In Re Sonicblue Inc.

422 B.R. 204, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 4190, 2009 WL 5197856
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. California
DecidedDecember 29, 2009
Docket19-30113
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 422 B.R. 204 (In Re Sonicblue Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Sonicblue Inc., 422 B.R. 204, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 4190, 2009 WL 5197856 (Cal. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER ON SB CLAIMS HOLDER, LLC’S ADMINISTRATIVE CLAIM FOR SUBSTANTIAL CONTRIBUTION AND MOTION FOR ALLOWANCE THEREOF

MARILYN MORGAN, Bankruptcy Judge.

Introduction

The reorganization of SONICblue, Inc. has been tragically marred by the misdeeds of professionals. Debtor’s counsel settled claims against it for nearly $10 million. Committee counsel settled claims against it for nearly $5 million. Debtor’s special counsel resolved claims against it by waiving approximately $750,000 in fees. Three senior noteholders relinquished at least $9 million in distributions as a result of their counsel’s actions. The chief whis-tleblower and protagonist was SB Claims Holder, LLC and its predecessor, a claims trader, which has previously received $683,240.62 in awards for substantial contribution. SB Claims Holder now seeks an additional $300,000 for its contributions in the case, which the court awards as well earned. This opinion tells the story.

Factual Baokground

The SONICblue story is not terribly complex and has only a handful of key players, but some background is required. SONICblue designed and marketed consumer electronic products. It filed a liquidating chapter 11 bankruptcy case on March 21, 2003. The debtor retained its longtime counsel Pillsbury, Winthrop, Shaw, Pittman, LLP as general bankruptcy counsel.

*206 The Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors retained Levene, Neale, Bender, Rankin & Brill LLP as committee counsel. The committee membership included three institutional bondholders, Portside Growth & Opportunity Fund Ltd., Smithfield Fiduciary LLC, and Citadel Equity Fund Ltd. (collectively the “2002 Noteholders”), who held $75 million in senior secured subordinated convertible debentures (“Senior Notes”) that SONICblue issued a year prior to its bankruptcy. The 2002 Noteholders rapidly became the majority voice of the committee and, from the beginning, had separate counsel, Bruce Bennett of Hennigan, Bennett & Dorman.

Soon after filing, SONICblue auctioned off substantially all of its assets. However, a major hurdle to the proposal of a plan was an ongoing dispute between SONIC-blue and two other companies, VIA Technologies, Inc. and S3 Graphics Co., Ltd. Prior to bankruptcy, SONICblue and VIA had entered into a joint venture forming S3 Graphics to operate SONICblue’s graphics chip business. SONICblue contributed critical graphics intellectual property rights that it held under a 1998 patent cross-license with Intel Corporation. A liquidated damages clause in the agreement entitled S3 Graphics and VIA each to liquidated damages of up to $70 million from SONICblue if S3 Graphics ever lost use of the Intel cross-license.

Following S3 Graphics’ formation, a dispute arose between SONICblue and VIA regarding various accounting discrepancies and post-closing adjustments (the “books and records dispute”), and it remained unresolved on the petition date. Then, in June 2003, Intel Corporation sought relief from the automatic stay to terminate its patent cross-license with SONICblue. VIA and S3 Graphics filed duplicate proofs of claim, seeking $35 million for the books and records dispute and another $70 million in liquidated damages.

In light of the size of VIA’s and S3 Graphic’s claims, SONICblue deferred proposing a plan to explore resolution of the claims and Intel’s related attempts to terminate the patent cross-license. 2 Pillsbury retained primary responsibility for the VIA matter, but due to a conflict of interest, it arranged for O’Melveny & Myers LLP to serve as special litigation counsel on all Intel related matters. Suz-zanne Uhland, an O’Melveny partner, assumed the lead with respect to Intel and later took on a prominent role in settling the VIA dispute.

VIA Settlement and Non-Disclosure of Special Interests

For the next three years, Pillsbury and O’Melveny put considerable effort into resolving the VIA and Intel matters. Bruce Bennett, representing the 2002 Notehold-ers, also became intimately involved even though his clients were not parties to either the VIA or the Intel dispute. Bennett used his clients’ controlling position on the creditors’ committee to gain access to high level strategic discussions regarding both disputes. He was a regular on the call list for conferences and, at times, participated as the sole creditor representative in key negotiations. While Bennett later testified that he never represented the 2002 Noteholders in their capacity as members of the committee, his extraordinarily high level of involvement created the opposite perception — that he was acting as a special envoy for the committee— and he did not dispel that belief.

Years later, the reason for Bennett’s acute interest in the VIA litigation became apparent. Only in hindsight and through discovery was his agenda in the negotiations revealed. A contractual provision in the Senior Notes indenture subordinated payment of the Senior Notes to certain *207 “Senior Indebtedness,” which was broadly defined to include:

All indebtedness of [SONICblue] due and owing to Via Technologies, Inc. in an aggregate principal amount not to exceed $15,000,000.

In light of this provision, there was a very real risk that the 2002 Noteholders’ claims might be junior to any claim of VIA. Bennett’s concern was validated within the first month of SONICblue’s bankruptcy when he received a copy of a liquidation analysis prepared by SONICblue’s financial advisors, Houlihan Lokey Howard Zu-Mn Capital. The analysis reflected that any claim by VIA against the estate had a $15 million senior component with priority in right of payment over the 2002 Note-holders’ claims.

Suzzanne Uhland also was aware of Houlihan Lokey’s analysis and had participated in several discussions where the senior component to VIA’s claim was acknowledged. Although she was special counsel only as to Intel matters, Uhland thought the provision was unusual and decided to ask SONICblue’s former general counsel about the origin of VIA’s seniority rights. In June 2004, Uhland met with general counsel as well as a Pillsbury litigation partner and Bennett to prepare for initial settlement discussions with VIA and Intel. At the preparation session, Uhland asked if general counsel had any understanding as to why the Senior Notes indenture would provide up to $15 million of VIA indebtedness with priority over the Senior Notes. General counsel casually responded that around the time of the indenture negotiations, SONICblue and VIA had been involved in settlement discussions concerning the books and records dispute and, at one time, those discussions included a possible $15 million working capital loan from VIA to SONICblue that had never been consummated. Although he did not say so explicitly, Uhland interpreted general counsel’s comments to mean that any senior component to VIA’s claim likely was limited to the $15 million loan that never materialized. Bennett was present for the explanation but did not comment.

More than a year later, in August 2005, settlement discussions regarding the VIA dispute were taken up in earnest. By this time, SONICblue had formally objected to the VIA and S3 Graphics claims and had filed an adversary complaint against both companies asserting breaches of the joint venture agreement.

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Related

Genesis Global Holdco, LLC
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Skyline Ridge, LLC
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Via Technologies, Inc. v. Sonicblue Claims, LLC
782 F. Supp. 2d 843 (N.D. California, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
422 B.R. 204, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 4190, 2009 WL 5197856, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-sonicblue-inc-canb-2009.