In re Roman Catholic Bishop of Great Falls

584 B.R. 335
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Montana
DecidedMarch 1, 2018
DocketCase No. 17–60271–11
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 584 B.R. 335 (In re Roman Catholic Bishop of Great Falls) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Montana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Roman Catholic Bishop of Great Falls, 584 B.R. 335 (Mont. 2018).

Opinion

Honorable Jim D. Pappas, United States Bankruptcy Judge

Introduction

In this chapter 111 case, on November 2, 2017, the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors ("the Committee") filed a motion seeking "exclusive and irrevocable" authority to commence, prosecute, and settle adversary proceedings under Bankruptcy Code §§ 544, 547, 548, 549 and 550 ("Avoidance Actions") against the parishes ("Parishes") and other affiliates of the Debtor-in-Possession, the Roman Catholic Bishop of Great Falls, a Montana Religious Corporate Sole ("the Diocese"). Dkt. No. 220. The sole response to the Committee's Motion was filed by the Diocese, and its objection was a limited one. Dkt. No. 230. On January 4, 2018, the Court conducted a hearing concerning the Committee's Motion, at which the parties appeared and presented arguments. Dkt. No. 42. After due deliberation, this Memorandum disposes of the Committee's Motion.2

Background

The Diocese is a corporation sole organized under Montana's corporation laws. See Mont. Code Ann. § 35-3-101 et seq. Over 100 Parishes, and at least one school, are affiliated with the Diocese. The parties agree that, under applicable civil law, these affiliates are not separate legal entities. The Committee is comprised and represents the interests of the many claimants in this case alleging that they suffered sexual and other abuse at the hands of the various agents of the Diocese.

When the Diocese filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition, in its schedules, it listed an interest in various assets, including approximately $70,000,000 in real estate and $19,000,000 in checking and investment accounts. The Diocese contends that these valuable assets are either held in trust or otherwise for the benefit of the Parishes, or that the assets have been transferred to and are held by third parties. The Diocese explains in its schedules that the Debtor is incorporated under Montana law as the "Roman Catholic Bishop of Great Falls, Montana, a Montana religious corporation sole," but that under the Code of Canon Law of the Roman Catholic Church, each of its affiliates (e.g. , each of the Parishes) constitutes a separate and distinct entity within the Church. According to this view, while the Diocese *337may hold legal title to the properties, it does so solely for the benefit of the affiliates.

In its Motion, the Committee seeks authorization to commence, prosecute and, if appropriate, settle litigation, on behalf of the Diocese and bankruptcy estate against the Parishes and others asserting the statutory trustee avoiding powers granted to a chapter 11 debtor by §§ 544, 547, 548, 549 and 550. See § 1108(a) (granting a chapter 11 debtor, with some exceptions, all the rights and powers of a trustee). In particular, invoking the avoiding powers, the Committee seeks: (1) to set aside an alleged transfer by the Diocese of over $16 million in financial assets and cash from the so-called Deposit and Loan Fund ("DLF") to another entity known as the Capital Assets Support Corporation ("CASC"); and (2) a determination that the real property listed in the Diocese's schedules as being held in trust for the Parishes is property of the Bankruptcy Estate, and that all unrecorded interests in that real property may be avoided.3 In its draft complaint submitted with its Motion, the Committee proposed to sue the CASC and all of the Parishes.

The Diocese filed a Limited Objection to the Committee's Motion representing that, while it does not oppose the Committee's request to prosecute the Avoidance Actions, the Diocese should be allowed to participate in and contest those actions when filed. The Diocese also contended that the Committee's prosecution of such actions should be subject to certain limitations or "controls". In support of its position, the Diocese steadfastly maintained that the Parishes are the true owners of the real property, and that they own the funds in their bank accounts and in the DLF. According to the Diocese, under the principles of Canon Law, the real and other property titled in its is name is simply held in trust for the Parishes. The Diocese characterized the Committee's proposed complaint as a "shotgun" approach to litigation, the cost of which will consume its scarce assets. To protect the parties' time and resources, the Diocese argued that the Committee's "blanket complaint" is not appropriate, and that the Parishes and the CASC should be sued individually; that any claims asserted by the Committee should remain property of the bankruptcy estate subject to the control of the Diocese; that the Committee should not be authorized to pursue any claim, transfer or claim for relief not specifically identified in the proposed complaint; and that the Court must take a proactive role in the litigation, weeding out unnecessary claims and requiring the Committee to conform to a litigation budget.

In response to the Diocese's concerns, the Committee agreed at the January 4, 2018, hearing to bifurcate its litigation and to limit the named defendants to the Diocese, the CASC and fourteen representative Parishes. The Committee also agreed that any property recovered via the Avoiding *338Actions would remain property of the bankruptcy estate, that, despite the Avoiding Actions, the Diocese could settle the issues raised in the litigation through the confirmation process in a chapter 11 plan, and that it was fair and appropriate to require the Committee to seek Court approval before adding any additional claims or defendants to the litigation. In addition, the Committee acknowledged that it would be unfair to starve the Parishes of the funds to pay for their defense of the Avoiding Actions by blocking their access to the DLF through the litigation. The Committee, however, clarified that it would resist any attempts to compensate Parish counsel from any other assets of the bankruptcy estate.

At the conclusion of the hearing, the Court granted the parties time to file post-hearing memoranda addressing the Committee's revised proposals, which the parties have done. Dkt. Nos. 273 and 298. The Court also directed the Committee to submit its proposed revised complaint to comport with the representations made by the Committee's counsel at the hearing. The Committee did so, Dkt. No. 273, p.4-21, and in its new submissions, it now proposes to file two complaints, one against the Diocese and CASC targeting the approximately $16 million of financial assets transferred from the DLF to the CASC prior to the bankruptcy filing, and a second complaint against the Diocese, Billings Catholic Schools4 and 14 representative Parishes challenging their interests in the real estate.

Analysis and Disposition

Having considered the parties' submissions and arguments, and the record in this case, the Court has determined that the Committee's Motion should be granted. Because determination of the extent of the assets in the bankruptcy case is a critical condition to confirmation of a plan, and since the Diocese is unwilling to assert its avoiding powers against its affiliates, the Committee's request to pursue that litigation is necessary and appropriate.

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Bluebook (online)
584 B.R. 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-roman-catholic-bishop-of-great-falls-mtb-2018.