Gregory F. Kishel, Chief United States Bankruptcy Judge.
This adversary proceeding came before the undersigned bankruptcy judge on cross-motions for summary judgment on Count Two of the Plaintiffs amended complaint. The Plaintiff ("the Trustee") appeared personally and by his attorneys, Ralph V. Mitchell and Tyler D. Candee. The Defendant ("PNY") appeared by its attorneys, David J. Adler and Robert T. Kugler. Count Two is not a core proceeding in the underlying bankruptcy cases, but it is a related proceeding subject to the federal bankruptcy jurisdiction. Because PNY would not consent to entry of judgment at the order of a bankruptcy judge, the following report and recommendation is made to one of the district judges for this district pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(c)(1). On the full record made for the motions,
This adversary proceeding arises out of the bankruptcy cases of the Polaroid Corporation and its affiliated companies. Through intermediate holding companies, one Thomas J. Petters acquired the assets of the Polaroid enterprise in 2005. He formed successor-companies to hold the assets, and then relocated the operation to Minnesota. By that time, the Polaroid Corporation and Polaroid Consumer Electronics, LLC ("PCE") functioned mainly to parlay the Polaroid brand-identity into the retail marketplace, through the licensing of the use of distinctive brands, trademarks, trade dress, and logos associated with the name, to third parties that used them on consumer goods for retail sale.
Tom Petters was arrested and charged with federal criminal offenses in early October, 2008. His assets were put under a receivership in the United States District Court for the District of Minnesota, ancillary to the federal criminal proceedings.
Among those assets were Tom Petters's ownership interests in two holding companies, including the one through which he held the post-acquisition Polaroid Corporation and its affiliates. The receiver put the two — Petters Company, Inc. and Petters Group Worldwide, LLC — into Chapter 11 in mid-October, 2008. The Polaroid Corporation continued its freestanding business operations under preexisting management, though subject to the second-level oversight of the receivership and bankruptcy processes for its ultimate and intermediate owners. Ultimately, on December 18, 2008, the management of the Polaroid Corporation and its affiliates put these companies into reorganization under Chapter 11.
A sale of the assets of the Polaroidgoing concern was conducted and court-approved in April, 2009. The underlying bankruptcy cases were converted to ones for liquidation under Chapter 7 on August 31, 2009.
PNY is a New Jersey-based concern. It was a party to a brand licensing agreement and a support services agreement with the Polaroid Corporation before the bankruptcy filings. The Trustee has sued PNY (Count One) to avoid pre-petition transfers alleged to have been preferential (payments from PNY to one of the Debtors on invoices); and (Count Two) to liquidate an asset of the estate (by asserting a claim for royalties under license alleged to have been owing to the Polaroid Corporation for times before and after the bankruptcy filings).
In his complaint, the Trustee invoked the bankruptcy jurisdiction of the federal courts under 28 U.S.C. § 1334(b), over all counts of his complaint.
In his amended complaint [Dkt. No. 4, ¶ 4], the Trustee properly classifies his request for avoidance and disallowance as core proceedings; 28 U.S.C. §§ 157(b)(2)(F) and 157(b)(2)(B) are directly on-point. This allows entry of final judgment on their adjudication by the order of a bankruptcy judge. 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(1).
The Trustee classifies Count Two, his action on the claim for royalties, as a "state-law claim for breach of contract," and hence describes it as "non-core." This concession is properly founded in the basic framework for adjudication in bankruptcy cases. Count Two is a claim under law to obtain one's due on breach — i.e., a failure by a contractual counterparty to perform. As such, Count Two is not materially different from Northern Pipeline Constr. Co. v. Marathon Pipe Line Co., 458 U.S. 50, 102 S.Ct. 2858, 73 L.Ed.2d 598 (1982), which is considered to be the classic third-party action that has a relationship to a bankruptcy case but which does not directly involve one of the core functions of bankruptcy in the adjustment of the debtor-creditor relationship. For the purposes of jurisdiction and judicial administration, however, the correct statutory phrase for the classification is not "non-core," but rather a "civil proceeding ... related to [a]
As to Count Two, a related proceeding, neither side complied with the pleading requirements for consent to entry of final judgment at the order of a bankruptcy judge. See Fed. R. Bankr. P. 7008(a) (as to complaint, counterclaim, cross-claim, or third-party complaint) and 7012(b) (as to responsive pleadings). The Defendant's pleading was especially defective, being a vague, wholly generic boilerplate denial of sufficient information. [Dkt. No. 12, ¶ 4).
The court noted that deficiency on the record at a hearing, and addressed it in a later directive to the parties. Order re: Consent Under 28 U.S.C. § 157(c)(2) and Fed. R. Bankr. P. 7008(a) and 7012(b) [Dkt. No. 31].
Thus, the final disposition of Count Two must be made on order of a district judge. On a full review of the record on these cross-motions, and on the conclusion that the record supports granting the Trustee's motion, this submission is thus made in the form of a report and recommendation, 28 U.S.C. § 157(c)(1).
Some four months after the Trustee commenced this adversary proceeding, PNY filed a motion for dismissal. It did so pursuant to a "procedures order" that had been entered to generally govern the Trustee's litigation in the underlying cases. Some six weeks after that, the parties stipulated to the withdrawal of PNY's motion and the submission of cross-motions for summary judgment as to Count Two [Dkt. No. 11].
PNY filed its motion first [Dkt. No. 15]. As Rule 56(a) requires,
The Trustee's motion followed soon after. The Trustee countered PNY's contract-based theory head-on, but he referred to provisions of the Asset Purchase Agreement other than those on which PNY relied. The Trustee argued that the bankruptcy estate(s) retained the right to collect the royalties identified in Count Two, and that there were unpaid royalties indisputably owing as to which he was entitled to judgment.
The Trustee also presented evidentiary materials to support the entry of judgment in a specific amount. He asserted that the factual content of these documents was not subject to controversy from PNY, because PNY itself had generated most of them. Through them, he argued, the amount of a judgment was established as a matter of law, under the simple terms of the original contract.
The Trustee raised another issue in his motion for summary judgment, PNY's right to its pleaded affirmative defense of setoff which would apply the claim that PNY was maintaining against the bankruptcy estate(s) against any judgment in the Trustee's favor. In preemptive fashion, the Trustee moved for summary judgment on this defense. He sought to bar it, on the argument that the claim in suit here and the claim asserted against the estate(s) lacked mutuality.
This led to responsive dithering from PNY, as to whether disposition on summary judgment was appropriate after all. By the time of oral argument, PNY's counsel was demanding an opportunity for discovery into factual matters on several fronts: whether the Polaroid Corporation-PNY contractual relationship had been assumed and assigned to PLR pursuant to the Asset Purchase Agreement or not; whether a right to recover unpaid royalties accrued before the sale had passed to PLR.with the contract, or stayed with the estate(s); and whether and in what amount a judgment in favor of the Trustee should be subject to reduction by setoff or (newly-asserted and not pleaded) recoupment. It was a curious retreat from the rectitude and projected simplicity of PNY's original request for summary judgment in its favor, in respects a near-reversal of tone and position.
These motions partially overlap in their substantive scope, and each side's responses to the other's motion ended up hitting all of the issues raised between the two. Thus, the motions need not be analyzed seriatim. In the end, the structure of relevant rights under three different contractual undertakings, and the most basic of undisputed material facts, merit grant of judgment to the Trustee. He is not entitled to judgment in the full amount he demands, though.
The parties' dispute has its origins in business relationships between the Polaroid enterprise and PNY that began in 2006. It is important to note at the outset that both the Polaroid Corporation and PCE were involved and active in that ongoing relationship; but only the Polaroid Corporation was a signatory to the two contracts that created and structured the relationship.
PNY was to give several types of consideration for the license, including the payment of royalties. A minimum quarterly royalty was fixed by a table; it stepped up in amount from that due for a first quarter ending October 31, 2006. PNY was to submit to the Polaroid Corporation quarterly reports of its net sales of Polaroid-branded merchandise. The actual royalty payment was based on net sales volume, against a multiplier of three percent. That amount would be payable, with the contractual minimum as the floor for the Polaroid Corporation's entitlement. BLA [attached as Exh. 5 to Declaration of Tyler D. Candee, Dkt. No. 18, CM/ECF pp. 88-116], §§ 1 and 4, 1 and 4-6.
On April 6, 2007, the Polaroid Corporation and PNY entered a "Support Services Agreement" ("the SSA").
Under the SSA, the signatories created a structure through which the Polaroid Corporation was a named intermediary for the placement of PNY-produced and Polaroid-branded merchandise with the Target Corporation. Under the SSA, the Polaroid Corporation was to:
SSA, 1-2, ¶ 2.
In turn, PNY was to be:
SSA, 3, ¶¶ 4(a)-(b), (d) (emphasis in original).
Second Third Fourth $132,287.59 $ 87,153.22 $100,000.00 (minimum)11
Under Count Two, the Trustee sued PNY for an alleged breach of the BLA, a failure to pay royalties due "in a sum not less than $332,287.59." Via the motion at bar, the Trustee sought a judgment for damages on this claim, but in a larger amount: $472,946.93. To make out an entitlement to judgment in this amount, the Trustee produced two declarations by James Dolan.
Before the bankruptcy filings and up to the date on which the cases were converted, Dolan was employed as Vice President and Controller of the Polaroid Corporation and its affiliated entities including PCE. After that, the Trustee employed Dolan to perform similar functions for the administration of the estate including the liquidation of assets.
Through his declaration, Dolan:
PNY did not produce any admissible evidence to counter the Trustee's evidence on those points, in any of its submissions on either motion
For the Trustee's motion, PNY's opposition is entirely on the legal plane. PNY makes three very different arguments. One of them is a reprise of the argued basis for PNY's own motion for partial summary judgment. None of PNY's arguments go to the substantive, facial terms of the BLA, or the parties' rights or liabilities as they would be governed by those terms.
PNY phrases its first defense in terms of "standing." PNY's theory, however, is not constitutionally-derived from
Memorandum of Law in Opposition to Plaintiff's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment [Dkt. No. 19], 2. Put another way: the Trustee-plaintiff here never succeeded to the right to recovery on this claim for royalties, when the case was converted after the sale had closed. As PNY would have it, the right of action passed out of the bankruptcy estate, and vested in PLR as purchaser, through the sale. Hence, PNY demands, Count Two must be "dismissed with prejudice," for want of the Trustee's right to recover for the bankruptcy estate.
The argument, however, is without merit. The written terms of the court-approved sale of the assets of the Polaroid enterprise, applied in accordance with their clear facial tenor, fully bear out the Trustee's right to sue for the royalties.
The scope of the sale of the Polaroid enterprise's assets is governed by the APA, which was executed by the Debtors and PLR toward the consummation of the sale process under 11 U.S.C. § 363, plus the ancillary agreements that went to the executory contracts among those assets.
Section 1.1 of the APA defines the "Acquired Assets" that PLR was purchasing. Those include (using the APA's only numeration):
APA, 2-3 (emphasis added).
Complementing Section 1.1, the APA's Section 1.2 provides for the Debtors' retention of "Excluded Assets," and defines them to include:
APA, 5 (emphasis added).
For its argument on both motions, PNY correctly points out that the BLA was among the "Acquired Contracts" that the Debtors assigned to PLR as part of the sale. The Trustee does not (and could not) dispute this. See Schedule 4.1(s) to APA (identifying BLA as Contract No. 158 among Acquired Contracts).
PNY argues that the accrued pre-sale royalties went to PLR right along with its "Acquired Contract," by the sweep of two generalized provisions of the Asset Purchase Agreement. First, it argues, the BLA was an "Acquired Intellectual Property Contract," and hence the accrued royalties fell under the "causes of action to enforce rights in any Acquired Intellectual Property," APA at Section 1.1(o).
The first argument is wrong as a matter of the logic of classification. It confuses the more narrow, contractually-based rights of a licensor of intellectual property to enforce the terms of the license against the licensee, with the plenary rights of an owner of intellectual property to protect and vindicate the value of its ownership against all the world.
Yes, absent the APA's more exacting scheme of classification, there would be a broad, impressionistic argument to characterize a right to unpaid royalties as a right to recover part of the value of the basic ownership of the intellectual property under license. This would require jumping over a crafted, intermediate level of organization for rights and liabilities (the BLA); but it would be arguable.
However, the APA specifically identifies "royalties," in that very word, that are derived from the licensure of intellectual property under an Acquired Contract, as a separate class of treated asset. It recognizes segregated value traceable to such royalties. Most to the point, it allocates that value between seller and buyer in express terms, with the seller to retain the fruit grown off the tree before sale and the buyer to take all ripening thereafter.
This embodies an exacting and deliberate analysis of the components of value in an ongoing, complex contractual relationship like the BLA. Thanks to the powerful remedies of 11 U.S.C. § 365, that relationship could be transferred to a new owner even as it continued to throw off realized value (the royalties) through performance. Responding to the complexities of this moving and operating asset, the parties to the APA carefully made specific provision for its multiple parts, for the transition to a new, post-sale ownership.
There are three reasons why this specific provision for the estates' retention takes precedence over the APA's generally-framed categories of acquired assets.
The first stems from contract, the specific agreement of the parties to the APA. Section 1.2 of the APA governs the assets to be retained by the Debtors as sellers. It opens with the qualifying proviso, "[n]otwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Agreement,...." This clearly expresses the thought that the following, specific provisions for retention were to override the effect otherwise to be had from all general provisions for transfer of assets.
And a third also comes from the general law of contract. "Each and every provision of a contract must be given effect if that can be consistently and reasonably done." Advantage Consulting Grp., Ltd. v. ADT Sec'y Systs., Inc., 306 F.3d 582, 586 (8th Cir.2002) (quoting Oster v. Medtronic, Inc., 428 N.W.2d 116, 119 (Minn.Ct. App.1988). The carveout of unpaid, presale royalty payments in Sections 1.1(p) and 1.2(p) of the APA would be rendered entirely superfluous, were PNY's argument adopted; and that would be contrary to the governing Minnesota law.
The same reasoning applies to the second argument. Outside of context, a right to recover royalties on a licensure of intellectual property might be classified as an "account receivable." However, this would only be in a generalized, connotative sense. E.g., Bryan A. Garner, Garner's Dictionary of Legal Usage (3d ed.2011), 14 (defining "account" as "a detailed statement of the debits and credits between parties to a contract...."). The parties to the APA did not envision the governance of such generalities here. They clearly took account of the special and valuable place of ongoing, royalty-producing licenses of the Polaroid branding in the asset structure that was being sold.
PNY's argument of law to defeat the Trustee's full suit fails. The right to these royalties reposes in the bankruptcy estate and the Trustee has the right to sue to recover on them. The Trustee should receive a ruling to that effect; and because this issue was the only one raised by PNY in its motion for summary judgment, PNY's motion should be denied.
As its Fifteenth Affirmative Defense, PNY asserted that it was "entitled to set off and/or recoup any indebtedness due by the Debtor to [PNY] against such liability." Answer and Affirmative Defenses of Defendant PNY Technologies, Inc. [Dkt. No. 12], 6. It raises this defense in response to the Trustee's motion for summary judgment, maintaining that the
The Trustee's rejoinder to that was the filing of an objection to PNY's claim in BKY 08-46617, shortly before the hearing on these motions. This strategic ploy was directed in part against PNY's assertion of setoff and recoupment, on various theories including ripeness.
Most of those are mooted by the intervening hearing on the claim objection and today's entry of a dispositive order on it [BKY 08-46617, Dkt. No.2070]. That disposition left a claim in the amount of $111,713.60 allowed against the estate to the Polaroid Corporation, founded on multiple invoices issued up to August 10, 2008 on PNY's performance under the SSA. Because this claim arose in transactions that were executed before the Debtors' bankruptcy filings, it is a general unsecured, pre-petition claim for the purposes of PNY's affirmative defenses.
As a counter to the Trustee's relief, PNY would have this allowed claim set off against the Trustee's judgment, reducing or extinguishing the amount it would have to pay to the estate in satisfaction.
11 U.S.C. § 553 generally preserves the right of setoff that a creditor could have raised against its debtor under nonbankruptcy law. Subject to exceptions not relevant here, it provides:
11 U.S.C. § 553(a). This provision preserves setoff rights that are otherwise valid under applicable nonbankruptcy law. In re Nerland Oil, Inc., 303 F.3d 911, 917 (8th Cir.2002); In re American Central Airlines, Inc., 60 B.R. 587, 590 (Bankr. N.D.Iowa 1996).
Under Minnesota law, the elements for setoff have been identified as two debts owing, one by the debtor to the creditor and one by the creditor to the debtor; and the mutuality of those debts. See Nietzel v. Farmers and Merchants State Bank, 307 Minn. 147, 238 N.W.2d 437 (1976); Firstar Eagan Bank v. Marquette Bank, 466 N.W.2d 8, 12 (Minn.Ct. App.1991). The two existing debts must each be due at the time of setoff, and the debts must be mutual. Firstar Eagan Bank v. Marquette Bank, 466 N.W.2d at 12.
In re Donnay, 184 B.R. 767, 787 (Bankr. D.Minn.1995) (citations omitted).
In the context of bankruptcy, the Eighth Circuit has articulated these elements
United States v. Gerth, 991 F.2d 1428, 1431 (8th Cir.1993).
Then, under Minnesota law setoff can be applied to cross-running claims in litigation between parties where both sides are adjudicated liable to the other — much in the sense of counterclaim, with which the concept and terminology of setoff are often used interchangeably. Imperial Elevator Co. v. Hartford Acc. & Indem. Co., 163 Minn. 481, 204 N.W. 531 (1925). As a tool of equity, setoff may be used by a court in its discretion, to net out liquidated cross-running claims for a final consolidated judgment. Hogren v. Schlueto; 355 N.W.2d 762, 764 (Minn.Ct. App.1984).
Finally (and quite relevant here), when a trustee in bankruptcy sues a creditor on a matured debt that is property of the estate and establishes the creditor's liability, the creditor's pre-petition claim against the debtor (if allowable against the estate) may be offset against the creditor's adjudicated liability to the estate. 11 U.S.C. § 542(b).
As an alternate defense to the Trustee's recovery under the BLA, PNY asserted a right to set off its pre-petition claim under the SSA against the amount of any judgment the Trustee received against it. The Trustee opposed this, and preemptively sought a ruling through his own motion for summary judgment.
The Trustee's legal theory — lack of mutuality — was partly miscast, given the sole basis raised: PNY's claim in these cases, if any, was allowable only against the estate of PCE, due to a novation of the SSA. The Trustee argued that the parties had effected this novation by their consistent performance under the SSA, when PCE acted as the sole party to serve, do the work, and undertake subsidiary transactional liability to the Target Corporation for the placement of PNY's Polaroid-branded products. Thus, the Trustee insisted, PNY's claim should not be allowed against the estate of the Polaroid Corporation, because the Polaroid Corporation had no de facto involvement with PNY after it executed the SSA and therefore PNY had no enforceable claim against it. From this, the Trustee argued, the Polaroid Corporation's BLA-based claim against PNY could not be reduced by the offset of PNY's SSA-based claim, because PNY's claim legally lay against PCE only.
The Trustee made this theory one of his substantive bases for objecting to PNY's filed claim, which PNY had designated as running against the Polaroid Corporation alone. In today's ruling, the Trustee lost. PNY's claim was allowed against the estate of the Polaroid Corporation, though in a reduced amount due to the disallowance of its major part.
As a last ground of resistance to the Trustee's motion, PNY points to the difference between the amount of damages pleaded in the prayer for relief in the Trustee's amended complaint and the greater amount he now seeks to have awarded on motion.
PNY's first objection is couched in procedural terms: the enhancement of the number "is an improper attempt to amend its [sic] Amended Complaint to increase the alleged damages by approximately $140,000 (in violation of Rule 7015 of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure)." Memorandum of Law in Opposition to Plaintiffs Motion for Partial Summary Judgment [Dkt. No. 19], 8.
This was a curious argument. It was redolent of the old, hypertechnical "forms of action" approach of the common law on pleading, that prevailed before the adoption of the first modern procedural codes in the mid-19th Century. In any event, as the Trustee notes, it is met conclusively by Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(c):
The Trustee proved up a right to damages in the greater amount, so he is entitled to a corresponding judgment.
The other objection to the enhanced demand for damages is more nebulous. Per PNY, the request for an award linked to post-petition royalties is "based solely on conjecture," because the Trustee had no reports of sales to analyze for the calculation of a specific amount under the BLA's formula.
This, too, was a strange argument. The Trustee had to resort to the BLA's minimum-royalty provision because PNY had defaulted in its duty to report. PNY had no cause to complain, if the Trustee shrugged, assumed a continuing downward "trajectory" in royalties, and did not bother to push the issue of PNY's delinquent reports.
In any case, from PNY's perspective the point is defused by no-harm, nofoul considerations. By resorting to the estates' right to a minimum payment, the
Under this analysis, the Trustee would be entitled to a recovery under Count Two of his amended complaint in the amount of $472,946.93, for the benefit of the bankruptcy estate of Debtor Polaroid Corporation. PNY would be entitled to an offset against that, on account of its allowed claim in the case of Debtor Polaroid Corporation, to the extent of $111,713.60. The outcome would be a netted judgment in favor of the Trustee against PNY, in the amount of $361,233.33.
IT IS RECOMMENDED that the district court adopt the report just made in disposition of the parties' cross-motions for summary judgment on Count Two of the Plaintiff's complaint, and that it enter, as follows, an:
On Count Two of his amended complaint, the Plaintiff shall recover from the Defendant, for the benefit of the estate of Debtor Polaroid Corporation, BKY 08-46617, the amount of $361,233.33, together with taxable costs and disbursements.
IT IS FURTHER RECOMMENDED that the district court determine that there is no just reason for delay, and order entry of judgment in the district court now.