RICHARD G. ANDREWS, District Judge.
Before the Court is Appellant's Emergency Motion for Stay of Order Confirming the Amended Prepackaged Plans of Reorganization of Nuverra Environmental Solutions, Inc. and its Affiliated Debtors Pending Appeal (D.I. 3) and related Motion to Expedite (D.I. 4), seeking a stay pending appeal of a July 25, 2017 order by the Bankruptcy Court (D.I. 1-1) ("Confirmation Order"). Debtors and the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors have each filed briefs in opposition. (D.I. 18, 19). For the reasons set forth below, the Motion for Stay is denied.
1.
2. Despite the fact that unsecured creditors would receive no distribution absent the gift, Appellant has appealed the Confirmation Order based on the fact that the plan places general unsecured claims of the same priority into two separate classes and provides disparate treatment. Class A6, comprised of holders of 9.875% unsecured senior notes due 2018 ("2018 Notes"), will receive an approximate 4%-6% recovery on account of their claims by virtue of the gift. Class A7, on the other hand, comprised of trade and other creditors whose claims arise from the Debtors' day to day operations, will receive a 100% recovery by virtue of the gift. Appellant is a holder of approximately $450,000 of the 2018 Notes, or 1% of the claims in Class A6. Class A6 voted to reject the plan,
3. Appellant was the sole objector at the hearing on plan confirmation and argued, inter alia, that the plan: improperly classified his claim separately from other general unsecured claims (see B.D.I. 290 at 6-7); unfairly discriminated against Class A6 (see id. at 7-11); and violated the requirement that a nonconsensual plan be fair and equitable (see id at 11-12). Following argument on July 21, 2017 (B.D.I. 362), the Bankruptcy Court took the matter under advisement and made a bench ruling via telephonic hearing on July 24, 2017, overruling the objection and confirming the plan (B.D.I. 363). The Bankruptcy Court determined that separate classification of trade creditors and noteholders was reasonable on the basis that trade creditors were critical to the success of the reorganized debtors. (B.D.I. 363 at 5:5-6:24). Judge Carey applied the Markell test
4.
5.
Revel AC, 802 F.3d at 571 (emphasis in text) (internal quotations and citations omitted).
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7. First, although the Bankruptcy Court cited relevant case law from this district in support its ruling, Appellant fails to address those cases in his Motion for Stay or explain how the Bankruptcy Court erred in relying on those cases. In determining that the plan did not unfairly discriminate, the Bankruptcy Court relied on In re Genesis Health Ventures, Inc., 266 B.R. 591 (Bankr. D. Del. 2001). (See B.D.I. 363 at 10:12-12:12). The bankruptcy court in Genesis confirmed a similar plan, under which secured lenders made a gift from their own recovery to certain, but not all, classes of general unsecured creditors, premised upon the assumption that even if senior lenders received all the debt and equity distributed under the plan, the senior lenders' claims still would not be satisfied in full. See Genesis, 266 B.R. at 602. Under the plan in that case, secured creditors did not make a gift to certain classes of general unsecured creditors (e.g., creditors holding punitive damages claims), and those creditors objected to plan confirmation on the basis of unfair discrimination. While the disparate treatment gave rise to presumption of unfair discrimination under the Markell test, the Genesis court ultimately concluded that the presumption was rebutted:
[T]he recovery by Classes G4 and M4 of a dividend in the form of New Common Stock and Warrants is based on the agreement of the Senior Lenders to allocate a portion of the value they would have otherwise received to Classes G4 and G5. The disparate treatment ... is a permissible allocation by the secured creditors of a portion of the distribution to which they would otherwise be entitled, rather than unfair discrimination against Classes G7 and M7 by the proponents of the plan. Id. at 612. Thus, Genesis held that the presumption of unfair discrimination is rebutted where the distribution is based on the agreement of senior lenders to allocate a portion of the value to which they would have otherwise been entitled under the Bankruptcy Code. The Bankruptcy Court's ruling here is consistent with Genesis, and Appellant points to no differences between these cases that requires a different outcome or would make his success on appeal likely.
8. Appellant's reliance on the Third Circuit's holdings in Armstrong and ICL is misplaced. Under the proposed plan in Armstrong, an unsecured creditor class would receive and automatically transfer warrants to purchase common stock (property of the estate) to a class of equity holders, despite the fact that the plan did not provide full recovery for all unsecured creditors in classes senior to the equity holders. See Armstrong, 432 F.3d at 514. The Third Circuit determined that vertical class skipping gifts like these violated the absolute priority rule, which is codified as part of the "fair and equitable" requirements of section 1129(b). "Under the statute, a plan is fair and equitable with respect to an impaired, dissenting class of unsecured claims if (1) it pays the class's claims in full, or if (2) it does not allow holders of any junior claims or interests to receive or retain any property under the plan `on account of such claims or interests." Id. at 512 (citing 11 U.S.C. § 1129(b)(2)(B)(i)-(ii). The Armstrong court concluded that the plain language of the statute makes clear that a plan cannot give property to junior claimants over the objection of a more senior class that is impaired. Id. at 513. In the context of gifts, the Third Circuit noted that "section 1129 was at least designed to address `give-up' situations where a senior class gave property to a class junior to the dissenting class." Id. Unlike Armstrong, the gift at issue here is a voluntary carve out from the senior lender's liens, and the plan does not involve vertical class skipping as it does not provide a distribution to a class junior to the dissenting class — Class A6.
9. Appellant further cites the Third Circuit's ruling in ICL — a case decided in the context of a settlement agreement in connection with an asset sale, not a plan of reorganization — for the rule that gifts are permissible only if they are not made from estate property. In re ICL Holding Co., Inc., 802 F.3d 547 (3d Cir. 2015). While Appellant appears to argue that the gift in this case was made from estate property and was thus impermissible (see D.I. 3 at 7), Appellant provides no support for his argument. As noted above, a similar gift from senior lenders to certain, but not all, classes of general unsecured creditors was approved in Genesis. As the Bankruptcy Court noted in its ruling, Armstrong distinguished the very similar "arrangement in Genesis as an ordinary carveout of the senior creditor's lien for the junior claimant's benefit" but did not reject it. (See B.D.I. 363 at 11:8-12:9).
10. Finally, Appellant relies on Sentry, a case outside this circuit, in which the Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas held that a secured creditor should never be permitted to "decide which creditors get paid and how much those creditors get paid." In re Sentry Operating Co. of Texas, Inc., 264 B.R. 850, 865 (Bankr. S.D. Tex. 2001). Because Appellant has failed to address case law in this district to the contrary, his reliance on a case outside this circuit does not establish a likelihood of success on appeal.
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12. Having evaluated Appellant's likelihood of success on the merits and irreparable harm absent a stay, and having determined that Appellant has failed to carry his burden as to either element, the Court is satisfied no further analysis is required. See Revel AC, 802 F.3d at 571.
13.
NOW, THEREFORE, it is HEREBY ORDERED that the Motion for Stay (D.I. 3) and Motion to Expedite (D.I. 4) are DENIED.
In re Tribune Co., 472 B.R. 223, 241-42 (Bankr. D. Del. 2012) (adopting Markell test).