Ultra Petroleum Corporation v. Ad Hoc Commi

943 F.3d 758
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 26, 2019
Docket17-20793
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 943 F.3d 758 (Ultra Petroleum Corporation v. Ad Hoc Commi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ultra Petroleum Corporation v. Ad Hoc Commi, 943 F.3d 758 (5th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

Case: 17-20793 Document: 00515215410 Page: 1 Date Filed: 11/26/2019

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit

FILED November 26, 2019 No. 17-20793 Lyle W. Cayce Clerk In re: ULTRA PETROLEUM CORPORATION; KEYSTONE GAS GATHERING, L.L.C.; ULTRA RESOURCES, INCORPORATED; ULTRA WYOMING, INCORPORATED; ULTRA WYOMING LGS, INCORPORATED; UP ENERGY CORPORATION; UPL PINEDALE, L.L.C.; UPL THREE RIVERS HOLDINGS, L.L.C.,

Debtors,

ULTRA PETROLEUM CORPORATION; KEYSTONE GAS GATHERING, L.L.C.; ULTRA RESOURCES, INCORPORATED; ULTRA WYOMING, INCORPORATED; ULTRA WYOMING LGS, INCORPORATED; UP ENERGY CORPORATION; UPL PINEDALE, L.L.C.; UPL THREE RIVERS HOLDINGS, L.L.C.,

Appellants,

v.

AD HOC COMMITTEE OF UNSECURED CREDITORS OF ULTRA RESOURCES, INCORPORATED; OPCO NOTEHOLDERS,

Appellees.

Appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas

ON PETITION FOR REHEARING Before DAVIS, ENGELHARDT, and OLDHAM, Circuit Judges. ANDREW S. OLDHAM, Circuit Judge: Case: 17-20793 Document: 00515215410 Page: 2 Date Filed: 11/26/2019

No. 17-20793 Treating the Appellees’ and Intervenors’ Joint Petition for Rehearing En Banc as a Petition for Panel Rehearing, it is GRANTED. The prior opinion, In re Ultra Petroleum Corporation, 913 F.3d 533 (5th Cir. 2019), is withdrawn, and the following opinion is substituted: These bankruptcy proceedings arise from exceedingly anomalous facts. The debtors entered bankruptcy insolvent and now are solvent. That alone makes them rare. But second, the debtors accomplished their unlikely feat by virtue of a lottery-like rise in commodity prices. The combination of these anomalies makes these debtors as rare as the proverbial rich man who manages to enter the Kingdom of Heaven. The key legal question before us is whether the rich man’s creditors are “impaired” by a plan that paid them everything allowed by the Bankruptcy Code. The bankruptcy court said yes. In that court’s view, a plan impairs a creditor if it refuses to pay an amount the Bankruptcy Code independently disallows. In reaching that conclusion, the bankruptcy court split from the only court of appeals to address the question, every reported bankruptcy court decision on the question, and the leading treatise discussing the question. We reverse and follow the monolithic mountain of authority holding the Code—not the reorganization plan—defines and limits the claim in these circumstances. Because the bankruptcy court saw things differently, it did not consider whether the Code disallows certain creditors’ contractual claims for a Make- Whole Amount or post-petition interest. Instead, it ordered the debtors to pay both amounts in full. We vacate and remand those determinations for reconsideration. I. Ultra Petroleum Corporation (“Petroleum”) is an oil and gas exploration and production company. To be more precise, it’s a holding company. Petroleum’s subsidiaries—UP Energy Corporation (“Energy”) and Ultra 2 Case: 17-20793 Document: 00515215410 Page: 3 Date Filed: 11/26/2019

No. 17-20793 Resources, Inc. (“Resources”)—do the exploring and producing. Resources took on debt to finance its operations. Between 2008 and 2010, Resources issued unsecured notes worth $1.46 billion to various noteholders. And in 2011, it borrowed another $999 million under a Revolving Credit Facility. Petroleum and Energy guaranteed both debt obligations. In 2014, crude oil cost well over $100 per barrel. But then Petroleum’s fate took a sharp turn for the worse. Only a year and a half later, a barrel cost less than $30. The world was flooded with oil; Petroleum and its subsidiaries were flooded with debt. On April 29, 2016, the companies voluntarily petitioned for reorganization under Chapter 11. See 11 U.S.C. § 301(a). No one argues the companies filed those petitions in bad faith. See id. § 1112(b). During bankruptcy proceedings, however, oil prices rose. Crude oil approached $80 per barrel, and the Petroleum companies became solvent again. So, the debtors proposed a rare creature in bankruptcy—a reorganization plan that (they said) would compensate the creditors in full. As to creditors with claims under the Note Agreement and Revolving Credit Facility (together, the “Class 4 Creditors”), the debtors would pay three sums: the outstanding principal on those obligations, pre-petition interest at a rate of 0.1%, and post-petition interest at the federal judgment rate. In re Ultra Petroleum Corp., No. 4:16-bk-32202, ECF No. 1308-1 at 25–26 (Bankr. S.D. Tex. 2017). Accordingly, the debtors elected to treat the Class 4 Creditors as “unimpaired.” Therefore, they could not object to the plan. 11 U.S.C. § 1126(f). The Class 4 Creditors objected just the same. They insisted their claims were impaired because the plan did not require the debtors to pay a contractual Make-Whole Amount and additional post-petition interest at contractual default rates. Under the Note Agreement, prepayment of the notes triggers the Make- Whole Amount. That amount is designed “to provide compensation for the 3 Case: 17-20793 Document: 00515215410 Page: 4 Date Filed: 11/26/2019

No. 17-20793 deprivation of ” a noteholder’s “right to maintain its investment in the Notes free from repayment.” A formula defines the Make-Whole Amount as the amount by which “the Discounted Value of the Remaining Scheduled Payments with respect to the Called Principal” exceeds the notes’ “Called Principal.” Remaining scheduled payments include “all payments of [the] Called Principal and interest . . . that would be due” after prepayment (if the notes had never been prepaid). And the discounted value of those payments is keyed to a “Reinvestment Yield” of 0.5% over the total anticipated return on comparable U.S. Treasury obligations. Under the Note Agreement, petitioning for bankruptcy automatically renders the outstanding principal, any accrued interest, and the Make-Whole Amount “immediately due and payable.” Failure to pay immediately triggers interest at a default rate of either 2% above the normal rate set for the note at issue or 2% above J.P. Morgan’s publicly announced prime rate, whichever is greater. The Revolving Credit Facility does not contain a make-whole provision. But it does contain a similar acceleration clause that made the outstanding principal and any accrued interest “automatically . . . due and payable” as soon as Resources petitioned for bankruptcy. And it likewise provides for interest at a contractual default rate—2% above “the rate otherwise applicable to [the] Loan”—if Resources delayed paying the accelerated amount. Under these two agreements, the creditors argued the debtors owed them an additional $387 million—$201 million as the Make-Whole Amount and $186 million 1 in post-petition interest. Both sides chose to kick the can

1 This amount includes $106 million in interest on the outstanding principal under the notes, $14 million in interest on the Make-Whole Amount, and $66 million in interest on the outstanding principal under the Revolving Credit Facility, all accruing after the debtors filed their petitions. 4 Case: 17-20793 Document: 00515215410 Page: 5 Date Filed: 11/26/2019

No. 17-20793 down the road. Rather than force resolution of the impairment issue at the plan-confirmation stage, the parties stipulated the bankruptcy court could resolve the dispute by deeming the creditors unimpaired and confirming the proposed plan.

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943 F.3d 758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ultra-petroleum-corporation-v-ad-hoc-commi-ca5-2019.