In re Rede Energia S.A.

515 B.R. 69, 2014 Bankr. LEXIS 3617, 2014 WL 4248121
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedAugust 27, 2014
DocketCase No. 14-10078 (SCC)
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 515 B.R. 69 (In re Rede Energia S.A.) 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 Rede Energia S.A., 515 B.R. 69, 2014 Bankr. LEXIS 3617, 2014 WL 4248121 (N.Y. 2014).

Opinion

In a Case Under Chapter 15 of the Bankruptcy Code

MEMORANDUM DECISION GRANTING PLAN ENFORCEMENT RELIEF PURSUANT TO CHAPTER 15 OF THE BANKRUPTCY CODE

SHELLEY C. CHAPMAN, UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE

TABLE OF CONTENTS

FACTUAL BACKGROUND ... 75

I. The Rede Group ... 75

II. Rede Issues the Perpetual Notes ... 76

III. Events Leading to the Brazilian Bankruptcy Proceeding ... 77

IV. The Brazilian Bankruptcy Proceeding ... 79

A. Competing Plans are Submitted ... 79

B. Creditors Vote on the Brazilian Reorganization Plan ... 81

C. The Brazilian Reorganization Plan is Approved Via Cram-Down ... 82

V. The Terms and Provisions of the Brazilian Reorganization Plan ... 84

A. Substantive Consolidation of the Rede Debtors ... 84

B. Classification of Claims Generally ... 85

[74]*74C. Treatment of Secured Claims ... 85

D. Treatment of Unsecured Claims ... 86

1. Treatment of Concessionaire Creditor Claims ... 86

2. Treatment of Subsidiary Concessionaire Claims ... 87

3. Treatment of General Unsecured Claims ... 87

VI. The Foreign Representative Commences a Chapter 15 Proceeding in the United States ... 88

DISCUSSION ... 89

I. Applicable Law ... 89

II. The Plan Enforcement Relief is Proper Under Section 1521 of the Bankruptcy Code ... 92

III. The Plan Enforcement Relief is Also Proper Under Section 1507 of the Bankruptcy Code ... 94

A. Creditors Were Treated Justly in Brazil ... 95

B. There is No Prejudice to U.S. Creditors in the Processing of Claims in Brazil ... 96

C. There Were No Preferential or Fraudulent Property Distributions in the Brazilian Bankruptcy Proceeding ... 96

D. The Distribution of Proceeds Under the Brazilian Reorganization Plan Was Substantially in Accordance with U.S. Law ... 97

IV. With Respect to Section 1506, the Brazilian Bankruptcy Proceeding Was Administered in a Manner Consistent With U.S. Public Policy ... 98

A.The Marketing Process of the Rede Debtors’ Assets, the Consolidation of the Rede Debtors, and the Confirmation of the Brazilian Reorganization Plan Did Not Violate Creditors’ Due Process Rights and Were Not Manifestly Contrary to U.S. Public Policy ... 98

1: The Marketing Process of the Rede Debtors’ Assets ... 98

2. The Determination by the Brazilian Bankruptcy Court That the Rede Debtors’ Assets and Liabilities Could be Consolidated for Plan Purposes ... 100

3. The Voting Process and Approval of the Plan Through Cram-Down ... 101

B. The Distribution Scheme in the Brazilian Reorganization Plan is Not Manifestly Contrary to U.S. Public Policy ... 103

C. Differing Treatment of Similarly Situated Creditors by the Brazilian Reorganization Plan Was For a Valid Purpose and Is Not Inconsistent With U.S. Law ... 105

D. To the Extent That There is Disparate Treatment, Such Treatment is Not Targeted at U.S.-Based Creditors and There is No Evidence of Protection of Local Creditors to the Detriment of U.S.-Based Creditors ... 106

CONCLUSION ... 107

In this proceeding brought pursuant to chapter 15 of the Bankruptcy Code, José Carlos Santos, the Foreign Representative of Rede Energía S.A., seeks this Court’s assistance, pursuant to sections 1507 and 1521, in enforcing the terms of Rede’s Brazilian reorganization plan. Specifically, the Foreign Representative requests the following relief: (i) an order granting full faith and credit to (a) the Brazilian reorganization plan and (b) the Brazilian court order confirming the plan, including a continuation of the injunction of acts in the United States in contravention of the confirmation order, and (ii) an order authorizing and directing the Indenture Trustee [75]*75for Rede’s 11.125 percent perpetual notes and the Depository Trust Company to take the actions necessary to carry out the terms of the Brazilian reorganization plan, including making payments to Rede’s note-holders. Certain of Rede’s noteholders object to the relief as being contrary to public policy of the United States and urge the Court to allow them to return to Brazil and negotiate for an improvement on the distribution they are to receive under the Brazilian reorganization plan. These note-holders allege that what the Foreign Representative describes as a proceeding that indisputably comports with fundamental principles of U.S. bankruptcy law and civilized jurisprudence is in fact a wholesale trampling of their rights that was conceived of and executed by the Brazilian government and rubberstamped by the Brazilian bankruptcy court. While there are certainly aspects of the Brazilian proceeding that differ in form and substance from what might occur in the United States, the Court nonetheless concludes, for the reasons set forth herein, that Rede’s Foreign Representative is entitled to the relief requested.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

An understanding of the structure of Rede Energía S.A. {“Rede ” or the “Debt- or”), the events leading to Rede’s Brazilian bankruptcy proceeding (the “Brazilian Bankruptcy Proceeding ”), and the Brazilian Bankruptcy proceeding itself, including the terms of Rede’s reorganization plan and its treatment of Rede’s creditors, is essential to the Court’s consideration and analysis of the relief requested by José Carlos Santos, the authorized foreign representative of Rede (the “Foreign Representative”) and the objections to such relief. The uncontroverted facts and summary of applicable Brazilian law set forth below are taken from (i) the Stipulation of Facts for Purposes of a Hearing on the Objection by the Ad Hoc Group of Rede Noteholders to Relief Related' to Recognition of a Foreign Proceeding [Docket No. 26] (“Stipulation of Facts ” or “Fact Stip. ”) and (ii) the Stipulation of Brazilian Law for Purposes of a Hearing on the Objection by the Ad Hoc Group of Rede Noteholders to Relief Related to Recognition of Foreign Proceeding [Docket No. 27] {“Stipulation of Law ” or “Law Stip. 2

I. The Rede Group

Rede is one of the largest electric power companies in Brazil; it is the parent company of a group of operating and non-operating subsidiary entities (collectively, with Rede, the “Rede Group ”). (Foreign Representative’s Petition for Recognition of Brazilian Bankruptcy Proceeding and Motion for Order Granting Related Relief Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 105(a), 1507(a), 1509(b), 1515,1517,1520 and 1521) [Docket No. 2] (the “Petition” at 3.) Through its operating subsidiaries, the Rede Group distributes electricity to millions of customers throughout Brazil, including customers in the States of Sao Paulo, Minas Gerais, Paraná, Mato Grosso, and Tocantins.

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Bluebook (online)
515 B.R. 69, 2014 Bankr. LEXIS 3617, 2014 WL 4248121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-rede-energia-sa-nysb-2014.