Christopher S. Sontchi, United States Bankruptcy Judge.
Before the Court is the Motion of Shirley Fenicle, David William Fahy, John H. Jones, and David Heinzmann to Dismiss Chapter 11 Petitions of LSGT Debtors EECI, Inc., EEC Holdings, Inc., LSGT Sacroc, Inc. and LSGT Gas Co. LLC (D.I. 10074 and 10075) (the "Motion" filed, collectively, by the "Asbestos Movants"), and the response and replies thereto (D.I. 10249, 10273, and 10304). The Motion seeks dismissal of four of the above-captioned debtors' cases (as defined in more detail below, the "LSGT Debtors").
Thirty-one months after the filing of these Chapter 11 cases in April 2014 and on the eve of the third confirmation hearing in these cases, several persons asserting asbestos-related claims against the LSGT Debtors have brought a motion to dismiss the LSGT Debtors' cases as having been
The evidence clearly establishes that based on the totality of the circumstances the LSGT Debtors' bankruptcy petitions were filed in good faith because the filing was for a valid bankruptcy purpose and not as a litigation tactic. The LSGT Debtors' bankruptcy was filed for three primary purposes. First, they were filed to avoid immediate cash flow insolvency. The LSGT Debtors' primary assets were intercompany claims against EFH Corp., a company that was clearly going to file bankruptcy. The LSGT Debtors' primary liabilities were the costs of defending and settling asbestos related litigation. The imposition of the automatic stay in EFH Corp.'s bankruptcy was going to cut off the LSGT Debtors' sole source of liquidity. At the same time, absent their own automatic stay, the LSGT Debtors would have continued to incur expenses related to asbestos litigation. In short, absent their own bankruptcy filing, the LSGT Debtors would have been immediately cash flow insolvent upon EFH Corp.'s bankruptcy filing.
Second, the Debtors as a whole were facing the prospect of a huge $6.5 billion deconsolidation tax for which three of the LSGT Debtors would have been jointly and severally liable. As part of the Debtors' reorganization strategy for the enterprise as a whole, it was hoped that the tax could be avoided. However, to avoid the tax would require obtaining a private letter
Third, the LSGT Debtors filed bankruptcy in the hope of negotiating a resolution in bankruptcy that would maximize both the value of their assets and the recovery on their asbestos related claims. Although irrelevant to the question of whether the LSGT Debtors filed their cases in good faith, subsequent events have proven the strategy successful. In December 2015, the Debtors reached a settlement with one of its official committees of unsecured creditors that requires any plan of the Debtors to provide for the reinstatement of the LSGT Debtors' intercompany claims amongst each other and against EFH Corp. as well as the asbestos related claims for which a timely proof of claim was filed. The plan currently before the Court and scheduled for confirmation in February 2017 provides just that, even though EFH Corp.'s other unsecured creditors are impaired to the tune of ten cents on the dollar and all other intercompany claims are being discharged.
There can be no question that the LSGT Debtors' decision to file bankruptcy was in good faith and subsequent events have proven the decision to have been correct. Furthermore, the Motion is barred as untimely by the doctrine of laches. Thus, the Court will deny the Motion.
This Court has subject matter jurisdiction over the LSGT Debtors pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 157 and 1334. Venue in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware was proper as of the Petition Date (as defined below) pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1408 and 1409. This is a core proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(b).
Energy Future Holdings Corp. ("EFH Corp.") and 69 of its direct and indirect subsidiaries (collectively, the "Debtors"), including LSGT Gas Co. LLC ("LSGT Gas"), EEC Holdings, Inc. ("EEC Holdings"), EECI, Inc. ("EECI"), and LSGT Sacroc, Inc. ("Sacroc," and together with LSGT Gas, EEC Holdings, and EECI, the "LSGT Debtors"), filed petitions under Chapter 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code on April 29, 2014 (the "Petition Date"). The Debtors' bankruptcies were consolidated for procedural purposes only and have been jointly administered pursuant to Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 1015 and Local Bankruptcy Rule 1015-1.
Thirty-one months after the Petition Date, the Asbestos Movants filed the Motion under section 1112(b) of the United States Bankruptcy Code (the "Bankruptcy Code"). The Court held an evidentiary hearing on the Motion on December 5, 2016.
In October 2007, the Debtors adopted its current organizational structure in a privatization transaction of TXU Corp., EFH Corp.'s predecessor. The LSGT Debtors are successors to certain entities acquired through the 1996 merger of TXU Corp. and ENSERCH Corporation ("Enserch").
Enserch was an integrated natural gas company with operations in natural gas distribution and transmission, oil and gas exploration and production, oil-field services, and engineering and construction. LSGT Gas was previously the primary Enserch natural gas distribution and transmission business unit, and EEC Holdings and EECI related to Enserch's engineering and construction businesses.
As of the Petition Date, and as detailed in the below chart, the Debtors' books and records reflect a $560 million payable owed to LSGT Gas by EFH Corp., and approximately $990 million in payables owed to Sacroc, EECI, and EEC Holdings by LSGT Gas. The LSGT Debtors' primary assets and liabilities have been in the form of these intercompany receivables, certain residual pension obligations, and asbestos liabilities.
The LSGT Debtors' alleged asbestos liabilities primarily arise from certain discontinued operations of Ebasco Services Incorporated ("Ebasco"). Enserch owned Ebasco from 1976 to 1993. Ebasco was an engineering, construction, and consulting firm that designed, constructed, or performed maintenance at power plants during a time when the utility industry used asbestos-containing materials.
In 1993, United Engineers & Constructors, Inc. and Raytheon Engineers & Constructors, Inc. (together, "Raytheon") entered into an Asset Purchase Agreement to acquire certain of Ebasco's assets. Section 13.1 of the Asset Purchase Agreement required Enserch and Ebasco to indemnify Raytheon for "any and all losses" arising from their previous operations prior to the sale. Enserch formed an indirect subsidiary, Enserch E&C, Inc. to acquire the retained assets, claims, and liabilities in connection with the sale of Ebasco, including the indemnity obligation. Following a name change, Enserch E&C, Inc. became EECI. While claimants in the Debtors' chapter 11 cases filed proofs of claim alleging asbestos-related liabilities against other
EECI's asbestos obligations and related defense costs have totaled approximately $12.5 million since 2004. In the three years before the Petition Date, the annual amounts grew: $1.2 million, $1.6 million, and $3.8 million in 2011, 2012, and 2013, respectively.
In November 2015, the Court approved a settlement between the Debtors and the EFH Committee,
Prior to the Petition Date, the officers and directors/managers of the LGST Debtors, Mr. Anthony Horton
According to the LSGT Debtors' Schedules, the LSGT Debtors had the following assets on the Petition Date:
Debtor Personal Property Assets 12 Accounts Receivable LSGT Gash13 Interest in insurance policies; The accounts receivable were accounts receivable in the from (i) Debtor EFH Corporate approximate amount of $560 Services Co., (ii) Debtor Energy million; ownership interests in Future Holdings Corp., and incorporated businesses; and other (iii) a non-debtor foreign personal property in the subsidiary of EFH Humphreys approximate amount of & Glasgow Ltd. approximately $1.01 million LSGT Sacroc14 Interest in insurance policies and The accounts receivable are accounts receivable in the from LSGT Gas. approximate amount of $502 million EEC Holdings15 Interest in insurance policies; The accounts receivable are ownership interests in incorporated businesses.; interest and accounts receivable in the from LSGT Gas. approximate amount of $404 million EECI16 Interest in insurance policies and The accounts receivable are accounts receivable in the from LSGT Gas. approximate amount of $84 million
In July 2014, all of the Debtors sought bar dates for claims,
The proposed plan of reorganization (the "Plan") that is currently on file with the Court reinstates the Legacy General Unsecured Claims Against the EFH Debtors (as defined in the Plan) and reinstates the intercompany claims between and among the LSGT Debtors and EFH Corp.
The Plan provides that the LSGT Debtors will remain separate corporate entities, wholly-owned by reorganized EFH Corp., which, in turn, will be wholly owned by NextEra, Inc.
Chapter 11 bankruptcy petitions are
The burden of proving that the LSGT Debtors' petitions were filed in good faith is on the Debtors.
A party filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy may prove that its petition served a valid bankruptcy purpose by showing that the petition "preserved a going concern or maximized the value of the debtor's estate.... To say that liquidation under Chapter 11 maximizes the value of an entity is to
Here, the Debtors assert there were several reasons why the LSGT Debtors filed for bankruptcy protection. First, the LSGT Debtors' only means of funding the payment of their asbestos liabilities was through LSGT Gas's intercompany claim against EFH Corp., a company that was clearly going to file bankruptcy. At the same time, absent their own automatic stay, the LSGT Debtors would have continued to incur expenses related to asbestos litigation. In short, absent their own bankruptcy filing, the LSGT Debtors would have been immediately cash flow insolvent upon EFH Corp.'s bankruptcy filing. Second, the Debtors' pre-filing tax arrangement, under certain reorganization scenarios, could have left three of the LSGT Debtors, which are C-corporations, jointly and severally liable for billions of dollars in deconsolidation tax. Third, bankruptcy could provide a forum for permanently addressing all claims against the LSGT Debtors to the benefit of the creditors.
The fact that the LSGT Debtors would be cash flow insolvent with no source of funding upon the bankruptcy filing of EFH Corp. is the most persuasive factor regarding whether the LSGT Debtors had a valid bankruptcy purpose in filing bankruptcy. On the Petition Date, the LSGT Debtors' main assets were unsecured intercompany claims — there was no other source of funding to satisfy the asbestos claims and the other liabilities of the LSGT Debtors.
By filing for bankruptcy, the LSGT Debtors avoided becoming cash flow insolvent in the short-term. Moreover, they preserved their claims against EFH Corp. and had a seat at the table in negotiating the terms of payment on the intercompany claims against EFH Corp. — their sole
The Asbestos Movants compare the LSGT Debtors' cases to those in 15375 Memorial Corp. v. Bepco, L.P.
The Court does not agree that the case sub judice and Memorial are comparable — any similarities stop after noting that the Memorial debtors and the LSGT Debtors are both non-operating entities. First, the Memorial debtors were not part of an enterprise-wide restructuring.
Second, the Memorial debtors did not have viable intercompany claims against the parent,
Third, Memorial was in effect a two-party dispute — one creditor held $320 million of the $330 million in claims against the Memorial debtors.
Fourth, the timing of the Memorial debtors' petitions demonstrated that they filed bankruptcy as a litigation tactic, only two months before trial with their largest claimant.
The Asbestos Movants also argue that the LSGT Debtors' impending cash flow insolvency was, in fact, easily remediable. The Asbestos Movants suggest that the LSGT Debtors could have taken other steps, other than filing for bankruptcy to achieve access to EFH Corp.'s cash: (i) court approval to fund the litigation costs and/or (ii) modification of the automatic stay to allow the intercompany claim.
The Asbestos Movants are correct that had the LSGT Debtors not filed bankruptcy, the LSGT Debtors could have sought court approval to lift the automatic stay on their intercompany claims against EFH Corp. and to compel payment of those claims. Of course, immediate payment of these intercompany claims on a dollar-for-dollar basis — when the other general unsecured creditors of EFH Corp. had to await confirmation of a plan for payment with no guarantee of being paid in full — might have been problematic. Indeed, there is no doubt in the Court's mind that EFH Corp.'s other unsecured creditors would have contested any such motion. But, that aside, the LSGT Debtors would have had to meet two rather stringent tests to compel payment: the balancing test in order to lift the stay as well as the "necessity of payment doctrine."
In order to modify or to lift the automatic stay, the Court would have to determine that the LSGT Debtors' were likely to succeed on a claim under the "doctrine of necessity."
At the time of the bankruptcy filings, Messrs. Horton and Moldovan were concerned about the risk that the LSGT Debtors could become jointly and severally liable for a multi-billion dollar deconsolidation tax if the TCEH Debtors were separated from the EFH/EFIH Debtors.
The Asbestos Movants make two arguments in response: (i) EFH Properties Company ("EFH Properties") did not file bankruptcy but nonetheless joined in the ultimate tax settlement, and the LSGT Debtors could have done the same without filing bankruptcy;
The Asbestos Movants point to the fact that EFH Properties did not file bankruptcy. However, as the evidence showed at the TCEH Debtors' confirmation trial and at the hearing on December 5, 2016, EFH Properties was in a much different position than the LSGT Debtors. While EFH Properties faced the same risk of deconsolidation tax liability, the Debtors also had to consider the following factors, which weighed against EFH Properties filing bankruptcy: (i) the possibility of accelerating a large tax indemnity claim; (ii) starting the clock on the Debtors' time to accept or reject the master lease on Energy Plaza under section 365(d)(4); and (iii) if the master lease was rejected (or deemed rejected) the requirement that EFH Properties and its subtenants surrender the building.
Without having the considerations against filing for bankruptcy such as those faced by EFH Properties, the LSGT Debtors' consideration of the deconsolidated tax liability weighed the potential of bearing the full brunt of the deconsolidated tax liability versus the preservation of negotiations on an enterprise basis, as well as negotiations over any proposed plan
Furthermore, as of the Petition Date, regardless of the fact that the Debtors were highly motivated to avoid billions of dollars in taxes, no one could have predicted the outcome of the tax issues, which required 2½ years of intense negotiations. Eventually, in June 2016, the IRS issued a private letter ruling, which ultimately led to negotiation and confirmation of a plan of reorganization that allowed the separation of the TCEH Debtors on a tax-free basis, avoiding approximately $6.5 billion in tax liability. Resolution of the potential deconsolidated tax liability could not have been known as of the Petition Date.
The LSGT Debtors filed bankruptcy in the hope of negotiating a resolution in bankruptcy that would maximize both the value of their assets and the recovery on their asbestos related claims. Mr. Moldovan testified that, although addressing claims against EECI was an important factor in determining whether to file EECI's bankruptcy petitions, it was not as important as the other factors considered by EECI's board. Rather, it was "part of the holistic solution" to maximize the LSGT Debtors' assets to satisfy is asbestos claims.
The Asbestos Movants counter that the LSGT Debtors' primary reason for filing for bankruptcy was to evade their asbestos liabilities. However, at trial, Mr. Moldovan and Mr. Horton testified that discharging asbestos liabilities was not factored into their decision to file the LSGT Debtors for chapter 11.
As the Asbestos Bar Date was not contemplated until
Furthermore, there is no evidence in the record to suggest that if the LSGT Debtors had not moved to establish a bar date that the Debtors would still have been able to reinstate LSGT Gas' intercompany claim against EFH Corp. In fact, the record shows just the opposite. The record is replete with testimony that potential investors were concerned about the LSGT Debtors' open-ended asbestos liabilities.
Although section 1112(b) places no time limitations on the filing of a motion to dismiss, a bankruptcy court may exercise its discretion to deny a motion to dismiss as untimely based on the doctrine of laches.
Here, the Asbestos Movants waited 31 months into extremely complex cases to assert this Motion. The Asbestos Movants are not new to this case. Indeed, two of them, Shirley Fenicle and William Fahy, have been extremely active in these cases since their appointment to the EFH Committee in 2014.
The Asbestos Movants have argued that movants John H. Jones and David Heinzmann, who (allegedly) manifested asbestos-related injuries after the bar date, should not be faulted for not having acted earlier. However, at the trial, the Asbestos Movants did not present any evidence about Mr. Jones or Mr. Heinzmann and what they know about these cases and when. As a result, the Asbestos Movants have left the Court with an incomplete factual record to rule in make a finding of "excuse" based on this argument. The Asbestos Movants also argue that Debtors caused the delay by opposing the appointment of a legal representative of future, Unmanifested Asbestos Claimants. The Court notes that the U.S. Trustee denied appointment of a legal representative. Furthermore, such request and argument was 15 month ago
The Asbestos Movants assert that there is only one effect of dismissal of these cases: removal of the Asbestos Bar Date for unmanifested claimants, if any, who did not file proofs of claim. The Court disagrees. Dismissal of the LSGT Debtors could also have a much larger effect. For example, dismissal of the LSGT Debtors could trigger NextEra's termination rights under the Plan Support Agreement and the Merger Agreement.
Thus, there is undue prejudice to the Debtors resulting from the Asbestos Debtors bringing this Motion 31 months after
As discussed above, the Court finds that, based on the totality of the circumstances the LSGT Debtors' bankruptcy petitions were filed in good faith for a valid bankruptcy purpose. Furthermore, the Court finds that the Motion is barred by the doctrine of laches.
Thus, the Court will deny the Motion.
An order will be entered.
D-Dir Moldovan at ¶ 9. See also D-Dir Horton at ¶ 5.
Immediately prior to the Petition Date, on April 25, 2014, EECI had a formal board meeting to address whether or not to file for bankruptcy. D-Dir Horton at ¶ 10; D-Dir Moldovan at ¶ 6; DX091A.
12/5/2016 Hr'g Tr. 53:18-54:4. See also id. at 93:19-94:2 (Horton); 98:16-99:15 (Horton); 135:8-13 (Moldovan).
12/5/2016 Hr'g Tr. 131:22-132:2 (Moldovan).
Id. at 98:16-99:5.