In Re Regatta Bay, LLC

406 B.R. 875, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 1293, 2009 WL 1609388
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Arizona
DecidedMay 19, 2009
Docket2:08-bk-10838-RJH
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 406 B.R. 875 (In Re Regatta Bay, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Regatta Bay, LLC, 406 B.R. 875, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 1293, 2009 WL 1609388 (Ark. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER DENYING STAY PENDING APPEAL

RANDOLPH J. HAINES, Bankruptcy Judge.

The creditors’ motion for a stay pending appeal of the order confirming the Debt- or’s Plan of Reorganization hinges largely on the creditor’s argument that Ninth Circuit case law prohibits a plan term that delays the creditor’s collection of its debt from non-estate sources. Because the Court concludes Ninth Circuit law does not so hold and that such a plan term is permissible, the motion for stay pending appeal is denied.

Factual and Procedural Background

The creditor, Coronado City Views, LLC, and the debtor, Regatta Bay, LLC, own competing specialized condominium developments on Coronado Island, off the coast of San Diego. They were under construction at approximately the same time, and are both offering units for sale. Coronado sued the debtor and its two owners, John Wright and Phillip Keesling, alleging them to have been somehow responsible for delays in completion of the Coronado condominium complex. Coronado obtained a $6 million jury verdict, which the debtor appealed but did not stay pending appeal. This bankruptcy case followed.

The debtor confirmed a plan of reorganization that provides for payment in full of all of its creditors. In particular, the first *877 mortgage on the condominium project shall be paid in full, together with interest at the non-default contract rate, within a year and a half after the confirmation of the plan from the net proceeds of all condominium sales. After the first mortgage is paid in full, all net proceeds from condominium sales shall be devoted to a reserve fund for the payment of the claim of creditor, Coronado City Views. Its debt shall be paid in full, together with interest at the California statutory rate, upon the resolution of the pending appeal or two and one-half years after confirmation. After creditor Coronado City Views has been paid, net proceeds shall be devoted to the payment of mechanics and materialmens hens and then payment of unsecured creditors.

The debtor’s plan also provides that Wright and Keesling shall contribute a total of $400,000.00 to the debtor for the payment of operating expenses and professional fees.

The plan also provides that creditor Coronado City Views is enjoined from attempting to collect its claim from Wright or Keesling or any of their property until the earlier of (a) all required plan payments have been made, or (b) the bankruptcy case is dismissed or converted to chapter 7; or (c) when there is a default under the plan that is not cured within ten days.

Finally, the order confirming the plan also provides that Wright and Keesling are enjoined from transferring or encumbering any of their assets out of the ordinary course of business except as may be approved by the Bankruptcy Court after notice and opportunity for creditor Coronado City Views to object.

Creditor Coronado City Views appealed the confirmation order to the District Court and then moved in the Bankruptcy Court for a stay pending appeal.

Standards for Stay Pending Appeal

The Ninth Circuit employs a sliding scale for a stay pending appeal, which should be granted when the appellant demonstrates either (1) “a strong likelihood of success on the merits” and “the possibility of irreparable injury,” or (2) “serious legal questions are raised and that the balance of hardships tips sharply in its favor.” 1 Here, the creditor primarily bases its motion on its likelihood of success on appeal, contending that the “Ninth Circuit has adopted a per se rule against post-confirmation injunctions against non-debtors.” In addition, the creditor argues it will be irreparably harmed because other creditors could levy against the assets of Wright and Keesling,

No Ninth Circuit Authority Bars Plan Terms that Delay Enforcement of Judgments

The creditor relies on three Ninth Circuit cases for the proposition that Bankruptcy Code § 524(e) 2 limits the authority of bankruptcy courts, under Bankruptcy Code § 105 3 , to enjoin the collection of a debt from a non-debtor. While that may *878 be an accurate summary of the holdings of those cases, none of those holdings is on point with the factual and legal circumstances present here, nor does any of them hold that a bankruptcy court cannot confirm a plan that delays enforcement of creditors’ judgments.

What is at issue here is the confirmation of a plan that contains a provision that delays the enforcement of the creditor’s judgment against the individuals Wright and Keesling. The injunctive effect of that plan provision comes not from a bankruptcy court injunction issued under Code § 105, but rather from the statutory language of Code § 1141(a) “the provisions of a confirmed plan bind ... any creditor.” Although in this ease there is also injunc-tive language contained in the court’s order confirming the plan, its effect is only to recite the binding effect of the plan term pursuant to Code § 1141(a). Thus if the plan was properly confirmed, there is no issue regarding the court’s ability to issue an injunction pursuant to Code § 105. The injunctive effect flows from the statute itself. Thus the only real issue here is whether a plan containing such a term is confirmable.

The issue of whether a confirmable plan may contain a term delaying a creditor’s enforcement of a judgment against a non-debtor is not addressed by any of the cases on which the creditor relies to demonstrate the likelihood of success on appeal of the confirmation order.

The creditor’s principal case, American Hardwoods, 4 did not address the confirma-bility of a plan containing a provision delaying a creditor’s enforcement of a judgment against non-debtors and, indeed, did not address any confirmation issue. American Hardwoods dealt with an injunction granted, apparently under the authority of § 105, early in a bankruptcy case before any plan of reorganization had ever been filed, much less confirmed. Neither the holding in that case nor any dictum in the opinion has any bearing on the confirmability of plans. The opinion focused solely on the kinds of injunctions bankruptcy courts could issue under § 105 and not on the authority of bankruptcy courts to confirm plans pursuant to Code § 1129. Nor did it discuss what provisions might be contained in a confirmable plan.

More significantly, the specific issue raised by the debtor’s appeal in American Hardwoods was the Bankruptcy Court’s authority to issue a permanent injunction under § 105. The Ninth Circuit concluded the Bankruptcy Court was powerless to issue such an injunction because “[t]he permanent injunction requested by American falls squarely within the definition of a discharge under section 524(a)(2).” 5 It was on that basis that the Ninth Circuit “conclude[d] that the specific provisions of section 524 displace the court’s equitable powers under section 105 to order the permanent relief sought by

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
406 B.R. 875, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 1293, 2009 WL 1609388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-regatta-bay-llc-arb-2009.