PATRICK J. SCHILTZ, District Judge.
Four groups of lenders appeal from the November 22, 2013 order of Chief United States Bankruptcy Judge Gregory F. Kishel granting the trustee's motion to substantively consolidate nine bankruptcy estates.
These appeals arise out of the jointly administered bankruptcy proceedings of Petters Company, Inc. ("PCI") and eight "special-purpose entities" ("SPEs") wholly owned and controlled by PCI or Thomas J. Petters.
Appellants are lenders who extended financing to one or more of the SPEs either directly or indirectly through one of the other lenders. All of the appellants were net winners from the Ponzi scheme. Tr. App. 5581. In other words, appellants not only regained their initial investments in the SPEs, but they also garnered tens or even hundreds of millions of dollars in profits — profits that were funded with money stolen from other investors. Because they were net winners, none of the appellants has filed a proof of claim in the bankruptcy proceeding. Nor would there appear to be anything for appellants to claim; at the time of the FBI's raid in September 2008, none of the SPEs had any assets. App. 221-22.
Appellants seek review of Judge Kishel's order granting the trustee's motion for substantive consolidation of PCI and the SPEs. Substantive consolidation is a common-law doctrine under which a bankruptcy court may combine separate bankruptcy estates into a single estate. In re Owens Corning, 419 F.3d 195, 205 (3d Cir.2005). As with corporate-veil piercing and similar doctrines, substantive consolidation is generally justified at least partly on the ground that the separate corporate existence of the debtors was disregarded in practice and therefore should be disregarded in law. Id. ("The concept of substantively consolidating separate estates begins with a commonsense deduction. Corporate disregard as a fault may lead to corporate disregard as a remedy." (footnote omitted)).
When a court grants substantive consolidation, creditors' claims against the separate debtors become claims against the consolidated entity, and liabilities among the consolidated entities are erased. Id. This has the effect of providing a bigger pool of assets from which creditors can draw, but it can also work to the disadvantage of creditors whose potential recovery is diluted. In particular, a creditor whose debtor had some assets may now be forced to share those assets with creditors of debtors who had no assets.
The trustee moves to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction, arguing that, because appellants are net winners from the Ponzi scheme who have no claims against the bankruptcy estate, they lack standing to appeal the substantive-consolidation order. Appellants respond that (1) the trustee should be estopped from raising the issue of standing, and (2) they do, in fact, have standing to appeal. The Court considers each issue in turn.
Appellants first argue that the trustee should be estopped from raising the issue of standing because earlier in these proceedings he argued that this Court has jurisdiction over this appeal. The Court disagrees.
Judicial estoppel is an equitable doctrine under which a court may prevent a party from deliberately changing its position on a legal or factual issue during the course of a lawsuit. New Hampshire v. Maine, 532 U.S. 742, 749-50, 121 S.Ct. 1808, 149 L.Ed.2d 968 (2001). The purpose of the doctrine is to protect the integrity of the judicial process. Id. Among the factors a court may consider in deciding whether to apply the doctrine are (1) whether the party's current position is "clearly inconsistent" with its former position; (2) whether the party succeeded in persuading the court to accept its earlier position; and (3) whether the party would derive an unfair advantage or impose an unfair detriment on the opposing party if it were not estopped. Id. at 750-51, 121 S.Ct. 1808.
Application of the doctrine is not warranted when the party's prior position was the product of inadvertence or mistake. Id. at 753, 121 S.Ct. 1808; EEOC v. CRST Van Expedited, Inc., 679 F.3d 657, 680 (8th Cir.2012). Whether to apply judicial estoppel is within the discretion of the Court. New Hampshire, 532 U.S. at 750, 121 S.Ct. 1808.
Shortly after these appeals were docketed, the trustee filed motions to certify them for immediate appeal to the Eighth Circuit. In his briefing in support of the motions, the trustee represented that "[t]his Court has jurisdiction over this motion and the pending appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 158(a) and 1334 and Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 8001(f)." See, e.g., Case No. 13-CV-3611, ECF No. 13 at 3. In its order denying the trustee's motions, the Court found that it had jurisdiction under § 158(a)(1), which permits appeals as of right from "final judgments,
Appellants argue that the trustee's earlier argument that this Court has jurisdiction should estop him from now arguing that appellants lack standing. The Court disagrees. As an initial matter, the trustee's earlier assertion regarding jurisdiction is not "clearly inconsistent" with his current assertion that appellants lack standing, because the trustee was earlier addressing the issue of finality, while now he is addressing the issue of standing. Whether an order regarding substantive consolidation is a "final" order appealable as of right under § 158(a)(1) is not entirely clear. The trustee correctly anticipated that the Court would be concerned about the issue of finality, and the trustee quite appropriately focused on that issue. Given the context, the trustee's earlier statement about jurisdiction appears to concern only the issue of finality under § 158(a) and not the issue of standing.
Moreover, the trustee's failure to raise the issue of standing earlier was almost certainly inadvertent.
It is also worth noting that, at the time that the trustee filed his motions to certify, there was an appellant who unquestionably had standing — Elistone Fund. Unlike the other appellants, Elistone Fund was a net loser from the Ponzi scheme, and it filed a proof of claim in the PCI bankruptcy case. As a result, Elistone Fund was a creditor with a direct interest in the distribution of the assets of the bankruptcy estate and therefore had standing to appeal orders affecting that distribution. Cf. Hartman Corp. of Am. v. United States, 304 F.2d 429, 430 (8th Cir.1962) (creditors are normally parties that can be "aggrieved" by a bankruptcy order). Elistone Fund later settled with the trustee and dismissed its appeal, but at the time that the trustee argued that this Court had jurisdiction, Elistone was still among the appellants, and thus it is understandable why the trustee would not have focused on the issue of standing. Once the only appellant who was a net loser from the Ponzi scheme settled out, it was natural for the trustee to turn his attention to the standing of the remaining appellants.
Finally, there is little prejudice to appellants in permitting the trustee to raise the issue of standing at this stage. Appellants cite no authority for the proposition that the trustee had to raise the issue of standing before he filed his brief addressing the merits of appellants' appeals. At worst, appellants were required to undergo one round of unnecessary briefing on the issue of immediate certification. This is not the sort of prejudice that should result in the drastic remedy of estoppel, particularly where the party to be estopped gained no advantage from failing to raise the issue earlier. The Court therefore declines to
Appellate standing in bankruptcy cases is more limited than either Article III standing or ordinary prudential standing. In re AFY, 734 F.3d 810, 819 (8th Cir.2013). In order to have standing to appeal a bankruptcy order, an appellant must be a "person aggrieved" by that order. In re Zahn, 526 F.3d 1140, 1142 (8th Cir.2008).
The "person aggrieved" doctrine originally derives from the Bankruptcy Act of 1898. In re AFY, 734 F.3d at 819 n. 10. Although the statutory basis for the doctrine has since been repealed, courts continue to apply it in light of the pressing need to limit the class of people who may appeal bankruptcy orders:
In re El San Juan Hotel, 809 F.2d 151, 154 (1st Cir.1987); see also In re Ernie Haire Ford, Inc., 764 F.3d 1321, 1327 (11th Cir.2014) ("The purpose of the person aggrieved standard is to prevent bankruptcies from being needlessly prolonged by parties whose interests are not central to the process.").
Conversely, the right to participate in proceedings before a bankruptcy court is broader than the "person aggrieved" status necessary to have standing to appeal an order of that bankruptcy court. See In re AFY, 734 F.3d at 824. In other words, the fact that a party was permitted to participate in bankruptcy-court proceedings does not mean that the party necessarily has standing to appeal orders entered in those proceedings.
"`Person aggrieved' is, of course, a term of art: almost by definition, all appellants may claim in some way to be `aggrieved,' else they would not bother to prosecute their appeals." Travelers Ins. Co. v. H.K. Porter Co., 45 F.3d 737, 741 (3d Cir.1995). To qualify as a "person aggrieved," an appellant must have a "financial stake in the bankruptcy court's order, meaning [it was] directly and adversely affected pecuniarily by the order." In re Peoples, 764 F.3d 817, 820 (8th Cir.2014) (citation and quotations omitted). Courts sometimes explain that a person has standing to appeal an order of a bankruptcy court only when the order "diminishes the person's property, increases the person's burdens, or impairs the person's rights." In re Marlar, 267 F.3d 749, 753 n. 1 (8th Cir.2001) (citation and quotations omitted).
Even when an appellant has a direct pecuniary interest in a bankruptcy-court order, he may nevertheless lack standing to appeal that order if the interest he seeks to vindicate is not one that is protected by the Bankruptcy Code. In re Ernie Haire Ford, Inc., 764 F.3d at 1327 ("Assuming arguendo that Atkinson has suffered a direct harm as a result of the amended Litigation Bar Date, he is still not a person aggrieved because his interest is not protected or regulated by the Bankruptcy Code."); In re Moran, 566 F.3d 676, 681 (6th Cir.2009) ("All of Stark's asserted interests are either not directly harmed by the bankruptcy court's order or are not interests that bankruptcy law — in particular the law governing abandonment — protects."); In re Harwald Co., 497 F.2d 443, 444-45 (7th Cir.1974) (no appellate standing because, although unsuccessful bidders suffered injury from order
Whether an appellant is a "person aggrieved" is ordinarily a question of fact. In re Hecker, 496 B.R. 541, 550 (8th Cir. BAP 2013). But where the relevant facts are undisputed, courts may treat the question as an issue of law. Cf. In re El San Juan Hotel, 809 F.2d at 154 n. 3. Here, the relevant facts are undisputed.
As discussed above, Judge Kishel's substantive-consolidation order will have a major impact on how the assets of the bankruptcy estates are distributed to the creditors of those estates. Because appellants do not presently have claims against any of the estates, however, they do not currently have any interest in how the assets of those estates are distributed.
Instead, the reason appellants have appealed Judge Kishel's order is to gain a strategic advantage in the avoidance actions that the trustee has brought against them. As noted, appellants profited from the Ponzi scheme when hundreds of millions of dollars stolen from others were paid to them. The trustee has brought avoidance actions against appellants to seek to recover this stolen loot and distribute it equitably among the victims of the Ponzi scheme; appellants are resisting those actions, seeking to retain the stolen loot for themselves.
Understandably, appellants would prefer not to have to defend the trustee's avoidance actions. Because the substantive-consolidation order makes it more likely that those actions will go forward, appellants seek to have the order overturned. A long line of cases establishes, however, that having to defend a separate lawsuit does not render a litigant "aggrieved" for purposes of standing.
The Court is not persuaded that these circumstances render this case materially distinguishable from other cases in which an appellant's interest in avoiding litigation has been held insufficient to confer standing. It is true that a number of these cases emphasized that the appellants' rights were not affected because the appellants could assert the same defenses that they could have asserted in the absence of the order permitting the litigation to go forward. Nevertheless, the fact remains that in all of these cases, the appellants lost their very best "defense" — their "defense" of not having to defend the lawsuit at all.
Setting that aside, courts have rejected the argument that being deprived of a defense to an adversary action gives an appellant standing to appeal an order of a bankruptcy court. See In re Ernie Haire Ford, Inc., 764 F.3d 1321, 1326-27 (11th Cir.2014). In Ernie Haire Ford, the bankruptcy court confirmed a Chapter 11 plan that set a deadline for the liquidating agent to bring lawsuits against third parties on behalf of the estate. Id. at 1323-24. Any lawsuit not brought by that deadline would be "conclusively deemed waived or abandoned." Id. at 1324. The plan further granted "any defendant" the right
Over two years after the deadline had passed, the liquidating agent instituted a lawsuit against the appellant. Id. Invoking his rights under the plan, the appellant moved to enjoin the lawsuit. Id. The debtor then filed a motion to extend the deadline, which the bankruptcy court granted. Id.
As in this case, the appellant argued that he had standing to appeal the bankruptcy court's order because the order "hampered [his] ability to defend against liability by removing a defense that would have otherwise been available to him ...." Id. at 1326-27. The appellant contended that, unlike other cases that merely permitted litigation to proceed, the bankruptcy court order "deprived him of an affirmative right...." Id. at 1326.
The Eleventh Circuit did not dispute the premise of the appellant's argument — that the bankruptcy-court order had impaired appellant's ability to defend the adversary action — but the court nevertheless held that the appellant lacked standing to appeal that order. Even assuming that the appellant's alleged harm was sufficiently direct to satisfy the "person aggrieved" standard, the Eleventh Circuit explained, "he is still not a person aggrieved because his interest is not protected or regulated by the Bankruptcy Code." Id. at 1327. Indeed, an adversary defendant's interest in avoiding liability to the estate is "antithetical to the goals of bankruptcy," the primary purpose of which is to minimize injury to creditors. Id. Simply put, the desire to avoid liability to the estate does not render a litigant "aggrieved" for purposes of appealing from an order of the bankruptcy court. Id.
Although Ernie Haire Ford appears to be unique in the explicitness with which it held that an appellant does not have standing to appeal even when the bankruptcycourt order impairs his defenses in a separate lawsuit, other cases have reached the same conclusion. For example, in In re Moran, the debtor was a shareholder in a closely-held corporation, but did not initially disclose that asset in his bankruptcy petition. 566 F.3d 676, 678 (6th Cir.2009). The trustee later learned of the debtor's interest in the corporation and moved to reopen the bankruptcy case. Id. at 679. The trustee eventually reached a settlement with the debtor under which the trustee agreed to ask the bankruptcy court to treat the stock as never having belonged to the bankruptcy estate. Id. This would allow the debtor to retain the shares. Id. at 678.
Another shareholder in the corporation objected and submitted an offer to purchase the stock from the estate. Id. at 680. The bankruptcy court rejected the other shareholder's offer and granted the trustee's motion to abandon the stock to the debtor as of the date of the bankruptcy filing. Id.
Notably, the debtor had a separate state-court lawsuit pending against the other shareholder concerning ownership and control of the corporation. Id. at 679. Both the debtor and the other shareholder agreed that the order granting the trustee's motion gave the debtor an advantage in that separate litigation. Id. at 679 & n. 1. Specifically, if the bankruptcy estate owned the shares instead of the debtor, then some or all of the debtor's claims could fail. Id. at 679. By granting the trustee's motion to abandon the shares as of the date of the bankruptcy filing, the bankruptcy court removed the other shareholder's ability to argue that the debtor did not own the shares.
Nevertheless, the Sixth Circuit held that the shareholder lacked standing to appeal the bankruptcy court's order. The court held that the shareholder's interests as a
True, the court also opined that the shareholder's ability to defend himself had not been impaired. Specifically, the court observed that any defenses that the shareholder could have asserted if the trustee had properly abandoned the stock to the debtor — or if the trustee had brought the same suit on behalf of the estate — would still be available. Id. The fact remains, however, that under the actual circumstances of the case — as opposed to the hypothetical circumstances posited by the Sixth Circuit — the appellant's defenses were unquestionably compromised by the bankruptcy court's order. Nevertheless, the appellant did not have standing to attack that order as erroneous on appeal.
Land-O-Sun Dairies v. Pine State Creamery Co. is another case in which the bankruptcy court's order did more than just allow litigation to go forward. In Land-O-Sun Dairies, the appellant had agreed to purchase the debtor's assets. 200 B.R. 125, 126 (E.D.N.C.1996). The sale was conditioned on the bankruptcy court's approval. Id. Before the bankruptcy court approved the sale, however, the appellant changed its mind and advised the court that it was not in a position to close the sale. Id. The bankruptcy court approved the sale anyway. Id.
On appeal of the bankruptcy-court order, the district court held that the appellant lacked standing because its main interest was in avoiding a separate breach-of-contract action for refusing to go forward with the sale. Id. at 127. Crucially, the appellant lacked standing even though the order approving the sale did not merely allow a separate lawsuit to go forward; it actually changed the legal relationship between the parties and thereby affected the ability of the appellant to defend that lawsuit. The bankruptcy court's approval was a condition precedent of the sale. Without it, the debtor would not have a valid breach-of-contract claim against the appellant. Id. Again, though, the fact that the bankruptcy-court order had an impact on the ability of the appellant to defend a separate lawsuit did not give the appellant standing to appeal that order.
In this case, as in these other cases, appellants' asserted interest in avoiding liability to the consolidated bankruptcy estate is not the sort of interest that is protected by the Bankruptcy Code. Indeed, as Ernie Haire Ford put it, appellants' interest is "antithetical to the goals of bankruptcy." In re Ernie Haire Ford, 764 F.3d at 1327. For that reason, the fact that Judge Kishel's substantive-consolidation order may have an impact on appellants' ability to defend themselves in avoidance actions does not give appellants standing to appeal that order.
Appellants next argue that they are, in fact, creditors of the consolidated bankruptcy
Whether or not appellants meet the formal definition of "creditor" under the Bankruptcy Code, the fact remains that the contingent and speculative nature of appellants' hypothetical future bankruptcy claims is at odds with the "person aggrieved" standard. That standard requires that the appellant have a direct pecuniary interest in the order from which he appeals. In re Peoples, 764 F.3d at 820 ("The doctrine limits standing to persons with a financial stake in the bankruptcy court's order, meaning they were directly and adversely affected pecuniarily by the order." (citations and quotations omitted)); In re AFY, 734 F.3d at 820-21 (indirect consequences from a bankruptcy order are not enough to confer appellate standing); LTV Steel Co., 560 F.3d at 454 ("simply holding a claim of any type against the estate does not automatically confer appellate standing"); Travelers Ins. Co., 45 F.3d at 741 (no standing where insurer's interest in the bankruptcy order was "remote and contingent").
Appellants' interest as potential creditors is remote from the substantive-consolidation order because that interest depends on the highly uncertain outcome of the avoidance actions. If appellants prevail in those actions — and they express confidence that they will — then appellants will never file proofs of claim against a bankruptcy estate and their interest as creditors will never come into being, much less be affected by Judge Kishel's substantive-consolidation order. Under these circumstances, any pecuniary harm to appellants as creditors is merely potential and cannot be characterized as a direct consequence of the substantive-consolidation order.
Indeed, because their status as creditors turns entirely on the outcome of the avoidance actions, appellants' "contingent claim" argument is really just another way of attempting to assert their interest as adversary defendants. Cf. LTV Steel Co., 560 F.3d at 455 (because the lawsuit against the appellant would be dismissed if he succeeded in reversing the bankruptcy court's order, his potential claim against the estate for litigation expenses was "nothing more than an indirect way of arguing that his status as a defendant in a lawsuit is sufficient to confer `person aggrieved' standing"). This is especially true because the SPEs to which appellants loaned money do not appear to have any assets except for the avoidance actions. Compared to their immediate interest as adversary defendants in avoiding liability to the estate, appellants' future interest in protecting their share of nonexistent assets is essentially theoretical.
Appellants cite cases in which courts have allowed creditors with contingent claims to participate in proceedings before the bankruptcy court. See, e.g., In re Dunes Hotel Assocs., No. 94-75715, 1997 WL 33344253, at *10-13 (Bankr. D.S.C. Sept. 26, 1997). As noted earlier, however, the standard for permitting a party to participate in proceedings before a bankruptcy court is broader and more lenient than the "person aggrieved" standard that governs standing to appeal orders
If appellants are eventually found liable in the trustee's avoidance actions — and if appellants then file claims against the estate that are detrimentally affected by the substantive-consolidation order — then presumably appellants may invoke that harm as the basis for an appeal at that time.
Based on the foregoing, and on all of the files, records, and proceedings herein, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED THAT:
LET JUDGMENT BE ENTERED ACCORDINGLY.
True, in permitting the adversary defendant to contest the nunc pro tunc feature of the substantive-consolidation order, Auto-Train mainly relied on the fact that the adversary defendant had not received adequate notice of the consolidation hearing. Id. at 278. The court also noted, however, that the adversary defendant did not suffer any harm until "the Trustee sued to recover the funds as preferential," id. at 278 n. 11, suggesting that the proper time for the defendant to litigate the issue was during the adversary proceeding.