TRACEY N. WISE, Bankruptcy Judge.
This matter is before the Court on Debtors' Motion for an Order Authorizing the Rejection of Certain Agreements ("Motion") [Doc. 394] between Debtor Little
Upon consideration of the arguments of counsel and the record herein, the Court finds that the agreements sought to be rejected are part of an indivisible, integrated property exchange transaction entered into between Little Elk and the ICG Entities, and, therefore, denies the Motion for the reasons stated below.
This Court has jurisdiction of this matter pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1334(b), and it is a core proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2). Venue is proper pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1408 and 1409.
Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 365, the Debtors move to reject two contracts with the ICG Entities. The first contract is a Disposal Agreement dated June 23, 2008, entered into between Little Elk and the ICG Entities, and second is an Easement Agreement also dated June 23, 2008, entered into between Little Elk and Hazard.
The ICG Entities raise several objections to the Motion, including an argument that the ICG Agreements are an indivisible part of a larger, comprehensive property exchange transaction among the parties that occurred in June 2008; the ICG Agreements cannot be severed from that transaction, and thus, cannot be rejected.
The ICG Entities and Debtor Little Elk have adjacent coal properties located in Breathitt County, Perry County, and Knott County, Kentucky, which they, or their predecessors, acquired in 2004 through separate sales from a prior bankruptcy case. In 2008, the ICG Entities and Little Elk determined that "the way the property had been divided in 2004 was in some respects cumbersome and illogical." [Joint Stips ¶ 12; see also Affidavit of William Gregory Feltner, Doc. 1283-3 ¶¶ 5, 9]. To remedy this, the parties negotiated a comprehensive property exchange that would allow the companies to consolidate their property interests and rights in a way that would facilitate mining and make their respective operations and properties more logical and workable (the "2008 Transaction"). The 2008 Transaction closed on June 23, 2008, involved approximately 5,500 acres of mineral properties and was documented by a series of agreements, all as more particularly described in a master Property Exchange Agreement ("Exchange Agreement") [Doc. 1273-5]. The purpose of the 2008 Transaction was for the parties to "exchange certain interests in their respective coal rights and surface tracts and to take other actions to enable each of them to conduct their respective coal mining operations more efficiently." [Exchange Agreement, Recitals ¶ F].
The requirement that all of the Ancillary Documents be executed at closing was dictated by paragraph 2.6 of the Exchange Agreement:
[Exchange Agreement ¶ 2.6]. The Exchange Agreement also contained the following provision:
[Exchange Agreement ¶ 8.4 (emphasis added)]. The Easement Agreement and Disposal Agreement were attached to the Exchange Agreement as Exhibits 2.2(k) and 2.2(l), respectively, thus constituting a part of the "entire agreement between the parties."
The Easement Agreement. Pursuant to the Easement Agreement, Little Elk granted to ICG Hazard an easement and right-of-way on and across its land to allow ICG Hazard access, for the purpose of ingress and egress, for an original term of ten years and ten renewal periods of one year each. Additional rights were granted for ICG Hazard to construct and maintain new roadways with Little Elk's approval. A recital in the Easement Agreement expressly noted that the agreement was reached pursuant to Section 2.2(k) of the Exchange Agreement:
[Easement Agreement, Recitals ¶ C]. The "sole consideration" for the rights granted in the Easement Agreement was "the various property rights that the parties have exchanged pursuant to the Exchange Agreement." [Easement Agreement ¶ 7].
Similar to the Exchange Agreement, the Easement Agreement contained an incorporation provision as follows:
[Easement Agreement ¶ 10.g (emphasis added)]. As noted above, this provision is consistent with the Exchange Agreement's language defining the "Entire Agreement."
The Disposal Agreement. The Disposal Agreement granted the parties reciprocal rights to dispose of spoil generated from the mining activities of one onto property owned or controlled by the other. As with the Easement Agreement, the Disposal Agreement recitals expressly provided that the Disposal Agreement was reached pursuant to Section 2.2(l) of the Exchange Agreement [Disposal Agreement, Recitals ¶ C], and the "sole consideration" for the disposal rights granted under the Disposal Agreement was "the various property rights that the parties have exchanged pursuant to the Exchange Agreement and the mutual rights and obligations set forth in this Disposal Agreement" [Disposal Agreement ¶ 7]. The incorporation provision contained in the Disposal Agreement mirrored that in the Easement Agreement. [Disposal Agreement ¶ 11.g].
The ICG Entities are continuing to operate mines on the properties in which they obtained rights pursuant to the 2008 Transaction, and they deem continuation of their rights under the ICG Agreements to be essential to their business operations. Little Elk has ceased mining operations, and the Debtors have determined that the ICG Agreements are burdensome to their estates.
Under the Bankruptcy Code, a debtor-in-possession is permitted to assume or reject unexpired leases or executory contracts. 11 U.S.C. § 365(a). To determine the applicability of this provision, the Court "must first identify what constitutes the agreements at issue." Lewis Bros. Bakeries, Inc. v. Interstate Brands Corp. (In re Interstate Bakeries Corp.), 751 F.3d 955, 961 (8th Cir.2014). Where multiple contracts are intended to comprise one agreement or transaction, a party may not sever them for purposes of assumption or rejection. See, e.g., In re LG Philips Displays USA, Inc., No. 06-10245(BLS), 2006 WL 1748671, at *4 (Bankr.D.Del. June 21, 2006) ("[A]ll of the contracts that comprise an integrated agreement must be either assumed or rejected, since they all make up one contract." (citations omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted)). Here, the parties agree that if the ICG Agreements are integrated with the Exchange Agreement such that the 2008 Transaction Agreements form one indivisible contract, the Debtors cannot reject the ICG Agreements.
Contract interpretation is a matter of state law. KFC Corp. v. Wagstaff Minnesota, Inc. (In re Wagstaff Minnesota, Inc.), Ch. 11 Case No. 11-43073, Adv. No. 11-2450 (JNE/JJG), 2012 WL 10623, at *3 (D.Minn. Jan. 3, 2012):
Wagstaff Minnesota, Inc., 2012 WL 10623, at *3 (citations omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted). Like the agreements at issue in Wagstaff, the subject ICG Agreements, as well as the Exchange Agreement, each provided that they would be governed by and construed according to the laws of the Commonwealth of Kentucky.
Here, the terms of the ICG Agreements and the Exchange Agreement unequivocally evidence the parties' intent that the 2008 Transaction Agreements form one indivisible contract. The 2008 Transaction Agreements were executed contemporaneously on June 23, 2008, by and between the same parties, they all relate to the same subject matter, i.e., the operations of the parties' respective mining operations. The Exchange Agreement specifically provided that the 2008 Transaction "shall be canceled and treated as if void and of no force and effect" unless the Easement and Disposal Agreements, along with other Ancillary Documents, were entered into at the Closing. [Exchange Agreement ¶ 2.6]. The Exchange Agreement defined the "entire agreement" to include the schedules and exhibits, and models of the Easement Agreement and Disposal Agreement were included as exhibits. The Easement Agreement and the Disposal Agreement both defined the "entire agreement" as including the Exchange Agreement. Finally, the sole consideration for the ICG Agreements was the various property rights that the parties exchanged pursuant to the Exchange Agreement and, with respect to the Disposal Agreement, the reciprocal rights granted to the parties in that agreement. See In re Buffets Holdings, Inc., 387 B.R. 115 (Bankr.D.Del.2008) (multi-part agreement is not severable if the parties entered into the agreement as a whole, without which there would have been no agreement); Interstate Bakeries Corp., 751 F.3d at 963 (determining an asset purchase agreement and a license agreement were integrated under Illinois law where the agreements were executed the same date, both agreements defined the "entire agreement" as including both agreements, and a model of the license agreement was attached as an exhibit to the asset purchase agreement); In re Physiotherapy Holdings, Inc., 506 B.R. 619, 626 (Bankr. D.Del.2014) (considering whether agreements were executed at the same time as a factor in determining whether agreements were integrated). Here, the ICG Agreements constituted a portion of the consideration for the ICG Entities to enter into the Exchange Agreement and close the 2008 Transaction. The provisions of the ICG Agreements clearly and unambiguously evidence the parties' intent that the ICG Agreements are an integral, interdependent and non-severable part of the 2008 Transaction.
It is also appropriate for "courts considering the divisibility of a contract [to] look at the objects to be attained and the common sense of the situation." Wagstaff Minnesota, Inc., 2012 WL 10623, at *3. The Debtors argued at the hearing that while the ICG Agreements are related to the Exchange Agreement, they serve a different purpose and are not required for the ICG Entities to continue their mining operations. According to the Debtors, the ICG Entities can continue to mine coal on the property transferred to them in the 2008 Transaction because they can build roads on other property, and spoilage from their mining operations can be placed on
[Joint Stips ¶ 20 (emphasis added)]. Subsequent changes in the parties' operations cannot defeat the parties' intent regarding the indivisibility of the ICG Agreements from the 2008 Transaction Agreements.
Finally, to the extent the Debtors argue that a severability clause in the Exchange Agreement supports the divisibility of the ICG Agreements from the 2008 Transaction, this argument is without merit. Specifically, the Debtors argue that if the ICG Agreements are rejected, they are unenforceable, and thus may be severed from the 2008 Transaction by virtue of the Exchange Agreement's severability provision, to-wit:
[Exchange Agreement, ¶ 8.6]. This argument is circular at best, and the severability clause in no way diminishes the conclusion that the ICG Agreements are part of an indivisible contract with the Exchange Agreement and remaining Ancillary Documents.
The Court finds that the Easement Agreement and the Disposal Agreement constitute an indivisible part of the 2008 Transaction entered into among Little Elk and the ICG Entities. The Debtors have conceded that if the Court makes such a finding, then the Debtors cannot reject the ICG Agreements. Therefore, it is unnecessary for the Court to consider the other arguments of the parties. Based on the forgoing,