KEVIN J. CAREY, Bankruptcy Judge.
Orleans Homebuilders, Inc. and related entities (the "Debtors" or "Orleans") build, develop, market, and sell single-family homes, townhouses and condominiums to homebuyers. The Mews at Byers Station (the "Condominium" or "Byers Station") is a condominium project located in Chester County, Pennsylvania, started by certain Debtors on March 29, 2006, upon filing the Declaration of Condominium (the "Declaration"), which (among other things) established the Mews at Byers Station Condominium Association, Inc. (the "Association"). The Debtors controlled the Association's board from March 29, 2006 until turnover of the Association to the unit owners during the last week of August 2009.
The Debtors filed chapter 11 petitions on March 1, 2010. This Court entered an order confirming the Debtors' Modified Second Amended Joint Plan of Reorganization (the "Plan") on December 1, 2010, which became effective on February 14, 2011.
The Association filed a complaint against certain Reorganized Debtors on November 21, 2012, in the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County, Pennsylvania (the "Pennsylvania Action"), alleging that (i) the Reorganized Debtors failed to honor statutory and contractual warranties to repair alleged structural defects to common elements and limited common elements of the Condominium; and (ii) the Reorganized Debtors failed to pay assessments for units at the Condominium that it once owned and subsequently sold.
Before the Court is the Motion of Reorganized Debtors for Order Enforcing Plan Injunction, Holding the Mews At Byers Station Condominium Association, Inc. in Civil Contempt for Violating the Plan Injunction and Awarding Actual Damages, Costs, Attorney Fees and Punitive Damages (D.I. 4509) (the "Injunction Motion"). The Association filed an objection to the Injunction Motion (D.I. 4514) (the "Association Objection"). The parties filed a Joint Pre-Trial Memorandum (D.I. 4605), and the Debtors and the Association each filed a Trial Brief (D.I. 4598 and D.I. 4618, respectively) in support of their positions. After a hearing, I took this matter under advisement.
For the reasons set forth below, the Injunction Motion will be granted, in part, to enjoin claims arising prior to the Plan's Effective Date; denied, in part, as to claims arising after the Plan's Effective Date; and deferred as to the request for sanctions.
The parties' Joint Pre-Trial Memorandum contains a Statement of Uncontested Facts for the limited purpose of deciding the Injunction Motion, which includes the following:
On March 26, 2006, upon the filing of the Declaration of Condominium, the Debtors commenced development of the Condominium Project and the Association was formed.
On March 1, 2010 (the "Petition Date"), the Debtors filed chapter 11 petitions. On April 30, 2010, the Association filed a proof of claim, asserting both secured and unsecured claims.
On December 1, 2010, the Court entered an order confirming the Debtors' Second Amended Joint Plan of Reorganization (the "Plan").
In June of 2011, the Association's Engineer completed a transition report, which was sent to the Reorganized Debtors.
On September 28, 2012, the Reorganized Debtors filed the Eighth Omnibus Objection to Claims Pursuant to Bankruptcy Code § 502, Bankruptcy Rule 3007, and Local Rule 3007-1 [Substantive] (the "Claim Objection"), which asserted that the Association's claim was "not valid and that no amount was owed on account of [its] claim" and asked that the Proof of Claim be "expunged and disallowed in [its] entirety." (D.I. 4225).
On November 9, 2012, the Association requested an additional extension to respond to the Claims Objection and an additional adjournment of the hearing. The Reorganized Debtors agreed to extend the response deadline to November 14, 2012, but declined to further delay the hearing.
On November 16 and 19, 2012, after the extended response deadline had passed, the Reorganized Debtors confirmed with the Association that the Association had not filed and did not intend to file a response to the Claim Objection.
On November 21, 2012, the Association filed the Pennsylvania Action against certain Reorganized Debtors.
The Debtors argue that the Plan's Discharge and Injunction bars creditors, such as the Association, from "commencing or continuing in any manner" any litigation against the Reorganized Debtors arising from pre-petition claims. Section 9.2 of the Plan states, in part:
The Third Circuit's decision in In re Grossman's, Inc. instructs that a claim arises when an individual is exposed pre-petition to a product or other conduct giving rise to an injury, which underlies a "right to payment" under the Bankruptcy Code.
Here, the Debtors turned over control of the Association to the unit owners in August 2009, more than six months prior to the chapter 11 filing. On April 30, 2010, the Association filed a proof of claim, which describes the basis for the claim as "[o]bligations as Declarant & Unit Owner per 68 Pa CSA § 3101, et seq and Associations' Declaration of Covenants and Restrictions."
The proof of claim also further describes the Debtor's obligations to the Association as including, without limitation, (i) completion of construction of the condominium improvements (including items such as roads/streets, street lights, street curbing, storm sewers, water delivery system, paving, grading and landscaping); (ii) warranty against structural defects in the Units and portions of the condominium which are owned jointly as the common facilities owned by all Unit owners; (iii) payment of assessments levied by the Creditor Association upon Units owned by the Debtor (including past-due assessments), and (iv) all other obligations owed by the Debtor to the Creditor Association pursuant to the Declaration, the Condominium Act and the well-settled law of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
After filing the proof of claim, the Association obtained engineering reports, which were shared with the Reorganized Debtors. Thereafter, in 2011 and 2012 the Reorganized Debtors and the Association engaged in a series of correspondence in which the Reorganized Debtors agreed to address certain issues related to the units and common elements. In those letters, the Reorganized Debtors, however, stated their position that the 2-year warranties under the Pennsylvania statute had expired and that claims under warranties issued prior to the Petition Date were discharged under the Plan.
Then, on September 28, 2012, the Reorganized Debtors objected to the Association's proof of claim, arguing that no amount was owed and requesting that the claim be expunged and disallowed in its entirety. After the Association did not respond to the Claim Objection (despite receiving a continuance), the Court entered the Disallowance Order, expunging the claim.
The plain language of the Plan and Confirmation Order prevent the Association from pursuing pre-petition claims against the Reorganized Debtors, except to enforce any right to distribution under the terms of the Plan. Applying the Grossman's test to these facts, I conclude that the Association's pre-petition claims include any claims for damages arising out of the units and buildings constructed and sold pre-petition, as well as any right to payment for assessments that arose pre-petition. The Association clearly knew about its potential claims based on the engineering reports and the various correspondence with the Reorganized Debtors. In November 2012, the Association did not object to entry of an order expunging those claims. Any obligations on pre-petition claims under the Plan are expunged by the Disallowance Order.
The Association argues, however, that the "Revesting Provision" of the Plan provides that its pre-petition claims were not discharged, but passed through the Plan and may be enforced against the Reorganized Debtors. Section 1.163 of the Plan included the Byers Station Condominium project in the list of "Revesting Developments." Article VII of the Plan, entitled Executory Contracts, includes Section 7.14 (the "Revesting Provision"), which provides:
The Association argues that this section provides that all pre-petition agreements related to the Revesting Developments were treated as executory contracts and assumed by the Reorganized Debtors on the Effective Date. In particular, the Association argues that the Declaration of Condominium for the Mews at Byers Station (the "Declaration"), filed with the Recorder of Deeds for Chester County, Pennsylvania on March 29, 2006, and the Public Offering Statement (the "POS") were assumed by the Reorganized Debtors so that the Debtors could complete construction and sales of the Condominium post-petition.
In response, the Reorganized Debtors argue that the Association is reading the Revesting Provision too broadly. The Reorganized Debtors insist that the provision covers only a specific and narrowly-circumscribed set of governmental and quasi-governmental rights afforded to the Reorganized Debtors — not the assumption of any continuing liability by the Reorganized Debtors to third parties, such as the Association, who are not parties to those agreements. For an agreement to be assumed under the Revesting Development Provision, the Reorganized Debtors argue that the agreement must: (1) relate to a Revesting Development; (2) be embodied in one of the listed types of documents (i.e., development orders, city/county ordinances, zoning approvals, permits, and/or other related documents); (3) constitute an "official action of a governmental unit or quasi-governmental unit, and/or utility;" and (4) grant the Debtors "development rights, property interests, and/or entitlements."
I agree that the Association's reading of the Revesting Provision is too broad and disregards most of the language in that section. The Association argues that the provision applies to any documents that "are necessary, appropriate, beneficial, or required to permit the continued construction and development of the any of the Revesting Developments." This reading cites only to one element of the particular type of agreements the Debtors described in that Plan provision and ignores the remaining language. Moreover, the Revesting Provision's plain language specifically applies to agreements between the Debtors and governmental or quasi-governmental agencies. It does not include agreements between the Debtors and private third-parties, even if those obligations are referenced in an assumed agreement. The Revesting Provision cannot be read so broadly to incorporate agreements within agreements that grant rights to non-governmental third parties.
Further, the Reorganized Debtors argue that even if other executory contracts relating to the Byers Station Condominium were assumed pursuant to Bankruptcy Code § 365, the Plan provided that the default cure amount for any executory contract assumed under the Plan, but not specifically listed, was $0.
For all the reasons set forth above, the Association's causes of action against the Reorganized Debtors based on claims that arose pre-petition are barred by the Plan Discharge and Injunction, and any request for payment under the Plan was extinguished by the Disallowance Order. This includes claims based on (i) pre-petition construction and sales, (ii) pre-petition warranties, and (iii) non-payment of assessments or other amounts that became due pre-petition.
After commencement of their chapter 11 proceedings, the Debtors continued to build and sell units at the Byers Station Condominium. In the Joint Pre-Trial Memorandum, the parties agreed that the following units were sold post-petition:
In addition to selling the eight units listed above during the post-petition, pre-Effective Date period, the parties stipulated to the following facts in the Joint Pre-Trial Memorandum:
Deciding whether any claims arising from the post-petition activities are subject to the Plan's Discharge and Injunction requires a brief discussion of the history behind Third Circuit case law determining when a claim arises in a bankruptcy case.
Prior to Grossman's (discussed above), the Third Circuit's standard for determining when a claim arose was found in the Frenville decision,
The Third Circuit, however, abandoned the Frenville test in Grossman's when the Court, sitting en banc, held that a "claim" arises when an individual is exposed pre-petition to a product or other conduct giving rise to an injury, which underlies a "right to payment."
A Court of Appeals panel revisited the Grossman's test in Wright v. Owens Corning.
Here, the Debtors' Plan was confirmed on December 1, 2010 and became effective on February 14, 2011 (i.e., after Grossman's, but before Wright). The Plan's Discharge and Injunction in this case applies to all claims arising prior to the Effective Date. Wright instructs that the Frenville test governs the post-petition, pre-Effective Date claims in this matter.
Most of the claims asserted in the Pennsylvania Action (the "Pennsylvania Claims") are very broad and do not specify a time frame for the alleged breach or wrongful act.
"The true test for determining when a cause of action accrues is to establish the time when a plaintiff could have first maintained a cause of action to a successful conclusion."
Pennsylvania courts have applied the discovery rule in cases alleging latent real estate construction defects.
The parties stipulated that the Association obtained the engineer's initial report in June 2010, i.e., in the post-petition, pre-Effective Date period. Moreover, the uncontested facts are rife with communications between the Association and the Reorganized Debtors about construction issues and defects that continued after the Plan's Effective Date. The Association had the opportunity to pursue these pre-Effective Date claims as part of their proof of claim. The parties negotiated and the Reorganized Debtors addressed at least some of the issues. Eventually, the Reorganized Debtors filed an objection to the Association's claim, alleging that there was no liability to the Association on its claims. The Court entered the Disallowance Order that expunged all pre-Effective Date claims with the knowledge and consent of the Association.
Based on the facts and circumstances of this case, the Plan's Discharge and Injunction applies and bars the Association from pursuing any post-petition, pre-Effective Date claims against the Reorganized Debtors in the Pennsylvania Action.
The plain language of the Plan's Discharge and Injunction provides that it applies to claims that arise pre-Effective Date. Therefore, any claims in the Pennsylvania Action that are based upon post-Effective Date sales or construction are not subject to the Plan's Discharge and Injunction.
The Association, however, further argues that the Reorganized Debtors' post-Effective Date actions demonstrate that the Reorganized Debtors assumed all responsibilities under the Declaration, the Public Offering Statement and the PUCA. The Association, therefore, argues that the Reorganized Debtors should be equitably estopped from bringing this Injunction Motion. A party asserting equitable estoppel must show "(1) a representation of material fact was made to the party; (2) such party had a right to, and did, rely on the representation; and (3) that denial of the representation by the party making it would injure the relying party."
Here, I cannot agree that the Reorganized Debtors represented that they were assuming obligations related to the Byers Station Condominium. Although the Reorganized Debtors worked with the Association to address problems and concerns regarding completion and repair of the Condominium, the Reorganized Debtors often prefaced their cooperation — often in writing — with a statement that it was not waiving rights under the Plan and, further, argued that warranties had expired. In light of the Reorganized Debtors continuous statements about reserving all rights, I cannot conclude that the Association justifiably relied on any representation that the Association interpreted as a commitment to assume agreements and warranties.
The Reorganized Debtors argue that sanctions are warranted for the Association's willful violation of the Plan's Discharge and Injunction. I will schedule a further hearing to consider the Reorganized Debtors' request for sanctions.
For the reasons set forth above, I conclude that the Plan's Discharge and Injunction enjoins the Association from pursuing any claims against the Reorganized Debtors arising prior to the Plan's Effective Date. The Revesting Provision in the Plan does not apply to the Association's claims. However, the Plan's Discharge and Injunction does not affect any claims arising post-Effective Date. The Reorganized Debtors' request for sanctions will be deferred.
An appropriate order follows.