Bankruptcy Update 2023, Crypto Currency and Third-Party Releases

April 24, 2023

      I’m looking forward to presenting at National Business Institute’s upcoming course, “Bankruptcy Rules and Updates 2023” on Tuesday, May 09, 2023.  In this course, I discuss the Four (4) Bankruptcy related, United States Supreme Court cases on the docket. See below.  Plus, we chat about some key Subchapter V cases of interest such as In re Cleary and Nutrien AG Solutions Inc. v. Hall (In re Hall), 22-01326 (Bankr. M.D. Fla. April 13, 2023).  

               Crypto and Bankruptcy is, unfortunately, an emerging trend.  And we chat about third-party releases in cases such as the Boy Scouts of America and Pharma.

Register today at https://www.nbi-sems.com/ProductDetails/96710ER!  Use Promo Code FSPN50A at checkout to get $50 off! Hope to see you there.

  1. MOAC MALL HOLDINGS, LLC vs. TRANSFORM HOLDCO, LLC, (22-1270,   Ct. April 19, 2023).

Reversing the Second Circuit, the Supreme Court handed down a unanimous opinion today in MOAC Mall Holdings LLC, deciding that Section 363(m) is not jurisdictional. It’s a limitation on the remedy available to an appellate court on an appeal from an order approving a sale.

Section 363(m) says that the reversal or modification “of an authorization under subsection (b) or (c) of this section of a sale or lease of property does not affect the validity of a sale or lease [to a purchaser in good faith] . . . unless such authorization and such sale or lease were stayed pending appeal.”

The Second and Fifth Circuits have held that Section 363(m) is jurisdictional. The Third, Sixth, Seventh, Ninth, Tenth and Eleventh Circuits have held that it is not. The opinion for the Court by Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson was her first since her elevation in June 2022.

The Sale of a Sears Lease

The petitioner in the Supreme Court was the landlord of a Sears store in the giant Mall of America. The landlord objected to the assignment of a lease but lost in bankruptcy court.

Initially, the district court reversed the bankruptcy court, holding that a provision in a lease cannot supplant the requirement in Section 365(b)(3)(A) mandating that the financial condition of an assignee of a lease must be “similar to the financial condition . . . of the debtor . . . as of the time the debtor became the lessee under the lease . . . .” MOAC Mall Holdings LLC v. Transform Holdco LLC (In re Sears Holdings Corp.), 613 B.R. 51 (S.D.N.Y. May 11, 2020). (“MOAC I”).

Two weeks later, the purchaser of the lease filed a motion for rehearing. Although having taken contrary positions throughout, the purchaser contended for the first time on rehearing that the appeal should be dismissed under Section 363(m) because the landlord had not obtained a stay pending appeal. Previously, the purchaser had consistently contended that the transaction was not a sale and that Section 363 did not apply.

Ruling on the motion for rehearing, the district judge said that the buyer now “seeks to benefit from a complete reversal of that representation.” MOAC II, 616 B.R. at 626. Citing In re WestPoint Stevens Inc., 600 F.3d 231, 248 (2d Cir. 2010), and In re Gucci, 105 F.3d 837, 838–840 (2d Cir. 1997), the district judge said that the Second Circuit had twice held that Section 363(m) is “a jurisdiction-depriving statute.” Id. at 624.

In MOAC II, the district judge granted rehearing, concluded that she lacked appellate jurisdiction, vacated her earlier opinion, and dismissed the appeal. The Second Circuit affirmed in a nonprecedential opinion. MOAC Mall Holdings LLC v. Transform Holdco LLC (In re Sears Holdings Corp.), 20-1846, 2021 BL 481940, 2021 US App Lexis 37358, 2021 WL 5986997 (2d Cir. Dec. 17, 2021).

The circuit panel said that the landlord’s argument “is foreclosed by our binding precedent in In re WestPoint Stevens Inc., under which § 363(m) deprived the District Court of appellate jurisdiction.” In another nonprecedential opinion citing WestPoint Stevens, a Second Circuit panel indeed had said that Section 363(m) is jurisdictional because it “creates a rule of statutory mootness.” Pursuit Holdings (NY) LLC v. Piazza (In re Pursuit Holdings (NY) LLC), 845 Fed. App’x 60, 62 (2d Cir. 2021).

The landlord filed a petition for certiorari in March 2022, raising the circuit split. The Court granted the petition at the end of the last term in June 2022.

Jurisdiction Must Be ‘Clearly Stated’

Addressing the merits, Justice Jackson rejected the buyer’s “creative arguments” and mirrored comments from the district court when she referred to the buyer’s conduct as “egregious” in waiting until rehearing in district court to raise the question of jurisdiction.

Justice Jackson’s opinion is another stab at repairing the Court’s precedents on jurisdiction versus power. She referred to “our past sometimes loose use of the word ‘jurisdiction.’” More recently, she said, “We have clarified that jurisdictional rules pertain to ‘the power of the court rather than to the rights or obligations of the parties.’”

Today, Justice Jackson said, “we only treat a provision as jurisdictional if Congress ‘clearly states’ as much,” citing Boechler, P.C. v. Commissioner, 142 S. Ct. 1493, 1494 (2022). On the other hand, Congress isn’t required to use “magic words,” she said.

To be jurisdictional, Justice Jackson said that “the statement must indeed be clear; it is insufficient that a jurisdictional reading is ‘plausible,’ or even ‘better,’ than nonjurisdictional alternatives,” again citing Boechler.

Applying precedent, Justice Jackson saw “nothing” in Section 363(m) “that purports to ‘gover[n] a court’s adjudicatory capacity,’” quoting Henderson v. Shinseki, 562 U.S. 428, 435 (2011). To the contrary, she said that “§ 363(m) takes as a given the exercise of judicial power over any authorization under § 363(b) or § 363(c).”

The section, Justice Jackson said, “consists of a caveated constraint on the effect of a reversal or modification” and “is not the stuff of which clear statements are made.”

Noting that Section 363(m) is not located in 28 U.S.C. § 1334(a)-(b), (e) and § 157, Justice Jackson said, “Statutory context leads to the same conclusion” that Section 363(m) is not jurisdictional. She said that the buyer “does not (because it cannot) deny the paucity of textual or contextual clues indicating a clear statement of jurisdictional intent.”

Justice Jackson said that Section 363(m) is “a mere restriction on the effects of a valid exercise of [appellate] power when a party successfully appeals a covered authorization.”

Commentary on Equitable Mootness?

The buyer argued in the Supreme Court that the appeal was moot even without regard to Section 363(m). Justice Jackson rejected the argument using words that might be read as undercutting the validity of the doctrine of equitable mootness, which is the topic of a pending petition for certiorariSee U.S. Bank N.A. v. Windstream Holdings Inc., 22-926 (Sup. Ct.).

Without relying on Section 363(m), the buyer argued that the appeal was moot because the transfer of the lease could not now be avoided as a post-petition transaction under Section 549 since the debtor alone had standing to raise Section 549 and the debtor had waived any rights under that section.

In short, the buyer was saying that the appeal was moot because no relief could be granted.

Justice Jackson said that a “‘case becomes moot only when it is impossible for a court to grant any effectual relief whatever to the prevailing party,’” quoting Chafin v. Chafin, 568 U.S. 165, 172 (2013). “The case remains live,” she said, “‘[a]s long as the parties have a concrete interest, however small, in the outcome of the litigation.’” Id.

In the MOAC appeal, Justice Jackson said, “[W]e cannot say that the parties have ‘no “concrete interest,’” id. at 176, in whether [the buyer] obtains that relief.”

As a court of “first review,” Justice Jackson rejected the mootness contention, saying, “[W]e decline to act as a court of ‘first view,’ plumbing the Code’s complex depths in ‘the first instance’ to assure ourselves that [the buyer] is correct about its contention that no relief remains legally available.”

The Court remanded the case to the Second Circuit for “further proceedings consistent with this opinion.”

American Bankruptcy Institute’s Observations

Today’s opinion casts doubt on the doctrine of equitable mootness, where courts routinely dismiss appeals from confirmation orders where the plans have been consummated. MOAC could be read to mean that appellate courts should not in the first instance decide that no relief is available following reversal.

MOAC could be read to mean that an appellate court should hear an appeal from a confirmed plan as long as there is constitutional or Article III jurisdiction. More often than not, the appellate court will uphold confirmation and never reach the question of whether there would have been available relief had there been a reversal.

On remand from reversal of confirmation, the bankruptcy court might locate a sliver of relief for the appellant that would not upset the apple cart and undo the plan altogether. Perhaps the bankruptcy court could award attorneys’ fees to the creditor who appealed confirmation and established an important principle about chapter 11 plans.

  1.   Bartenwerfer  Buckley, 21-908 , (Supreme. Ct. Feb. 22, 2023)

Facts of the case

David and Kate Bartenwerfer renovated a house in San Francisco, California, and sold it to Kieran Buckley. After the sale, Buckley discovered defects in the house and sued the Bartenwerfers. A jury found for Buckley on several claims and awarded damages. The Bartenwerfers then filed for bankruptcy.

In the bankruptcy court, Buckley initiated an adversary proceeding against the Bartenwerfers arguing that the state-court judgment could not be discharged in bankruptcy because the debt was obtained through fraud. The bankruptcy court agreed, finding that the Bartenwerfers had intended to deceive Buckley, that Mr. Bartenwerfer had actual knowledge of the factual misrepresentations, and that Mr. Bartenwerfer’s fraudulent conduct could be imputed onto Mrs. Bartenwerfer because of their partnership relationship.

The Ninth Circuit Bankruptcy Appellate Panel (BAP) remanded the imputed liability finding with the instructions that the bankruptcy court determine whether Mrs. Bartenwerfer “knew or should have known” of Mr. Bartenwerfer’s fraud. On remand, the court held that Mrs. Bartenwerfer did not know of the fraud and thus was not liable for Mr. Bartenwerfer’s fraudulent conduct, and the BAP affirmed. Buckley appealed. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit reversed and remanded, concluding that the bankruptcy court applied the incorrect legal standard for imputed liability in a partnership relationship. The correct standard, based on binding Supreme Court and Ninth Circuit precedent, is whether the fraud was performed “on behalf of the partnership and in the ordinary course of business of the partnership.”

Question

Can a bankruptcy debtor be held liable for another person’s fraud, even when they were not aware of the fraud?

CONCLUSION

A debtor who is liable for her partner’s fraud cannot discharge that debt in bankruptcy, regardless of her own culpability. Justice Amy Coney Barrett authored the opinion for the unanimous Court holding that Mrs. Bartenwerfer could not discharge her partner’s debt even though she lacked knowledge of his fraud.

Section 523(a)(2)(A) provides an exception to discharge of “any debt…for money…to the extent obtained by…false pretenses, a false representation, or actual fraud.” The passive voice of that provision eliminates the significance of who engaged in the fraud, suggesting an “agnosticism” as to the identity of the wrongdoer. Neither the fact that neighboring provisions of the Code treat debtors differently nor the Court’s precedents support an alternative reading of that provision. Moreover, the Bankruptcy Code seeks to balance multiple interests, and the preclusion of faultless debtors from discharging liabilities run up by their associates is but one of those.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor authored a concurring opinion, in which Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson joined, to clarify that the Court’s opinion depends upon the agency relationship between Mrs. Bartenwerfer and her partner and that its decision does not consider the applicability of the provision when no such agency or partnership relationship exists.

  1.   Financial Oversight and Management Board for Puerto Rico Centro de Periodismo Investigativo, Inc., 22-96 (Supreme. Ct. Oral Argument Heard Jan. 11, 2023, Decision Pending).

Facts of the case

The Centro de Periodismo Investigativo (“CPI”) is a nonprofit media organization based in Puerto Rico. It seeks disclosure of documents relating to Puerto Rico’s fiscal situation from the Financial Oversight and Management Board for Puerto Rico (“the Board”). The Board has declined to release the requested documents, and CPI asked the district court to compel production. The Board asked the district court to dismiss the litigation, arguing that it is immune from suit pursuant to both the Eleventh Amendment of the U.S. Constitution and the Puerto Rico Oversight, Management, and Economic Stability Act (“PROMESA”).

The district court disagreed with the Board, finding PROMESA abrogated any possible Eleventh Amendment immunity the Board might have enjoyed, and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit affirmed.

Question

Does the Puerto Rico Oversight, Management, and Economic Stability Act (PROMESA)’s general grant of jurisdiction to the federal courts over claims against the Financial Oversight and Management Board for Puerto Rico and claims otherwise arising under PROMESA abrogate the Board’s sovereign immunity with respect to all federal and territorial claims?

  1.   Lac du Flambeau Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians Coughlin, 22-227, (Supreme. Ct. Cert Granted Jan. 13, 2023, Pending).

Facts of the case

In July 2019, Brian W. Coughlin took out a $1,100 payday loan from Lendgreen, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Lac Du Flambeau Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians (“Band”). Later that year, he filed a Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition in the District of Massachusetts and listed his debt to Lendgreen as a nonpriority unsecured claim. When he filed his petition, the Bankruptcy Code imposed an automatic stay enjoining “debt-collection efforts outside the umbrella of the bankruptcy case.”

Despite the stay, Lendgreen repeatedly contacted Coughlin seeking repayment of his debt. Coughlin moved to enforce the automatic stay against Lendgreen, and in response, the Band asserted tribal sovereign immunity and moved to dismiss the enforcement proceeding. The bankruptcy court granted the motion to dismiss, and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit reversed.

Question

Does the Bankruptcy Code unequivocally abrogate tribal sovereign immunity?

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