W. EUGENE DAVIS, Circuit Judge:
Lender-appellant Bank of New York Mellon ("Lender") appeals the district court's judgment which, in relevant part, disallowed the Lender's claim for a contractual
This dispute arose in a complicated bankruptcy proceeding, but the fundamental dispute is a relatively straightforward question of contract interpretation under Colorado law. Debtor-appellee GC Merchandise Mart, LLC ("GCMM") owns the Denver Merchandise Mart, a large exposition center in Denver, Colorado. GCMM's parent company is appellee Hawthorn Lakes Associates, Ltd., and appellee Denver Merchandise Mart, Inc. ("DMM") is an affiliate of GCMM. All three companies filed petitions for voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in March 2011. The cases are being jointly administered, with DMM's case designated as the lead case.
GCMM executed a promissory note (the "Note") dated September 30, 1997 in favor of Dynex Commercial, Inc., a predecessor in interest to lender-appellant Bank of New York Mellon ("Lender") in exchange for a $30 million loan. The Note bore interest at a non-default rate of 8.3% and contained several clauses, only two of which are at issue in this appeal: Article 4 ("Default and Acceleration") and Article 6 ("Prepayment").
Article 4 provides that "if any payment required in this Note is not paid prior to the tenth (10th) day after the date when due or on the Maturity Date or on the happening of any other default," certain sums become immediately due and payable, including the principal balance, interest, default interest, "other sums, as provided in this Note," and "all other moneys agreed or provided to be paid by Borrower in this Note, the Security Instrument or the Other Security Documents," among other things. Article 6 provides that the Borrower may prepay the Note under certain circumstances but must also pay a Prepayment Consideration, which is essentially a penalty for prepayment.
GCMM stopped making payments on the Note in October 2010 and thus defaulted under its terms. The Lender issued a notice of default, which GCMM failed to cure. Though GCMM made two more partial payments, it made no payment whatsoever after December 2010. As permitted by its security instruments, the Lender obtained an ex parte order appointing a receiver of the Merchandise Mart, at which point GCMM and the other debtors filed for bankruptcy. At that time, GCMM owed the Lender approximately $24 million.
The Lender argued that payment of the Prepayment Consideration under Article 6, valued at $1.8 million, is required by Article 4's acceleration clause, notwithstanding the fact that GCMM stopped making payments under the Note after December 2010 and never paid the Note prior to the maturity date. The bankruptcy court disagreed on four grounds. First, it found that some payment, whether voluntary or involuntary, must actually be made to trigger the obligation to pay the Prepayment Consideration. Second, it found that the rationale for requiring a Prepayment Consideration did not apply here. Third, it found that the cases cited by the Lender were inapposite because in each of those cases,
Thus, although the bankruptcy court allowed the Lender to recover a $25 million secured claim under the Note in conjunction with confirming the reorganization plan,
The Lender appealed the bankruptcy court's order to the district court. The district court affirmed the bankruptcy court in full. The Lender timely appealed to this court. The only issue the Lender presents on appeal is whether or not GCMM became liable for the $1.8 Prepayment Consideration upon the pre-bankruptcy acceleration of the Note.
In this dispute over the disallowance of a claim in a bankruptcy proceeding, the bankruptcy court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 157(b)(2)(B) and 1334(b), and the district court had jurisdiction over the appeal from the bankruptcy court under 28 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1). We therefore have jurisdiction over this appeal from the district court's judgment pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 158(d)(1) and 1291.
"We review the bankruptcy court's findings of fact for clear error and its conclusions of law de novo, using the same standards that the bankruptcy court and district court applied."
It is undisputed that Colorado law applies with respect to the interpretation of this contract. The Supreme Court of Colorado, sitting en banc, summarized Colorado's general principles for contract interpretation as follows:
As the court in Planned Pethood Plus, Inc. v. KeyCorp, Inc., 228 P.3d 262, 264 (Colo.App.2010), noted, "Prepayment penalties... have seldom been the subject of litigation in Colorado." Indeed, only a few Colorado cases have dealt with prepayment penalties in any depth: Carpenter v. Winn, 39 Colo.App. 238, 566 P.2d 370 (1977), Kirk v. Kitchens, 49 P.3d 1189 (Colo.App.2002), and Planned Pethood. Fortunately, these cases sufficiently develop the applicable principles to resolve this dispute.
A lender has the right to refuse early payment,
Unless specifically provided for by contract, a lender may not assess a prepayment penalty when the note is accelerated at the lender's option.
Planned Pethood held that a prepayment penalty (also known as a prepayment premium or fee) is not a remedy for breach of contract but consideration for the borrower's right or privilege to prepay.
Parties are free to contract however they wish around these general rules, provided they do so clearly.
As noted above, this appeal hinges on the interpretation of Articles 4 and 6 of the Note. Article 4 ("Default and Acceleration") provides in full:
Article 6 ("Prepayment") provides that the Borrower may not prepay the Note prior to October 1, 2007 (the "Lockout Period"), or within six (6) months from the maturity date (October 1, 2012), i.e., April 1, 2012. During the period between October 1, 2007 and April 1, 2012, however, Article 6(A)(1) gives the Borrower, GCMM, the "right or privilege to prepay all (but not less than all) of the unpaid principal balance of this Note" as well as all interest to the Prepayment Date, the interest due "to and including the first day of the calendar month immediately following the Prepayment Date," payment of any other sums due under the Note and related security instruments, the Release Fee, and, most relevantly, the Prepayment Consideration. Article 6(A)(1) also provides the formula for calculating the Prepayment Consideration.
Article 6(A)(1) also discusses prepayment in the event of a default:
The only other potentially relevant provision is Article 6(A)(3), which provides:
Under Colorado law, it is relatively simple to decide the only issue presented here, whether the acceleration of the Note due to GCMM's default by nonpayment under Article 4 triggered the obligation to pay the Prepayment Consideration under Article 6. Article 4 of the Note, concerning acceleration and default, provides for acceleration of principal, interest owed, and other things. As the Lender concedes, the only language that could possibly apply to a prepayment penalty is the acceleration of "all sums, as provided in this Note" or "all other moneys agreed or provided to be paid by Borrower in this Note, the Security Instrument or the Other Security Documents." Under this plain language, we must look elsewhere in the note to determine what "other sums" or "other moneys" must be paid. Logically, it cannot include every potential payment referred to in the Note or else contract conditions would mean nothing.
To determine whether the Prepayment Consideration was "agreed or provided to be paid by Borrower in this Note," we must look to Article 6, concerning prepayment. There are several conditions that might trigger the obligation to pay the Prepayment Consideration, but none requires the Borrower to pay the Prepayment Consideration absent an actual prepayment, which did not occur here.
First, Article 6(A)(1) gives the Borrower the "right or privilege" to prepay "all (but not less than all) of the unpaid balance of this Note" subject to paying the Prepayment Consideration but does not require it to do so. Because GCMM did not prepay, this provision cannot apply.
Second, also under Article 6(A)(1), the Borrower is obligated to pay in the event of a Default Prepayment, which is defined as a prepayment occurring during a default or acceleration "under any circumstances." Again, the plain language requires an actual prepayment to trigger the obligation to pay the Prepayment Consideration, and no prepayment occurred here.
Third and finally, Article 6(A)(3) provides that "Borrower shall pay the Prepayment Consideration due hereunder whether the prepayment is voluntary or involuntary (including without limitation in connection with Lender's acceleration of the unpaid principal balance of the Note) or the Security Instrument is satisfied or released by foreclosure (whether by power of sale or judicial proceeding), deed in lieu of foreclosure or by any other means." Again, the plain language contemplates an actual prepayment, which did not occur here.
Moreover, there is no language in the Note which would deem the prepayment to have been made in the event of acceleration
Under general Colorado law, a lender is not entitled to a prepayment penalty when the lender chooses to accelerate the note. Absent a clear contractual provision to the contrary or evidence of the borrower's bad faith in defaulting to avoid a penalty, the lender's decision to accelerate acts as a waiver of a prepayment penalty. Here, that general rule controls.
The plain language of the contract does not require the payment of the Prepayment Consideration in the event of mere acceleration. Quite the opposite, in fact: the plain language plainly provides that no Prepayment Consideration is owed unless there is an actual prepayment, whether voluntary or involuntary. The Lender has advanced no viable alternative interpretation of the Note.
Accordingly, we affirm.