Worcester Country Club Acres, LLC

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedNovember 7, 2023
Docket23-40446
StatusUnknown

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Bluebook
Worcester Country Club Acres, LLC, (Mass. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS CENTRAL DIVISION

____________________________________ ) In re: ) Chapter 11 ) Case No. 23-40446-EDK WORCESTER COUNTRY CLUB ) ACRES, LLC, ) ) Debtor ) ____________________________________)

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION Before the Court is a motion to approve an amended disclosure statement (the “Motion to Approve” and the “Disclosure Statement”) filed by Worcester Country Club Acres, LLC (the “Debtor”) with respect to the amended plan (the “Plan”) filed in this Chapter 11 bankruptcy case. The Country Club Acres Trust (the “Trust”) objects to approval of the Disclosure Statement on grounds that the Plan is unconfirmable because it contemplates the sale of real property which the Debtor does not own and the sale of development rights that do not exist. The Debtor argues that a sale may be authorized, as the interests asserted by the Trust are in bona fide dispute. This Court must determine whether 11 U.S.C. § 363(f)(4) would permit a sale prior to a final adjudication of the parties’ claims with respect to the property rights at issue. I. FACTS AND TRAVEL OF THE CASE1 The Debtor was formed in March 2004 to develop an age-restricted residential condominium community in Worcester, Massachusetts and acquired land for that purpose on East Mountain Street in May 2004. In September 2005, the Debtor recorded a master deed (the “Master Deed”) in the Worcester County Registry of Deeds that created the Country Club Acres

Condominium (the “Condominium”). The Trust was established by a declaration of trust recorded concurrently with the Master Deed and is vested with the rights and powers in and with respect to the Condominium’s common areas and facilities. In early 2021, the Trust filed suit against the Debtor in the Massachusetts Land Court (the “Land Court”), asserting that (1) all of the land owned by the Debtor at the creation of the Master Deed (approximately 37.32 acres), with the exception of the units themselves, comprises the common areas of the Condominium and is owned by the Condominium’s unit owners as tenants in common; and (2) the Debtor no longer owns certain development rights with regard to the property (the “Development Rights”), because those rights have expired. The Debtor argues that

the Master Deed submitted only a portion of the land to the Condominium, that the Debtor continues to own the remaining land (the “Disputed Land”),2 and that the Development Rights were validly extended through September 2025.

1 In addition to the Disclosure Statement, the Motion to Approve, and the various briefings related thereto, the Court has drawn on other pleadings in this case in describing the disputes between the Debtor and the Trust. Apart from accepting that the parties have a bona fide dispute with regard to the property interests at issue in this case, the Court need not, and does not, make factual findings or rulings with respect to the substance or merits of the disputes related to the extent or existence of the parties’ underlying property interests.

2 The Debtor describes the land in dispute (which it calls the “Reserved Land”) as “approximately twenty (20) acres of land adjacent to the Condominium which can be placed into the Condominium, developed, and sold, including two potential units that are improved by a completed residence, two that are improved by a foundation, and twenty-nine that are unimproved.” Disclosure Statement 3, June 22, 2023, ECF No. 35. On June 8, 2023, the Debtor commenced this bankruptcy case by filing a voluntary petition under Chapter 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code,3 and on August 3, 2023, the Court granted relief from the automatic stay to allow the parties to continue with the Land Court matter. Shortly after the petition date, the Debtor filed the Plan and Disclosure Statement, together with the Motion to Approve that is currently before the Court. Essentially, the Debtor’s Plan proposes that the

Debtor will sell the Disputed Land and the Development Rights to fund the Plan and provide a distribution for creditors, notwithstanding the unresolved Land Court matters. The Trust, together with certain of the unit owners, has objected to approval of the Disclosure Statement on grounds that the Plan is unconfirmable because it relies on “funding . . . generated solely from property owned by the unit owners without their consent.” Trust Obj. 1, July 28, 2023, ECF No. 62. The Debtor argues that the sale is permitted under § 363(f)(4), and the Trust disagrees. After an initial hearing on the approval of the Disclosure Statement, the Court requested further briefing from the parties on the narrow issue of whether § 363(f)(4) permits the sale of property when there is a bona fide dispute as to the ownership or existence of the property to be sold. Both

parties filed supplemental briefs and, at the conclusion of a continued hearing held on October 19, 2023, the Court took the matter under advisement.

II. POSITIONS OF THE PARTIES The Trust’s argument is relatively straightforward. According to the Trust, because the Debtor may only sell “property of the estate” under § 363(b) or (c), § 363(f)(4) (which permits the sale of property free and clear of certain interests in bona fide dispute) does not permit the sale of property free and clear when the property is subject to disputes regarding ownership (in the case

3 See 11 U.S.C. §§ 101 et seq. (the “Bankruptcy Code” or the “Code”). All references to statutory provisions are to provisions of the Bankruptcy Code unless otherwise stated. of the Disputed Land) or is subject to a claim that the property right simply does not exist (in the case of the Development Rights). And because the Plan contemplates the sale of property that the Debtor does not own, the Plan cannot be confirmed, and approval of the Disclosure Statement should therefore be denied.4 The Debtor urges the Court to take an expansive view of the power to sell free and clear

and argues that “property of the estate” is broadly defined and includes speculative or disputed property interests. Relying on, inter alia, In re Genesys Research. Institute, Inc., Case No. 15- 12794-JNF, 2016 WL 3583229 (Bankr. D. Mass. June 24, 2016), In re Eastman Kodak Co., No. 12-10202, 2012 WL 2255719 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. June 15, 2012), In re NJ Affordable Homes Corp., No. 15-60442 (DHS), 2006 WL 2128624 (Bankr. D.N.J. June 29, 2006), and In re IDL Development, Inc., Case No. 18-14808, Order Approving Sale, ECF No. 294 (Bankr. D. Mass. June 14, 2019) and the Transcript of the decision read into the record, August 22, 2019, ECF No. 353, the Debtor says that the sale of the Disputed Land and the Development Rights is permissible under § 363(f)(4) without a final determination as to their ownership (or existence), so long as the

Court determines by a preponderance of the evidence that the Debtor has an interest in the property or an objective basis for a claim of an interest in the property. The Debtor maintains “that it is sufficient for authorizing a sale under a bona fide dispute pursuant to Section 363(f)(4) that disputed property ‘could become property of the bankruptcy estate.’” Debtor Suppl. Brief 3 ¶ 6, Aug. 23, 2023, ECF No. 70 (quoting IDL Dev., Order Approving Sale 8). Here, the Debtor says that, based on its interpretation of the Master Deed and other indicia of ownership, there is an objective basis for asserting its claim of ownership in the property

4 The Trust also argues in its supplemental briefing that a sale of the Disputed Land and Development Rights is impermissible because the Debtor cannot provide adequate protection as required by § 363(e).

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