T.G. Shown Associates, Inc. v. Frontier Airlines, Inc. (In Re Frontier Airlines, Inc.)

112 B.R. 395, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3520, 1990 WL 36584
CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedMarch 28, 1990
Docket89-K-421, Bankruptcy No. 86-B-8021 E
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 112 B.R. 395 (T.G. Shown Associates, Inc. v. Frontier Airlines, Inc. (In Re Frontier Airlines, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
T.G. Shown Associates, Inc. v. Frontier Airlines, Inc. (In Re Frontier Airlines, Inc.), 112 B.R. 395, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3520, 1990 WL 36584 (D. Colo. 1990).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

KANE, Senior District Judge.

This opinion covers an appeal arising from the Frontier Airlines bankruptcy which was consolidated with Civil Action No. 89-K-1782 for the purpose of oral argument. Since oral argument, the companion case of 89-K-1782 has settled and was dismissed by stipulation. In this case, 89-K-421, T.G. Shown & Associates, Inc. (Shown) argues that the court erred in awarding only $22,000 of the approximately $29 million it claimed against the Frontier estate. It contends that the court should have required Frontier to file a separate objection to its amended claim, that it misconstrued Shown’s burden of proof, and that it misapplied Colorado contract law in denying all but a portion of the claim. I affirm.

I. Facts.

Frontier Airlines filed for bankruptcy in August, 1986. At this time, Shown was under contract with Frontier to market Frontier’s air freight services. This contract (the Marketing Agreement), which took effect on July 1, 1985, provided for an automatic one-year extension of its terms if Shown met a minimum revenue forecast of $12 million in air freight sales from July 1, 1985, to July 1, 1986. It is undisputed that Shown never reached this goal. 1 Neverthe *397 less, Frontier continued to use Shown’s marketing services after July 1, 1986 (and into August), paying Shown in advance for July.

On July 3, 1986, the parties executed a letter of intent (the Letter Agreement) concerning a transaction by which Frontier was to “farm out” to Shown its entire freight operations. At a meeting with Frontier on July 17, 1986, Shown presented a revision of the Letter Agreement to Larry Martin, Frontier’s President. Martin did not execute it, however, because Frontier was about to be sold to United Airlines, and United performed its own freight marketing and operations. The parties continued to negotiate over the “farm out,” but they never reached a final agreement on many of the details of the transaction. Martin testified at trial that his intent was simply to continue to use Shown on a month-to-month basis for marketing services pending the closing of Frontier’s sale to United. The sale never occurred, however, and Frontier was forced to file for bankruptcy.

On November 24, 1986, Shown filed its Proof of Claim for $220,000 against the Frontier estate. Shown claimed the Marketing Agreement had been extended for a second year (July 1986 to July 1987) and that Frontier owed it $220,000 for services to be performed during that year. On October 1, 1987, Frontier filed its objection to this claim. Shown then obtained new counsel, and filed an Amended Proof of Claim on June 10, 1988. The amended claim was for over $29 million, alleged to be damages for Frontier’s breach of the Letter Agreement. On June 16, 1988, Frontier filed a motion to strike the amended claim.

On July 14, 1988, the bankruptcy court denied Frontier’s motion to strike, finding that Frontier did not give notice to Shown of the claim bar date. At the hearing on the motion, Shown’s counsel questioned whether Frontier would be required to file a formal, written objection to the amended claim. The court responded that “for purposes of the record, the amended claim can be deemed objected to; the basic claim has been. Clearly, the fact that Frontier has filed a motion to strike indicates that the amended claim is objected to as well. So we will take the matter as being at issue.” R.Vol. II at 4. Shown’s counsel responded, “That’s fine.” Id. at 5.

Frontier then filed two pre-trial motions before the final hearing on Shown’s claim. On October 4, 1988, it filed a motion for partial summary judgment. The motion was directed at Shown’s argument that the Letter Agreement was a binding contract between the parties. Frontier alleged that, because the Letter Agreement expressly provided that the farm-out of its freight operations was “subject to successful negotiations between Frontier and the labor unions representing Frontier employees involved in cargo terminal operations” and these negotiations never occurred, 2 a condition precedent was not met and there never was a binding agreement between Frontier and Shown. The bankruptcy court declined to rule on the motion before trial; however, it severed the issue of damages and ordered trial to proceed solely on the issue of liability.

On October 28, 1988, Frontier then filed a motion for election of claim, seeking to have Shown choose whether its claim arose under the Marketing Agreement or the Letter Agreement. Frontier’s position was that it was inconsistent that both of these agreements were in effect at the same time and that Shown could have a claim under both of them, especially since the Letter Agreement provided that if the farm-out occurred, the Marketing Agreement would cease. The bankruptcy court initially denied the motion on November 3, 1988, but noted on the opening day of trial that Shown’s proofs of claim were inconsistent. It ruled that “the claimant [Shown] does *398 not have to make an irrevocable election before any evidence is put on concerning the contract under which claims are being asserted, but I think the burden lies on the claimant to go forward and establish which contracts, if any, it has a right to assert a claim under and, therefore, the burden is on Shown to go forward.” Id. Vol. Ill at 5.

After approximately three days of trial, the bankruptcy court ruled in Frontier’s favor. It held that the Letter Agreement was merely an “agreement to agree” and not a binding contract between the parties, and therefore it could not provide a basis for Shown’s claimed $29 million in damages. The court further ruled that the Marketing Agreement had expired by its own terms on July 1, 1986, and that there had been no automatic extension of this contract because Shown had not met the requirement of generating $12 million in revenue during the previous year. Finally, it found that Shown was entitled to a claim for services provided during the month of August, 1986, because the marketing agreement had continued on a month-to-month basis and Shown had provided services during that time. On March 1, 1989, the court entered judgment for Shown for $22,000, after the parties were unable to reach an agreement on the amount due Shown for these services. 3 On March 10, Shown filed its notice of appeal.

II. Issues.

A. Frontier’s Objection to Shown’s Claim.

Shown’s first argument is that Frontier should have been required to file a written objection to Shown’s amended claim. Shown contends that Bankruptcy Rule 3007 requires that a specific, written objection be filed and that in the absence of such an objection, Shown’s amended claim should have been deemed allowed. Shown also relies on Fed.R.Civ.P. 15, made applicable to bankruptcy adversary proceedings by Bankr.R. 7015. Shown argues that when it filed its amended claim, this rule of pleading required Frontier to file a new written objection.

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112 B.R. 395, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3520, 1990 WL 36584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tg-shown-associates-inc-v-frontier-airlines-inc-in-re-frontier-cod-1990.