Jessica Lopez ("Lopez") is a former employee of Valley Health System ("VHS") and was a participant in the Valley Health System Retirement Plan ("VHS Retirement Plan").
A Post-Effective Date Committee of Creditors and a disbursing agent appointed under the Chapter 9 Plan (jointly, the "Committee Parties") objected to Lopez's proof of claim. The bankruptcy court sustained the objection and entered an order disallowing Lopez's claim. Lopez appealed, and we AFFIRM.
VHS is a public agency and a local healthcare district formed in 1946, under the California Local Health Care District Law, Cal. Health & Safety Code § 32000,
Pursuant to § 943, the bankruptcy court confirmed VHS's first amended plan of adjustment ("Chapter 9 Plan") by order entered April 26, 2010 ("Confirmation Order"). The Chapter 9 Plan was based on the sale of substantially all of VHS's remaining assets to another entity known as Physicians for Healthy Hospitals, Inc. Among other things, the Chapter 9 Plan provided for the discharge of VHS's prepetition debts and also enjoined claimants from pursuing any action or proceeding on account of such debts.
The Chapter 9 Plan classified general unsecured claims as Class 2A claims and generally provided for the pro rata distribution of $17 million to the holders of allowed Class 2A claims. The plan then separately classified the Participants as Class 2C claimants and provided
The asset sale had expressly excluded all these VHS Retirement Plan assets. As a consequence, the Chapter 9 Plan specified that the Participants as Class 2C claimants would not have recourse as against VHS or its assets, and would not be entitled to any distribution under the Chapter 9 Plan.
This was expressly stated in the Chapter 9 Plan:
Chapter 9 Plan (Dec. 17, 2009) at 16:13-22.
Based on this treatment, the Chapter 9 Plan characterized the Class 2C claimants — the Participants — as unimpaired. As unimpaired claim holders, they were deemed to have accepted the Chapter 9 Plan, and were thus not allowed to vote to accept or reject it. § 1126(f).
The record reflects that Lopez was served with advance notice of: (1) the claims bar date, (2) the court approval of the first amended disclosure statement, and (3) the confirmation hearing on the Chapter 9 Plan. The accuracy of the record is supported by the fact that Lopez filed her proof of claim on time, and before the plan confirmation. The record further indicates that Lopez was sent copies of the Chapter 9 Plan and the first amended disclosure statement at the same time she was served with notice of the confirmation hearing.
But Lopez did not object to VHS's Chapter 9 Plan. According to Lopez, she and other Participants were lulled into a false sense of security regarding the VHS Retirement Plan because VHS's representatives, and the Chapter 9 Plan itself, indicated that the VHS Retirement Plan and the Participants would not be affected by either the bankruptcy case or the Chapter 9 Plan.
On October 14, 2010, VHS issued a notice that the asset sale had closed on October 13, 2010, and that October 13, 2010, was the effective date of the Chapter 9 Plan.
Lopez timely filed her proof of claim in VHS's bankruptcy case on August 22, 2008. On its face, the Proof of Claim stated that it was based on Lopez's alleged entitlement to a "retirement benefit."
On April 8, 2011, the Committee Parties filed a motion to disallow Lopez's proof of claim. According to the the Committee Parties, Lopez was a Class 2C creditor who was not entitled to any distribution under the Chapter 9 Plan, and thus her claim was subject to disallowance.
On September 14, 2011, Lopez filed a voluminous response to the Committee Parties' claim objection. Lopez did not contest that, under the terms of the Chapter 9 Plan, she was not entitled to a share of the funds set aside for distribution to other unsecured creditors of VHS. Indeed, Lopez essentially conceded that she qualified as a Class 2C creditor under the Chapter 9 Plan and that the Chapter 9 Plan provided for no distribution to Class 2C creditors.
Rather, Lopez argued that the Chapter 9 Plan was subject to being set aside under § 1144 or under § 105(a) based on fraud in the procurement and based on inadequate notice. In essence, Lopez argued that, in order to lull the Participants into a false sense of security so that none of them would object to confirmation of the Chapter 9 Plan, VHS and its representatives on numerous occasions represented that the Participants did not need to worry about VHS's bankruptcy case and would not be affected by the Chapter 9 Plan. Lopez further claimed that VHS and its representatives concealed from the Participants the true state of affairs until the July 7, 2010 meeting held shortly after confirmation: (1) that VHS had underfunded the VHS Retirement Plan and/or had raided the monies set aside for funding the plan; (2) that VHS wrongfully had exercised control over the VHS Retirement Plan and effectively was preventing the VHS Retirement Plan's fiduciaries from fulfilling their duties to ensure that the VHS Retirement Plan was adequately funded; and (3) that VHS secretly intended to terminate the VHS Retirement Plan well before it confirmed its Chapter 9 Plan, but it concealed this fact in order to avoid any additional impediments to confirmation of its Chapter 9 Plan.
Meanwhile, Lopez's contentions regarding inadequate notice were twofold. On the one hand, Lopez complained that some Participants, unlike herself, received no notice whatsoever of VHS's bankruptcy. On the other hand, Lopez complained that the notice she received was ineffective in light of the alleged acts of concealment and misinformation referenced above.
Lopez also spent a great deal of time and effort outlining the various alleged statutory and contractual duties VHS supposedly breached. But Lopez never really tied this discussion to any relief that Lopez contends she might have been entitled to on account of her proof of claim, which only sought a distribution based on her claimed entitlement to retirement benefits. At most, Lopez argued that the bankruptcy court should hold in abeyance its decision on Lopez's proof of claim until after Lopez and others had commenced and prosecuted an action against VHS, which in part would have sought modification and/or revocation of VHS's Chapter 9 Plan.
Lopez also focused on her allegation that VHS and the VHS Retirement Plan were separate entities, with separate boards and separate agents for service of process. According to Lopez, the VHS Retirement Plan, as a separate entity, was not properly subject to VHS's control, and thus her entitlement to benefits from the VHS Retirement Plan could not have been validly affected by either VHS or its Chapter 9 Plan. However, Lopez never explained how this allegation, even if true, would have entitled her to a distribution
On September 21, 2011, the Committee Parties filed a reply in support of their claim objection. In it, the Committee Parties emphasized (1) that Lopez had notice of the VHS bankruptcy and an opportunity to object to its Chapter 9 Plan, (2) that the Chapter 9 Plan, which the bankruptcy court had confirmed, specified that Class 2C creditors would not be entitled to any distribution, and (3) that Lopez's claim constituted a Class 2C claim, a claim seeking a distribution on account of Lopez's alleged entitlement to benefits under the VHS Retirement Plan. According to the Committee Parties, the doctrine of claim preclusion barred Lopez from collaterally attacking the Chapter 9 Plan, and neither § 1144 nor § 105(a) afforded Lopez with a proper basis to seek either modification or revocation of the Chapter 9 Plan.
After holding a hearing on the claim objection, the bankruptcy court issued a memorandum decision in which it essentially agreed with the Committee Parties' arguments. Accordingly, on November 8, 2011, the bankruptcy court entered an order sustaining the Committee Parties' claim objection and disallowing Lopez's claim. Lopez timely filed a notice of appeal on November 18, 2011.
The bankruptcy court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(B), and we have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 158(b) as this is a final order from the resolution of a proof of claim.
Whether the bankruptcy court erred when it disallowed Lopez's proof of claim.
Orders resolving claims objections can raise legal issues, which we review de novo, as well as factual issues, which we review under the clearly erroneous standard.
The key to this appeal is Lopez's proof of claim. The principal purpose of that proof of claim, as with any proof of claim, is to assert an entitlement to a share of any assets designated for distribution.
Here, Lopez based her proof of claim on her claimed entitlement to benefits under the VHS Retirement Plan, but VHS's Chapter 9 Plan specified that Participants under the VHS Retirement Plan would have no recourse against either VHS or its assets and would not be entitled to any distribution under the Chapter 9 Plan. Lopez indisputably had actual notice of the Chapter 9 Plan and its contents, and had an opportunity to object, but did not do so before the plan was confirmed.
Under these circumstances, Lopez is precluded from now objecting to how VHS's Chapter 9 Plan treated her retirement benefits claim.
As she argued in the bankruptcy court, Lopez argues on appeal that she was not given adequate notice of the Chapter 9 Plan's impact on her. According to Lopez, the misleading statements regarding the effect of the Chapter 9 Plan on Participants like her amounted to a violation of her due process rights. Consequently, she argues, she should not be bound by the terms of the Chapter 9 Plan.
We disagree. The Chapter 9 Plan was not misleading regarding how the claims of Participants would be treated: it unequivocally stated that they would receive nothing from VHS, its assets, or its Chapter 9 Plan.
Moreover, due process does not require that any notice given explain the potential legal and practical effects of proposed judicial action; rather, as long as a party is given notice of the action and is afforded an opportunity to object, due process requirements are satisfied.
Lopez also argues on appeal that the bankruptcy court erred when it denied her request to continue the hearing on its disposition of her proof of claim until she brought and prosecuted an action that in part would seek to modify or revoke the Chapter 9 Plan. But we agree with the bankruptcy court that, on the record presented, no delay was necessary because any action to modify or revoke the Chapter 9 Plan would have been futile.
Lopez contended that modification or revocation could have been granted under either § 1144 or under § 105(a), but neither of these statutes would have justified either revocation or modification here. We will address each statute in turn.
Section 1144 applies in chapter 9 cases.
While the parties here dispute whether the alleged fraud was discovered before or after the § 1144(a) limitations period ran, that issue is not material to our resolution of Lopez's revocation argument. It is undisputed that Lopez did not commence an action before the limitations period ran, so Lopez cannot avail herself of any relief under § 1144(a).
Meanwhile, § 105(a) facilitates the authority the Bankruptcy Code grants to bankruptcy courts by generally authorizing them to "issue any order, process, or judgment that is necessary or appropriate
Simply put, Congress made it abundantly clear in § 1144(a) that a revocation action must be brought within six months of confirmation, and § 105(a) does not permit the bankruptcy court to depart from the statutory scheme and extend the § 1144(a) time limit.
The bankruptcy court was exercising its discretion when it declined to delay its ruling on the claim objection,
Lopez makes a number of other arguments in her appeal briefs, but none of them have any merit. They all hinge on the premise that the VHS Retirement Plan was a separate entity from VHS and that neither the bankruptcy court nor VHS properly could have affected the VHS Retirement Plan's assets or obligations. Even if we were to assume that the VHS Retirement Plan was a separate entity, nothing that Lopez argues explains why this would alter Lopez's rights
For all of the reasons set forth above, we AFFIRM the bankruptcy court's order sustaining the Committee Parties' claim objection and disallowing Lopez's claim.
We vacated the bankruptcy court's dismissal order, holding that the bankruptcy court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the petition.