In Re St. Mary Hospital

155 B.R. 345, 1993 Bankr. LEXIS 860, 1993 WL 213295
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 16, 1993
Docket19-11267
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 155 B.R. 345 (In Re St. Mary Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re St. Mary Hospital, 155 B.R. 345, 1993 Bankr. LEXIS 860, 1993 WL 213295 (Pa. 1993).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Bankruptcy Judge.

A. INTRODUCTION

The instant dispute presents a question of the proper interpretation of certain terms of the Third Amended Joint Chapter 11 Plan, confirmed on March 14, 1990 (“the Plan”), in the case of ST. MARY HOSPITAL (“the Debtor”), the proponents of which were the Debtor; ROGER B. HISER (“the Trustee”); the Committee of Unsecured Creditors (“the Committee); and Franciscan Health System (“FHS”), the Debtor’s parent organization. 1 In material terms, the dispute is a contest over who gets certain unanticipated excess funds now projected to remain upon distribution to creditors in this case. The Trustee has proposed — and FHS supports — that the projected excess funds of about $770,000 be returned to FHS for distribution to an FHS affiliate, while the Committee, joined by the United States of America (“the USA”), contends that the excess funds belong to an elective class of unsecured creditors whose members include the USA.

On behalf of itself and the Trustee, FHS contends that the unexpected turn of events which resulted in the surplus render the Plan ambiguous, and that extrinsic evidence may be considered .in determining the parties’ true intentions regarding the distribution. The Committee, speaking for itself and the USA, first argues that the Plan is unambiguous and that its language unequivocally supports the Committee's interpretation. In the alternative, the Committee argues that any ambiguity should be resolved in its favor.

Although this court agreed, at the May 19, 1993, hearing on the Objections to the Trustee’s proposed distribution, that the critical terms of the Plan were sufficiently ambiguous to allow the admission of extrinsic evidence to aid in its proper interpretation, the only extrinsic evidence thereupon presented by FHS was a Stipulation of Facts which was inconclusive as to the parties’ intentions on the issue in dispute. That evidence supported only the conclusion that the parties did not consider the disposition of unanticipated excess funds in drafting the Plan. Such inconclusive evidence is insufficient, in our weighing of the competing arguments and interests, to allow us to read the Plan other than literally. Therefore, although we find certain equities in favor of FHS’ position, particularly in light of FHS’ generous financial contributions to the Plan and its desire that the excess funds be distributed to the benefit of a most worthy cause, we are compelled to accept the Committee’s interpretation of the Plan. Therefore, we will sustain the Committee’s Objections and will direct the Trustee to prepare a new Order of Distribution consistent with the Objections.

B. HISTORY OF THE INSTANT DISPUTE

On March 11, 1993, pursuant to our Order of February 11, 1993, the Trustee filed *347 his proposed Third and Final Order of Distribution (“the Order”). The Order was calculated on the principle that all creditors, even those who had opted to release FHS from any liability in its attempted closure of the Debtor hospital in exchange for FHS’ contribution of $800,000 to fund the Plan, would not receive more than one hundred (100%) percent of their claims. These calculations resulted in a surplus which the Order proposed to remit to the St. Agnes Medical Center (“St. Agnes”), an FHS affiliate hospital.

The Committee objected to the Order on the ground that its calculation failed to give the creditors who had opted to release FHS in consideration for a supplemental payment the benefit of their bargain. Specifically, the Committee pointed to the following provisions in Section Three of the Plan as directing a distribution contrary to that proposed by the Trustee:

Class IV: Class IV consists of all holders of Unsecured Claims. Creditors in Class IV will receive distribution in Class IV, unless waived. Class IV Creditors will receive a distribution in Class IV whether or not such Creditors elect to participate in Class IV(A). The receipt of distribution by a Class IV Claimant under Class TV(A) shall not reduce its (or his or her) Claim in Class TV (emphasis added).
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Class IV(A): Class IV(A) is a class consisting of all class IV Creditors who or which elect to participate in Class IV(A). Only those Creditors who affirmatively elect to participate in Class IV(A) shall be entitled to receive distribution in Class IV(A) and distribution shall be contingent upon the satisfaction of the conditions precedent [which were deemed satisfied] (emphasis is in original).
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FHS and Affiliates will pay $800,000 to fund Class IV(A). In consideration for funding Class IV(A), FHS and Affiliates require that Creditors who elect to participate in Class IV(A) release FHS and Affiliates as set forth in Section Six herein. A Creditor’s election to participate in Class IV(A) shall constitute its release of FHS and Affiliates, which shall become effective on the Effective Date.
On the Effective Date, or as soon thereafter as a Class IV Claim is determined to be an Allowed Class IV Claim by a Final Order, each holder of an Allowed Class IV Claim who elects to participate in Class IV(A) shall be paid, in cash, its (or his or her) pro rata share of such Claim from the $800,000 fund, unless the holder of such Claim agrees to a different treatment. If a Class IV Creditor elects to participate in Class IV(A), such Creditor shall be entitled to distribution under both Class IV and Class IV(A). The receipt of distribution by a Class IV(A) Claimant under Class IV shall not reduce its (or his or her) Claim in Class IV(A) ... (emphasis added).

The Committee’s basic argument is that, since there is no qualification limiting this Plan language to an instance where there is a shortfall in funds available to distribute to Class IV and Class IV(A) members, its literal terms must be enforced, requiring that the distributions made to Class IV(A) members do not effect the distributions made to the Class IV members generally, even in an instance where an admittedly unexpected availability of a surplus of funds exists, and this will result in Class IV(A) members receiving more than one hundred (100%) percent of their claims.

FHS responds to this straightforward argument by arguing that the distribution contemplated by the Committee which would result in a distribution of greater than one hundred (100%) percent to Class IV(A) members constitutes a result which the extrinsic evidence establishes that no parties had contemplated at the time of confirmation. In support of the latter assertion, FHS points to language in the Disclosure Statement accompanying the Plan, echoed in the Stipulation of Facts, that a thirty-one (31%) percent distribution was projected for Class IV creditors and a fifty-seven and eight-tenths (57.8%) percent distribution was projected for Class IV(A) *348 creditors.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 B.R. 345, 1993 Bankr. LEXIS 860, 1993 WL 213295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-st-mary-hospital-paeb-1993.