Kent's Run Partnership, Ltd. v. Glosser

323 B.R. 408, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10203, 2005 WL 954891
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 31, 2005
DocketCiv.A. No. 03-1760, Bankruptcy No. 97-23098-JLC
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 323 B.R. 408 (Kent's Run Partnership, Ltd. v. Glosser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kent's Run Partnership, Ltd. v. Glosser, 323 B.R. 408, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10203, 2005 WL 954891 (W.D. Pa. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

CERCONE, District Judge.

The central issue in this appeal is whether the bankruptcy court erred by denying the trustee’s and co-movant’s motion to assume and assign an executory contract under 11 U.S.C. § 365(a). The bankruptcy court determined that 11 U.S.C. § 365(a) did not permit the contract’s assumption and assignment because (1) at the time the bankruptcy petition was filed, the contract was no longer executory and (2) even if the contract were executory, the assignment of the debtor’s personal easement to the co-movant/appellant would constitute an impermissible expansion of the limited property interest granted in the contract and related deed. After careful consideration of the arguments presented and the au *412 thority bearing on the matters raised, the court concludes that the motion to assume and assign the contract properly was denied. Accordingly, the bankruptcy court’s order of October 10, 2003, will be affirmed.

Procedural History

On May 5, 1997, an involuntary bankruptcy petition was filed against Midwest Portland Cement Company (“Midwest”). During the course of proceedings, the trustee, Kents Run Partnership Ltd. (“Kents Run”), ES Cement Corporation, and ESS-ROC Cement Corporation entered into a settlement agreement. See Bkcy. Ct. Doc. No. 157.

Paragraph 23 of the settlement agreement obligated the trustee to institute and prosecute with reasonable diligence a proceeding pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 365(a) and Bankruptcy Rule 6006(a) authorizing the trustee to assume and assign an executory contract. The trustee sought to assume and assign a 1993 contract between Midwest and Maysville Regional Water District (“Maysville”) regarding the purchase and sale of real property and the creation of certain easements. The settlement agreement was not contingent upon the success of the trustee’s motion. The bankruptcy court approved the settlement agreement, and the trustee, together with Kents Run, filed a “Motion to Assume and Assign Executory Contract” (“the motion”). 1

After a hearing, the bankruptcy court denied the motion in a Memorandum Opinion and Order dated October 10, 2003 (“Memorandum Opinion”). The trustee and Kents Run now appeal that ruling.

Factual history

The historical facts underlying the motion are uncontested. All of the properties involved are located in Muskingum County, Ohio.

Maysville is a municipal regional water district formed pursuant to Chapter 6119 of the Ohio Revised Code in order to supply water in a defined unincorporated area of Muskingum County. One source of Maysville’s water is an impoundment of water known as Frazier Quarry. Maysville has held title to Frazier Quarry since 1971.

Midwest owned the land surrounding Frazier Quarry (the “Frazier Quarry Surrounding Property”) and land located several miles south of Frazier Quarry which consisted of Lake Isabella and the property surrounding the lake (the “Lake Isabella Property”). Midwest also owned property adjacent to the Frazier Quarry Surrounding Property and Lake Isabella Property (“Midwest Adjacent Property”). Additionally, Midwest held the right to mine limestone under property owned by Kents Run immediately north of the Frazier Quarry Surrounding Property (the “Kents Run Property”). 2

Lake Isabella was a potential source of water for Maysville. In a letter to Midwest dated January 27, 1993, Maysville inquired about purchasing the Frazier Quarry Surrounding Property and the Lake Isabella Property. In the negotiations that followed, both parties expressed the desire that certain easements be included in any sales agreement. Midwest insisted that it receive a fifty-foot wide easement across the Frazier Quarry Surrounding Property and a narrow portion of the Frazier Quarry in order to construct *413 and maintain both a belt conveyor system to transport stone mined from the Kents Run Property and a terminal/storage facility on the Frazier Quarry Surrounding Property for the stone (the “Midwest Belt/Storage Facility Easement”). Mays-ville sought several waterline and access easements from Midwest that would burden the Midwest Adjacent Property, which was not being sold to Maysville in the real estate transaction (the “Maysville Waterlines/Access Easements”). 3

Negotiations culminated in a contract dated March 15, 1993 (“the contract”). In the contract Midwest agreed to sell, and Maysville agreed to purchase, the Frazier Quarry Surrounding Property and the Lake Isabella Property. The contract also provided for the creation of “appropriate easements as agreed in the purchase descriptions attached.” The described easements were the Midwest Belt/Storage Facility Easement and the Maysville Waterlines/Access Easements.

Midwest signed a deed conveying to Maysville the Frazier Quarry Surrounding Property and the Lake Isabella Property (“the deed”) on December 22, 1993. The deed, which was subsequently recorded, included specific provisions describing the easements reserved by and/or granted to Midwest and Maysville. 4 The deed was not signed by Maysville, even though it had agreed to burden the Frazier Quarry with the Midwest Belt/Storage Facility Easement.

The deed described the Midwest Belt/Storage Facility Easement as follows:

Reserving to [Midwest] a non-assignable easement to be held only by [Midwest] for the purpose of the construction and maintenance of a beltline and terminal area for a 50 foot (wide) easement across the Frazier Quarry property (providing for a stone “belt” conveyor) from the north to the south (bridging the quarry at a narrow point in the southern part of the quarry) and termination into a Storage Facility in the area of Well # 17. Stone may be transferred from this point by truck through a cut (to be made) in the spoil bank and on to Old Town Road. This easement to be more particularly described after construction of said terminal and beltline.

1993 Deed, reproduced as Exhibit E to the Motion to Assume and Assign Executory Contract (Bkcy.Ct.Doc. No. 194) (emphasis added).

The Maysville Waterlines/Access Easements were described in five separate sections of the deed. Each section began with “[a]lso granting to [Maysville] an easement for the purpose of...” and ended with:

This easement which is located on adjoining property of [Midwest] shall be binding upon and inure to the benefit of the parties hereto, their heirs, administrators, successors, and assigns, and shall be part of and run with the above described property. Any conveyance of [Midwest]’s adjoining property shall be made subject to this easement.

Id. The deed also stated the Maysville Waterlines/Access Easements were “to be more particularly described after construction of a waterline.”

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Related

In Re Abitibibowater Inc.
418 B.R. 815 (D. Delaware, 2009)
Glosser v. Maysville Regional Water District
174 F. App'x 34 (Third Circuit, 2006)
Ephrata Area School District v. County of Lancaster
886 A.2d 1169 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2005)

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Bluebook (online)
323 B.R. 408, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10203, 2005 WL 954891, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kents-run-partnership-ltd-v-glosser-pawd-2005.