ERIC L. FRANK, CHIEF U.S. BANKRUPTCY JUDGE.
In this individual chapter 11 case, the debtor's confirmed chapter 11 plan provided,
The liquidating agent has filed a motion seeking entry of an order compelling the debtor to pay over those pre-confirmation distributions. The debtor resists making the payment on the ground that the confirmed plan required only the surrender of the debtor's ownership interest in the entities and not the prior, pre-confirmation distributions.
Resolution of this dispute requires interpretation of the confirmed plan.
As explained below, I conclude that the confirmed plan in this case requires the debtor to pay pre-confirmation distributions to the liquidating agent that he retained as of the effective date, but that the liquidating agent failed to prove that any such distributions exist. Therefore, the liquidating agent's motion will be denied.
On May 27, 2010, John N. Irwin ("the Debtor") filed a voluntary chapter 11 bankruptcy petition. The same day, the Debtor filed his bankruptcy schedules and statement of financial affairs.
The Debtor filed his individual chapter 11 plan of reorganization and disclosure statement on May 24, 2011. (Doc. #'s 209, 210). The Debtor filed a second amended Plan and Disclosure Statement on November 18, 2011. (Doc. #'s 282, 283).
The Plan is a liquidating plan. The Plan is to be implemented by a liquidating agent who is to collect the assets to be made available for distribution and to distribute the proceeds of those assets according to the Plan. (
The Plan contemplates that the funding for distribution to creditors will derive from four (4) primary sources:
The term "Assets" is defined in the Plan as:
(Plan ¶ 1.8).
Article 7 specifies that the Plan will be implemented "[u]pon and after the Effective Date." The "Effective Date" is a defined term: in the absence of an appeal of the confirmation order, the Plan was to become effective "fifteen (15) days after the Confirmation Date." (Plan Article 1.27). The Effective Date occurred on January 27, 2012.
The liquidating agent is authorized to pay administrative claims in full on or after the Effective Date, (Plan, Art. 5.1 & Art. 6.1), and the holders of Allowed Unsecured Claims pro rata from the proceeds resulting from the Sale of the Assets and any recovery resulting from the prosecution of Avoidance Actions on or as soon as is reasonably practicable after the Effective Date. (
On March 19, 2012, George L. Miller was appointed as the liquidating agent ("the Liquidating Agent") under the Plan. (Doc. # 303).
On January 20, 2016, the Liquidating Agent filed a Motion to Compel Turnover of Property to the Estate Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 542 ("the Motion") (Doc. # 458). The Debtor objected to the Motion. (Doc. # 460).
The Debtor's Amended Schedule B included the Debtor's ownership interest in two (2) entities, Diversified Private Equity Investors, L.P. ("DPEI") and Diversified Private Equity Investors II, L.P. ("DPEI II," together with DPEI, "the Entities"). The Debtor did not claim his interest in the Entities as exempt. Therefore, it is indisputable that the Debtor's interests in the Entities are "Assets" within the meaning of the Plan.
The Entities paid distributions to their equity owners, including the Debtor. DPEI paid the Debtor $4,139.00 in 2011 and $2,919.00 in 2012, for a total distribution of $7,058.00. DPEI II paid the Debtor $18,059.00 in 2011 and $2,789.00 in 2012, for a total distribution of $20,848.00. The Debtor does not dispute that he received these distributions from the Entities.
The 2011 distributions were made prior to confirmation of the Plan, while the 2012 distributions were made after confirmation of the Plan. Prior to the filing of the Motion, the Debtor turned over those funds derived from the Entities for 2012; the Debtor concedes that the post-confirmation distributions were collectible by the Liquidating Agent for distribution under the Plan. Thus, the sole issue is whether pre-confirmation distributions the Debtor received in 2011 ("the Distributions") totaling $22,198.00 are Assets under the Plan that must be delivered to the Liquidating Agent.
Interpretation of a confirmed chapter 11 plan is governed by the rules for interpretation of contracts.
The principles of contract interpretation under Pennsylvania law are well-settled:
A term or phrase of a contract is ambiguous if it is reasonably susceptible to different meanings.
If an ambiguity is found, the parties may offer extrinsic evidence to clarify the meaning of the ambiguity.
The Debtor and the Liquidating Agent agree that the term "Assets" as defined in ¶ 1.8 of the Plan includes the Debtor's ownership interest in the two (2) Entities involved. The parties further agree that the definition of Assets encompasses distributions from those Entities, at least post-confirmation. The question is whether the Plan mandates that the Liquidating Agent collect and distribute the post-petition, pre-confirmation distributions (hereafter, "the Distributions").
The Liquidating Agent's position is that "[t]he temporal frame for what constitutes an Asset for distribution by the Liquidating Agent is that property owned by the Debtor on the Petition Date as reflected on his schedules." (Liq. Agent Brief at ¶ 19). In response, the Debtor's position is that the Assets subject to collection by the Liquidating Agent are those Assets in existence as of the Effective Date of the Plan and the pre-confirmation distributions constitute "income," not Assets within the meaning of the Plan.
I conclude that the Plan is reasonably susceptible to either reading, rendering the term "Assets" ambiguous.
Neither party submitted extrinsic evidence in support of the meaning of ¶ 1.8. The only extrinsic evidence available is the Disclosure Statement, and previous versions
For this reason, my analysis of the meaning of ¶ 1.8 will be confined largely to the four corners of the Plan.
The Liquidating Agent argues that the Distributions generated from the Entities since the petition date should be subject to distribution. The Liquidating Agent's argument finds some textual support in the Plan.
The first indication is the expansive definition of "Assets" — all right, title, and interest of the Debtor in nonexempt assets.
It is a fundamental concept in chapter 11 law that post-petition income generated by estate property distributions constitutes property of the estate.
The Liquidating Agent can point to another textual clue in support of his position. The definition of "Assets" refers to Schedules A and B of the Debtor's petition. An inference can be made that by referring back to schedules that were filed with the petition (or shortly thereafter), the Plan contemplated that the distributions of those Assets listed on the schedules were part of the funds for distribution.
In his contrary approach, the Debtor reads ¶ 1.8 narrowly and seeks to turn the definition's reference to Schedules A and B to his advantage. The Debtor contends that, because the distribution from the Entities had not yet occurred as of the petition date, the postpetition income from the Entities fall outside the definition. (Debtor's Brief at 4).
The Debtor also argues, holistically, that because his liabilities vastly exceeded his assets, the overall approach of the Plan was to take the existing pool of assets, as of the Effective Date, and make them available for distribution to his creditors. This, the Debtor argues, is inherent from a Plan that revolved around a fixed point in time when the Liquidating Agent was to be appointed and the Plan was to be implemented,
In a chapter 11 bankruptcy of an individual, the debtor remains in possession of
The Liquidating Agent has not questioned the propriety of the Debtor's use of property of the estate for administrative expenses in the ordinary course — here, in the form of personal living expenses. Nor has the Liquidating Agent asserted that prior court approval of such use of estate property was necessary. Therefore, I will assume, without deciding, that in this case, the Debtor was entitled to use estate property (including the Distributions) in the ordinary course to pay administrative expenses (including reasonable living expenses).
Taking into account both the textual clues in the Plan and the context in which the Plan was proposed, I conclude that both parties are partially correct in their respective interpretations of the Plan.
I agree with the Liquidating Agent that the term "Assets" encompasses distributions made to the Debtor from non-exempt assets. In other words, I conclude that the better interpretation is to construe ¶ 1.8 of the Plan consistently with the bankruptcy concept of property of the estate. But, I also agree with the Debtor that his duty to deliver Assets to the Liquidating Agent for distribution under the Plan must be considered in context.
Upon the Effective Date, the Debtor was obliged to make the Assets available to the Liquidating Agent for distribution. However, it makes no sense to interpret the obligation to include Assets that the Debtor expended prior to the Effective Date in payment of administrative expenses — assets that no longer existed on that date. On the other hand, had the Debtor segregated and retained possession of the Distributions, or if they otherwise could be traced, as of the Effective Date of
This analysis brings me to the state of the record, or lack thereof. There is no evidence in the record on a critical factual issue:
Like many contested matters, the outcome of this dispute turns on the burden of proof. As the moving party, the Liquidating Agent bears this burden.
Here, the Liquidating Agent offered no evidence to establish that the pre-confirmation Distributions made in 2011 were in existence, and therefore, were Assets to be collected, as of the Effective Date of the Plan. Therefore, he has not met his burden of establishing that the 2011 Distributions were "Assets" within the meaning of the Plan.
For the reasons stated above, the Liquidating Agent's Motion for Turnover will be denied. An appropriate order will be entered.
In any event, as amplified below, the Liquidating Agent's legal theory is that the Plan obligates the Debtor to pay over to the Liquidating Agent the pre-confirmation distributions the Debtor received. Thus, this contested matter is properly conceptualized as a motion to enforce the confirmed plan, rather than a statutory turnover action under 11 U.S.C. § 542.
There also is some question whether court approval of the use of estate property for living expenses in an individual chapter 11 case is necessary.
I note that some courts have enacted local rules that address individual chapter 11 budgets.