DEBORAH L. THORNE, UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE.
This matter comes before the court on the motion of Argon Credit, LLC and Argon X, LLC ("Debtors") for declaratory relief or a protective order. The Debtors' motion is granted. Because under the circumstances of this case the only possible § 341(a) meeting has been concluded, the Debtors have no obligation under § 343 to appear at the continued May meeting, it being a special meeting with its current purpose not requiring the Debtors' presence. Further, the court declines to order the meeting to be re-opened or re-convened under § 105 because such relief is not appropriate to carry out the provisions of the Bankruptcy Code under these specific circumstances. Thus, the Debtors need not appear at any continuation of the May meeting.
This case concerns a trustee in need of more information. It also concerns debtors who believe that they have provided enough already as well as counsel for the Debtors who will not be paid for any further services on behalf of the Debtors. The bankruptcy case was initially opened as a Chapter 11 proceeding, but on January 11 of this year was converted to a Chapter 7 liquidation following this court's ruling that the Debtors could not use their lender's cash collateral. Immediately following that conversion, Deborah Ebner was appointed Chapter 7 trustee.
Ebner presided over the meeting of creditors on February 7, 2017. The Debtors appeared at the meeting through one of their officers, Howard Korenthal, previously hired as their chief restructuring officer ("CRO") on December 16, 2016, the date of their Chapter 11 filing. Between December 16, 2016, and February 7, 2017, Korenthal had undertaken various tasks, including cash planning, reporting to lenders, analyzing the potential sale of the business, managing any potential liquidation of the business, implementing cost reduction and liquidity improvement programs and developing management/employee programs to assist with any sale or liquidation.
The meeting was concluded the day after
Two days after Crane's appointment, notice was sent out indicating that the § 341(a) meeting had been reset for May 17, 2017.
The Debtors now request that this court rule that they have no obligation to appear at the new meeting owing to the fact that the § 341(a) meeting has been concluded, not adjourned,
With that in mind, the court turns to a discussion of the applicable law.
The Debtors first argue that the language of the Bankruptcy Code forecloses any new § 341(a) meeting because that meeting has been concluded and there has not been an intervening conversion resulting in a new order for relief. For the reasons that follow, the court agrees.
As a matter of statute, the debtor is required to appear only at § 341(a) meetings. 11 U.S.C. § 343; see also In re Astri Inv., Mgmt. & Sec. Corp., 88 B.R. 730, 741 (D. Md. 1988) (noting that the § 341 meeting is the "only mandatory hearing" in Chapter 7 and 11 cases). The United States Trustee "shall" convene these § 341(a) meetings when, and only when, an order for relief in a case under the Bankruptcy Code is entered. Id. § 341(a). Thus, in a typical case, there can be only one § 341(a) meeting to be convened and concluded
It would seem to follow from this reading of the plain language of the relevant statutes
This reading does not come into conflict with the relevant purposes of the § 341(a) meeting, the "only mandatory
Here, the § 341(a) meeting was convened on February 7, 2017, and concluded, not adjourned, on February 8, 2017. Nobody disputed that Ebner was a proper trustee. The Debtors appeared through their Chief Restructuring Officer; no objections were made. The Debtors were present and available for examination under oath, meaning that the spirit or purpose of this mandatory hearing was complied with. When this meeting concluded on February 8, there could be no more mandatory § 341(a) meetings under the Code, because there could be no more orders for relief. See 11 U.S.C. § 706(a) (preventing this case from being re-converted back to a Chapter 11 case and potentially allowing a new order for relief).
The fact that the May meeting was noticed as a § 341(a) meeting is certainly interesting, but it would seem to make no difference under the Code. Owing to the previous analysis, it must be that the notice of this meeting was mislabeled. As the United States Trustee was under no statutory duty to call the meeting, it could not have been a § 341(a) meeting. If the purpose of this special meeting had been to examine the Debtors, then the Debtors would have had to have appeared through their representatives.
Therefore, the purpose of the May meeting not requiring the Debtors' presence, and § 343 having no application, the court concludes that the Debtors need not appear at any continuation of the May meeting.
The court further concludes that § 105 has no application to the case at bar that would alter this result. Section 105 provides that the court may issue any order that is appropriate to carry out the provisions of the Bankruptcy Code. See id. § 105(a). It seems likely that, given the right circumstances, § 105 could be used to re-open or re-convene a previously concluded § 341 meeting. Those circumstances, however, do not seem to be present here.
The current trustee contends that his duties require him to be able to examine the Debtors,
Second, the court cannot conclude that Korenthal, the Debtors' CRO, was not knowledgeable regarding the Debtors' interests, property, and/or financial affairs, due to the reasons stated in the court's recounting of the facts above. Therefore, Korenthal was a proper representative of the Debtors, being, as he was, an officer of the Debtors.
Moreover, the court notes that the trustee's duties under the Code are not being frustrated by this ruling. The trustee has ample recourse, either under Rule 2003(f) or Rule 2004, to examine the Debtors' principals in this case should the circumstances warrant such an examination, making the relief requested under § 105 even less appropriate. As noted by a leading Bankruptcy treatise commenting on § 343, "[i]nformation needed by the trustee and other parties can normally be obtained through other means." 3 COLLIER ON BANKRUPTCY, ¶ 343.02[5] (Alan N. Resnick & Henry J. Sommer, eds. 16th ed.). Owing to this, one of the Code's "central objectives," namely the maximization of the value of the estate through the discovery of its probable extent by examination of the Debtors' pre-bankruptcy officers, would not be furthered here by using § 105, because this type of examination does not depend on the existence of an ongoing § 341(a) meeting. See In re Caesars Entertainment Operating Co., 808 F.3d 1186, 1188-89 (7th Cir. 2015) (stating that the use of § 105 is "appropriate to carry out the provisions" of the Code where its use would further one of the "Code's central objectives").
What very limited case authority there is directly on this point supports this conclusion. For example, in discussing Matter of Mission Carpet Mills, Inc., 10 B.R. 494 (9th Cir. BAP 1981),
Due to the fact that the § 341(a) meeting in this case has been concluded and will not be reopened, and because the meeting currently being called therefore is a special creditors' meeting with no noticed purpose that requires the examination of the Debtors, the motion is hereby granted. The Debtors need not appear at any continuation of the May meeting.
While it might be contended that Congress, in the absence of any discussion in the legislative history as to this intended change, was not trying to alter this pre-Code practice, it seems reasonable to conclude that such a change was intended in light of the unambiguous statutory language and the lessened importance of such meetings under the Code. See Dewsnup, 502 U.S. at 419-20, 112 S.Ct. 773 ("Of course, where the language is unambiguous, silence in the legislative history cannot be controlling."); Vance, 120 B.R. at 184 (noting, in light of the various changes to bankruptcy practice made by the Code in 1978, that "the meeting of creditors has become a less urgent and pivotal event in bankruptcy administration than it once was").