Maxwell Communication Corp. v. National Westminster Bank Plc (In Re Maxwell Communication Corp.)

170 B.R. 800, 1994 WL 416458
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedAugust 10, 1994
Docket18-37066
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 170 B.R. 800 (Maxwell Communication Corp. v. National Westminster Bank Plc (In Re Maxwell Communication Corp.)) 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
Maxwell Communication Corp. v. National Westminster Bank Plc (In Re Maxwell Communication Corp.), 170 B.R. 800, 1994 WL 416458 (N.Y. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION ON MOTIONS TO DISMISS

TINA L. BROZMAN, Bankruptcy Judge.

When filed, the insolvency case of Maxwell Communications Corporation pic (MCC) was unique, MCC, an English corporation, having filed a chapter 11 petition in this court followed immediately by a petition for administration in the High Court of Justice in London. What was so unusual about this is that both cases were and remained, through each court’s approval of a joint plan of reorganization and scheme of arrangement, primary proceedings under the laws of the respective nations. Not a lot of imagination is needed to predict that under such circumstances choice-of-law questions might arise. And, indeed, in a very limited sense they have.

MCC, prior to its bankruptcy, made some large transfers in England to three banks, two English 1 and one French 2 , which MCC, through the joint administrators appointed by the High Court, now seeks to recover as preferential under U.S. law. The banks, which do not challenge my subject matter jurisdiction over the chapter 11 case or my personal jurisdiction over them, nonetheless urge me to dismiss the preference actions under a variety of theories all of which are grounded in the notion that these transfers ought be governed by U.K. law and adjudicated in the parallel English proceedings. If successful in their quest for dismissal the banks may be very successful, for it is likely that under the English analogue to our preference law, the transfers would not be avoidable. The English administrators, openly desirous of substantially augmenting MCC’s estate, contend that I must apply U.S. law. There is a certain irony in this; so well have the two cases been meshed that the administrators urge that I not defer to the court which appointed them.

I.

The salient facts are uncontroverted. 3 MCC is an English holding company which was controlled by Ian Robert Maxwell from 1981 until his untimely death in November, 1991. 4 MCC’s crown jewels were its 100% *802 ownership, directly or indirectly, of two American entities, the well-known publishing company Macmillan, Inc. (Macmillan) and Official Airlines Guide, Inc. (OAG), which together constituted approximately 80% of MCC’s total asset pool. MCC had acquired Macmillan in 1988 for roughly $2.6 billion and OAG that same year for approximately $750 million. Although the most valuable of MCC’s subsidiaries were found in the United States, most of MCC’s debt was incurred in England.

A. Background

On December 16, 1991, shortly after Maxwell died and his financial empire began crumbling, MCC filed its chapter 11 petition. MCC having substantial asset holdings in this country, no one disputed my jurisdiction to entertain its petition. The following day, both to protect against dismemberment by English creditors of its assets held outside the United States and because directors of an insolvent English corporation may be ha-ble for trading while insolvent, MCC presented a petition to the High Court of Justice for an administration order under the Insolvency Act 1986. On December 20, 1991, Mr. Justice Leonard Hoffmann appointed Andrew Mark Homan, Colin Graham Bird and Jonathan Guy Anthony Phillips as joint administrators in the English proceeding. Rice Aff. Exh. D. 5 On that same day, I appointed Richard Gitlin, Esq., as examiner in the U.S. proceeding. Id. Exh. E. The examiner’s mandate was to harmonize the two proceedings so as to permit a reorganization under U.S. law which would maximize the return to creditors.

The joint administrators in England and the examiner in New York, subject to the jurisdiction of both courts, have carried out the administration of MCC in unprecedented cooperation with each other. To aid that endeavor, Mr. Justice Hoffmann and I entered orders authorizing the joint administrators and the examiner to coordinate their efforts. They have done so in accordance with a document called the “Protocol.” Rice Aff. Exh. F. My January 15, 1992, order approving that Protocol recognized the joint administrators as the corporate governance of MCC. Id. In similar fashion, Mr. Justice Hoffmann granted standing to the examiner to be heard in his court. The order expressed not to affect the jurisdiction of the High Court in England or of this court under our respective laws or to preclude any party from seeking an expansion or reduction of the examiner’s powers. Id. Nor did it place any limits on the exercise of avoidance powers under the Bankruptcy Code or the Insolvency Act 1986.

In February, 1993, building on what the Protocol had created, the joint administrators, with the concurrence of the examiner, filed their plan of reorganization (plan) and scheme of arrangement (scheme). Although separate plan and scheme documents exist, the plan and scheme are mutually dependent and, in their effect, constitute a single mechanism, consistent with the laws of both countries, for reorganizing MCC through the sale of assets as going concerns and for distributing assets to creditors. The disclosure statement accompanying MCC’s plan provided creditors around the world with a summary of the plan and an explanation of the potential for recoveries to creditors from asset dispositions and causes of action, including preferences under U.S. law. Rather than carving up the assets for distribution by the two courts to different groups of creditors, the plan and scheme set up a single “pot” for distribution to all creditors. In keeping with the single distribution mechanism, creditors were permitted to submit a claim in either jurisdiction which would suffice for participation under both the plan and scheme.

This was all explained to creditors in MCC’s disclosure statement, which provided in pertinent part that

A creditor who has a right to claim in the [U.S.] Chapter 11 case, or who would have a right to claim if MCC were liquidated under U.K. law ... can claim under the Plan and Scheme by a single filing in either jurisdiction. The Plan and Scheme permit the forum for resolution of disputed *803 claims against MCC to be determined on a case by ease basis. While in many cases the choice of forum for determining a disputed claim should not affect the application of substantive legal principles to a disputed claim for purposes of the Plan and the Scheme, creditors are urged to seek their own advice regarding the differences, if any, between alternative forums affecting the allowance of any particular disputed claim.
The Plan and Scheme provide for a “bar order” equivalent to that normally obtained in US proceedings but also provide for the allowance of late Notices of Claim to the extent that the Administrators or the English Court determine that the creditor’s failure to file a Notice of Claim on or before the Claims Date did not result from wilful default or lack of reasonable diligence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 B.R. 800, 1994 WL 416458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maxwell-communication-corp-v-national-westminster-bank-plc-in-re-maxwell-nysb-1994.