TPC Group Inc.

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware
DecidedFebruary 22, 2023
Docket22-10493
StatusUnknown

This text of TPC Group Inc. (TPC Group Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
TPC Group Inc., (Del. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF DELAWARE Chapter 11 In re: Case No. 22-10493 (CTG) TPC GROUP INC., et al., (Jointly Administered) Debtors. Related Docket No. 1334 MEMORANDUM OPINION The reorganized debtors own and operate a petrochemical business.1 In November 2019, two of the debtors’ plants, located in Port Neches, Texas, exploded, causing property damage and personal injury to nearby residents. Various of the residents brought prepetition lawsuits against the debtors and several third parties, including the debtors’ equity sponsors, in state court in Texas.2 The debtors’ confirmed plan of reorganization embodied a global settlement. Under that settlement, $30 million was set aside to pay the claims of general unsecured creditors, including those of the tort plaintiffs. The debtors released any causes of action their estates may have had against the Supporting Sponsors. That

1 TPC Group Inc. and its debtor affiliates were the debtors in the above-captioned bankruptcy case and are now (following the effectiveness of the confirmed plan of reorganization) referred to as the “reorganized debtors.” 2 That case is currently pending in the Multi District Litigation Court and can be found at In re TPC Group Litigation, Cause No. A2020-0236-MDL (Tex. 128th Dist. Ct. – Orange, Apr. 27, 2021). For purposes of this memorandum, the case is referred to as the “MDL litigation,” and the plaintiffs as the “tort plaintiffs.” The equity sponsor defendants are: (1) SK Second Reserve, LP f/k/a SK Capital Partners, LP; (2) SK Sawgrass, LP; (3) First Reserve Corporation, LLC; (4) FR Sawgrass, LP; (5) First Reserve Management, LP; (6) FR XII Alpha AIV, LP; (7) FR XII-A Alpha AIV LP; (8) Sawgrass Merger Sub, Inc.; (9) Sawgrass Holdings, LP; and (10) Sawgrass Holdings GP LLC. These defendants are referred to as the “Supporting Sponsors.” release is backed by an injunction against the assertion of such a released cause of action. While the tort plaintiffs granted consensual third-party releases to some non- debtor parties, whatever direct claims the tort plaintiffs may have against the

Supporting Sponsors are not subject to that release. The tort plaintiffs remain free to pursue them. The dispute now before the Court presents the question whether the claims the tort plaintiffs intend to pursue against the Supporting Sponsors are claims that belonged to the debtors’ estates (and therefore are released and enjoined), or are claims that belong to the plaintiffs themselves, such that they may be pursued in the MDL litigation. At the time of confirmation, the tort plaintiffs and the Supporting

Sponsors identified that issue as one over which they disagreed. The plan expressly provides that this Court would resolve it after confirmation. The dispute between the parties is, in substantial part, a dispute about how to characterize the complaint the plaintiffs seek to pursue in state court. The plaintiffs contend that the complaint asserts a claim for negligent undertaking that seeks to hold the Supporting Sponsors liable only for their own “independent” tortious

conduct. The Supporting Sponsors dispute that characterization, contending that the complaint is fundamentally one for veil piercing in which the court is being asked to disregard the corporate separateness between the debtors and the Supporting Sponsors and hold the Supporting Sponsors liable for the debtors’ tortious conduct. The Supporting Sponsors contend that veil-piercing actions are estate causes of action, and that the claim the plaintiffs seek to pursue is therefore barred by the plan injunction. In fairness, the complaint – both the Fifth Amended version (which is currently

operative) and the proposed Sixth Amended version (which plaintiffs propose to file, and which removes the debtors as defendants, among other revisions) – contains elements of both.3 For the reasons described below, the Court concludes that in the context of this case, any claim to pierce the corporate veil would be an estate cause of action that has been settled and released. On the other hand, a claim that alleges that the Supporting Sponsors had sufficient substantive involvement in the operation of the debtors’ business that they undertook responsibility for managing the safety

function and were negligent in the manner in which they carried it out is a direct claim against the Supporting Sponsors that is not affected by the debtors’ settlement or the plan injunction. The challenge presented by the current motion is that while the tort plaintiffs argue that, in substance, their proposed Sixth Amended Complaint asserts only claims that are for negligent undertaking, the complaint nevertheless asserts that

the “corporate separateness should be disregarded.”4 Indeed, it appears that the plaintiffs have endeavored, in the complaint, to say as much as they could about efforts to “hide behind the corporate veil” while retaining the ability to maintain that

3 The formal title of the pleadings are the Fifth and Sixth “Amended Master Consolidated Petition and Jury Demand With Certificates of Merit and curriculum Vitae of Mr. Edwards, P.E.” These pleadings are referred to as the “complaints.” 4 Sixth Amended Complaint, D.I. 1363-2 ¶ 55. the action is not really a claim for veil piercing that would be barred by this Court’s injunction. In the Court’s view, however, the Sixth Amended Complaint crosses the line.

While the complaint does assert claims for negligent undertaking that may proceed without running afoul of the plan injunction, fairly read, Count VIII of the Sixth Amended Complaint is simply a claim for ordinary veil piercing. Other counts fall somewhere in between, leaving it unclear whether the alleged liability of the Supporting Sponsors is based on their independent tortious conduct as opposed to a form of vicarious liability as the debtors’ alter ego. To comply with the plan injunction, this ambiguity must be removed. Count

VIII must be dropped and the various assertions about veil piercing and hiding behind the corporate shield must be stripped out. The only claims plaintiffs may assert against the Supporting Sponsors are those that are based on their own allegedly tortious conduct. Plaintiffs are accordingly directed to submit to this Court a revised complaint that complies with the plan injunction as set forth herein. The Supporting Sponsors may, within ten days of such a filing, submit a letter brief

identifying any portion of the complaint that they contend fails to comply with the terms of this ruling. The Court will thereupon determine whether the proposed complaint comports with the terms of the plan injunction. The Court emphasizes that its role is simply to police the enforcement of the injunction reflected in the confirmed plan of reorganization (which the tort plaintiffs themselves supported). Neither this ruling nor any subsequent determination that a further revised complaint may (or may not) be filed purports to venture any opinion about whether the remaining claims for negligent undertaking or otherwise are valid or invalid under Texas law. Those merits issues are left entirely, as they must be, to

the Texas state court.5 Factual and Procedural Background 1. The MDL litigation For purposes of the motion before this Court, the relevant pleading is the proposed Sixth Amended Complaint, which the plaintiffs contend has been amended so that the debtors are dropped as defendants and the terms of the plan injunction are otherwise respected. Eight of the counts in that complaint assert claims against one or more of the

Supporting Sponsors.

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