TLI, Inc. v. Lynn (In Re TLI, Inc.)

213 B.R. 946, 11 Tex.Bankr.Ct.Rep. 369, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15582, 1997 WL 627519
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedOctober 3, 1997
Docket1:97-cv-00201
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 213 B.R. 946 (TLI, Inc. v. Lynn (In Re TLI, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
TLI, Inc. v. Lynn (In Re TLI, Inc.), 213 B.R. 946, 11 Tex.Bankr.Ct.Rep. 369, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15582, 1997 WL 627519 (N.D. Tex. 1997).

Opinion

FITZWATER, District Judge.

Thi.s is an appeal from an order of the bankruptcy court directing that unclaimed funds transferred to the court registry from a liquidating reorganization plan claims fund be distributed in payment of administrative expenses and otherwise escheat to the United States. The court affirms the order in part, and reverses and remands it in part.

I

A

TLI, Inc. (formerly Trailways Lines, Inc.) and five related entities filed for chapter 11 protection. The bankruptcy court later confirmed the debtors’ joint plan of reorganization (the “Plan”). The Plan provided for the liquidation of all six debtors and their ultimate merger into “Reorganized TLI” (“TLI”), for the purpose of creating a single entity to dispose of the debtors’ assets. The Plan also established a cash pool in the sum of $9,005,000 (the “Claims Fund”) that provided inter alia for distribution of funds, after payment of expenses, to priority and unsecured creditors. The Claims Fund included “the funds and property as provided in the Plan delivered to the Creditors’ Trustee, which shall constitute an irrevocable trust as established by the trust indenture, to be distributed under the Plan.” Appellee D.M. Lynn (the “Trustee”), as the Creditors’ Trustee, was to receive, manage, and distribute the Claims Fund and determine allowed claims payable from the Fund. All proceeds derived from the liquidation of TLI’s assets were to be paid to The First National Bank of Boston (the “Bank”), a creditor. If the Bank’s claims were fully satisfied, any remaining assets of TLI were to be paid into the Claims Fund. After disposition of all of its assets, TLI would cease to exist.

At issue in the present appeal are unclaimed funds (the “Unclaimed Funds”) deposited from the Claims Fund into the court registry. The Plan did not originally provide *949 for this manner of disposition. Instead, § 6.7 established that property that remained unclaimed after the later of three years after confirmation, or 60 days after the final order allowing the claim of that entity, would return to the Claims Fund for distribution to other claimants. Apart from the effect of complete distribution, the Plan did not impose a restriction on this recirculation process.

In June 1993, following three interim distributions and one final distribution, the Trustee sought bankruptcy court approval to deposit the Unclaimed Funds into the court registry and to be relieved of any further responsibility for them. The sum of $108,-311.50 remained in the Claims Fund because of final distribution checks that had not been cashed. Recycling $100,000 for payment of approximately $27 million in allowed unsecured claims was impractical. Distributing this amount would have paid a burdensomely small dividend of less than 1/3 of 1%. The bankruptcy court granted the Trustee’s motion, overruling the objections of the Bank.

Before entry of an order reflecting this ruling, however, the Trustee notified the court that there were additional unpaid administrative expenses. On November 1,1993 the Trustee moved the court to authorize payment of administrative expenses from the funds to be deposited in the court registry. On February 11, 1994 the bankruptcy court granted the relief that the Trustee had requested. The court authorized the deposit of the Unclaimed Funds into the court registry and ordered that to the extent such funds remained in the court registry after July 4, 1994, administrative claimants could obtain payment from these funds by motion and court order.

The Trustee applied on August 1, 1995 for authority to pay administrative expenses. In September 1995 the bankruptcy court granted in part the Trustee’s motion. The bankruptcy clerk’s office later advised the court that it could not disburse the funds as ordered because they were designated for specific creditors. The bankruptcy court responded by vacating its order and denying without prejudice the Trustee’s motion. The court indicated that it would consider further argument on the propriety of ordering funds held in the registry to be paid to administrative claimants.

B

In August 1996 TLI asked the bankruptcy court to award it the funds in the court registry. TLI asserted inter alia that 11 U.S.C. §§ 347 and 1143 dictated that any funds unclaimed five years after entry of the plan confirmation order vested in it as the debtor. The Trustee applied to the court in September 1996 for an order distributing certain of the funds to him so that he could pay $42,250.65 in administrative expenses.

The bankruptcy court granted the Trustee’s application and denied TLI’s motion in an order entered November 22, 1996. It held that TLI had no right to the funds. The court awarded the Trustee the funds he sought from the court registry for payment of administrative claimants. It directed that an additional sum be set aside for other anticipated costs, and that the balance of the funds escheat to the United States.

The bankruptcy court reasoned that pursuant to § 5.6 of the Plan, a plan proponent (which included TLI) was under no circumstances entitled to any claim or recovery from or against the Claims Fund except as provided by § 6.2.F(iv) of the Plan. That section dictated that if the costs and expenses (including reasonable attorney and other professional fees) and compensation of the Trustee did not exceed the aggregate sum of $200,000, the Trustee would rebate the excess amount to TLI. The court held that the debtors were prohibited from participating in the Claims Fund, that the court’s primary concern was for the creditors, and that its secondary concern was for administrative claimants. It concluded that Congress had specifically chosen the word “debt- or” in § 347(b) with the intent that unclaimed property would re-vest only in a debtor who continued with ongoing business operations. The court noted that the Plan provided that certain of the debtors’ property was to be liquidated for the benefit of the Bank and the remainder was to vest in a trust for the benefit of unsecured creditors. The court held that the reorganized debtor provided for *950 in the Plan was not the “debtor” contemplated by § 347(b). Therefore, the Unclaimed Funds did not re-vest in TLI, Inc. or the other debtors. The court concluded that as far as § 1143 required the Trustee to perform an act, the act was accomplished iuthe form of the court’s February 11, 1994 order authorizing the Trustee to deposit Unclaimed Funds into the court registry and establishing a procedure for payment of unpaid administrative claims. It also held that the pleadings relating to payment of professionals were acts under § 1143. The court directed that the balance of the Unclaimed Funds be paid to or set aside in trust for professionals, or otherwise escheat to the United States, because Plan § 5.6 directed that money in the court’s registry go to creditors rather than to Plan proponents, and that it would be an abuse of the Code and chapter 11 for. Walter Kellogg to acquire these funds “as a sort of CEO or operating officer of a fictional T.L.I. entity ...

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Bluebook (online)
213 B.R. 946, 11 Tex.Bankr.Ct.Rep. 369, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15582, 1997 WL 627519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tli-inc-v-lynn-in-re-tli-inc-txnd-1997.