In Re Plant Insulation Co.

469 B.R. 843, 2012 Bankr. LEXIS 1717, 2012 WL 1058196
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. California
DecidedMarch 15, 2012
Docket19-30115
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 469 B.R. 843 (In Re Plant Insulation Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Plant Insulation Co., 469 B.R. 843, 2012 Bankr. LEXIS 1717, 2012 WL 1058196 (Cal. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

THOMAS E. CARLSON, Bankruptcy Judge.

INTRODUCTION

Debtor sold, installed, and repaired asbestos-containing products starting in 1937. Plagued by thousands of lawsuits, and facing its insurers’ claims that its insurance coverage was exhausted, Debtor filed a chapter 11 petition in this court. Debtor now seeks to confirm a plan that channels all asbestos injury claims to a section 524(g) trust established to benefit asbestos victims. The central feature of the plan is that it encourages insurers to make lump-sum settlement contributions to the trust by protecting settling insurers from claims for equitable contribution asserted by non-settling insurers. Asbestos claimants voted unanimously in favor of the plan, but non-settling insurers unanimously rejected the plan.

The trust/injunction provisions of section 524(g) of the Bankruptcy Code form the basis of the plan in every asbestos bankruptcy. The present case raises three questions regarding the application of section 524(g) that do not appear to be fully resolved under existing case law. Should the court confirm a plan in which a debtor that ceased doing business ten years ago attempts to satisfy the ongoing-business requirement of section 524(g) by merging with the company to which the debtor sold its operating assets? May an injunction issued under section 524(g) cut off non-settling insurers’ equitable contribution claims against settling insurers without providing full compensation for the barred claims? Does the best-interest-of-creditors test require debtor to pay non-settling insurers the full value of their equitable contribution rights, because non-settling insurers would retain those rights in a case? I determine that each of these questions should be answered in favor of the debtor, and that the plan should be confirmed.

This opinion includes all the findings of facts and conclusions of law related to the three issues described above. In determining whether to confirm the plan, the court must make additional findings and conclusions that have little or no prece-dential significance. To avoid burdening readers not directly involved in the present ease, I have placed the findings and conclusions regarding those remaining issues in a separate unpublished memorandum.

CONTENTS

I. Background 850

*849 A. History of the Debtor....850

B. The Role of Section 524(g)....852

O The Plan . .853

1. Summary.....853
2. Unsecured Claims.854
3. Asbestos Injury Claims.854
4. The Trust Option.854
5. The Tort-System Option.855
6. The Merger.856
7. Injunctions.856

(a) Channeling Injunction.856

(b) Settling Insurer Injunction.856

(c) Asbestos Insurer Injunction..856

8. Insurance Settlement Deadline .857
D. The Vote......857
E. Objections to Confirmation.....857
F. The Trial....858

II. Analysis ....859

A. Good Faith.....859

1. The Bad Faith Alleged.....859
2. Standard for Determining Good Faith.....859
8. Objectives of Section 524(g).....859

(a) Equal Treatment of Present and Future Claims ...860

(b) Preservation of Going-Concern Value.....860

(c) Prompt Payment of Claims...861

4. Importance of the Merger.....861
5. Argument that Bankruptcy Unnecessary....862

6. Argument that Plan Does Not Preserve Going-Concern Value....862

7. Argument that Insurers Coerced....864
8. Argument that Bayside Coerced....865

B. Issues Concerning Financial Projections ....865

1. Plan Proponents’ Evidence.865
2. Non-Settling Insurers’ Evidence ....867
3. Findings Regarding Financial Projections....867
4. Feasibility....868
5. Sufficiency of the Bayside Contribution.....869
6. Good Faith Considerations....870

C. Equitable Contribution Claims....871

1. Introduction ....871
2. Provisions of Section 524(g)....874
3. Constitutional Concerns....875
4. Equity Jurisprudence...875
5. Non-Settling Insurers’ Evidence....876
6. The Plan Proponents’ Evidence...877
7. Findings Regarding the Evidence Presented....878
8. Other Arguments of Non-Settling Insurers.....879
9. Decision....880

D. Extension of Deadline for Insurance Settlements....882

1. The Terms of the Extension ....882
2. The Non-Settling Insurers’ Objections....882
3. No Unfair Surprise...882
4. Benefits of the Extension....883

5. Confirmation is not Affected by the Number of Settlements .....883

6. Jurisdiction Questions....884
7. Standards for Future Settlements.884
8. Additional Disclosure is not Required....886
9. Proposed Extension Approved ....886

E. The “Best-Interest-of-Creditors” Test...886

*850 1. Introduction...886

2. The Test Applies only to Claims Against the Debtor....887

3. Equitable Contribution Claims are not Claims Against the Debtor...888

CONCLUSION. .888

I

BACKGROUND

A. History of the Debtor

Plant Insulation Company (Plant) was incorporated in 1937, and for decades engaged in the business of selling, installing, and repairing asbestos-containing insulation and fireproofing materials. For many years, it was the exclusive Northern California distributor for asbestos-containing products manufactured by Fibreboard Company.

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Bluebook (online)
469 B.R. 843, 2012 Bankr. LEXIS 1717, 2012 WL 1058196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-plant-insulation-co-canb-2012.