WENDY BEETLESTONE, District Judge.
Before the Court are the consolidated appeals from two orders by the United States Bankruptcy Court in the Matter of Renee M. Thorpe, Debtor (Bankruptcy Case No. 13-15267). The first appeal concerns the Bankruptcy Court's denial of Thorpe's motion to modify an existing Chapter 12 reorganization plan on an expedited basis, or in the alternative, to clarify that a proposed transaction would satisfy the debtor redemption provisions of the existing confirmed reorganization plan and require cancellation of an auction of Mrs. Thorpe's family farm. The second appeal concerns the Bankruptcy Court's confirmation of the sale of the farm at a court-ordered auction, despite objections from Mrs. Thorpe that irregularities in the auction process undermined the integrity of the auction.
In 2010, Renee M. Thorpe ("Mrs. Thorpe") and Dale Thorpe ("Mr. Thorpe") received notice from Susquehanna Bank that they were in default on two loans secured by mortgages on the Thorpe Family Farm (the "Farm") in Upper Makefield Township, Newtown, Pennsylvania. The Farm covers approximately 144 acres, and is divided by a public road. A house and several farm buildings are located on the north side of the road, while the portion of the Farm on the south side of the road consists of a 47.915-acre parcel of undeveloped land (the "Parcel"). Though the Parcel has its own tax identification number and legal description, the entire Farm was deeded together when it was first acquired by the Thorpe family in 1945, when it was conveyed within the family in 2003, and when it was conveyed to Mr. and Mrs. Thorpe in 2007.
The Thorpes and Susquehanna Bank initially attempted to resolve the Thorpes' debt through various proceedings in state court but were unable to do so. A Sheriff's sale of the Farm was originally scheduled in May 2012. That sale was cancelled as a result of a Chapter 12 petition filed by Mr. Thorpe. That case was dismissed on March 8, 2013 for failure to submit a viable reorganization plan with an order barring Mr. Thorpe from filing future bankruptcy petitions without leave of court. In re Thorpe, No. 12-19652 (Bankr. E.D. Pa. Mar. 8, 2013).
After the dismissal of Mr. Thorpe's bankruptcy case, Susquehanna Bank assigned the mortgages to Lititz Properties, LLC ("Lititz"). Lititz continued the effort to collect on the debt, and another Sherriff's sale was scheduled for June 14, 2013. (Appellant Br. at 11). The day before the scheduled sale, Mrs. Thorpe filed the Chapter 12 petition that eventually gave rise to the appeals at issue here. Frederick L. Reigle was appointed as the Chapter 12 Trustee (the "Trustee"). After several unsuccessful attempts to submit a confirmable reorganization plan and intense negotiation with Lititz and the Trustee, Mrs. Thorpe gained approval of a Fourth Amended Chapter 12 Reorganization Plan (the "Fourth Amended Plan") on January 23, 2014. (ECF No. 121). The Fourth Amended Plan memorialized the first iteration of what the parties and the Bankruptcy Court have described as a "grand bargain." The essence of the bargain was to allow sale of the Parcel to generate funds to pay down Mrs. Thorpe's debt and allow her to retain ownership of the remainder
Initial efforts to market the Parcel were met with some success, and on the final day permitted by the Fourth Amended Plan, Mrs. Thorpe filed a motion to sell the Parcel to Mack & Roedel, LLC for $1,300,000. Lititz and the Trustee objected to the sale on the grounds that the agreement of sale to Mack & Roedel contained terms that conflicted with the Fourth Amended Plan, and that there were higher and better offers for the Parcel. On April 11, 2014, the Bankruptcy Court sustained the objections, and ordered Mrs. Thorpe to enter into an agreement of sale with King's General Contracting ("King's") in the amount of $1,350,000 within seven days, with a closing no later than July 2, 2014. (ECF No. 136).
Despite the Bankruptcy Court's careful order and the provisions for a back-up purchaser, no sale occurred. On April 22, 2014, King's defaulted. Finding that neither Mack & Roedel nor Zaveta remained ready or willing to purchase the Parcel, the Bankruptcy Court ordered the Trustee to market the Parcel through September 2, 2014. (ECF No. 155). Linda Emerson ("Emerson") of Berkshire Hathaway Home Services Fox and Roach was approved as the realtor for sale of the Parcel. (ECF No. 163).
Emerson's marketing efforts yielded another potential buyer for the Parcel. On September 10, 2014, the Trustee received a signed offer to purchase the Parcel for $900,000 from Deepak and Jayshree Patel (the "Patels"). (ECF 221). Mrs. Thorpe objected to this sale. At a lengthy hearing on September 17, 2014, the Bankruptcy Court declined to approve the sale because the price offered by the Patels was unlikely to sufficiently alleviate Mrs. Thorpe's debt service burden to allow her to eventually meet the other obligations of the Fourth Amended Plan. (ECF No. 256 at 96-97). The deadline for submitting another amended plan was extended.
Following the rejection of the sale of the Parcel to the Patels, Lititz renewed its motion to dismiss Mrs. Thorpe's bankruptcy case. Over the next two months, Mrs. Thorpe, Lititz, and the Trustee again engaged in extensive negotiations. These negotiations eventually yielded the confirmation of the Fifth Amended Chapter 12 Reorganization Plan (the "Fifth Amended Plan"). (ECF No. 290). The Fifth Amended Plan resuscitated the grand bargain, but this time provided that the entire
Paragraph 2(D) also provided that Mrs. Thorpe could prevent an auction by paying $1,000,000 directly to Lititz at least four-teen days before the closing of any sale of the Parcel or Farm:
Like the Fourth Amended Plan, the Fifth Amended Plan was silent concerning the responsibility to subdivide the Farm to allow sale of the Parcel.
The Patels continued to demonstrate interest in purchasing the Parcel, but insisted that several contingencies be included in the agreement of sale. Among the contingencies they sought was the right to a refund on their deposit pending the out-come of an environmental study or an unfavorable determination from local zoning authorities concerning the location of a proposed home. As a result, both parties expressed concerns about the Patels' level of financial commitment. The Trustee, whose responsibility it was to market the Parcel under the Fifth Amended Plan, did not present any of the Patels' offers to the Bankruptcy Court for approval. However, Mrs. Thorpe presented a signed offer from the Patels (the "Patel Agreement") to purchase the Parcel for $1,200,000 to the Bankruptcy Court on April 13, 2015. (ECF No. 420). The Bankruptcy Court preliminarily approved the Patel Agreement on April 23, 2015, and ordered that any discrepancies
Following the termination of the Patel Agreement, the Trustee moved forward with the Auction provisions of the Fifth Amended Plan. On July 31, 2015, the Bankruptcy Court issued a Final Order establishing procedures for an auction to be held on September 16, 2015 (the "Final Auction Order"). (ECF No. 434). In addition to setting forth the procedural specifications for the Auction, the Final Auction Order changed the deadline for effecting the Debtor's Redemption, described as "making a payment such that Lititz Properties nets $1,000,000," from fourteen days prior to closing to the "fall of the auctioneer's hammer" at the conclusion of the Auction. (Final Auction Order ¶ 15). As provided in the Fifth Amended Plan, the Debtor's Redemption could be effected either through direct cash payment, or a sale of the Parcel for an amount that would net Lititz $1,000,000 after accounting for applicable fees and other expenses. The Final Auction Order also provided that the Parcel could be sold separately at the Auction if Mrs. Thorpe could successfully subdivide the Parcel before August 7, 2015:
(Final Auction Order ¶ 25). The Bankruptcy Court approved Max Spann Real Estate & Auction Co. to serve as the auctioneer for the Auction (the "Auctioneer"). Robert Dann ("Dann") was the Auctioneer's primary coordinator for the Auction and worked with the Trustee to arrange Auction procedures in accordance with the Final Auction Order. (Sept. 17 Tr. at 116).
The Auctioneer designed and implemented a court-approved marketing strategy to publicize the auction that included open houses, printed brochures, and posting on the Auctioneer's website. The Trustee did not directly supervise the development or implementation of this strategy. (Id. at 118-28). On August 28, 2015, a video was posted on the web site of the Bucks County Courier Times in which Dann was interviewed by a reporter for the Courier Times concerning the Auction and said that "people are allowed to build one more house, maybe another one. That's about it. The property is not subdividable." Tracie Van Auken, Video: Thorpe Farm Auction Preview, Bucks County Courier Times (Aug. 23, 2015, 4:08 PM), http://www. buckscountycouriertimes.com/videos/local/ video-thorpe-farm-auction-preview/html_3856df8f-ea76-54c4-92a0-d90bdbf35b93. html.
On September 10, 2015, Mrs. Thorpe filed her Motion to Modify Chapter 12 Plan After Confirmation, or in the Alternative for Clarification of Fifth Amended Plan in which she asserted that she had received an offer for the sale of the Parcel in the amount of $1,156,000. (ECF No. 460.) In that Motion, Mrs. Thorpe proposed a modified reorganization plan (the "Sixth Amended Plan") that she argued would provide an optional structure for the Debtor's Redemption "should it develop
At the conclusion of the September 11, 2015, hearing, the Bankruptcy Court denied the Motion to Modify on grounds that the Bankruptcy Court did not have the discretion to waive the 21-day notice required for such motions under Bankruptcy Rule 9006(c)(2). (Sept. 11 Tr. at 109). The Bankruptcy Court also indicated that it would not exercise its discretion to reduce the notice period, even if such discretion were permitted. (Sept. 11 Tr. at 111). The Bankruptcy Court further ruled that that the Debtor's Redemption provisions of the Fifth Amended Plan would not be satisfied by the proposed agreement with the Damerjian Group and that a termination of the Auction was not appropriate. The Bankruptcy Court memorialized this decision with an Opinion read from the bench on September 11 and an Order issued on September 14 that denied "the request for waiver of the 21 day notice period provided in Fed. R. Bankr. P. 3015(g)" (the "September 14 Order"). (ECF No. 462). In a separate order on September 14, 2015, the Court set $2,358,354.32 as Lititz's credit bid maximum. (ECF No. 463). Mrs. Thorpe appealed the September 14 Order denying modification and its incorporated Opinion. (ECF No. 467). This is the first appeal currently before the Court.
The morning of the Auction, Mrs. Thorpe unsuccessfully sought a stay of the Auction.
The Bankruptcy Court held a hearing on the confirmation of the sale on September 17, 2015. Prior to the hearing, Mrs. Thorpe filed an Objection that asserted two major reasons that the Auction should not be confirmed. First, Mrs. Thorpe renewed her argument that the Auction should have been terminated. Second, Mrs. Thorpe alleged three specific irregularities with the sale and Auction process: (1) the Trustee's real estate broker violated the Bankruptcy Court's sealing order by disclosing the Auction provision in the Fifth Amended Plan to Mr. Patel which allegedly caused the Patels to withdraw their offer to purchase the Parcel in the Spring of 2015; (2) in marketing materials, the Auctioneer understated the number of homes which could be built on the Farm; and (3) Lititz sought to increase its credit bid authority to more than $1,000,000 million higher than it actually bid at the Auction. (ECF 474 ¶ 16).
At the September 17, 2015, hearing, the Bankruptcy Court would not permit testimony or argument concerning the Debtor's Redemption, or any evidence concerning Mrs. Thorpe's allegation that Mr. Patel was informed about the eventual Auction prior to withdrawing the bid to purchase the Parcel in Spring 2015, ruling that both issues concerned the subject matter of the September 14 Order and were thus already under appeal. (Sept. 17 Tr. at 17, 61). Nonetheless, during background questioning concerning his participation in the Auction, Mr. Patel testified that he learned about the Auction from his real estate broker in August 2015. (Id. at 42). The Bankruptcy Court would not allow more specific questioning concerning Mr. Patel's prior knowledge of the Auction. (Sept. 17 Tr. at 17, 60-61, 67). The Bankruptcy Court declined to continue the September 17 hearing to allow for the collection of additional evidence and overruled all of Mrs. Thorpe's objections to the sale. (Sept. 17 Tr. at 186). An order memorializing the confirmation was issued on September 18, 2015 (the "September 18 Order"). Mrs. Thorpe indicated her intent to appeal and the Bankruptcy Court granted a brief stay of the confirmation order pending the first hearing before this Court. The appeal of the September 18 Order is the second appeal now before the Court.
Mrs. Thorpe has appealed decisions of the Bankruptcy Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1), which grants the District Court jurisdiction over appeals of final orders from the Bankruptcy Court. In its appellate role reviewing the decisions of the Bankruptcy Court, the Court generally must "review questions of law de novo, findings of fact for clear error, and exercises of discretion for abuse thereof." In re Jevic Holding Corp., 787 F.3d 173, 179 (3d Cir.2015). Concerning issues of mixed law and fact, the Court must "accept the [Bankruptcy Court's] finding of historical or narrative facts unless clearly erroneous, but exercise plenary review of the [Bankruptcy Court's] choice and interpretation of legal precepts and its application of those precepts to the historical facts." Mellon Bank N.A. v. Metro Commc'ns, Inc., 945 F.2d 635, 642 (3d Cir.1991) (internal citations omitted).
The first appeal assigns error to the Bankruptcy Court's denial of Mrs. Thorpe's motion to either modify the Fifth
The Bankruptcy Court denied modification of the Chapter 12 Plan on the basis that consideration of such a modification requires 21 days' notice under Bankruptcy Rules 3015(g) and 9006(c)(2). Mrs. Thorpe concedes that an action to modify a confirmed reorganization plan is governed by Bankruptcy Rule 3015(g), which imposes a 21-day notice requirement on motions to modify a reorganization plan if a plan has already been confirmed, and that Rule 9006(c)(2) specifically lists actions under Rule 3015 as actions for which notice periods cannot be reduced at the court's discretion. In the Bankruptcy Court, Mrs. Thorpe did not challenge the basic interpretation of these provisions, but instead argued that 18 U.S.C. § 105(a) grants the Bankruptcy Court the equitable authority to waive the Rule 3015(g) notice requirement. The Bankruptcy Court rejected this argument, and further held that even if discretion to reduce the notice period did exist, it would not exercise that discretion.
The Bankruptcy Court's interpretation of the interaction between Rule 9006(c)(2) and U.S.C. § 105(a) is supported by the plain language and structure of the Rule. Rule 9006(c)(1) provides that the Bankruptcy Court generally has discretion to reduce deadlines with notice and for cause, but Rule 9006(c)(2) specifically removes that discretion for certain enumerated actions, including those filed under Rule 3015. Fed. R. Bankr. P. 9006(c). This specific removal of discretion would have no effect if it could be overridden by the Bankruptcy Court's general equitable powers. Neither the parties nor the Court have located any authority that would undermine this straightforward reading of the Rule. Thus, the Bankruptcy Court's holding that it lacked discretion to reduce the notice period was not error. Furthermore, if it had such discretion, it would not have been an abuse of that discretion to decline waiver of the notice period, particularly considering the lengthy history of attempted sales and reorganizations in the bankruptcy proceedings for this case.
Mrs. Thorpe argues in the alternative that the Auction should have been cancelled even without amending the Fifth Amended Plan because the proposed sale of the Parcel to the Damerjian Group satisfied the existing Debtor's Redemption provisions. The Bankruptcy Court rejected this argument in its Opinion from the bench on September 11 and did not order
This appeal requires a review of the Bankruptcy Court's interpretation of the Debtor's Redemption provision and the allocation of subdivision responsibility in the Fourth and Fifth Amended Plans. Confirmed reorganization plans are court-approved contracts. As such, they must be analyzed through the lens of contract law. See In re Shenango Grp., Inc., 501 F.3d 338, 344 (3d Cir.2007). While contract interpretation is typically a matter of de novo appellate review, the Third Circuit has announced a specific hybrid standard of review in context of confirmed bankruptcy reorganization plans that "accords great weight to the Bankruptcy Court's construction of an order with which it is familiar by virtue of its direct involvement in the proceedings." Id. at 346. This hybrid standard applies de novo review to the initial question of whether a reorganization plan is ambiguous, but reviews a bankruptcy court's resolution of contract ambiguities for abuse of discretion. Id. It is widely accepted that a plan should be interpreted under the law of the state in which it was confirmed. See In re Turek, 346 B.R. 350, 354 (M.D.Pa.Bankr.2006). Accordingly, the Court will review de novo any conclusions that the relevant portions of the Fourth and Fifth Amended Plans are ambiguous under Pennsylvania law, but will resolve any ambiguities in the Plans by "defer[ring] to the Bankruptcy Court's interpretation unless it is unreasonable under the circumstances." In re Shenango, 501 F.3d at 346.
Mrs. Thorpe argues that her proposed sale of the Parcel to the Damerjian Group was a "closing" as contemplated by the Debtor's Redemption provision of the Fifth Amended Plan. The Bankruptcy Court disagreed, and held that a sale would only "close" upon the "unconditional delivery of the redemption amount prior to the fall of the hammer at the auction." (Sept. 11 Tr. at 94). The Bankruptcy Court further held that a transfer of funds would be "unconditional" only if title to the Farm were actually conveyed to the buyer. Adopting as "an undisputed fact" or "a mixed fact-law finding" that the Trustee could not convey title prior to subdivision, the Bankruptcy Court found "no basis to believe" that closing could be completed before the conclusion of the Auction.
Mrs. Thorpe argues that the Debtor Redemption provision of the Fifth Amended Plan, which allows for cancellation of the Auction upon a sale that nets Lititz $1 million, is ambiguous concerning the meaning of the term "close." She asserts that "closing" in this context includes a transaction whereby payment would be tendered to the Trustee, but title would not be transferred until a later date after subdivision of the Parcel has been obtained. Lititz argues that "closing" is not completed until the funds have been transferred to the Trustee and the Parcel has been conveyed to the buyer.
Under Pennsylvania contract law, "clear contractual terms that are capable of one reasonable interpretation must be given effect without reference to matters outside the contract." Bohler-Uddeholm Am., Inc. v. Ellwood Grp., Inc., 247 F.3d 79, 93 (3d Cir.2001). A contract is ambiguous only if "it is reasonably or fairly susceptible of different constructions and is capable of being understood in more senses than one." Id. To analyze potential ambiguity, the court may consider "the words of the contract, the alternative meaning suggested by counsel, and the nature of the objective evidence in support of that meaning." Id.
Turning to other evidence of the parties' intent to alleviate the ambiguity as a matter of law is also unavailing. Both the Fourth and Fifth Amended Plans were the result of what all parties and the Bankruptcy Court refer to as a "grand bargain." Under this bargain, Mrs. Thorpe had a chance to maintain ownership of a portion of the Farm by selling the Parcel to pay down a sizeable portion of her debt, while Lititz received a reasonably certain timeframe for the resolution of the out-standing debt. Both parties' interpretations of "closing" are consistent with their own interests in the bargain. Lititz favors an interpretation that maximizes the finality of the Auction process. Mrs. Thorpe favors an interpretation that provides the fewest obstacles to fulfilling the Debtor's Redemption requirements. Lititz's interpretation appears more consistent with the essence of the grand bargain (i.e., to allow for a final opportunity for Mrs. Thorpe to keep part of the Farm, but with a clear deadline). However, without more definitive authority concerning the precise meaning of the language as used by the parties, the Court will not hold as a matter of law that the Fifth Amended Plan unambiguously required a conveyance of the Parcel to effect a "closing." Since the operative documents are ambiguous as a matter of law, the Court must review the Bankruptcy Court's interpretation of that ambiguity and affirm that interpretation unless it is clearly erroneous.
In its interpretation of the Debtor's Redemption provision, the Bankruptcy Court emphasized that Lititz's primary benefit from the "grand bargain" of the Fifth Amended Plan was the establishment of a clear deadline that would bring the foreclosure process to an end through a court-ordered auction. In light of this context, the Bankruptcy Court concluded that the Debtor's Redemption provision could only be satisfied by the unconditional payment of funds to Lititz. Since payment for the sale of the Parcel would not be unconditional until the Parcel is actually conveyed, the Bankruptcy Court held that the actual conveyance of the Parcel is necessary to "close" as contemplated by the Fifth Amended Plan. The Bankruptcy Court's interpretation is reasonable. It is clear that the essence of the heavily negotiated "grand bargain" that produced the Fifth Amended Plan was to give Mrs. Thorpe one final chance to keep part of the Farm, while establishing an absolute deadline by which the Farm would be auctioned if the Parcel could not be sold. Particularly in light of the history of unsuccessful reorganizations and withdrawn offers for the Parcel in this case, it is reasonable to conclude that the Fifth Amended Plan required that any proposed sale of the Parcel include actual cash payment and unconditional
The Bankruptcy Court concluded, as a factual matter, that the Parcel could not be conveyed prior to the Auction. Mrs. Thorpe appears to now be challenging this factual finding by arguing that subdivision may not be necessary to convey the Parcel. This new argument is not supported by any evidence in the record, while there is substantial evidence that subdivision is necessary. The Trustee testified at the September 11 hearing that the Farm could not be subdivided in time to convey the Parcel prior to the Auction. (Sept. 11 Tr. at 83). Mrs. Thorpe's counsel apparently assumed the necessity of subdivision at the same hearing when he asked whether enough time remained for the Trustee to "begin a process to inquire into and/or seek subdivision of the parcel so that it could be conveyed." (Id. (emphasis added)). Furthermore, the Upper Makefield Township Code of Ordinances provides that "[n]o owner of any land in the Township or any other person shall subdivide or ...sell lots unless and until final plans of such subdivision or development have been... submitted to and approved in writing thereon by the Board of Supervisors." Upper Makefield Twp., Pa., Code of Ordinances ch. 22, § 201. Mrs. Thorpe has not produced any evidence nor cited to any legal authority to refute the finding that subdivision is necessary. Thus, the Bankruptcy Court's factual finding that the Parcel could not be conveyed prior to the Auction due to a lack of subdivision is not error.
Mrs. Thorpe argues that, to the extent that the sale of the Parcel could not be closed due to a lack of subdivision, this obstacle to closing was created by the Trustee's failure to fulfill a duty established by the Fourth and Fifth Amended Plans to obtain subdivision. Setting aside the question of whether the Trustee's failure to fulfill subdivision obligations would warrant cancellation of the Auction even if it were proven, the Bankruptcy Court ruled that no such duty exists.
In support of her argument that subdivision was the Trustee's responsibility, Mrs. Thorpe points to paragraph 2(D) of the Fifth Amended Plan, which provides that "the Trustee shall convey the Parcel" to the buyer in the event that Mrs. Thorpe is able to close on a sale of the Parcel that nets Lititz $1 million. She argues that obtaining any necessary subdivision is implicitly included in the responsibility to "convey" the Parcel, and that this responsibility continued during the weeks leading up to the Auction because the Final Auction Order preserved Mrs. Thorpe's right to exercise the Debtor's Redemption. The Trustee and Lititz disagree with this interpretation. Furthermore, they note that pursuant to paragraph 25 of the Final Auction Order, the only method by which the Parcel could have been sold separately at the Auction was "[i]f on or before August 7, 2015, the Debtor is able to successfully obtain or demonstrate to the Trustee that it has the appropriate approval for the subdivision of the Parcel and has had the two parcels surveyed by a licensed engineer with both parcels having their own legal descriptions (or can do so with sufficient promptness considering the need to conclude the Auction and closing in a timely manner)." (Appellant Br. Ex. 15 ¶ 25).
The Final Auction Order leaves ambiguity concerning responsibility for subdivision for any purpose other than preparation for the Auction. The text does not indicate whether subdivision responsibility for the Auction was allocated to Mrs. Thorpe as an exception to an existing obligation of
The Bankruptcy Court found Mrs. Thorpe's argument that the Trustee had a duty to anticipate a private sale and pre-emptively obtain subdivision to be "disingenuous" and "close to outrageous" because Mrs. Thorpe had controlled efforts to market and sell the Parcel throughout most of the bankruptcy process. Furthermore, beginning on April 1, 2015, when the Trustee began to market the entire Farm, it was once again only Mrs. Thorpe who retained the right to market the Parcel. The Bankruptcy Court's reasoning is compelling. Furthermore, Mrs. Thorpe's argument is undermined by the provision in the Final Auction Order requiring Mrs. Thorpe to obtain subdivision herself if she wanted the Parcel to be sold separately at Auction. Requiring Mrs. Thorpe to subdivide the Farm for the Auction would be unnecessary if the Trustee already had a duty subdivide. Additionally, requiring Mrs. Thorpe to obtain subdivision for an Auction managed by the Trustee but not for a private sale to a buyer she located herself would be an illogical allocation of responsibilities that the Court will not read into the lacunae of the operative documents. Finally, the fact that the Final Auction Order specifically addresses subdivision for the purpose of the Auction and requires more than one month of notice of such subdivision emphasizes that the Bankruptcy Court and the parties were aware of the time constraints for completing the subdivision process before the Auction, yet did not explicitly impose any duty on the Trustee. In sum, there is no direct evidence in the operative documents of a duty to subdivide on the part of the Trustee, and there is persuasive indirect evidence that no such duty existed. Accordingly, the Bankruptcy Court's ruling that the Trustee had no duty to subdivide in anticipation of a private sale of the Parcel was not error. The Bankruptcy Court's September 14 Order shall be affirmed.
In her appeal of the September 18 Order confirming the Auction sale, Mrs. Thorpe does not challenge the legality of the Auction procedures or the Bankruptcy Court's interpretation of the Auction procedures. Rather, she alleges that there were irregularities in the administration of the Auction that tainted the process and prevented the Auction from fulfilling its objective of maximizing the value of the assets.
Mrs. Thorpe contends that during Spring 2015, while the Fifth Amended Plan was sealed by court order, Emerson informed Mr. Patel that there would be an Auction for the entire farm if no private sale of the Parcel occurred. Mrs. Thorpe argues that this alleged leak of then-confidential information caused Mr. Patel to withdraw his bid for the Parcel. The Bankruptcy Court ruled that this objection did not address the regularity of the Auction process, and did not permit Mrs. Thorpe to pursue this issue at the September 17 hearing. Mrs. Thorpe assigns this as error.
The Bankruptcy Court's refusal to hear evidence on this issue notwithstanding, Mr. Patel testified that he learned about the Auction from his own broker in mid-August 2015, after the Fifth Amended Plan was unsealed. Thus, the only evidence in the record suggests that Mr. Patel did not know about the Auction until long after he withdrew his bid for the Parcel and the Fifth Amended Plan was unsealed. Mrs. Thorpe's offer of proof on the matter at the September 17 hearing was vague concerning when this alleged breach of confidentiality occurred or what evidence Mrs. Thorpe would be able to produce to show that it happened. However, the details of the alleged breach of the sealing order do not matter. The Bankruptcy Court's refusal to hear evidence on this issue is not error for the same reason that the Bankruptcy Court stated in the September 17, 2015 hearing: whether or not Patel knew about the Auction in the Spring of 2015 is not relevant for evaluating the integrity of the Auction. There is no logical explanation for how learning about the Auction at an earlier date could have decreased the amount Patel was willing to bid for the Farm at the Auction.
As her second objection to the Auction, Mrs. Thorpe contends that the marketing of the Auction was plagued by inaccuracies and carelessness that diminished interest in the Auction and depressed the amount that potential buyers were willing to bid. This objection is much more logically sound than the other two objections. As a hypothetical matter, if the marketing were inaccurate and serious potential buyers relied on these inaccuracies resulting in lower bids, the integrity of the Auction might be undermined and there could be serious questions concerning the propriety of confirming the sale. However, there is no evidence that this occurred. Mrs. Thorpe has produced only two examples of inaccurate marketing, both from the Bucks County Courier Times. First, Mrs. Thorpe points to a video posted on the website for the Courier Times in which Robert Dann, the representative of the Auctioneer responsible for conducting the sale, comments that "people are allowed to build one more house, maybe another one." Second, she notes that the Courier Times published the wrong time for the Auction, allegedly because of confusing marketing materials produced by the Auctioneer.
Mrs. Thorpe assigns as error the Bankruptcy Court's refusal to continue the September 17 hearing to allow her the opportunity
A second basis on which it was not error to decline to continue the hearing for the introduction of more evidence is the fact that Mrs. Thorpe did not raise her concerns about the marketing materials until the September 17 hearing, and even then she was unable to produce specific evidence of the impact of the allegedly mistaken materials. Mrs. Thorpe's counsel acknowledged that Mrs. Thorpe became aware of the alleged misrepresentation as early as September 9. Yet she did not address any concerns about inaccurate marketing two days later at the September 11 hearing. No objection was filed along with her Emergency Stay of the Auction on September 16. Given the above, it was not error to conclude that the alleged marketing errors, even if true, did not materially undermine the integrity of the Auction.
As her final objection, Mrs. Thorpe argues that the eventual Auction price was deflated by Lititz's credit bidding process. The precise logic behind this objection is unclear, but it appears to be based on an anecdote that one bidder became suspicious about Lititz's view of the true value of the Farm when he recognized counsel for Lititz at the Auction and saw him bid only once at $1,000,000, after seeing the same counsel argue at the September 11 hearing for an increased credit bid allowance. There are two fatal flaws to this objection. First, despite this anecdote from Mrs. Thorpe's counsel at oral argument before this Court, there is no evidence in the record that any bidders knew that Lititz was bidding, knew the amount of Lititz's bid, or drew any inference about the value of the property even if they did know about Lititz's bidding behavior. Mrs. Thorpe assigns as error that the hearing was not continued to allow for further development of the record in this regard. However, this is not error because Lititz's lawful bidding behavior is not a basis for invalidating the Auction, even if it did
Finally, Mrs. Thorpe argues that even if none of her objections to the Auction taken alone justify the invalidation of the Auction sale, the alleged irregularities considered together taint the Auction such that the sale should not be confirmed. The Court disagrees. Mrs. Thorpe's allegation concerning a leak of the Fifth Amended Plan is irrelevant to the integrity of the Auction procedures and Lititz's business decision not to bid more than $1,000,000 at the Auction is not an irregularity. Accordingly, the alleged marketing inaccuracies stand alone as the only objection that truly concerns the integrity of the Auction process. As discussed above, it was not error to overrule this objection, nor was it an abuse of discretion to deny further evidentiary proceedings. The Bankruptcy Court's September 18 Order shall be affirmed.