RANDOLPH J. HAINES, Bankruptcy Judge.
Pending before the Court is confirmation of the Debtor's First Amended Plan of Reorganization. The only objections to confirmation are those filed by the secured creditor Comerica Bank. Comerica objects that the plan is not feasible, that its classification of unsecured claims violates Bankruptcy Code § 1122,
The Debtor is an Arizona corporation formed in 1986 by Owen and Linda Cowing, who are the Debtor's only shareholders. Although they are no longer married, the Cowings jointly manage the Debtor's business operation in their respective capacities as president and secretary.
The Debtor's business consists of the rental of large earth moving equipment, primarily Caterpillars often referred to as "yellow iron," almost exclusively to licensed contractors. Its equipment is used primarily in four business sectors: commercial building, road building, other infrastructure construction, and residential building. During the height of the housing boom perhaps as much as 30% of Debtor's business was in residential construction, but today it is only about 1%.
The Debtor's business model is to purchase and rent out older, used equipment but to maintain it extremely well according to regular maintenance schedules. In addition, the Debtor has maintenance staff that can respond quickly if a machine breaks down on the job, either to repair it or to substitute replacement equipment. Over the past quarter century the Debtor has built a reputation for reliability and minimal downtime, and because it does not buy or use new equipment it can charge lower rental rates than its principal competitor.
Since 2003, the Debtor has been financed by a revolving line of credit with Comerica Bank. By the time the Chapter 11 was filed in August, 2009, the Comerica debt was approximately $33 million. The debt is guaranteed by Owen and Linda Cowing.
In the spring of 2008, the decline in revenues caused non-monetary defaults in the Comerica debt, which led to a series of forbearance agreements and workout negotiations. At about that same time Owen Cowing was diagnosed with leukemia, and therefore turned over primary responsibility for the workout negotiations to the Debtor's then-Chief Financial Officer Darren Dierich. Dierich continually advised that no workout solution could be negotiated with Comerica, and that Comerica insisted that the Debtor wind down its business operations, substantially reduce the amount of equipment it owned, and that it prepare for liquidation.
Although not directly at issue at this confirmation hearing,
In June, 2009, the Debtor advised Comerica of its discovery of the secret sale plan and that it might have claims against Comerica as a result. In August, 2009, Comerica advised that it would not approve payment of any weekly expenses, including payroll, that had routinely been paid out of Comerica's revolving line. Because it could not fund payroll or pay trade vendors, the Debtor filed this Chapter 11 petition on August 11, 2009.
The Debtor has filed an adversary proceeding asserting claims against Comerica arising from the secret sale scheme, including equitable subordination and damages for aiding and abetting breaches of fiduciary duty. That adversary proceeding is currently pending before Bankruptcy Judge Case and is not scheduled for trial until 2012. Comerica's primary defense is not to deny the facts as alleged by the Debtor, but to argue that there was no damage to the Debtor because the scheme was discovered before the sale could be concluded.
Although the Debtor had been downsizing in 2007 and 2008, by the petition date it owned approximately 180 items of major equipment. About two months after the filing, the Debtor received a bid from an auction company to purchase approximately 50% of the Debtor's equipment for a little over $5 million. After initially opposing the sale, Comerica eventually consented to the sale and made a credit bid of $7 million for the equipment. After the sale, the Debtor's remaining equipment was approximately
The Debtor filed its plan of reorganization in December, 2009, and filed its first amended plan in October, 2010. In November, Comerica filed an election pursuant to Bankruptcy Code § 1111(b), seeking to have its approximate $25 million claim treated as fully secured. The Debtor objected pursuant to Code § 1111(b)(1)(B)(II), arguing that the § 1111(b) election is not available when the property has been sold under § 363. The parties briefed and argued the issues of whether the Code's language "is sold" may include a sale prior to confirmation and how the exception to the election applies when only some of "such property is sold." The Court concluded that "is sold" includes sales made prior to the election deadline, because "or is to be sold under the plan" refers to sales to be made after the election deadline. The Court also held that when there is a sale of only a portion of the property there must be a pro rata exclusion from the election. Pursuant to that ruling, for purposes of confirmation the parties have stipulated that the value of Comerica's collateral is $10 million and that Comerica's total claim pursuant to § 1111(b) is $15.9 million.
The plan classifies Comerica's $15.9 million allowed secured § 1111(b) claim in Class 2. Pursuant to § 1129(b)(2)(A)(i)(II), although the principal amount of the claim is $15.9 million it need be paid only a present value of $10 million. The allowed secured claim will be paid with interest on $10 million at 5%, or such higher amount as the Court may deem appropriate. For the first year it will be paid in 12 monthly interest-only payments, and thereafter will be paid semiannual principal and interest payments based on a 20 year amortization, with the full balance due in 15 years. If Comerica had not made the § 1111(b) election, the full balance of the allowed secured claim would have been due and payable in five years.
The plan classifies Comerica's deficiency claim arising from the portion of its collateral that was sold, in the approximate amount of $9.8 million, in Class 7. All other unsecured claims, in the approximate amount of $4.5 million, are classified in Class 8. All 42 ballots cast in Class 8 accepted the plan. The allowed claims in Class 7 and 8 will share pro rata in a $100,000 pot to be funded on the effective date of the plan.
Both Comerica's secured and unsecured deficiency claims are treated as disputed claims under the plan. Until entry of a final order in the adversary proceeding, all payments due to Comerica on these claims will be deposited in a creditor reserve account. The plan designates Class 9 for any claims that are subordinated as a result of the adversary proceeding, and provides that the claims in Class 9 shall be paid in accordance with any final order in the adversary proceeding.
Class 3 consists of the secured property tax claims in the estimated amount of approximately $140,000. The plan provides these claims may be paid in quarterly payments over two years, with statutory interest. This class unanimously voted to accept the plan, as a result of the ballots cast by Maricopa County and Riverside County, California.
Class 4 consists of priority employee claims in the approximate amount of $12,000. The plan provides these claims may be paid in monthly installments over three years, together with simple interest at the rate of 4%. All four ballots cast in this class voted to accept the plan.
Class 6 is the consignment claims that Debtor estimates to total approximately $196,000. The plan provides that the consignment agreements giving rise to these claims will be rejected, the Debtor will enter into new consignment agreements, and the creditors will be paid 90% of any monetary arrearage on the effective date. All four ballots cast in this class voted to accept the plan, in the approximate amount of $208,000.
Class 10 consists of the equity ownership of Owen and Linda Cowing. The plan provides that their equity ownership shall be extinguished and that on the effective date the Cowings shall contribute the $480,000 cash payable on their administrative claim in exchange for 100% of the equity of the reorganized debtor. A modification filed shortly before the confirmation hearing clarified that this is to be a cash contribution. In addition, there is an exit loan facility in the amount of $1.25 million to be funded by the Cowings. Together with cash on hand, this will be much more than sufficient to pay all administrative claims, including the Cowings', which will enable them to make their cash contribution to the Debtor, and also to fund a capital reserve.
The only rejections of the plan were cast by Comerica, both in Class 2 and Class 7.
Relying on the Ninth Circuit BAP's decision in Tucson Self-Storage
The gerrymandering analysis applies only when similar claims are separately classified. It has no application to the classification of dissimilar claims. This is so for three reasons. First, Code § 1122 explicitly requires substantially dissimilar claims to be placed in separate classes.
Here, the Court finds as a fact that the deficiency claim of Comerica and the general unsecured claims are not substantially similar. This factual finding is based on the undisputed facts that (1) Comerica's deficiency claim may be paid from a nondebtor source, namely by the guarantees of Owen and Linda Cowing,
Moreover, even if the claims were not dissimilar, the gerrymandering analysis would not prohibit their separate classification on the facts here, where there are other classes that are impaired and have accepted the plan. It is undisputed that Class 3 (secured property tax claims of Maricopa and Riverside Counties), Class 4 (priority employee claims), Class 5 (priority unsecured tax claims) and Class 6 (consignment claims) are all impaired and have accepted the plan. Because each of these classes satisfies Code § 1129(a)(10), there is no need nor motivation to classify Comerica's deficiency claim separately from Class 8 so that Class 8's acceptance of the plan can satisfy the accepting impaired class requirement.
Because it is clearly not the case that the "sole purpose of Debtor's separate classification [of the deficiency claim] was to obtain acceptance of the Plan"
The evidence at the confirmation hearing consisted of only three witnesses. The only fact witness was Dave Gonzales, the Debtor's Chief Restructuring Officer and Chief Financial Officer (who replaced Darren Dierich). The Debtor also submitted a report, declaration and testimony from its expert witness Ed McDonough, and Comerica submitted a declaration and testimony from its expert Grant Lyon.
Mr. Gonzales testified to the Debtor's operating results since the petition. At the first cash collateral hearing in August of 2009, the Debtor had budgeted that it would double its sales within eight weeks and it would improve its cash position by approximately $7,000. In fact, the Debtor increased its machines on rent from 11 to 27, generated revenues in excess of that first budget by almost $43,000, and improved its cash position by $19,000.
At the beginning of 2010, the Debtor had projected $3.1 million in gross revenues and $126,000 of EBIDTA.
Comerica presented no factual or opinion evidence to the contrary, and effectively does not dispute the evidence that the Debtor's operations during this case substantially outperformed its own projections.
Mr. Gonzales prepared and testified to income projections covering the 15 year term of the plan. He testified they were based on a conservative 2% growth rate. The projections reflect more than a million dollars of EBIDTA available after bank debt service (at 6% interest) for the year 2011, around $800,000 of excess EBIDTA after service of bank debt for the years 2012 and 2013, and well over a million dollars of excess EBIDTA after service of bank debt for the years 2014 through 2023, after which it exceeds $2 million. He testified that these projections had already been met and significantly exceeded for the first quarter of 2011. He testified that the Debtor can easily make required plan payments for the first two years based on current performance, and that the trend of performance was steadily upward. He testified that the sales he is projecting for the future have been achieved by the Debtor in its recent past. He also noted that the Debtor's business model—consisting of leasing older but meticulously maintained equipment—is better suited to the current economic climate because the Debtor's older machines move dirt as well as brand new machines at a fraction of the cost. Moreover, newer machines have suffered from some quality issues and a greater proportion of them are being shipped offshore, resulting in increased demand for the Debtor's used machines.
Finally, Mr. Gonzales testified that his projections resulted in a low debt service coverage ratio in 2012 of 1.74 and a high debt service ratio of 4.2 in 2020. Based on his 25 years experience in underwriting bank debt, primarily consisting of his 18 years with Wells Fargo, he testified that a debt service coverage ratio of 1.25 was
Comerica presented no fact or expert testimony to the contrary. Indeed, Comerica's expert Mr. Lyon testified that the Debtor's plan was feasible, and not likely to result in any further need for a financial reorganization, if the Debtor met its projections. Mr. Lyon also testified that he assumed management was competent in preparing its projections. Mr. Lyon's report testified that he "determined that the Debtor can pay the projected interest and amortization payments under the Plan if it consistently achieves the projections," and even "could pay an interest rate of up to 10.7% and still be cash flow positive or break even over the next five years if it consistently reaches" its projections.
Mr. Lyon did not prepare his own projections, nor did he undertake any factual evaluation that would enable him to do so. He did not interview the Debtor or its CFO, or any of the Debtor's customers or competitors, did not review the Debtor's business model, did not view the Debtor's operations, and had no particular experience in the equipment rental field.
Mr. Lyon's principal argument was that the Debtor would need to maintain a utilization rate of its equipment between 50 and 55% over the next five years in order to meet its projections and pay Comerica's debt under the plan. Mr. Lyon conceded that the Debtor in fact exceeded the 50% utilization rate during November and December 2010 and January 2011. In order to suggest that a utilization rate in excess of 50% was not feasible, Mr. Lyon had to average the entire prior 12 months. But he did not provide any facts or opinion, nor did the bank make any argument, that the November, December and January actual results were seasonal aberrations.
Often, the feasibility of a 15-year payment plan is found lacking due to evidence that there is little credibility to 15-year projections.
Based on his 22 years experience in the asset based lending industry and another decade as a middle market capital investor and financial adviser, as well as his demeanor on the stand and his answers on cross examination, the Court finds Dave Gonzales to be an extremely credible witness. He is not a professional witness. His projections appear to be very sound and conservative, particularly as demonstrated by the fact that the Debtor has out performed them consistently during this bankruptcy case.
Based on Mr. Gonzales testimony, and the lack of any fact or expert opinion testimony to the contrary, the Court finds both the projections and the plan to be feasible, within the meaning of Code § 1129(a)(11).
The Debtor's expert witness Ed McDonough testified to an interest rate of 6%, based on the relevant risk factors
Comerica's expert did not indicate his conclusion was based on the risk factors identified in Till. To the contrary, his conclusion was based on "a survey of publically-reported debt issued by borrowers roughly comparable to the Debtor." Based on factors such as total debt/EBIDTA, EBIDTA interest coverage and total debt, he concluded that the appropriate credit rating for the Debtor (if it were a publically issued debt) would be CCC. He also considered the bonds issued by four public equipment lenders (United Rentals, RSC Holdings,
Except for the isolated fact that RSC's secured bond rating is 7%, the Court finds little of use in Mr. Lyon's analysis, because it does not comport with the procedure required by Till.
In order to conclude the interest rate should be significantly higher than RSC's senior secured 2017 bonds that are currently yielding 7%, Comerica's expert concluded that rate should apply only to 65% of Comerica's secured debt, because 65% is "an appropriate loan-to-value metric that banks would use to extend secured financing on the collateral." He then concluded that the remaining 35% of Comerica's secured claim should be regarded as "unsecured" (quotation marks in original) and bear the interest rate for unsecured bonds, which he concluded was 11.4%. Comerica's expert then mathematically blended
There are several problems with this approach. First, and most obviously, 35% of Comerica's secured claim is not unsecured. Rather, it is fully secured. There is no basis to treat it as unsecured when the fact is that it is secured. Treating a portion of the secured debt as unsecured is directly contrary to Till's holding that the risk factors should be based on "the characteristics of the [actual] loan,"
Second, the secured portion of the debt secured by Mr. Till's pickup truck was similarly secured to the full extent of the value of the collateral.
Third, the Court specifically rejected the almost identical "coerced loan" approach.
Mr. McDonough's report considered a total of twelve risk factors, of which nine were positive and three were negative. The positive risk factors included the Debtor's twenty year history, its improving operating results in 2010, its sophisticated system to ensure proper maintenance, its budgeted $500,000 in capital expenditures each year, the expected long term growth in Arizona, the near term reduction in competition, the positive cash flow for each year in the projections, the projected EBIDTA more than sufficient to cover debt service, and the debt service coverage ratios from 1.3 to 3.8% and improving over time. The negative factors including the slow economic recovery in Arizona, the fifteen year payout, and a balloon payment in year fifteen.
In addition, neither expert considered the effect of the Cowings' guarantees, even though Dave Gonzales' declaration indicated they are both solvent and that Linda Cowing has sufficient liquid assets to provide the funding source for the exit loan. And it appears that prior to the bankruptcy case, Comerica's interest rates ranged from a high of prime plus 1% (currently approximately 4.25%) to a low of prime plus 0.65% (currently approximately 3.6%).
Probably the most difficult risk factor to evaluate is the fifteen year payment term. Mr. McDonough's report does not give any specific analysis of how much this risk factor should count for. Mr. Lyon testified that the difference between a one year and a fifteen year treasury bill is about 4.6%. Based on that, Mr. McDonough's analysis does not seem to give sufficient consideration to the magnitude of the risk factor of the long term payout. On the other hand, that risk factor may be substantially mitigated by the fact that this is secured debt, that it will be significantly amortized over the fifteen years, and that it is guaranteed by solvent guarantors. The amortization is particularly significant, because it means that when the balloon becomes due in 15 years, the balance will be, at most, $3.43 million.
Based on the combination of these positive and negative factors, the Court finds that an appropriate interest rate would be somewhat closer to the RSC 2017 bond debt rating of 7% than Mr. McDonough opined, but the existence of the guarantee and the significantly amortized debt (whereas most bonds are not amortized) suggests the rate need not be as high as the RSC secured bond rate. Consequently, based on all the testimony and risk factors, the Court finds and concludes that an appropriate rate necessary to provide Comerica with the present value of the amount of its allowed secured claim is 6.5%.
Finally, Comerica objects that the plan violates the absolute priority rule and its new value corollary that both the Supreme Court and the Ninth Circuit have recognized and defined.
The absolute priority rule is defined by the Supreme Court's opinion in Case v. Los Angeles Lumber.
The portion of the absolute priority rule that is codified provides in relevant part that if a rejecting class of unsecured claims is not paid in full, then "the holder of any claim or interest that is junior to the claims of such class will not receive or retain under the plan on account of such junior claim or interest any property." Here, the rejecting class of unsecured claims is Class 7, consisting of the Comerica deficiency claim, and the junior class of interests consists of the equity ownership interests of the Cowings. Because Comerica's deficiency claims is not paid in full and has rejected the plan, what the rule therefore requires is that the Cowings may not retain their equity interests merely "on account of" the fact that they owned those interests as of the filing of the case.
What the Ninth Circuit pellucidly held in Bonner Mall
The Supreme Court has addressed the absolute priority rule at least twice since the Ninth Circuit's holding in Bonner Mall. First, in the Bonner Mall case itself the Supreme Court expressly declined to vacate the Ninth Circuit's opinion.
The issue here, therefore, is whether the equity interests that the Cowings will obtain under this plan are "on account of" their former equity ownership, or instead are "on account of" their new value contribution of $480,000. And it is important to recognize that under controlling Ninth Circuit law, this is a purely factual determination, not a legal question: "[W]hether a particular plan gives old equity a property interest `on account of' its old ownership interests in violation of the absolute priority rule or for another, permissible reason is a factual question."
In Bonner Mall, the Ninth Circuit held that "if a proposed plan satisfies all of these [five] requirements, i.e., the new value exception, it will not violate section 1129(b)(2)(B)(ii) of the Code and the absolute priority rule. Such a plan, [we agree], will not give old equity property `on account of' prior interests, but instead will allow the former owners to participate in the reorganized debtor on account of a substantial, necessary, and fair new value contribution."
Dave Gonzales testified, without objection, that the plan as amended and modified "contemplates a cash infusion of approximately $1.25 million in contributions and loans by Owen and Linda Cowing that will be used to satisfy effective date obligations of the Debtor, including payment of administrative and priority claims, fund distributions to unsecured creditors, and recapitalize the Debtor going forward. The Exit Loan is to be funded by Linda Cowing, through a newly formed and wholly owned limited liability called, Arlington RMMC Investments, LLC."
Comerica presented no evidence that the contributions required of the old equity holders were either not new or not money or money's worth. At closing argument, Comerica's counsel conceded that the contribution was both new and money or money's worth. Comerica's only evidence was the opinion testimony of Grant Lyon. Although as a financial analyst he may have been qualified to opine that the contributions are neither new nor money's worth, he expressed no opinion on those issues. Based on the uncontroverted testimony of Mr. Gonzales, the Court finds that the new value contributions are both new and money or money's worth.
Comerica argues, in a footnote, that the new value contributions "may not be necessary to the reorganization of the debtor."
Comerica argues in a heading, but provided no evidence in support, that the new value contribution of either $480,000 or $1.2 million is not "sufficient."
Particularly in the absence of any evidence to the contrary, the Court finds, as a fact, that $480,000 is "substantial." I do so on two independent bases. First, it is far from nominal or de minimis. To paraphrase Senator Everett Dircksen, a half million here and there pretty soon adds up to real money. I can take judicial notice that it is more than three times the annual gross salary of a U.S. Bankruptcy Judge. It is almost ten times the amount found insufficient in Tucson Self-Storage,
Finally, the Court finds, as a fact, that the $480,000 effective date cash contribution is more than reasonably equivalent to the value of the equity interests received by the Cowings and, in light of the expiration of exclusivity, satisfies the "top dollar" requirement of 203 North LaSalle.
Prior to the Supreme Court's analysis in 203 North LaSalle, the Ninth Circuit noted that the fifth new value requirement— equivalence to the value of the interest received—is the "most conceptually difficult
The answer to this conceptual difficulty may be found in 203 North LaSalle, which had not been decided when the Ninth Circuit called this the "most conceptually difficult prong" of the new value corollary. Like Boyd, Case and Ahlers, 203 North LaSalle also focused on the value of control of the debtor and its assets. But unlike those precedents, 203 North LaSalle for the first time pinpointed exactly where that value is found, and why it is not found in a balance sheet. While declining to define it as constituting "property," the Court found the problematic value to subsist in the plan's "provision for vesting equity in the reorganized business in the Debtor's partners without extending an opportunity to anyone else either to compete for that equity or to propose a competing reorganization plan."
Thus Justice Souter's analysis in 203 North LaSalle explains why the Court has always found (in Boyd, Case and Ahlers) a retention of value that violates the absolute priority rule even when that value does not appear on a GAAP-prepared balance sheet—it exists in the option value of the exclusive right to propose a new value plan. It is not surprising that it has taken over a hundred years for the Court to start to identify the basis of that value. Economic analysis of option value is a relatively recent development, both in academia and in the markets,
But if the option value of the exclusive right to propose a plan is why the Court has always rejected the "no value" argument
Neither expert who testified at confirmation attempted to determine an enterprise value of the reorganized debtor based on a present value of its projected income stream. Nor has either expert opined as to an enterprise value based on a multiple of the projected EBITDA, another common method of valuing an operating business based on its projected earnings. Either of those methods is probably more sound than determining value of the new equity interests simply based on a reorganized balance sheet.
The Debtor's CFO Dave Gonzales testified that based on a discounted projected cash flow, using an equity investor's discount rate of 25%, and assuming a terminal enterprise value based on multiple of three times EBITDA, the result was a negative equity in the range of $9 million. The Court allowed this testimony as to how the math works out, but did not allow Mr. Gonzales to testify to an opinion that the 25% discount rate or the 3 X EBITDA numbers were appropriate.
But when expert opinion evidence of a discounted cash flow valuation is not available, the balance sheet approach supplies sufficient evidence to satisfy the preponderance of evidence standard applicable to confirmation of a plan, at least when there is no evidence to the contrary.
For these reasons, the Court finds and concludes that the First Amended Plan satisfies all of the requirements of § 1129(a) and (b), that the objections of Comerica must be denied, and that the plan must be confirmed. Counsel for Debtor is requested to upload a form of order of confirmation, which when entered shall be the final, appealable order.