MEMORANDUM SUSTAINING THE REORGANIZED DEBTORS' OBJECTION TO CLASS IF OTHER PARENT CLAIM ASSERTED BY WILMINGTON TRUST COMPANY2
(D.I. 13338; 14028)
KEVIN J. CAREY, Bankruptcy Judge.
Wilmington Trust Company ("WTC") included postpetition attorney fees and costs of more than $30 million in its unsecured Class 1F Claim that will receive a partial distribution under the confirmed Plan. The Reorganized Debtors object to this portion of WTC's Class 1F Claim, arguing that a majority of courts have decided that unsecured creditors cannot include postpetition attorney's fees in their claims against the bankruptcy estate.3 In response, WTC argues that the 2007 United States Supreme Court Travelers decision4 rejected this rule and determined that postpetition attorney's fees may be included in an unsecured claim if recovery of the fees are permitted by an enforceable prepetition contract. After consideration of Travelers, along with a textual analysis of Bankruptcy Code sections 502(b), 506(a) and 506(b), and consistent with the Mediator's Report and Recommendation, the Debtors' objection will be sustained and WTC's claim for postpetition attorney's fees and costs will be disallowed.
BACKGROUND
On December 8, 2008, Tribune Company and certain affiliates (the "Debtors") filed voluntary petitions under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. On July 23, 2012, this Court entered the Order Confirming the Fourth Amended Joint Plan of Reorganization (the "Plan") for Tribune Company and Its Subsidiaries Proposed by the Debtors, the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors, Oaktree Capital Management, L.P., Angelo, Gordon & Co., L.P. and JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A. (the "Confirmation Order") (D.I. 12074). The Effective Date of the Plan was December 31, 2012.5
WTC served as the indenture trustee for the PHONES Notes, which were unsecured subordinated securities.6 After the Debtors' bankruptcy filing, WTC retained Brown Rudnick LLP, as well as other professionals, to represent WTC and the interests of the PHONES Noteholders in the bankruptcy case.7 The Plan permits WTC to seek a general unsecured claim, classified as an Other Parent Claim under Class 1F of the Plan, "for fees, expenses arising under Section 6.07 of the PHONES Notes Indenture."8
In Section 6.07 of the PHONES Notes Indenture, Tribune agreed (1) to pay the Trustee [WTC] . . . reasonable compensation . . . for all services rendered by it hereunder . . . [and] (2) except as otherwise expressly provided herein, to reimburse the Trustee . . . for all reasonable expenses, disbursements and advances incurred or made by the Trustee in accordance with any provision of this Indenture (including the reasonable compensation and the expenses and disbursements of its agents and counsel). . . ."9 WTC argues that two other provisions of the Indenture also support its Class 1F Fee Claim:
(1) Section 5.03 of the Indenture provides that in the event of certain enumerated defaults, "the Company [which is defined as Tribune Company and any successor corporation] will upon demand of the Trustee, pay to it, for the benefit of the Holders of such Securities, . . . such further amount as shall be sufficient to cover the costs and expenses of collection, including the reasonable compensation, expenses, disbursement and advances of the Trustee, its agents and counsel."
(2) Section 5.04 of the Indenture further allows the Trustee to file and prove a proof of claim in bankruptcy proceedings "in order to have the claims of the Trustee (including any claims for the reasonable compensation, expenses, disbursements and advances of the Trustee, its agents and counsel) and of the Holders allowed in such judicial proceedings" and to collect and receive any moneys or other property payable or deliverable on any such claims and to distribute the same. . . ."
Pursuant to a stipulated procedure,10 on January 2, 2013, WTC provided the Reorganized Debtors with its Class 1F Claim, which included fees and expenses in the amount of $30,289,093.33, under Bankruptcy Code § 502(b) (the "Fee Claim"). The Reorganized Debtors objected informally to the Fee Claim through a letter outlining their arguments for disallowance and/or limitation of the Fee Claim. Subsequent negotiations failed and the Reorganized Debtors filed a formal Objection to the Fee Claim on March 18, 2013 (D.I. 13338). WTC opposed the Objection.
By Order dated June 26, 2013 (D.I. 13642), upon agreement of the parties, I appointed Joseph J. Farnan, Jr., a retired Delaware District Court Judge (the "Mediator"), pursuant to Local Rule 9019-5, to mediate the Reorganized Debtors' Objection to WTC's Fee Claim, along with other contested fee matters. The Mediator's Report and Recommendation, dated October 24, 2014 (the "Mediator's Report"), recommended disallowance of the Fee Claim.11
After a telephonic status conference with the parties, I issued an Order dated December 19, 2014 (D.I. 14011) that established a schedule for the parties' supplemental submissions regarding WTC's Class 1F Claim. On January 20, 2015, WTC filed its limited objection to the Mediator's Report and Recommendation ("WTC's Report Objection"). On February 20, 2015, the Reorganized Debtors filed their response to WTC's Report Objection.
DISCUSSION
Courts have long been divided over the issue of whether an unsecured creditor can recover postpetition attorney's fees and costs as part of its allowed claim against a bankruptcy estate.12 Although the Third Circuit Court of Appeals has not decided the issue, some courts in this Circuit have determined that postpetition attorney's fees are not recoverable as part of an allowed unsecured claim.13 The Global Industrial Technologies Court recognized four arguments in support of this position:
• First, "[b]ecause § 506(b) of the Bankruptcy Code expressly provides for the allowance of postpetition attorneys' fees for oversecured creditors, and neither § 506(b) nor any other provision of the Bankruptcy Code provides for the allowance of such fees for unsecured creditors, it follows that unsecured creditors have no clear entitlement to postpetition attorneys' fees."14 Courts rely on the maxim of expressio unius est exclusio alterius (the expression of one is the exclusion of the alternatives).
• Second, the United States Supreme Court's decision in Timbers decided that § 506(b) permitted only oversecured creditors to recover postpetition interest on their claims.15 Because § 506(b) provides for the allowance of postpetition fees and interest, courts apply this reasoning to restrict allowance of postpetition fees only to oversecured creditors.16
• Third, Bankruptcy Code § 502(b) requires a court to determine the amount of a claim as of the date the petition was filed.17 Then, as set forth in the "First" paragraph above, § 506(b) adds postpetition interest and fees to the extent a creditor is oversecured.
• Fourth, "it is inequitable to allow certain unsecured creditors to recover postpetition attorney's fees at the expense of similarly situated claimants. To allow one group of unsecured creditors to recover more than their prepetition debt unfairly discriminates against the others because it reduces the pool of assets available to all unsecured creditors pro rata."18
In his report, the Mediator observed, "it is a reasonable conclusion that Congress would not have to expressly provide for the recovery of post-petition fees by oversecured creditors if such fees were generally recoverable by all creditors."19 I agree with the reasoning set forth in Global Industrial Technologies and the Mediator's Report; especially the conclusion that the plain language of § 502(b) and § 506(b), when read together, indicate that postpetition interest, attorney's fees and costs are recoverable only by oversecured creditors.20
Finally, as noted in the Mediator's Report, denying postpetition attorney's fees to unsecured creditors does not leave those claimants without recourse.21 Creditors may seek payment of postpetition fees and expenses under § 503(b)(3)(D) and § 503(b)(4), which allow an administrative claim for actual, necessary expenses that confer a "substantial contribution" on the bankruptcy estate.
WTC objects to the Mediator's Report for failing to recognize that, after the Supreme Court decided Travelers, an "overwhelming" number of courts considering the postpetition attorney's fees issue have rejected the majority rule. Before discussing this argument, a brief review of the Travelers decision is helpful.
The Travelers Court considered the Ninth Circuit's Fobian rule that disallowed claims against a bankruptcy estate for attorney's fees arising from litigating issues that were "peculiar to federal bankruptcy law," rather than basic contract enforcement issues.22 The Travelers Court rejected the Fobian rule, concluding that it had no support in the Bankruptcy Code.23 The Court recognized the presumption that "claims enforceable under applicable state law will be allowed in bankruptcy unless they are expressly disallowed."24 However, the Travelers Court did not consider the argument that § 506(b) "categorically disallows unsecured claims for contractual attorney's fees" because the issue was not raised in the lower courts.25 The Supreme Court wrote: "we express no opinion with regard to whether, following the demise of the Fobian rule, other principles of bankruptcy law might provide an independent basis for disallowing Travelers' claim for attorney's fees."26
Accordingly, Travelers did not address the division among courts over whether unsecured creditors can recover postpetition attorney's fees as part of their claims. WTC's premise that an overwhelming number of courts considering this issue post-Travelers have rejected the majority position is simply untrue. Instead, the split in decisions continues.27 The post-Travelers cases from this district cited by WTC as allowing postpetition attorney's fees, involve oversecured creditors' claims.28 WTC's challenge to the Mediator's Report based on post-Travelers case law is unfounded.
Accordingly, I will accept the recommendation in the Mediator's Report and disallow WTC's Fee Claim.29 An appropriate Order follows.