In re: NEW MEXICO TERMINAL SERVICES, LLC

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Mexico
DecidedMarch 13, 2026
Docket25-11291
StatusUnknown

This text of In re: NEW MEXICO TERMINAL SERVICES, LLC (In re: NEW MEXICO TERMINAL SERVICES, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Mexico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re: NEW MEXICO TERMINAL SERVICES, LLC, (N.M. 2026).

Opinion

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT DISTRICT OF NEW MEXICO In re: NEW MEXICO TERMINAL SERVICES, LLC, No. 25-11291-j11 Debtor. MEMORANDUM OPINION

The matter before the Court is Century Bank’s Emergency Motion to Appoint Chapter 11 Trustee Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 1104 filed December 10, 2025 (Doc. 60) as supplemented by the Amended Emergency Motion to file Supplement to, or Amend, Motion to Appoint Chapter 11 Trustee Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 1104 (Doc. 87) and Century Banks’s Amended Second Supplemental Motion to Emergency Motion to Appoint Chapter 11 Trustee filed January 13, 2026 (Doc. 132) (together, the “Motion to Appoint a Trustee”). Debtor filed a response and opposition to the Motion on December 24, 2025 (Doc. 99). FINDINGS OF FACT This case is a single asset real estate case. Debtor’s goal in this chapter 11 case is to

maximize value from the sale of its real property located at 9615 Broadway Blvd. SE, in Albuquerque (the “Property”) to pay all creditors in full and yield a substantial surplus for Debtor’s members. The Property is part of an economic development project (“Development Project”) that contemplates the installation of railroad siding track to run parallel to the main track that would allow large loading, unloading, and transloading in the area using one or more spurs off the new track. Debtor’s hope is to sell the Property in a private sale after it completes the installation of railway improvements consisting of at least switches to enhance the value of the Property, but Debtor agrees to sell the Property by auction, as is, if a private sale agreement is not reached withing six months after the Court approves the Debor’s employment of a broker to market the Property. Debtor’s installation of the switches has stalled for lack of funds. Debtor has been seeking a grant from the New Mexico Economic Development Department to obtain funds to complete its portion of the Development Project. Karl Pergola, Debtor’s principal, has been paying Debtor’s operating expenses post- petition incurred prior to a sale by making loans to Debtor. Through the end of January 2026,

Karl Pergola made post-petition loans to Debtor totaling $71,721.45: insurance ($25, 521.45); taxes and an annual New Mexico Department of Transportation (“NMDOT”) license fee ($24,000); a retainer to a company employed by Debtor to appraise the Property ($15,000); a retainer to new chapter 11 counsel ($20,000); and trash cleanup of the Property ($500). There is no evidence before the Court that a chapter 11 trustee would have access to any funds prior to the closing of a sale of the Property. Debtor acquired the Property with known contamination and with the responsibility to remediate the Property. Debtor’s principal creditor and lender, Century Bank, has lost confidence in and does not trust Karl Pergola. Debtor has not undertaken action to remediate the Property

and has not paid Century Bank. Likewise, Cal-Maine Foods, Inc. (“Cal-Maine”), which remains a responsible party to remediate the Property, has lost confidence in and does not trust Karl Pergola. Cal-Maine has filed an unsecured pre-petition claim in the amount of $989,877.20, which Debtor disputes, to cover the cost of remediating the Property. Cal-Maine also commenced an adversary proceeding in which it objects to dischargeability of debt under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a), alleging, among other things, that that Debtor has knowingly and intentionally failed to comply with mandatory environmental abatement requirements with respect to the Property imposed by the State of New Mexico. Debtor’s original schedules of assets and liabilities and its statement of financial affairs filed by Debtor’s then counsel, who is not experienced chapter 11 counsel, were deficient in various respects. About a month after commencement of this chapter 11 case, Debtor located and retained new counsel, who amended the schedules and statement of financial affairs and corrected other deficiencies. Debor’s current lead counsel is an experienced, highly competent

chapter 11 lawyer. Ownership of the Property, Notice of Settlement with NMED, Seller Indemnification, and Debtor’s Loan from Century Bank

Prior to 2015, Cal-Maine owned the Property and operated an egg production facility on the site. The operation of the egg production facility resulted in contamination of soil at the site and groundwater beneath the site. In February of 2012, Cal-Maine entered into a settlement agreement (the “Settlement Agreement”) with the New Mexico Environment Department (“NMED”). The Settlement Agreement provides that it remains in effect until Cal-Maine “completes [a]batement pursuant to 20.6.2.4112 NMAC or it is terminated by written agreement of the parties.” NMED required Cal-Maine to disclose the Settlement Agreement to any successor in interest and to advise any successor in interest that the Settlement Agreement was binding on the successor in interest until such time as Cal-Maine complies with the terms and conditions of the agreement or it is terminated by Cal-Maine and NMED. The Settlement Agreement also provides that if NMED conditionally determines that a third-party purchaser, or prospective purchaser, of the Property is eligible for a Voluntary Remediation Program1 (“VRP”), NMED would suspend action to enforce the remediation requirement of the Settlement Agreement against Cal-Maine. The Settlement Agreement further

1 “The purpose of the Voluntary Remediation Program is to provide incentives for the voluntary assessment and remediation of contaminated property, with state oversight, and to remove future liability of lenders and landowners.” Exhibit 1, p. 15, Settlement Agreement (internal quotes omitted). provides that if NMED or the third-party purchaser terminates the Settlement Agreement under the VRP, the suspension of action to enforce the remediation requirement would be terminated and Cal-Maine’s obligation to abate groundwater contamination at the Property would remain in full force and effect, and that any owners or lessees of the site are also considered responsible persons for purposes of abatement of groundwater contamination.2

On January 15, 2015, Rock House CGM, LLC (“Rock House”)3 executed a real estate purchase and sale agreement (“Purchase Agreement”) under which Cal-Maine agreed to sell, and Rock House agreed to purchase the Property, for $2,500,000. Karl Pergola, as “president” of Rock House, signed the Purchase Agreement on behalf of Rock House. The agreed sales price of the Property was discounted because of the soil and water contamination existing on the Property at the time of the sale. Under the Purchase Agreement, Rock House agreed to “indemnify, defend, protect and hold [Cal-Maine] harmless from and against any and all claims, actions, causes of action, demands, liabilities, damages, costs and expenses (including reasonable attorneys’ fees) . . . on account of the following with respect to the Property: (a) the physical

condition, nature or quality of the Property (including the soils and groundwater on and under the Property to the extent hazardous substances are involved); and (b) [Cal-Maine’s] presence on, management of, remediation or operations on the Property.”4 On December 31, 2014, Rock House sent a letter via certified mail, signed by Karl Pergola as its managing member, to NMED acknowledging that Rock House had “been furnished with a copy of the requirements of the New Mexico Environment Department under

2 Exhibit 1, p. 17, Settlement Agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
In re: NEW MEXICO TERMINAL SERVICES, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-new-mexico-terminal-services-llc-nmb-2026.