Scott L. Clarkson, United States Bankruptcy Judge.
Before the Court are two Motions filed by Small Business Chapter 11 Debtor Progressive Solutions on January 30, 2020:1) Motion for Order Authorizing Amendment of Chapter 11 Petition regarding Subchapter V Election and Extension of Plan Deadline [Dk. 143], and 2) Motion for Order Confirming Amended Chapter 11 Small Business Plan [Dk. 145]. Appearing for the Debtor was Lewis Landau, Esq. Other appearances included Michael Hauser, Esq. and Frank Cadigan, Esq. for the Office of the United States Trustee, Monique Jewett-Brewster, Esq. for Creditor, City of Oakland, and Andre Khansari, Esq. for Creditor, Ecker Capital.
The first motion, entitled Motion for Order Authorizing Amendment of Chapter 11 Petition regarding Subchapter V Election and Extension of Plan Deadline makes two seemingly simple requests. A Small Business-designated Chapter 11 case (not to be confused with a Subchapter V small business case), filed on November 21, 2018, requests that this Court authorize the amendment of the original Chapter 11 petition to permit the re-designation of its status as a Subchapter V small business debtor, and, further, that the Court establish or modify certain deadlines set out in the newly enacted Small Business Reorganization Act of 2019 (hereinafter "SBRA").
The second motion, entitled Motion for Order Confirming Amended Chapter 11 Small Business Plan, (the "Confirmation Motion") requests that this Court confirm an amended Chapter 11 Plan that supposedly complied with the terms of the SBRA. With respect to the Confirmation Motion, for the reasons apparent and stated below, it is denied without prejudice.
The Small Business Reorganization Act of 2019 (H.R. 3311) was introduced into
Thereafter, on June 28, 2019, the bill was referred to the Judiciary Committee's Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial, and Administrative Law. On July 11, 2019, the Subcommittee conducted a mark-up session and on the same day the bill was ordered to be reported by voice vote. On July 23, 2019, the bill was reported by the Judiciary Committee (Judiciary Committee Report 116-171) to the House of Representatives by voice vote. The report (which historically is drafted by professional staff of the assigned Subcommittee) reflects that the Judiciary Committee submitted the bill without amendment and with recommendation that the bill pass the House of Representatives.
On the same day as the House Judiciary Committee reported the bill, on July 23, 2019, the bill was placed on the House of Representative's Union Calendar (Calendar No. 131), and at 6:25 pm (eastern time) that day, a motion to suspend the House Rules and pass the bill was made. The bill was considered under the suspension of the rules (Cong. Rec. H7217-7220), and the debate lasted four minutes, from 6:25 pm (eastern time) through 6:29 pm (eastern time), although the rules permitted forty minutes of debate.
H.R. 3311, on motion to suspend the rules, was passed by voice vote on July 23, 2019. (Cong. Rec. H7217-7219). The bill was received by the United States Senate on July 24, 2019, and on August 1, 2019 was passed by the United States Senate without amendment or debate. (Cong. Rec. S5321). It went exactly like this:
On August 1, 2019, the Senate advised the House of the passage without amendment, the bill was engrossed, and was presented to the President on August 13, 2019. The bill was signed into law on August
Certain "legislative history" of H.R. 3311 exists, including the Report from the House Committee on the Judiciary (Report No. 116-54.) The report contains, inter alia, the following statement:
This might be the only official legislative history in existence; however, another example is contained in an official public release and "fact sheet" presented by the Chairman of the Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Charles "Chuck" Grassley, accompanying his April 9, 2019-introduced version
Public statements from various cosponsors of the Senate version (which is the final version signed into law), include:
The SBRA became effective on February 19, 2020.
The Court also discussed with Oakland's learned counsel the provisions of Section 5 of the SBRA (involving a change in law to all preference actions filed under section 547 of the Bankruptcy Code) and their applicability to pending litigation. It was pointed out, and conceded by all parties present at the hearing, that nowhere in the SBRA are there stated limitations to the application of the SBRA (including new preference recovery provisions) to pending cases.
Early on, in arguments brought forward by the Office of the United States Trustee (hereinafter "OUST"), it was conceded that the OUST was not advancing any retroactivity arguments, and that, as an example, a Chapter 7 case, pending prior to the effective date of the SBRA, could convert to Chapter 11, Subchapter V after the SBRA date of enactment.
The only comprehensive objections raised at the hearing by counsel of the Office of United States Trustee were procedural in nature. The OUST made very good points regarding the practicality and scheduling issues arising from a SBRA designation of a pre-effective date pending case.
This Court finds that while the procedural tasks of setting an IDI, a section 341(a) meeting of creditors, and a new Subchapter V Status Conference (as long as the Debtor did not object to any of these actions), might be redundant or procedurally awkward, there are no bases in law or rules to prohibit a resetting or rescheduling of these procedural matters. If any vested rights of a debtor or any other party in interest would be in jeopardy, this Court concedes that rescheduling would likely be a violation of due process. On the other hand, if any party holding vested rights approved of a re-setting or
Also, if the Debtor declined to undertake the responsibilities and duties under Subchapter V, as suggested by the OUST, the Court would not approve a resetting and rescheduling of such meetings, hearings or deadlines, and would take steps to remedy such behavior.
The Court was entirely appreciative of the OUST's suggestion that the Debtor simply (and orally) dismiss the pending case and file it again the following day. The Court, during the hearing, polled the appearing counsels on their support or opposition to such an action, and to its surprise, no creditor objected. The Court asked Debtor's counsel to consider such an action, and the Debtor declined to make such an oral Motion to Dismiss. Without notice to all parties in the case, this Court was unwilling to dismiss the case, sua sponte.
The Court is not unmindful of the additional efforts the OUST, the newly appointed Subchapter V Trustee, the creditors, or this Court might have to undertake to administer a re-designated Subchapter V case. But, the whole, the entire whole, of the legislative history and statements of Congress teaches the Court that the primary purpose of the SBRA is to promote successful reorganizations using the tools that are now available under current law. The decision to proceed and hopefully confirm a Subchapter V plan of reorganization under the law as it exists today, after February 19, 2020, is further supported by the teaching of the United States Supreme Court in Landgraf v. USI Film Products, 511 U.S. 244, 114 S.Ct. 1483, 128 L.Ed.2d 229 (1994), which said, "The first is the rule that `a court is to apply the law in effect at the time it renders its decision,' Bradley v. School Bd. of City of Richmond, 416 U.S. 696, 711, 94 S.Ct. 2006, 40 L.Ed.2d 476 (1974)." Appreciating Landgraf, it remains the Court's duty to ensure that no vested rights have been altered by application of a changed law. In this instance, that has not occurred.
To recap, this Court has found no legal reason to restrict a pending Chapter 11 case to re-designate to a Subchapter V case, on the facts underlying the Motion. No party has provided any legal reasoning to support a blanket prohibition of such re-designation by the Debtor. The arguments against pending case being designated by the Debtor as a Subchapter V case all have to do with practicality and not legality. However, there remains one final, procedural problem requiring denial of the Motion.
The Motion is denied because the actual requests made in the Motion (to approve such a re-designation) are procedurally infirm. Federal Bankruptcy Rule 1009 reads in pertinent part:
This Court concludes that an amendment to a Bankruptcy Petition can be made at any time as a matter of course
To set a standard or precedent requiring a debtor to seek leave to amend a petition or schedule is improper, especially in light of Rule 1009. As there is no legal requirement to have a court grant leave to amend the petition or schedules, and there are clear procedures for parties to later object to any amendments or designations (including a designation as a Subchapter V debtor within the new federal rules for the SBRA), this Court finds that the Motion is unnecessary and not required by law. When and if there is a designation by amendment to the Petition, opposing parties may file objections on a timely basis, and the Court may undertake eligibility considerations.
Further, the second request within the Motion desires this Court to set deadlines appropriate to the implementation of the SBRA. This request is premature, as no Subchapter V designation had been made by the Debtor at the time of the filing of the motion and the hearing.
Finally, as stated earlier, the Debtor seeks by its Motion to Confirm a Subchapter V Plan of Reorganization, recently filed. This Motion is premature for the reasons stated above and is denied without prejudice.
IT IS SO ORDERED.