Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. v. Beltway One Development Group, LLC (In Re Beltway One Development Group, LLC)

547 B.R. 819, 2016 WL 1357583
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMarch 31, 2016
DocketBAP NV-14-1564-KiDJu; Bk. 2:11-bk-21026-MKN
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 547 B.R. 819 (Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. v. Beltway One Development Group, LLC (In Re Beltway One Development Group, LLC)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. v. Beltway One Development Group, LLC (In Re Beltway One Development Group, LLC), 547 B.R. 819, 2016 WL 1357583 (bap9 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

KIRSCHER, Bankruptcy Judge:

Creditor Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., appeals the bankruptcy court’s decision to deny accrued postpetition, pre-effective date 1 default interest on Wells Fargo’s *822 allowed, oversecured claim pursuant to the Debtor’s chapter 11 2 plan of reorganization, which did not cure the prebankruptcy default. We REVERSE and REMAND.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

A. Events leading to the bankruptcy case

Chapter 11 debtor, Beltway One Development Group, LLC, owns and operates the Desert Canyon Business Park, a 15-acre master planned business park located in Las Vegas. Debtor is managed by Beltway One Management Group, LLC, which in turn is managed by Todd Nigro.

On May 16, 2008, Debtor and Wells Fargo’s predecessor in interest, Wachovia Bank, N.A., entered into a term loan agreement wherein Wachovia agreed to lend Debtor $10 million. In exchange for the loan, Debtor executed a promissory note, a deed of trust with assignment of rents and other documents in favor of Wa-chovia, giving the lender a first position lien and security interest in the real property and various personal property of Debtor. 3 The note matured on May 16, 2011, before the bankruptcy petition was filed.

Per the terms of the agreement, the loan accrued interest at a variable rate equal to 1-month LIBOR rate plus 2.10%. Upon default, the interest rate would increase by 3% over the nondefault rate of LIBOR plus 2.10%. 4

In May 2010, Wells Fargo issued notices of default based on an alleged loan-to-value ratio covenant default. Specifically, Wells Fargo claimed the value of the property was $10.15 million and therefore, in order to comply with the covenant requiring a LTV ratio of not less than 70%, demanded that Debtor immediately tender a payment of $2,793,419 to reduce the loan balance to $7,105 million. Debtor was unable to meet the demand and tried to negotiate a resolution, which the parties failed to accomplish.

Debtor did not pay the loan in full by its maturity date of May 16, 2011. Wells Fargo sent Debtor and the loan guarantors a letter declaring Debtor’s default and the acceleration of the debt, including the principal balance of $9,789,494.72 and accrued interest of $18,011.56, for a total due of $9,807,506.28. On July 8, 2011, Wells *823 Fargo recorded its Notice of Trustee’s Sale and advised Debtor it would be filing a complaint and seeking the appointment of a receiver. To avoid foreclosure, Debt- or filed its chapter 11 bankruptcy petition on July 13, 2011.

B. Debtor’s bankruptcy case

Pursuant to a stipulated cash collateral agreement, Debtor paid Wells Fargo monthly adequate protection payments of $30,000. Debtor timely made each of these payments between July 2011 and the Effective Date of Debtor’s chapter 11 plan.

Meanwhile, Wells Fargo filed its proof of claim on November 15, 2011, asserting a prepetition debt of $9,877,741.20, which consisted of $9,789,494.72 in unpaid principal, $36,060.70 in unpaid accrued nonde-fault interest, $47,315.89 in default interest, and $4,869.89 in other charges.

1. Debtor’s plan and Wells Fargo’s objection

In Debtor’s amended chapter 11 plan of reorganization (the “Plan”), for Wells Fargo’s claim Debtor proposed to: (1) extend the loan term to March 31, 2017, with a balloon payment at the end of the Plan term; (2) impose a cramdown interest rate of 4.25%; (3) and eliminate various covenants (one being the LTV covenant) and other loan terms. Debtor would make a $200,000 payment to Wells Fargo just after the Plan’s Effective Date, and thereafter make monthly payments for principal and interest (at the 4.25% rate), amortized over 30 years.

The Plan expressly provided that Wells Fargo would “not be entitled to any default interest, late fees, or other charges resulting from a default occurring prior to the Effective Date.” The Plan further provided that on the Effective Date, any pre-Effective Date defaults under the Wells Fargo loan would be deemed to have been “cured.”

In support of the Plan, Debtor offered a direct testimony declaration from Mr. Nig-ro. He testified that even if Wells Fargo’s claim were allowed as filed, including default interest, Debtor would still have more than $2 million in equity at the new maturity of the restructured loan under the Plan.

In opposing confirmation, Wells Fargo contended the Plan failed the general “fair and equitable” test under § 1129(b)(1) because it treated Wells Fargo as fully secured but deprived Wells Fargo of its contractual right to default interest, late fees and other charges arising from any default prior to the Effective Date. Citing Future Media Productions, Inc., 5 Wells Fargo contended that as an oversecured creditor, § 506(b) authorized recovery of postpetition default interest on its claim and any reasonable fees, costs or charges arising under the loan agreement. Wells Fargo further contended that Debtor’s proposed “cure” attempt was not permissible; Debt- or could not “magically cure” the maturity date default as required by § 1124(2)(A).

2. The Plan confirmation hearing and post-trial briefing

Following the four day Plan confirmation hearing, the parties filed post-trial briefs. Reiterating the same arguments it had raised in its Plan objection and citing Future Media, Wells Fargo contended that Debtor’s Plan failed the general “fair and equitable” test under .§ 1129(b) by depriving it of default interest prior to the Effective Date despite the loan documents’ *824 allowance for such charges and that § 506(b) provided oversecured creditors like Wells Fargo recovery of any pendency interest.

Debtor acknowledged the Plan was not “curing” the Wells Fargo loan and not restoring its formerly effective terms; rather, it was creating a “new loan” by restructuring the debt. Debtor did not generally disagree with the authority cited by Wells Fargo for the payment of default interest, late fees and other charges. The only caveat, according to Debtor, was that § 506 did “not allow any such interest to exceed the value of the collateral.”

3. The bankruptcy court confirms the Plan.

With the Plan under submission for just over two years, the bankruptcy court entered its Order and Memorandum Decision on Final Approval of Disclosure Statement and Confirmation of Chapter 11 Plan on March 25, 2014. The court adopted Debt- or’s valuation of $11.1 million for Building 11, which secured Wells Fargo’s claim of approximately $9.9 million, and approved the cramdown interest rate of 4.25%. 6 In denying Wells Fargo pendency interest, the court’s ruling was brief:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
547 B.R. 819, 2016 WL 1357583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-fargo-bank-na-v-beltway-one-development-group-llc-in-re-beltway-bap9-2016.