Rochester MSA Building Company v. UMB Bank, N.A., Trustee

CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 12, 2022
Docket0:21-cv-02559
StatusUnknown

This text of Rochester MSA Building Company v. UMB Bank, N.A., Trustee (Rochester MSA Building Company v. UMB Bank, N.A., Trustee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rochester MSA Building Company v. UMB Bank, N.A., Trustee, (mnd 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA

Rochester MSA Building Company, File No. 21-cv-2559 (ECT/ECW) Rochester Math & Science Academy, and Rochester Stem Academy Inc.,

Plaintiffs and Counter-Defendants, OPINION AND ORDER v.

UMB Bank, N.A., as trustee,

Defendant and Counterclaimant.

Colin M. Bruns and Richard G. Jensen, Fabyanske Westra Hart & Thomson, PA, Minneapolis, MN, for Plaintiffs and Counter-Defendants Rochester MSA Building Company, Rochester Math & Science Academy, and Rochester Stem Academy Inc.

Ryan T. Murphy, Joseph J. Cassioppi, and Samuel Andre, Fredrikson & Byron, PA, Minneapolis, MN; and Adrienne K. Walker, Locke Lord LLP, Boston, MA, for Defendant and Counterclaimant UMB Bank, N.A.

Together, Plaintiffs own and operate two public charter schools and were loaned more than $15 million in bond proceeds by the City of Rochester, Minnesota, to finance the improvement and expansion of their facilities. After Plaintiffs defaulted on promises to maintain minimum levels of cash on hand and income available for debt service, they entered a forbearance agreement with Defendant UMB Bank, the indenture trustee of the bonds. In that agreement, Plaintiffs took on new obligations, like more frequent financial reporting, implementing the recommendations of a business consultant, and retaining an independent business manager. Plaintiffs also agreed to pay certain fees and expenses UMB incurred. Plaintiffs filed this lawsuit over the reasonableness of fees that UMB has tried to collect under the forbearance agreement. UMB has asserted counterclaims,

alleging that Plaintiffs defaulted on their obligations under the forbearance agreement and underlying bond agreements. UMB has now moved to appoint a general receiver. Because UMB has not shown its entitlement to the extraordinary remedy of receivership at this early stage, the motion will be denied. I1

The Parties. Plaintiffs Rochester Math & Science Academy (“RMSA”) and Rochester Stem Academy Inc. (“RSTEM”) are Minnesota nonprofit corporations formed as public charter schools under Minn. Stat. § 124E.06 (collectively, the “Schools”). Wilkinson Decl. ¶¶ 4–5 [ECF No. 10]. RMSA runs a kindergarten through grade 8 charter school, id. ¶ 4, and RSTEM runs a grade 9-12 charter school, id. ¶ 5. Plaintiff Rochester

MSA Building Company (“RMSA Building Company”) is a Minnesota non-profit corporation that owns the facilities where the Schools operate. Id. ¶ 3. UMB is a national bank with its main office in Kansas City, Missouri. Id. ¶ 2. Plaintiffs were loaned bond proceeds, and UMB is the current trustee of the bonds under an indenture of trust. In September 2018, the City of Rochester, Minnesota, issued

two series of bonds under an Indenture of Trust with UMB, as trustee for the bond owners: (1) $15,555,000 Minnesota Charter School Leases Revenue Bonds, Series 2018A and (2)

1 These facts are drawn from the parties’ submissions and, unless otherwise noted, have not been disputed. $305,000 Minnesota Taxable Charter School Leases Revenue Bonds, Series 2018B (the “Bonds”). See Indenture of Trust [ECF No. 10-1]. The City loaned the Bond proceeds to RMSA Building Company to “(i) finance the acquisition, renovation, expansion and

equipping” of the facilities where the Schools operate, including a 25,000 square-foot addition; “(ii) fund a debt service reserve fund; (iii) pay a portion of the interest on the Bonds; and (iv) pay the costs of issuing the Bonds.” Loan Agreement at 1 [ECF No. 10-2]. The Bonds are secured by and payable from amounts held under the Indenture of Trust; by payments from RMSA Building Company under the Loan Agreement; by a mortgage lien

on, and a security interest in, essentially all of RMSA Building Company’s assets; and through assignments of scheduled rent payments by the Schools to RMSA Building Company that are sufficient to pay the principal and interest on the Bonds. See Mortgage, Security Agreement & Assignment of Rents, Art. II [ECF No. 10-3] (“Mortgage”); Pledge & Covenant Agreements §§ 2, 4, 8 [ECF No. 10-5] (“Pledge Agreements”); Lease

Agreements [ECF No. 10-4]. In connection with the Bonds, Plaintiffs took on many financial covenants. Among them, they agreed to maintain minimum amounts of cash on hand and income available for debt service. First, RMSA agreed to maintain at least 60 days’ “unrestricted” cash on hand in its operation fund “through the Fiscal year ending June 30, 2019[,] and each Fiscal Year

thereafter.” Pledge Agreements § 3(G). RSTEM agreed to maintain at least 30 days’ cash on hand for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2019, and 45 days’ cash on hand for each fiscal year thereafter. Id. Second, both Schools agreed to use “best efforts to maintain Income Available for Debt Service of at least 120% of the principal and interest due on the Bonds and any Additional Bonds in each fiscal year.” Id. at §§ 3(O). The parties agreed that the Schools’ cash on hand and debt service coverage ratio would be tested at the end of each fiscal year and that the Schools’ failure to meet the contractual benchmarks could trigger

other obligations. If either School missed its cash-on-hand requirement or maintained income available for debt service of less than 110% of the principal and interest due on the Bonds for that fiscal year, the parties agreed that the School shall retain an Independent Consultant, to review and analyze the reports required by this Agreement, to inspect the Facilities and the School’s operation and administration of the School and the Facilities as such Independent Consultant deems appropriate, and the School shall accept or adopt the consultant’s recommendations unless they are contrary to State or federal law.

Id. §§ 3(G); see also id. §§ (3)(O) (substantially similar language). Further, either School’s failure to achieve a debt service coverage ratio of 100% at the end of a fiscal year would constitute an “Event of Default” that triggered the trustee’s right to “exercise one or more of the remedies permitted under the Loan Agreement and the Indenture.” Id. §§ 3(O). UMB’s predecessor trustee hires an independent consultant to study Plaintiffs’ business after concluding that Plaintiffs breached financial covenants. On July 14, 2020, U.S. Bank2 sent Plaintiffs an Initial Notice of Default declaring that RSTEM had breached the cash-on-hand covenant and that both RSTEM and RMSA had breached the income-available-for-debt-service covenants for the fiscal year ending in June 2019. ECF No. 10-7. Attached to the Notice was a document showing that RSTEM missed its cash-

2 Although UMB is the original and current indenture trustee, it was temporarily replaced by U.S Bank National Association, N.A. UMB “has recently resumed its role as indenture trustee.” Wilkinson Decl. ¶ 2 n.1. on-hand benchmark by nearly $30,000 ($133,803.92/$166,439.92), and that both RMSA (29%) and RSTEM (103%) missed their debt service coverage ratio. Id. at 9. The Notice stated that the Schools’ failure to fulfill these financial covenants triggered their obligation

to retain an independent consultant, and that RMSA’s failure to maintain at least 100% of income was “an automatic Event of Default . . . under the Pledge Agreement, and thereby also under the Loan Agreement and the Indenture.” Id. at 4–6. The Notice relayed that, at the direction of the majority bondholder, U.S. Bank had already hired Pathway Learning Center as an independent consultant to “review and provide recommendations regarding

the 2019 Financial Covenant Defaults and other pertinent matters, in the manner contemplated in the Pledge Agreements.” Id. at 6.

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Rochester MSA Building Company v. UMB Bank, N.A., Trustee, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rochester-msa-building-company-v-umb-bank-na-trustee-mnd-2022.