FEDERMAN, Bankruptcy Judge.
Debtor Panther Mountain Land Development, LLC owns certain tracts of undeveloped real estate. More than a year prior to the filing of this bankruptcy case, representatives of the Debtor obtained the approval of the Pulaski County Court to form certain Improvement Districts under applicable Arkansas statutes. The Improvement Districts are separate entities which are not themselves in bankruptcy. Secured creditor National Bank of Arkansas now contends that such Improvement Districts were not validly formed, and wishes to file suit to challenge their validity in the Pulaski County Court. The issue on this appeal is whether the Bankruptcy Court
Debtor Panther Mountain Land Development, LLC filed this voluntary Chapter 11 case on September 20, 2009. National Bank of Arkansas is a secured creditor with mortgages on the Debtor's 17 lots in the Panther Mountain Estates subdivision ("Panther Mountain"), as well as the Debtor's undeveloped 125-acre tract located near Maumelle, Arkansas ("Sunset Lakes"). The Bank says it is owed about $2.1 million on two notes secured by the two properties. The day after the case was filed, the Bank filed a motion for relief from stay to proceed with a state court foreclosure which had been filed on November 4, 2008 (the "First Motion for Relief").
The Court held hearings on the First Motion for Relief on November 17 and December 2, 2009. The Bank's appraiser, Dwight Pattison, testified that the value of the property was only slightly more than the debt. At the conclusion of the December 2 hearing, the Bankruptcy Court denied the relief requested in the First Motion for Relief, finding that Pattison's appraisal and testimony were unreliable and unpersuasive. The Court found that the Bank was adequately protected by an equity cushion.
Five months later, on April 26, 2010, the Bank again moved for relief from the stay (the "Second Motion for Relief") and also filed a motion for valuation of its secured
On August 23, 2010, while the parties and the judge were in session for the hearing on the Second Motion for Relief, the Bank filed a third motion for relief from stay (the "Third Motion for Relief"), this time asserting that the case was a single asset real estate case and, thus, subject to § 362(d)(3).
Meanwhile, on September 9, 2010, the Debtor filed a § 363 motion to sell 45 acres of the undeveloped 125 acres in Sunset Lakes to ERC Land Development, LLC, free and clear of liens. The Bank filed an objection to that motion on September 17, 2010. As discussed below, the sale was approved, but then fell through, so that approval is not part of this appeal.
Then, on September 23, 2010, while the decision on the Second Motion for Relief was under advisement, and also while the Third Motion for Relief was scheduled to be heard, the Bank filed a fourth Motion for Relief from Stay (the "Fourth Motion for Relief"), this time seeking the Court's authority to file a state court lawsuit to challenge the inclusion of the Bank's collateral in Improvement Districts without notice to the Bank. The Improvement Districts had been formed more than two years prepetition pursuant to Arkansas' Property Owners' Improvement District Law
On October 22, 2010, the Court entered a Memorandum Opinion and Order denying the Second Motion for Relief, as well as denying the Valuation Motion, finding in detail that McIntosh's appraisals and testimony were materially flawed and unreliable.
On October 28, 2010, the Court held a hearing on the Fourth Motion for Relief and on the Debtor's Sale Motion. According to the Court, at that hearing, the Bank presented the same appraisals it had submitted in support of the Second Motion, and again called McIntosh as its expert witness, who basically testified the same way he had before, despite the Court's detailed findings as to his lack of credibility.
Additionally at the October 28 hearing, the Bank argued that it should be allowed to file suit in Pulaski County because formation of the Improvement Districts without formal notice to it violated its rights under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, and under the Arkansas Constitution. The Bank concedes
The Court ruled the motions from the bench with detailed findings on November 12, and supplemented such findings in writing on November 17, 2010. As relevant to this appeal, the Court denied the Fourth Motion for Relief.
We review the Bankruptcy Court's factual findings for clear error and its conclusions of law de novo.
As relevant here, the Bank makes two primary arguments. First, it contends
The crux of the Bank's argument on appeal is that the automatic stay is not applicable to an action against the Improvement Districts. In other words, the Bank's motion simply sought a "comfort order" to allow it to do what it contends it has the right to do regardless. Generally speaking, the automatic stay "applies only to bar actions against the debtor and does not extend to solvent codefendants."
However, § 362(a)(3) stays "any act to obtain possession of property of the estate or of property from the estate or to exercise control over property of the estate." Section 362(a)(3) "protects the in rem jurisdiction of the Court, and prohibits interference with the disposition of the assets that are under the Court's wing— whether or not the Debtor is named as a defendant as part of the effort. And that is so without distinction as to the form the interference takes."
In Adelphia, the debtors were attempting to sell their assets to Time Warner Cable and Comcast. A not-yet-operational cable channel, The America Channel, LLC, filed an antitrust suit against Time Warner and Comcast, as the potential purchasers of the assets to prohibit them from completing the purchase. The debtors, who were not named as defendants, filed an adversary proceeding seeking an injunction against the lawsuit because it adversely affected the pending sale of the assets. In issuing a temporary restraining order against the antitrust litigation, the bankruptcy court held that even though The America Channel had not sued the debtors themselves, the practical effect of the suit could be to enjoin the sale of the debtors' property to those who had been sued. The court referred to the antitrust lawsuit as a "classic, and egregious, violation of
Similarly, in A.H. Robins Co.,
Here, the Court held that a lawsuit against the Improvement Districts would inevitably have an adverse impact on property of the bankruptcy estate, and that the Debtor had an identity of interest with the Improvement Districts. There was substantial evidence at trial to support that conclusion. For example, the representative from the buyer under the motion to sell, ERC Land Development, LLC, testified that the Improvement Districts held easements to obtain sewer services to the property, and that those easements were critical for the development, such that ERC would not buy the property without them.
Section 362(d)(1) and (2) of the Bankruptcy Code provides as follows:
As stated, the Court held that the Debtor does have equity in the property, so that the Bank is not entitled to relief under § 362(d)(2). That finding is not part of this appeal. However, the Bank contends that cause exists under § 362(d)(1) because the procedure by which the Improvement Districts were formed creates the risk that its due process rights might be violated in the future. To avoid that possibility, the Bank contends that, even if the Improvement Districts are protected by the automatic stay by virtue of § 362(a)(3), due process requires that it be given the opportunity to challenge their formation in a separate forum.
The Bank's argument is that, once formed, the Districts now have the authority to, in effect, prime the Bank's liens by borrowing funds for improvements and assessing the property owners to pay for such improvements. According to the Bank, now that the Improvement Districts are formed, the Districts can take those steps upon a vote of their Commissioners, without notice to the Bank or the opportunity to be heard in opposition. And, since the Commissioners are all representatives of the Debtor as well, the Bank argues that it should have the opportunity to request that the Districts be voided altogether, or reconstituted in a manner more protective of the Bank's interests as lienholder.
The Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States provides, in relevant part, that no State shall "deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law."
The Bank relies on, inter alia, Cypress Creek Farms v. L'Anguille Improvement District No. 1,
We need not decide here, however, whether actions of the Improvement Districts outside of bankruptcy might violate the Bank's due process rights. That is because the bankruptcy process adequately protects the Bank from any taking of its collateral. While the Improvement Districts are distinct entities, they have no practical or effective existence independent of the Debtor's real estate, and the treatment and disposition of that real estate is now subject to approval of the Bankruptcy Court. Since the Bank's collateral—the real estate—is an asset of the bankruptcy estate, the Improvement Districts are barred from placing any liens on that collateral unless they first obtain approval of the Bankruptcy Court.
But the Districts took no such actions prior to the bankruptcy filing and, due to such filing, any action affecting the Bank's rights can now only be taken with notice and the opportunity to be heard provided by the Bankruptcy Rules. In addition, as the Bankruptcy Court held, the Bank's rights are further protected by the equity cushion and the requirement that the Bank's liens will attach to any sale proceeds. As was implicit in the Bankruptcy Court's finding as to the equity cushion and protection of liens, these bankruptcy procedures are consistent with the Bank's due process rights in collecting the debt due it from the Debtor, and in protecting its collateral from other claims. As the Eighth Circuit has recognized, "adequate protection is a safeguard which is provided to protect the rights of secured creditors, throughout the proceedings, to the extent of the value of their property, and there is no constitutional claim of the creditor to more than that."
As a result, so long as the Debtor's property remains subject to the Bankruptcy Court's protection, the Bankruptcy Code requires that the Bank's property rights in its collateral be protected. And, the Bankruptcy Rules require that no action to adversely affect that property interest be taken without notice to the Bank and the opportunity to be heard. Hence, there is no basis to allow the Bank to act in a separate proceeding which the Bankruptcy Court properly found could damage the interests of the Debtor and other creditors in the reorganization process.
Related to the due process argument, the Bank argues that the order of the Court denying its motion for relief was tantamount to an injunction and that, in order to obtain such relief, the Debtor should have complied with the requirements of Bankruptcy Rule 7065. The problem with this argument is that the Court did not issue an injunction. The Bank asked the Court for a comfort order, and the Court denied its request. Had the Debtor been asking the Court to enjoin the Bank from proceeding in state court against the Improvement Districts, the Bank's argument would be valid. But that is not the procedural posture of the case presented here. Therefore, since the Debtor was not seeking any affirmative relief from the Court, it was not required to offer evidence sufficient to entitle it to an injunction.
Because we conclude that the Bankruptcy Court did not err in denying the Fourth Motion for Relief on the grounds that an attack against the Improvement Districts would affect the Debtor's property under § 362(a)(3), and because the Bank's rights are protected by the Bankruptcy Code and Rules, we need not reach the issues relating to bad faith and laches.
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the Bankruptcy Court did not err in denying the Fourth Motion for Relief from Stay filed by National Bank of Arkansas. The Order doing so is, therefore, AFFIRMED.