In Re: SGL Carbon Corp, [ Official Comm. of Unsec. Cred. v. Nucor Corp]

200 F.3d 154
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedDecember 29, 1999
Docket99-5319, 99-5382
StatusUnknown
Cited by1 cases

This text of 200 F.3d 154 (In Re: SGL Carbon Corp, [ Official Comm. of Unsec. Cred. v. Nucor Corp]) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re: SGL Carbon Corp, [ Official Comm. of Unsec. Cred. v. Nucor Corp], 200 F.3d 154 (3d Cir. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

SCIRICA, Circuit Judge.

The issue on appeal is whether, on the facts of this case, a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition filed by a financially healthy company in the face of potentially significant civil antitrust liability complies with the requirements of the Bankruptcy Code. In this case, the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors of SGL Carbon Corporation appeals the District Court’s order denying its motion to dismiss SGL Carbon’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition on bad faith grounds.

This case also presents the threshold issue whether we will adopt a “good faith” requirement for Chapter 11 petitions. We will. After undertaking the fact intensive analysis inherent in the good faith determination, we conclude that SGL Carbon’s Chapter 11 petition lacks a valid reorgani-zational purpose and, therefore, lacks the requisite good faith. We will reverse.

I.

SGL Carbon is a Delaware corporation that manufactures and sells graphite electrodes used in steel production. 1 In 1997, the United States Department of Justice commenced an investigation of alleged price-fixing by graphite electrode manufacturers, including the SGL Carbon Group. 2 Soon thereafter, various steel producers filed class action antitrust lawsuits in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania against SGL *157 Carbon and other graphite electrode manufacturers. The District Court consolidated the cases into a single class action and certified a class under Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(b)(3) consisting of all United States purchasers of graphite electrodes between 1992 and 1997. Many class members opted out of the class before the November 28, 1998 opt-out deadline and subsequently filed or threatened to file separate antitrust lawsuits. Since the class certification, six complaints have been filed in federal district court and one complaint has been filed in a Canadian court.

In June 1998, SGL Carbon’s German parent SGL AG recorded a charge in Deutschmarks of approximately $240 million as its “best estimate” of the SGL Carbon Group’s 3 potential liability in the criminal and civil antitrust litigation. 4 On December 16, 1998, at the direction of SGL AG, SGL Carbon filed a voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition in the United States District Court for Delaware. In SGL Carbon’s Disclosure Statement, in a section addressing “Factors Leading to [the] Chapter 11 Filing,” SGL Carbon only discussed the antitrust litigation. The bankruptcy filing contained a proposed reorganization plan under which only one type of creditor would be required to accept less than full cash payment for its account, namely the antitrust plaintiffs who obtained judgments against SGL Carbon. Under the plan, potential antitrust judgment creditors would receive credits against future purchases of SGL Carbon’s product valid for 30 months following the plan’s confirmation. The proposed plan also bars any claimant from bringing an action against SGL Carbon’s affiliates, including its parent SGL AG, “based on, relating to, arising out of, or in any way connected with” their claims against SGL Carbon.

The next day, on December 17, in a press release, SGL Carbon explained it had filed for bankruptcy “to protect itself against excessive demands made by plaintiffs in civil antitrust litigation and in order to achieve an expeditious resolution of the claims against it.” The press release also stated:

SGL CARBON Corporation believes that in its case Chapter 11 protection provides the most effective and efficient means for resolving the civil antitrust claims....
“SGL CARBON Corporation is financially healthy,” said Wayne T. Burgess, SGL CARBON Corporation’s president. “If we did not face [antitrust] claims for such excessive amounts, we would not have had to file for Chapter 11. We expect to continue our normal business operations.”
However, because certain plaintiffs continue to make excessive and unreasonable demands, SGL CARBON Corporation believes the prospects of ever reaching a commercially practicable settlement with them are remote. After much consideration, SGL CARBON Corporation determined that the most appropriate course of action to address *158 the situation without harming its business was to voluntarily file for chapter 11 protection.

Contemporaneous with the press release, SGL AG Chairman Robert Koehler conducted a telephone conference call with securities analysts, stating that SGL Carbon was “financially healthier” than before and denying the antitrust litigation was “starting to have a material impact on [SGL Carbon’s] ongoing operations in the sense that ... [it was] starting to lose market share.” He also stated that SGL Carbon’s Chapter 11 petition was “fairly innovative [and] creative” because “usually Chapter 11 is used as protection against serious insolvency or credit problems, which is not the case [with SGL Carbon’s petition].”

Two weeks after SGL Carbon filed its petition and issued the press release, the United States Trustee formed a nine member Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors. Eight of the committee members are antitrust plaintiffs; two of the eight serve as class representatives and the other six have opted out of the class. 5 In January 1999, the Committee filed a motion to dismiss SGL Carbon’s bankruptcy petition on the grounds that it was a “litigation tactic designed to frustrate the prosecution of the civil antitrust claims pending against [SGL Carbon] and preserve [SGL Carbon’s] equity from these claims.” In re SGL Carbon Corp., 233 B.R. 285, 287 (D.Del.1999).

The District Court held a hearing on the motion on February 17, 1999. 6 Neither side presented witnesses. The evidence was entirely documentary or deposition testimony, including the deposition of SGL Carbon’s Vice President Theodore Breyer, who directs the company’s graphite electrode business in the United States. In his deposition, Breyer testified that SGL Carbon was financially healthy, having no overdue debts when it filed its Chapter 11 petition. Breyer stated that he recommended filing for bankruptcy because he believed SGL Carbon “could not expeditiously settle with the [antitrust] plaintiffs” absent Chapter 11 protection. Acknowledging that bankruptcy protection was the “sole reason” SGL AG’s Executive Committee had authorized the Chapter 11 petition, Breyer testified that he believed filing for Chapter 11 would “change the negotiating platform” with plaintiffs and “increase the pressure on ... plaintiffs to settle.”

The District Court denied the Committee’s motion to dismiss on April 23, 1999 assuming, without deciding, that 11 U.S.C. § 1112(b) imposes a duty of good faith upon bankruptcy petitioners.

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Bluebook (online)
200 F.3d 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-sgl-carbon-corp-official-comm-of-unsec-cred-v-nucor-corp-ca3-1999.