MEMORANDUM OPINION
GREGORY L. TADDONIO, UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE.
Before the Court are the (1) Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings Pursuant to Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 7012 and Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(c) filed by Defendant Beyondsoft Consulting Inc.;1 (2) Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings Pursuant to Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 7012 and Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 12(c), 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6), and Joinder to BeyondSoft's Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings filed by Defendants Collabera, Inc., Shannon Krohn, and Ian Olson;2 (3) Joinder by Microsoft Corporation to the Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings Filed by Beyondsoft Consulting, Inc.;3 and (4) Plaintiffs' Responses to the three Motions. For the following reasons, the Motions are GRANTED.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
The parties are well acquainted with the background of this case and proceeding, and the Court will only present those facts necessary to understand the current dispute.4
The Reorganized Debtor, Abilius, Inc. ("Abilius"),5 was an information technology staffing company that deployed teams of highly skilled employees to work on projects at jobsites maintained by Abilius' customers. Before Abilius filed its bankruptcy petition, approximately 90 percent of its revenue derived from one client, Defendant Microsoft Corporation.
Two of Abilius' competitors in the information technology staffing industry were Defendants Beyondsoft Consulting, Inc. and Collabera, Inc.6 A primary focus of the dispute in this adversary proceeding is the alleged "poaching" of Abilius' employees by those two competitors and their subsequent reassignment to Microsoft projects as employees of those competitors.
Abilius, then known as PCI, filed a petition for bankruptcy relief on September 10, 2013, after Plaintiff Kyko Global, Inc. ("Kyko")7 obtained a $17 million judgment against it and several of its affiliates.8 From the onset of the bankruptcy proceeding, Kyko was active in the case and sought the appointment of a chapter 11 trustee.9 Kyko also filed a claim for $18,473,630.10
Abilius did not file a plan within 120 days of filing the petition. Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 1121(c), Kyko filed its own plan on February 12, 2014.11 The Court confirmed Kyko's Second Amended Chapter 11 Plan for Prithvi Catalytic, Inc. (the "Confirmed Plan") on May 30, 2014.12 Kyko acknowledged that the Effective Date of the Confirmed Plan occurred on June 26, 2014.13
Two provisions of the Confirmed Plan are relevant to the current dispute regarding the standing of Kyko in this adversary proceeding. According to § 4.3(A) of the Confirmed Plan, Kyko received 100 percent of the new equity in Abilius in exchange for a $100,000 reduction in its claim. The balance of Kyko's claim against Abilius was to be paid over a period of six years. And according to § 3.1(c), Kyko sought an allowed administrative claim for "fees and expenses incurred in connection with the Chapter 11 Case." As discussed below, the Court will strike this provision in § 3.1(c) of the Confirmed Plan by separate order as a scrivener's error.
Plaintiffs allege that the "lynchpin" of the Confirmed Plan was the retention and expansion of the Microsoft business. However, on May 17, 2014, shortly before plan confirmation, Abilius learned that its contract with Microsoft for the "Sharepoint Project" would not be renewed and instead future work had been awarded to Beyondsoft. On June 4, 2014, Microsoft informed Abilius that part of its contract for the "Mission Control" project would not be extended and was awarded to Collabera.
Immediately after confirmation, on June 2, 2014, the Court entered its Post-Confirmation Order and Notice of Deadlines.14 The Post-Confirmation Order set a 30-day deadline for filing all administrative claims under the plan.
Kyko submitted its Motion for Payment of Professional Fees and Expenses Based Upon Substantial Contribution seeking an administrative claim under section 503(b)(3)(D) for its "substantial contribution in connection with the chapter 11 case."15 After a hearing on the motion, the Court ordered a further supplement to "include the sum total of the fees (broken down by category) that it seeks to have paid by the estate as an administrative expense."16 The supplement to the motion was submitted on October 1, 2014, in which, among other items, Kyko sought an "administrative expense for substantial contribution to the plan and disclosure statement" of $108,721.75.17
On October 14, 2014, the Court granted Kyko's motion in part, finding that "Kyko's efforts related to the Plan made a substantial contribution to the Debtor's case and the projected recovery for creditors."18 Once again, however, the Court had to require a supplement from Kyko to submit "its invoices, broken down by category."19 Kyko submitted the requested information,20 and the Court ultimately granted "an administrative expense claim in the amount of $137,608.25 based on the Plan Proponents' substantial contribution to this bankruptcy case."21
The Adversary Proceeding
Plaintiffs filed their complaint initiating this adversary proceeding on August 21, 2014. The complaint asserted ten counts. After the Court's rulings on the dismissal and summary judgment motions (see footnote 4), the following counts remain for adjudication:
Count 2: Tortious Interference with Contractual Relations against Krohn and Olson. Count 2 alleges that Krohn and Olson acted intentionally and improperly in their attempts to "poach" Abilius' employees. Collabera hired Krohn away from Abilius in December 2013 to manage its customer accounts (including the Microsoft account) in the Pacific Northwest. Olson joined Collabera in January 2014. Plaintiffs claim that both former Abilius' executives used improper means to lure the Abilius resources over to their new employer in conjunction with an overall effort to transfer the entirety of the CSS/Mission Control work to Collabera.
Count 3: Civil Conspiracy against Krohn, Olson, and Collabera. Count 3 alleges that Krohn, Olson, and Collabera agreed to commit the tortious actions described in Count 2. In retaining this count, the Court's summary judgment order observed that Collabera was not named in Count 2 but that it still might be liable under Count 3.
Count 5: Tortious Interference with Contractual Relations against Microsoft and Beyondsoft. Count 5 alleges that Microsoft and Beyondsoft acted intentionally and improperly by allegedly "poaching" Abilius' employees and shepherding them to equivalent positions at Beyondsoft.
Count 6: Civil Conspiracy against Microsoft and Beyondsoft. Count 6 alleges that Microsoft and Beyondsoft agreed to commit the tortious actions described in Count 5.
Count 9: Violation of the Automatic Stay and Count 10: Civil Contempt for Violation of the Automatic Stay against Microsoft, Collabera, Krohn, and Olson. In Count 9, Plaintiffs allege that the actions undertaken by Microsoft, Collabera, Krohn, and Olson in the other counts were intentional and occurred during a time when the automatic stay was in place. Count 10 alleges that Microsoft, Collabera, Krohn, and Olson should be held in civil contempt for violating the automatic stay order.
Beyondsoft, the Collabera Defendants, and Microsoft now move for judgment on the pleadings under Rule 7012 (incorporating Civil Rules 12(b)(1), 12(b)(6),22 and 12(c)). Defendants seek to dismiss Kyko as a plaintiff on all counts for failure to state a claim on which relief can be granted and that Kyko does not have constitutional, prudential, and/or statutory standing.
The issue is now ripe for adjudication. The Court has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1334 and 157(b)(2)(A). Venue is proper in this Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1409(a).
ANALYSIS
Microsoft explicitly raises the question of the constitutional standing of Kyko in this adversary proceeding:
In addition to the analysis provided in BeyondSoft's Motion, Microsoft submits that the fundamental elements of standing and jurisdiction require the dismissal of Kyko's claims at this juncture. ... As more fully articulated in BeyondSoft's Motion, Kyko simply lacks an identifiable legal injury to provide it standing.23
The Court is required to examine constitutional standing before other issues.24
Article III of the Constitution limits the judicial power of the federal courts to particular "cases" or "controversies."25 As the Supreme Court has observed, "[o]ne of the controlling elements in the definition of a case or controversy under Article III is standing."26 The "irreducible constitutional minimum of standing" contains three elements, rooted in the assumption that the individual bringing a lawsuit has an injury-in-fact:
First, the plaintiff must have suffered an "injury in fact" — an invasion of a legally protected interest which is (a) concrete and particularized, and (b) "actual or imminent, not `conjectural' or `hypothetical[.]'" Second, there must be a causal connection between the injury and the conduct complained of — the injury has to be "fairly ... trace[able] to the challenged action of the defendant, and not... th[e] result [of] the independent action of some third party not before the court." Third, it must be "likely," as opposed to merely "speculative," that the injury will be "redressed by a favorable decision."27
To simplify, "Article III standing requires (1) an injury in fact, (2) that is causally related to the alleged conduct of the defendant, and (3) that is redressable by judicial action."28 The plaintiff bears the burden of proof on each of the three elements.29 The plaintiff also must demonstrate standing separately "for each claim he seeks to press and for each form of relief that is sought."30
Both our Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court stress that the injury-in-fact inquiry is often determinative.31 The Court of Appeals has explained the extent of the injury-in-fact inquiry:
A plaintiff alleges injury-in-fact when it claims that it has, or is in imminent danger of having, suffered "an invasion of a legally protected interest" that is "concrete and particularized" and "`actual or imminent, not conjectural and hypothetical.'" The burden is low, requiring nothing more than "`an identifiable trifle' of harm."32
Kyko outlined its damage argument in its response to Beyondsoft's motion for judgment on the pleadings:
Kyko expended resources to conduct due diligence and prepare a plan of reorganization, and attempted to salvage PCI's business by not only extending credit but also by taking actions to assemble a management team in place to allow it to emerge from bankruptcy. Section 3.1(c) of the Second Amended Plan of Reorganization expressly preserves Kyko's right to recover the fees and expenses it incurred in connection with being the Plan Proponent. [Doc. No. 224 pg. 17; Case No. 13-23855]. Beyondsoft (and the other Defendants) tortiously interfered with PCI's non-compete agreements during the bankruptcy proceeding. These actions precluded PCI from being able to reorganize under the Plan, which in turn prevented PCI from compensating Kyko for the fees and expenses it incurred as the Plan Proponent. To hear Beyondsoft tell it, Kyko has no recourse to recoup the monies it lost even though, unbeknownst to Kyko and PCI, Beyondsoft (and the other Defendants) surreptitiously made plans to pull PCI's resources away from PCI so that there were no resources left when PCI emerged from bankruptcy. To allow Beyondsoft to get away with this "too bad, so sad" argument would render Section 3.1 of the Second Amended Plan of Reorganization a nullity and reward Beyondsoft's (and the other Defendants') tortious conduct.33
To summarize the argument,34 Kyko incurred "fees and expenses" as the plan proponent to prepare and support a plan of reorganization under the assumption that Abilius would continue as a viable corporation after bankruptcy. However, as a result of the allegedly tortious activities of the Defendants, there were no financial resources left to compensate Kyko for its expenditures as plan proponent, thereby leaving it with a claim for the sums it was otherwise entitled to receive under § 3.1(c) of the Confirmed Plan.
There are two fundamental and fatal errors in Kyko's damages argument. First, the language upon which Kyko relies in § 3.1(c) of the Confirmed Plan was a scrivener's error and was never intended to be included in the final plan documents. Kyko, by its contemporaneous actions, knew it was an error but with the passage of time, it has apparently forgotten. Second, the true § 3.1(c) that had been distributed to the creditors imposed an obligation on Kyko to seek its fees and expenses in the bankruptcy case by separate motion. Kyko did so and the Court granted the fees and expenses of Kyko as a substantial contribution claim against the bankruptcy estate. Kyko's claim was not only allowed, but it was also paid.35 Consequently, Kyko has no injury-in-fact resulting from any alleged tortious interference or alleged violation of the automatic stay by the Defendants and no constitutional standing in this adversary proceeding.
The Strange Tale of Section 3.1(c)
As of April 21, 2014, the Second Amended Plan of Reorganization contained the following text in § 3.1(c):
(c) Plan Proponents' Fees and Expenditures. This Plan and the Disclosure Statement shall constitute a motion for allowance of a substantial contribution claim in favor of the Plan Proponents. On the Effective Date, the Reorganized Debtor shall pay and reimburse the Plan Proponents for fees and expenses incurred in connection with the Chapter 11 case.36
This language was the "Original § 3.1(c)," but it was subsequently amended in the course of the bankruptcy proceedings.
On April 22, 2014, the Court held a hearing to consider approval of the disclosure statement to accompany Kyko's plan. At that hearing, Kyko's attorney informed the Court that the U.S. Trustee objected to the language in Original § 3.1(c) and that Kyko agreed to delete the provision from its plan. To resolve the objection, Kyko was prepared to file a motion seeking allowance of its substantial contribution claim and afford parties with an opportunity to object. The Court ordered Kyko's attorney to verify under Certification of Counsel whether the plan documents were amended.37
On April 22, 2014, Kyko submitted the Certification of Counsel and attached a revised version of the plan documents but it still identified them as the "Second Amended Plan."38 The attached plan contained only one change which addressed the U.S. Trustee's concerns in a "Revised § 3.1(c):"
(c) Plan Proponents' Fees and Expenses. The Plan Proponents intend to file a motion seeking allowance for fees and expenses incurred by it in connection with the Chapter 11 Case.39
The plan materials submitted to the Court on April 22, 2014, including Revised § 3.1(c), were presumably the same materials distributed to the creditors in the solicitation package.40
Kyko submitted its proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law for the plan confirmation hearing on May 30, 2014.41 Attached to the proposed findings as Appendix A was a copy of the Second Amended Plan containing the Original § 3.1(c) language. In its order entered on May 30, 2014, the Court confirmed the Second Amended Plan which contained the erroneous version of § 3.1(c).
The parties and the Court were apparently unaware of the error. Three days after the confirmation hearing, on June 2, 2014, the Court entered its Post-Confirmation Order and Notice of Deadlines. Paragraph 2 of that Post-Confirmation Order provided:
1. Administrative Expenses and Professional Fees. All applications for award of compensation or expenses to a trustee, examiner, attorney or other professional person and all other motions for allowance of administrative expenses shall be filed and served within thirty (30) days after the date of this Order, together with a certificate of service.42
Consistent with its obligations under the plan and pursuant to the Court's Post-Confirmation Order, Kyko submitted its motion for allowance of its substantial contribution claim as an administrative expense.43 The motion sought an administrative claim under § 503(b)(3)(D) for "substantial contribution in connection with the chapter 11 case."44 The motion argued that the contribution included:
But for the efforts of the Plan Proponents in this Case, it is likely that unsecured creditors [the largest of which was Kyko] would have recovered $0 on their claims against the Debtor.... The Plan Proponents incurred significant fees and expenses from the beginning of the Case in preserving value for the Debtor's estate and preparing, prosecuting, and negotiating the ultimately consensual Plan.
The Plan Proponents' actions made a substantial contribution to the Debtor's estate and they are entitled to allowance and payment of their professional fees and expenses as an administrative expense.... As a result of the Plan Proponents' extensive efforts ... [s]easoned and respected management have been put into place.45
In short, Kyko sought a substantial contribution claim based on the totality of its actions in the bankruptcy case. The Court was aware of those contributions, including extensive and diligent preparation and advocacy of the plan, as well as paving the way for the appointment of a key financial executive to take charge of the Debtor's operations and be accountable to the Court. After numerous supplements and amendments, the Court exercised its discretion46 and awarded a substantial contribution award to Kyko of $137,608.25 under § 503(b)(3)(D).47
The Court allowed the substantial contribution award as compensation to Kyko for all activities which benefitted the estate as a whole, rather than simply Kyko's interest as a creditor. That Kyko chose to limit its claim to the value of the itemized professional services and expenses does not alter the fact that the Court awarded the compensation based on the value of all of its activities.
In sum, the Court awarded Kyko $137,608.25 for its substantial contribution to the bankruptcy case, including the value of its services as Plan Proponent. Kyko claims in this adversary proceeding that it has been injured by the fees and expenses it incurred as Plan Proponent. The Court has already compensated Kyko for those fees and expenses. There is no injury-in-fact and Kyko will be dismissed as a plaintiff on the grounds that it does not have constitutional standing in this adversary proceeding.
Other Issues
The Court's ruling on the pending motions is incomplete without discussing certain other arguments raised by the parties. The Court shall address each of these in turn.
Kyko appears to suggest that a statement in the Court's Opinion on the various motions for summary judgment was already determinative of this matter and allows Kyko to continue to pursue its claims. To this end, Kyko relies on the Court's statement that "plaintiffs" [plural] may pursue their damages theories at trial" because at the time, the Court was aware that Beyondsoft had challenged Kyko's standing in these proceedings.
Ordinarily, the Court is not free to ignore the question of a party's standing. Indeed, it is required to examine standing questions, sua sponte.48 However, where there are multiple plaintiffs in a case, only one must have constitutional standing.49 In this proceeding, it is unquestioned that Abilius, the debtor, has standing. Of course, this rule does not prevent the Court from dismissing a co-plaintiff who does not have standing, especially in a case such as this where Kyko is seeking damages which are separate and distinct from those sought by Abilius.50
The Court is now prepared to rule on Kyko's standing. It now determines that Kyko does not have constitutional standing, nor did it have standing at the time of the entry of the summary judgment order. Consequently, the use of the term "plaintiffs" rather than "plaintiff" was improvident, and only Abilius may pursue its damage theories at trial.
Kyko also argues that as a creditor, it falls within the "zone of interests" that protect its standing. Kyko confuses constitutional standing with prudential standing, and only the latter deals with a zone of interest analysis.51 And recent caselaw holds that even prudential standing should not concern itself with zone of interests:
We have previously categorized the zone-of-interests requirement as one of three components of prudential standing. But in Lexmark International, Inc. v. Static Control Components, Inc.[,___ U.S. ___, 134 S.Ct. 1377, 188 L.Ed.2d 392 (2014) ], the Supreme Court criticized the placement of the zone-of-interests requirement within the rubric of prudential standing. The Court clarified that the zone-of-interests requirement goes to whether a particular plaintiff has a cause of action under a given law, not a plaintiff's standing.52
As found in the earlier sections, Kyko does not have constitutional standing, the highest form of standing that deprives the court of subject matter jurisdiction over the claims asserted in the complaint. Whether Kyko falls into the zone of interests, or does or does not have prudential standing, is irrelevant. Kyko does not have constitutional standing as a creditor because it does not have an injury-in-fact. To the extent a cause of action lies under the surviving counts, those claims belong to Abilius and cannot be separately pursued by a creditor.
Just as it does not have constitutional standing under the tortious interference and conspiracy claims, Kyko does not have that standing in Counts 9 and 10. Section 362(k) by its terms requires the movant or plaintiff to have an injury.53
CONCLUSION
Based on the foregoing, Kyko does not have an injury-in-fact related to the claims it asserts in the Complaint and thus does not have constitutional standing in this adversary proceeding. Kyko Global, Inc. and Kyko Global Gmbh are hereby DISMISSED as plaintiffs in this adversary proceeding.
By separate order, the Court will STRIKE Original § 3.1(c) from the Confirmed Plan and substitute Revised § 3.1(c) in its place.