MAXINE M. CHESNEY, District Judge.
Before the Court is appellee Kyle Everett's (hereinafter, "the Trustee") Motion to Dismiss Appeal as Moot, filed November 14, 2014. Appellant Randall Whitney ("Whitney") has filed opposition, to which the Trustee has replied. Having read and considered the motion, the Court deems the matter appropriate for determination on the parties' respective written submissions, VACATES the hearing scheduled for December 19, 2014, and rules as follows.
By the instant appeal, Whitney challenges two orders issued by the Bankruptcy Court on August 18, 2014 in the above-titled Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceeding instituted by debtor Pacific Thomas Corporation.
In the first of the two orders, titled Order Granting Motion for Sale of Property (hereinafter, "Sale Order"), the Bankruptcy Court granted the Trustee's motion for an order approving the sale of the estate's "self-storage facility and associated adjacent driveways and parking parcels" (hereinafter, "the Self-Storage Facility") for $12,950,000, pursuant to the terms of a purchase agreement. (
In the second of the two orders, titled Order Authorizing the Abandonment of the Estate's Interest in Certain Property of the Estate (hereinafter, "Abandonment Order"), the Bankruptcy Court granted the Trustee's motion for permission to abandon the estate's interests in "commercial buildings and improvements known as Tuffy and Morse" (hereinafter, "the Commercial Buildings"); the Bankruptcy Court ordered such abandonment to occur thirty days after the close of the sale of the Self-Storage Facility, finding the Commercial Buildings were "of inconsequential value and benefit to the [e]state." (
By the instant motion, the Trustee argues the appeal should be dismissed as moot.
The Trustee argues that, to the extent the instant appeal challenges the Sale Order, the appeal is moot in light of the sale of the Self-Storage Facility to Comcore having closed.
Under the "absolute mootness rule," where an appellant does not obtain a stay of an order approving a sale to a good faith purchaser, the appeal is moot when the sale closes.
Here, the Trustee contends, and a review of the docket confirms, neither Whitney nor any other party sought, let alone obtained, a stay of the Sale Order. Further, as noted, the Bankruptcy Court found Comcore was a good faith purchaser; no party argued to the contrary before the Bankruptcy Court,
Whitney argues his appeal as to the Sale Order nonetheless is not moot for two reasons. As discussed below, the Court finds neither reason persuasive.
First, in an apparent attempt to create a triable issue as to whether the sale in fact closed on October 31, 2014, Whitney contends that, on November 10, 2014, the Trustee advised the Bankruptcy Court that the sale was not final. In support thereof, Whitney relies on a declaration filed by the Trustee on November 10, 2014, in connection with the Trustee's motion for an order requiring Whitney to remove four lis pendens, on the ground said recordations constituted a violation of the automatic stay. (
Second, Whitney contends Comcore may seek to rescind the sale if Whitney, in the course of a proceeding pending in state court, establishes that the Certificates of Compliance issued by the City of Oakland pertaining to the property sold to Comcore are not accurate.
According, to the extent the appeal challenges the Sale Order, the appeal is moot.
The Trustee argues that, to the extent the instant appeal challenges the Abandonment Order, the appeal is moot, in light of the Commercial Buildings' having been sold on October 15, 2014 at a foreclosure sale.
As discussed above, the Bankruptcy Court approved the Trustee's motion for permission to abandon the estate's interests in the Commercial Buildings. Before the Trustee had the opportunity to abandon such interests, however, lienholder Private Mortgage Fund LLC sought and obtained from the Bankruptcy Court permission to foreclose upon the Commercial Buildings. (
Accordingly, to the extent the appeal challenges the Abandonment Order, the appeal is moot.
For the reasons stated above, the motion to dismiss is hereby GRANTED, and the appeal is hereby DISMISSED as moot.