National Bank of Arkansas v. Panther Mountain Land Devel.

686 F.3d 916, 2012 WL 3023495
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 25, 2012
Docket11-1900
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 686 F.3d 916 (National Bank of Arkansas v. Panther Mountain Land Devel.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Bank of Arkansas v. Panther Mountain Land Devel., 686 F.3d 916, 2012 WL 3023495 (8th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

MELLOY, Circuit Judge.

Voluntary Chapter 11 Debtor Panther Mountain Land Development, LLC (the Debtor), holds certain parcels of undeveloped land that are included within property-owners’ improvement districts (the Improvement Districts) formed in accordance with Arkansas law. The Debtor formed the Improvement Districts more than one year before filing for bankruptcy. They are separate, pseudo-governmental entities with certain powers including the abilities to sue or be sued, incur expenses for development purposes, and impose priority liens on properties included within the districts.

More than one year after the Debtor entered into bankruptcy, secured creditor National Bank of Arkansas (the Bank) filed a motion with the bankruptcy court seeking a ruling that a proposed state court action against the Improvement Districts would not violate the automatic stay. The Bank alleged the districts were *918 formed without constitutionally required notice that the Bank’s collateral (the land referenced above) would be included within the districts. The Bank’s motion was its fourth motion for relief from the stay, although it was the first motion concerning the Improvement Districts. The Bank filed the motion while a potential sale of a portion of the collateral was pending.

The bankruptcy court determined that the automatic stay applied to the Bank’s proposed action and that relief from the stay was unwarranted. The bankruptcy court, acting sua sponte, also determined that the Bank’s motion was barred by laches and that the Bank’s attorneys had not filed the motion in good faith. The Bank appealed to the Eighth Circuit’s Bankruptcy Appellate Panel (the BAP), which affirmed as to the applicability of the automatic stay. The BAP did not address the issues of laches or bad faith.

The Bank appeals to our court, and we reverse. The automatic stay does not apply to the Bank’s proposed action against the Improvement Districts, which are neither property of the Debtor nor debtors themselves. The Bank’s action against the Improvement Districts will have the potential consequence only of impacting the value of the estate in some undetermined and indirect manner; it is not an action to gain possession of, or exercise control over, estate property. The action will neither divest the Debtor of its property nor is there any evidence suggesting the action is likely to so substantially diminish the property’s value as to effectively divest the Debtor of its property. Further, the equitable doctrine of laches does not apply in this situation because there has been no showing of detrimental reliance by the Debtor upon the Bank’s failure to raise this particular challenge in a more timely fashion.

I.

The Bank holds mortgages on a 125-acre undeveloped parcel of land referred to as Sunset Lake Estates (the Sunset Lake Parcel) and on 17 lots in a development the parties refer to as the Panther Mountain subdivision (the Lots). The Debtor owns this land, and the mortgages secure two notes totaling approximately $1.9 million. As of October 2010, the Debtor owed the Bank approximately $2.1 million.

Throughout the spring of 2008, the Debtor formed the Improvement Districts in accordance with Arkansas law. Arkansas statutes provide for at least two different types of improvement districts: property-owners’ improvement districts and municipal improvement districts. See Ark. Code Ann. §§ 14-93-101 to 133 & LE94101 to 128. The Improvement Districts at issue in the present case are the former, although property-owners’ and municipal improvement districts share several characteristics. We discuss the detailed powers and characteristics of property-owners’ improvement districts in our analysis below. In general, they are separate, quasi-governmental corporate entities that affect the land included within the districts. Id. § 14-93-112. They are formed by county courts in Arkansas and require unanimous petition of the recorded title holders of all land to be included within such districts. Id. § 14-93-105 to 106.

Property owners’ improvement districts are controlled by a board of three commissioners who are named by the county court. Id. § 14-93-107 to 109. The commissioners of the Improvement Districts in the present case are Barry and Dana Kellerman and their daughter. Barry Keller-man and Dana Kellerman own and control the Debtor; the Debtor in the present case is not a commissioner.

*919 In November 2008, the Bank initiated a foreclosure action, and in September 2009, the Debtor filed for bankruptcy. The next day, the Bank filed a first motion for relief from the automatic stay seeking to continue its state-court foreclosure action. The bankruptcy court held hearings regarding the value of the Bank’s collateral, rejected testimony from the Bank’s appraiser, and determined that the Bank enjoyed a sufficient equity cushion to justify denying the Bank’s first motion for relief.

In April 2010, the Bank filed a second motion for relief from the automatic stay and a motion to set the property value for valuation of secured claims. The bankruptcy court held hearings on the second motion on three days during August 2010. On the last day of hearings, the Bank filed a third motion for relief from the automatic stay, asserting a claim that the bankruptcy was a single asset real estate case and seeking relief in accordance with that claim.

On September 9, 2010, before the bankruptcy court had ruled on the second motion for relief and before the court had held hearings on the third motion for relief, the Debtor filed a motion for authority to sell 45 acres of the 125-acre Sunset Lake Parcel to ERC Land Development, LLC (ERC). The planned sale to ERC and the proposed contract documents surrounding that sale required the Debtor to assign rights in the Improvement Districts to ERC. 1

On September 17, 2010, the Bank filed an objection to the motion to sell, and on September 23, the Bank filed its fourth motion for relief from the automatic stay. This fourth motion for relief was the present motion seeking a declaration that the stay would not apply to a proposed state court action against the Improvement Districts. In the proposed state court action, the Bank asserts that, when forming the Improvement Districts, the Debtor did not provide notice to the Bank that the Bank’s collateral would be included in the districts. Although it is now undisputed that Arkansas statutes do not expressly require such notice, the Bank asserts that the Due Process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Section 21, Article 2 of the Arkansas Constitution demand such notice.

On October 22, the bankruptcy court denied the Bank’s second motion for relief from the stay. On October 27, the Debtor filed a First Amended Plan of Reorganization that effectively rendered moot the Bank’s third motion for relief. On October 28, the court held a combined hearing on the motion to sell, objections to the motion to sell, and fourth motion for relief. The court received post-hearing briefs, and in November 2012, the court issued oral and *920 written rulings granting the motion to sell and denying the fourth motion for relief.

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Bluebook (online)
686 F.3d 916, 2012 WL 3023495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-bank-of-arkansas-v-panther-mountain-land-devel-ca8-2012.