Mission Product Holdings, Inc. v. Old Cold, LLC

879 F.3d 376
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJanuary 12, 2018
Docket16-9012P
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 879 F.3d 376 (Mission Product Holdings, Inc. v. Old Cold, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mission Product Holdings, Inc. v. Old Cold, LLC, 879 F.3d 376 (1st Cir. 2018).

Opinion

KAYATTA, Circuit Judge.

Chapter 11 debtor Tempnology, LLC (“Debtor”) auctioned off its assets pursuant to section 363 of the Bankruptcy Code. Schleicher and Stebbins Hotels LLC (“S & S”) was declared the winning bidder over Mission Product Holdings, Inc. (“Mission”). With the bankruptcy court’s approval, Debtor and S & S completed the sale. On appeal, Mission now asks that we order the bankruptcy court to unwind the sale and treat Mission as the winning bidder. Because the sale to S & S was completed and S & S.is a good faith purchaser entitled to protection under section 363(m), we affirm without reaching the merits of Mission’s various challenges to the sale. Our explanation follows.

I.

Debtor made specialized products—such as towels, socks, headbands, and other accessories—designed to remain at low temperatures even when used during exercise. It marketed these products under the “Coolcore” and “Dr. Cool” brands. S & S is an investment holding company with its primary interest in hotels. Prior to Debt- or’s bankruptcy, S & S owned a majority interest in Debtor. Until just under two months before Debtor commenced this Chapter 11 proceeding, Mark Schleicher and Mark Stebbins—S & S’s two principals—sat on Debtor’s management committee.

Almost three years before petitioning for bankruptcy, Debtor executed a Co-Marketing and Distribution Agreement with Mission. This Agreement granted Mission a nonexclusive, perpetual license to Debtor’s intellectual property and an exclusive distributorship for certain of Debtor’s manufactured products. The Agreement forbade Debtor from selling the covered products in Mission’s exclusive territory, which included the United States.

When the relationship between Mission and Debtor soured, Mission exercised its contractual right to terminate the Agreement without cause on June 30, 2014. This election triggered a two-year ‘Wind-Down Period” through July 1, 2016, during which Mission’s rights remained in effect. Debtor responded by seeking to terminate the Agreement for cause, claiming as a breach Mission’s hiring of Debtor’s former president. Unlike Mission’s election, Debtor’s termination for cause, if effective, would have terminated the Agreement without a Wind-Down Period. The dispute went before an arbitrator, who found that Debtor’s attempted termination for cause was improper, potentially entitling Mission to damages for Debtor’s failure to abide by the Agreement leading up to arbitration. The hearing to determine the amount of these damages has been stayed pending the resolution of Debtor’s bankruptcy petition.

As the parties’ relationship deteriorated, so too did Debtor’s financial results. Debt- or posted multi-million dollar losses in 2013, 2014, and 2015, for which it blames the Agreement with Mission. To combat its liquidity problems, Debtor took on increased debt. S & S, which had already made substantial loans to Debtor, loaned additional money, and Debtor obtained a secured line of credit with People’s United Bank for approximately $350,000. In 2014, after deciding that it would only continue lending to Debtor on a secured basis, S & S acquired People’s United Bank’s line of credit. S & S increased the secured loan limit, first to $4 million, and later to $5.5 million. This tactic allowed S & S to gradually convert its unsecured debt into secured debt.

Debtor failed to improve financially. On July 13, 2015, Debtor’s management committee and Stebbins met to discuss Debt- or’s outstanding debt. At this meeting, S & S and Debtor agreed to the outline of a forbearance agreement, which was memorialized and signed four days later. The forbearance agreement provided for an additional $1.4 million in funding for Debtor on the condition that it file for bankruptcy and sell substantially all of its assets in a section 363 sale. See 11 U.S.C. § 363(b).

Stebbins and Schleicher both stepped down from Debtor’s management committee following the July 13 meeting. Thereafter, neither had contact with Debtor’s management regarding Debtor’s operation or subsequent bankruptcy.

Debtor then engaged Phoenix Capital Resources, a crisis management, investment banking, and financial services firm, to explore its options. Phoenix concluded that Debtor’s best route was to be put up for sale. It then solicited approximately five companies to serve as the stalking horse bidder for Debtor’s assets. In the context of a bankruptcy sale, a stalking horse bidder is an initial bidder whose due diligence and research serve to encourage future bidders, and whose bid sets a floor for subsequent bidding. See ASARCO, Inc. v. Elliott Mgmt. (In re ASARCO, L.L.C.), 650 F.3d 593, 602 n.9 (5th Cir. 2011). None of the firms solicited by Phoenix were interested in taking on the expense of this role. In August of 2015, Phoenix approached S & S, which agreed to be the stalking horse bidder.

On September 1, 2015, Debtor filed a petition for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. On the same day, S & S formally became the stalking horse bidder by signing an agreement to purchase Debtor’s assets for $6.95 million, composed almost entirely of forgiven pre-petition debt owed by Debtor to S & S. This strategy of offsetting a purchase price with the value of a secured lien is called credit bidding, and it is permitted in a section 363 sale “unless the court for cause orders otherwise.” 11 U.S.C. § 363(k). A provision in the Agreement also left Debtor able to back out in favor of a superior bid at the auction.

The next day, Debtor moved for approval of its proposed asset sale procedures. It also moved to reject a number of its execu-tory contracts, including the Mission Agreement. The bankruptcy court ultimately granted that motion, and Mission’s challenge to that order is the subject of our separate opinion issued this date in appeal No. 16-9016.

Because the stalking horse bidder—S & S—was an insider of Debtor, both the United States Trustee and Mission sought the appointment of an independent examiner to evaluate the proposed sale and bidding procedures. Although Debtor initially resisted, it ultimately concurred in the recommendation. The court agreed, and appointed an examiner.

On October 8, the bankruptcy court held a hearing on the sale motion. In light of a concern raised in the examiner’s interim report and echoed by the court about S & S’s pre-petition credit bid, S &-S agreed at the hearing to change the composition of its stalking horse bid and to lower its value from approximately $7 million to just over $1 million. Its revised bid consisted of $750,000 in post-petition debt and the assumption of about $300,000 in pre-petition liabilities. As the bankruptcy court concluded, this agreement was a .concession intended to defer to a later day a possible fight over S & S’s credit-bidding rights.

The bankruptcy court approved the sale procedures on October 8, after which Phoenix sent 164 emails to companies that Phoenix determined might be interested in bidding for Debtor’s assets.

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Bluebook (online)
879 F.3d 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mission-product-holdings-inc-v-old-cold-llc-ca1-2018.