Green as the FCR.

These cases were filed as a prepackaged bankruptcy. The insurers allege that the Trust Distribution Procedures will violate certain policy provisions in the future and that the Plan will prevent the certain insurers from raising coverage defenses. Specifically, the certain insurers complain about § 10.1 and § 11.4 of the Plan. Section 10.1 falls under Article X, captioned Injunctions, Releases, and Discharge. 10.1 states:

Discharge and Release. On the Effective Date, to the fullest extent permitted under applicable law, the rights provided in the Plan shall (a) discharge the Debtors and the Reorganized Debtors and (b) release each of the Halliburton Entities and the Harbison-Walker Entities, in the case of both (a) and (b), from any and all Asbestos Unsecured PI Trust Claims and Silica Unsecured PI Trust Claims, whether or not (i) a Proof of Claim based on such claim was filed or deemed filed under section 501 of the Bankruptcy Code, (ii) such claim is or was Allowed under section 502 of the Bankruptcy Code, (iii) such claim was listed on the Schedules of a Debtor, or (iv) the holder of such claim voted on or accepted the Plan; provided, however, that notwithstanding anything in this article 10.1 to the contrary, nothing herein shall affect, limit, or otherwise impair any right of a Halliburton Entity against any Asbestos/Silica Insurance Company.

Section 11.4 falls under Article XI, captioned Matters Incident to Plan Confirmation. 11.4 reads:

Asbestos/'Silica Insurance Actions and Preservation of Insurance Claims. Asbestos/Silica Insurance Actions shall be preserved pursuant to this provision for prosecution by the Reorganized Debtors. On or after the Effective Date, the Reorganized Debtors shall be entitled, in their sole and complete discretion, to compromise or settle any and all Asbestos/Silica Insurance Actions and extend the Asbestos/Silica Insurance Company Injunction to any Asbestos/Silica Insur- *428 anee Company that becomes a party to an Asbestos/Silica Insurance Settlement Agreement. Extension of the Asbestos/Silica Insurance Company Injunction shall be accomplished by amending and/or supplementing Exhibit 2 hereto to add the name of the Settling Asbestos/Silica Insurance Company and, if requested by the Settling Asbestos/Silica Insurance Company, an order of the Bankruptcy Court. Except as for the rights of the Asbestos PI Trust under the Asbestos PI Trust Additional Funding Agreement, the Reorganized Debtors shall have the right to retain all Asbestos/Silica Insurance Action Recoveries. The Debtors’ discharge, and the Halliburton Entities’ and the Harbison-Walker Entities’ release pursuant to the terms of this Plan, shall neither diminish nor impair the rights of a party under any Asbestos/Silica Insurance Policy or the rights, if any, of any Asbestos/Silica Insurance Company to assert any claim, defense, or counterclaim in connection therewith.

That’s the end of the quote. The particular grounds raised by the insurers relate to plan confirmation issues but objections to the Plan are not appropriate at this juncture. This case was filed on December 16, 2003, with a plan which, as proposed, does not adjudicate insurers’ liability. The insurers are not creditors. They are not being asked or compelled to do anything at this point in the case. They have shown no harm.

Although the Plan includes a reference to “Settling Asbestos/Silica Insurance Company” in a paragraph heading, Debtors assert in them pleadings that they “intend to fund their obligations under the Plan without any assistance from the certain insurers and are willing to bear the entire and sole risk that they might be unable to recover from the certain insurers some or all of the funds paid out under the Plan.” See, for example, Debtors’ Brief Regarding Lack of Insurer Standing to Raise and be Heard on Issues Related to the Debtors’ Reorganization Cases, Dkt. No. 229, at page 11. Even if the certain insurers’ rights will be impaired by the Plan, objections to the Plan or motions to dismiss on the basis that the Plan is un-confirmable are not ripe. The gist of the certain insurers’ argument is that these chapter 11 cases have not been filed in good faith and that without advocacy by the certain insurers through the vehicle of these motions, the matter will never be adjudicated inasmuch as the Debtors and the asbestos creditors and the FCR have no incentive to do so. For reasons which follow, I find that the certain insurers have no standing to seek dismissal.

Regarding the motions to dismiss the case

The certain insurers have alleged that the negotiations leading up to the Plan violated insurance policy provisions. While that may be a defense to coverage, it does not confer standing on them at this point. They are not asked to pay claims under the Plan. The Debtors will pay claims directly. The Debtors are not seeking contributions by insurers. Insurers argue that they have standing because they are injured by the fact that under some insurance contracts certain insurers have the right to participate in the settlement process that Debtors engaged in with the asbestos claimants. This argument is irrelevant and without merit with respect to standing to move to dismiss. At best, the assertion provides a defense to coverage but does not provide the insurers with a “claim” as defined in 11 U.S.C. § 101(5). Furthermore, the fact that the Debtors have settled with asbestos claimants doesn’t mean that the certain insurers must pay those claims. Insurers retain the right to challenge their obligation to *429 pay claims regardless of what Debtors agreed with the claimants. As I read the Plan, there is no requirement that non-settling insurers pay in violation of their policies. Rights are preserved as to non-settling insurers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
305 B.R. 425, 2004 WL 287142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mid-valley-inc-pawb-2004.