In Re Sletteland

260 B.R. 657, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 347, 2001 WL 357263
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 28, 2001
Docket13-37607
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 260 B.R. 657 (In Re Sletteland) 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 Sletteland, 260 B.R. 657, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 347, 2001 WL 357263 (N.Y. 2001).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION AND ORDER

ALLAN L. GROPPER, Bankruptcy Judge.

The individual debtor and debtor in possession in this Chapter 11 case, James Philip Sletteland (the “Debtor”), is engaged in the business of developing and investing in electrical power generating plants and providing consulting services to the energy and waste management industries. In a wholly unsuccessful foray into the legal arena, he brought a derivative action on behalf of an energy company in which he is a 20 percent owner against two of his fellow investors and shareholders and ended up owing them and a third shareholder more than $3,000,000 on their counterclaims. As a direct consequence he also ended up as Debtor in this Chapter 11 case.

Before the Court is the motion of the counterclaim plaintiffs, Owen Orndorff, R. Lee Roberts and Jeffrey L. Smith (the “Shareholder Group”), to dismiss this Chapter 11 case on the ground that it was filed in bad faith. In the alternative, the Group seeks to appoint an examiner with expanded powers and to terminate the period during which the Debtor has the exclusive right to file a plan. That period has been extended four times; the last extension was granted with leave to the Group to seek to terminate exclusivity for cause.

Determination of the motion requires a more detailed explanation of the background facts.

The Debtor’s Business Interests

The Debtor and the Shareholder Group have ownership interests in two entities, Billings Generation, Inc. (“BGI”) and Rosebud Energy Corp. (“Rosebud”). The Debtor holds interests in BGI and Rosebud of 20% and 25%, respectively, compared to the Shareholder Group’s 80% and 75% interests. In turn BGI and Rosebud are general partners owning, as to BGI, a 35% interest in Yellowstone Energy Limited Partnership (‘YELP”), and as to Rosebud, a 50% interest in Colstrip Energy Limited Partnership (“CELP”). YELP and CELP are electrical cogeneration power plants in Montana, one of which is currently generating revenues and one of which is not. The members of the Shareholder Group are the officers of BGI and Rosebud, having removed the Debtor as an officer; he remains a minority shareholder and a director of each entity.

The Montana Litigation

The chain of events leading to the present motion began when the Debtor and the then remaining minority shareholder in BGI, Ronald D. Blendu, brought a shareholder derivative action on behalf of BGI against Messrs. Roberts and Orndorff and BGI (as a nominal defendant). At *660 issue in the action were legal fees charged by Orndorff and Roberts to YELP. It was alleged that the payments to Orndorff and Roberts had not been approved by BGI or by shareholder or director action, that the legal fees were excessive and that the charge of fees created a conflict of interest and constituted self-dealing. The complaint sought a return of legal fees and removal of Orndorff and Roberts from the board of directors of BGI.

A counterclaim was filed by the defendants, joined by Jeffrey Smith, the third member of the Shareholder Group, alleging that the Debtor had breached his fiduciary duty to the corporation by filing the derivative suit, as it allegedly had the direct effect of precluding a needed refinancing of the YELP Project. At the time of the filing of the derivative suit YELP and BGI were negotiating with their lender to restructure the financing. It was also alleged that the Debtor had engineered the suit for ulterior purposes to force a buyout of his position.

The Montana District Court determined in an opinion dated March 26, 1997, that there was a conflict of interest which was not properly waived, that the hourly rates charged by Orndorff and Roberts were excessive and that approximately $370,000 in fees should be disgorged. On the counterclaims, however, the court found that Sletteland had breached his fiduciary duty to the shareholders of the corporation by commencing the suit at a time the company was seeking badly needed financing from a third party, that the Debtor had done so either intentionally or negligently, and that he had injured the Shareholder Group in the amount of $3,027,939. 1 There is no dispute that the Debtor was unable to pay or to bond the judgment entered against him and that he filed a Chapter 11 petition in this Court as a direct result thereof.

On November 17, 1999, the Debtor moved for relief from the automatic stay so as to permit him to appeal to the Montana Supreme Court. The members of the Shareholder Group did not object to the Debtor’s appeal but sought relief from the stay to cross appeal from the Montana District Court’s grant of judgment against them on the derivative claim. An order was entered on December 9, 1999, permitting both the appeal and the cross appeal to go forward in the Montana Supreme Court; the order placed no conditions on the appeal that are relevant to these motions. Recently, after the instant motions were briefed but before argument, the Montana Supreme Court decided the appeal, and again the Debtor was unsuccessful. In an opinion dated December 28, 2000, the Supreme Court of Montana affirmed the $3 million judgment against the Debtor but reversed the decision of the District Court with respect to the fees of Orndorff and Roberts, finding that these charges were reasonable and appropriate and directing judgment in their favor on the complaint.

The Shareholder Group’s Motion in the Instant Bankruptcy Proceeding

In support of its motion to dismiss, the Shareholder Group relies principally on the argument that the Debtor filed this case in “bad faith,” specifically as a means to avoid execution on the Montana judgment and the posting of a supersedeas bond in Montana. The members of the Group argue that the Debtor’s principal assets are his interests in BGI and Rose-

*661 bud, that he apparently has little revenue other than his distributions from Rosebud, and that, as a minority shareholder in BGI and Rosebud, he has no control over the entities and will never be able to propose and fund a plan utilizing these assets, making this case a nullity. They point out further that the litigation is generating large administrative expenses which have priority over the claims of unsecured creditors, e.g., their claims, as there are virtually no other unsecured creditors in this “two party” case. They also speculate as to wrongdoing the Debtor might commit during the course of this case as justifying dismissal or the appointment of an examiner with the expanded powers of a trustee.

The Debtor has, other than the Shareholder Group, few if any creditors. His amended schedules show two unsecured holders of credit card debt of only about $5,000, mortgages on one of his two residences totaling $667,637, and a life insurance policy loan of $110,000. Other than the Shareholder Group the only creditor to have appeared on the instant motion is Exxon Billings Cogeneration, Inc. (“EBCI”), the limited partner in YELP. EBCI holds a pledge of the Debtor’s distributions from and shares in Rosebud, which secures the Debtor’s contingent obligations under a guarantee of EBCI’s financing of the YELP plant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
260 B.R. 657, 2001 Bankr. LEXIS 347, 2001 WL 357263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-sletteland-nysb-2001.