LAURIE SELBER SILVERSTEIN, UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE.
Before the Court is the Debtors' objection (the "Claim Objection") to class action proof of claim no. 1316 (the "Class Claim") filed by Naylor Farms, Inc. and Harrel's LLC (together, the "Putative Class Plaintiffs") on behalf of themselves and all other similarly situated claimants (collectively, the "Putative Class"). Having determined that the Court has jurisdiction to consider the Claim Objection as a core proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 157 and 1334; and having considered: the Claim Objection (D.I. 789), the Putative Class Plaintiffs' response in opposition of the Claim Objection (the "Response") (D.I. 832), the Ad Hoc Committee's objection and joinder to the Claim Objection (D.I. 860), the Debtors' reply in connection with their objection to the Class Claim (the "Reply") (D.I. 864), the testimony and evidence adduced at the hearing conducted before the Court on February 28, 2017 (the "Hearing" or "Hr'g") as well as the oral arguments made by counsel at the Hearing; and it appearing that adequate notice was
1. On May 9, 2016 (the "Petition Date"), the Debtors, including Chaparral Energy, LLC ("Chaparral"), commenced these chapter 11 cases.
2. Almost five years prior, on June 7, 2011, the Putative Class Plaintiffs filed a class action complaint against Chaparral in the United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma (the "Oklahoma District Court").
3. In the Oklahoma Class Action, the Putative Class Plaintiffs assert that Chaparral failed to properly report, account for, and distribute royalty interest payments to the Putative Class, and thus the Putative Class is entitled to recovery for unpaid royalties. On October 13, 2015, the Putative Class Plaintiffs filed a motion with the Oklahoma District Court seeking certification of the Putative Class in the Oklahoma Class Action (the "Class Certification Motion") together with a supporting motion for partial summary judgment. The two motions were fully briefed and under consideration, but before the Oklahoma District Court could rule Chaparral filed its voluntary petition.
4. On July 22, 2016, the Putative Class Plaintiffs sought relief from the stay to permit the Oklahoma District Court to adjudicate both the Class Certification Motion and the motion for partial summary judgment. Chaparral and the Putative Class Plaintiffs reached a resolution of the stay relief motion and stipulated to relief from stay to permit the Oklahoma District Court to determine whether to certify the requested class in the Oklahoma Class Action. The Court approved the stipulation reached between the parties (the "Lift Stay Order") (D.I. 412).
5. On July 1, 2016, in an Order Pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 3003(c)(3) and Local Rule 2002-1(e) Establishing Bar Dates and Related Procedures for Filing Proofs of Claim (Including for Administrative Expense Claims Arising Under Section 503(b)(9) of the Bankruptcy Code) and Approving the Form and Manner of Notice Thereof (the "Bar Date Order") (D.I. 270), the Court set the bar date as August 19, 2016 (the "Bar Date").
6. The Putative Class Plaintiffs filed the Class Claim on behalf of themselves and the other members of the Putative Class on August 15, 2016.
7. By order dated January 17, 2017, the Oklahoma District Court certified the Putative Class with stated modifications (the "Certification Order").
8. The Debtors filed the Claim Objection on January 26, 2017. In the Claim Objection, the Debtors assert that this court should exercise its discretionary authority and refuse to permit the filing of the Class Claim because it would not be beneficial to apply Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure ("Bankruptcy Rule") 7023 to the Class Claim. The Debtors purport to reserve for future adjudication the question of whether the Class Claim actually satisfies the requisites of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure ("Federal Rule") 23, as well as additional objections on any other basis.
9. On December 19, 2016, the Debtors filed their Joint Plan of Reorganization for Chaparral Energy, Inc. and its Affiliate Debtors Under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (as amended, the "Plan") (D.I. 665). The Plan treated over $1.7 billion in debt primarily consisting of the Prepetition Notes Claims (allowed in the amount of $1,267,410,336) and the Prepetition Credit Agreement Claims (allowed in the amount of $444,439,907). In the disclosure statement accompanying the Plan, the Debtors projected General Unsecured Claims in the amount of $4.5 million and Convenience Class Claims of $1.3 million. The Debtors separately classified Royalty Payment Litigation Claims, which would include the Class Claim, if allowed. Under the Plan, holders of Royalty Payment Litigation Claims were offered $6 million plus payment of attorneys' fees of up to $1.5 million as a settlement if their class voted to accept the plan. It did not.
10. Under the Plan, the holders of the Prepetition Notes Claims, General Unsecured Claims, and Royalty Payment Litigation Claims (if the class rejected the Plan) receive their pro rata share of the equity of the reorganized companies as well as the opportunity to purchase a pro rata share of the Rights Offering Shares, all as fully described in the disclosure statement for the Plan (D.I. 666), as amended (D.I. 784).
11. The Court confirmed the Plan on March 10, 2017—just ten days after the Claim Objection was argued and the Court took the matter under advisement. At the confirmation hearing, no party suggested that the Plan could not be confirmed or could not go effective because of this outstanding issue. Subsequently, the Debtors filed a notice stating that the effective date of the Plan was March 21, 2017 (D.I. 977).
12. Assuming a $90 million Class Claim, holders of those claims are entitled to approximately 7% of the equity of the reorganized company.
13. Whether to permit a class action proof of claim is a matter of discretion. In exercising that discretion, a two-step analysis is performed. See, e.g., In re Pac. Sunwear of California, Inc., No. 16-10882 (LSS), 2016 WL 3564484, at *5 (Bankr. D. Del. June 22, 2016), reconsideration denied, No. 16-10882(LSS), 2016 WL 4250681 (Bankr. D. Del. Aug. 8, 2016). First, the court must decide whether it is beneficial to apply Bankruptcy Rule 7023, via Bankruptcy Rule 9014(c), to the claims administration process. See id. Second, the court must determine whether the requirements of Federal Rule 23 have been satisfied, such that a class proof of claim may properly be filed. See id. (citing In re MF Global Inc., 512 B.R. 757, 763 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2014) and In re Motors Liquidation Co., 447 B.R. 150, 157 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2011)). At issue here is only the first step of the analysis, that is, whether to apply Bankruptcy Rule 7023.
14. While the exercise of this discretion is clearly a fact and case specific analysis, courts have developed a three-factor framework to help guide the court's discretion in determining if Bankruptcy Rule 7023 should be extended to the claims administration process. Those factors are: (1) whether the class was certified pre-petition; (2) whether the members of the putative class received notice of the bar date; and (3) whether class certification will adversely affect the administration of the estate. See, e.g., In re Musicland Holding Corp., 362 B.R. 644, 654 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2007) (the "Musicland factors").
15. No one factor is dispositive; a factor may take on more or less importance in any given case. Here, where the Court determines that the administration of the estate will in no way be adversely impacted, the Court will exercise its discretion to apply Bankruptcy Rule 7023. Each of the factors is discussed in turn.
16. The first Musicland factor weighs against applying Bankruptcy Rule 7023 to the Class Claim, as the Putative Class was not certified prepetition. Nonetheless, the Court would not be alone in exercising its discretion to apply Bankruptcy Rule 7023 in these circumstances. See, e.g., In re Kaiser Group Intern., Inc., 278 B.R. 58, 62-63 (Bankr. D. Del. 2002) (allowing the filing of a class proof of claim where class not certified pre-petition); see also Gentry v. Siegel, 668 F.3d 83, 91 (4th Cir.2012) (same); In re MF Glob. Inc., 512 B.R. at 763-65 (same); In re Connaught Group, Ltd., 491 B.R. 88, 98-100 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2013) (same).
17. The second Musicland factor weighs in favor of applying Bankruptcy Rule 7023 to the Class Claim as not all putative class members were served with notice of the Bar Date. Debtors' associate vice president of legal, associate general counsel, and corporate secretary, Ms. Byford, testified regarding the Debtors' decision-making process in determining who would be served with the bar date notice. Ms. Byford testified that the Debtors employed a three year look-back period from the Petition Date across all their creditor groups.
18. Consistency may be a virtue in many instances, but not this one. Rigid adherence to a uniform look-back period in the context of determining a company's actual creditors for purposes of bar date notification is not appropriate. Here, the Debtors blindly adhered to a three year look-back period in the face of class action litigation commenced five years earlier. The result of using that three year look-back period is that not all potential class members were served with notice of the Bar Date.
19. The Debtors are correct that the complaint filed in the Oklahoma Class Action did not contain a defined class period. But, the Putative Class Plaintiffs filed the Oklahoma Class Action on June 7, 2011. As Debtors acknowledged a five year statute of limitations for the claims asserted in the Oklahoma Class Action, the Debtors should have at the very least served the bar date notice on Oklahoma Royalty Interest Owners who received payments going back to June 7, 2006.
20. Despite this obvious conclusion, and after first attempting other theories,
21. At the hearing, the Debtors also raised a creative—and newly minted—argument: if the Court is inclined to exercise its discretion to permit the filing of a class proof of claim, the class should be limited to those individuals not served. This argument has no basis in the case law; it also misconstrues this factor. Notice does not circumscribe the class; nor does it define the class. Rather, notice is only one factor the court looks to in determining whether to exercise its discretion in connection with a request to apply Bankruptcy Rule 7023 to the claims administration process.
22. The failure to notify each and every putative class member may not always be fatal to a class claim objection. But, under the facts of this case, the Debtors' failure to notice all Putative Class members weighs in favor of exercising discretion to apply Bankruptcy Rule 7023 to this class claim. To find otherwise would condone the Debtors' failure (albeit, perhaps unintentional) to provide actual notice to its known creditors, whose information was indisputably in the Debtors' books and records.
23. The third Musicland factor is "whether class certification will adversely affect the administration of the case." In re Musicland Holding Corp., 362 B.R. at 654. Here it will not.
24. Most of the Debtors' original arguments have been mooted by the Debtors' determination to go forward with confirmation and consummation of their plan of
25. Further, the Court disagrees with the Debtors' assertion that the administration of the estate will be adversely affected by reserving 7% of new equity interests for putative class claimants in the event their claims are ultimately allowed. Compare In re Connaught Grp., Ltd., 491 B.R. at 99 ("there are sufficient funds to pay the [class] claims if they are allowed, and there [sic] allowance will not jeopardize the consummation of the plan."), with In re Musicland Holding Corp., 362 B.R. at 656 (the class claim, which was a significant percentage of the overall creditor claims, would extend the proceedings indefinitely, and the plan could not be confirmed nor could distributions be resolved until the class claim issues were resolved).
26. Further, the Debtors have not proceeded in a manner that comports with the alleged urgency in finalizing the administration of the estate. The Debtors divorced the question of whether the Court should exercise its discretion to apply Bankruptcy Rule 7023 from the issue of whether the Putative Class Claim should be certified under Federal Rule 23.
27. Finally, the Court notes an additional reason weighing in favor of applying
Based on the above discussion, the Musicland factors weigh in favor of applying Bankruptcy Rule 7023 in this case.