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U. S. Bank N. A. v. Village at Lakeridge, LLC, 15-1509 (2018)

Court: Supreme Court of the United States Number: 15-1509 Visitors: 8
Judges: Elana Kagan
Filed: Mar. 05, 2018
Latest Update: Mar. 03, 2020
Summary: (Slip Opinion) OCTOBER TERM, 2017 1 Syllabus NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued. The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader. See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 200 U.S. 321 , 337. SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES Syllabus U. S. BANK N. A., TRUSTEE, BY AND THROUGH CW
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(Slip Opinion)              OCTOBER TERM, 2017                                       1

                                       Syllabus

         NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is
       being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued.
       The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been
       prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.
       See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 
200 U.S. 321
, 337.


SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES

                                       Syllabus

    U. S. BANK N. A., TRUSTEE, BY AND THROUGH
 CWCAPITAL ASSET MANAGEMENT LLC v. VILLAGE
               AT LAKERIDGE, LLC

CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR
                  THE NINTH CIRCUIT

    No. 15–1509. Argued October 31, 2017—Decided March 5, 2018
Respondent Lakeridge is a corporate entity with a single owner, MBP
  Equity Partners. When Lakeridge filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, it
  had a pair of substantial debts: It owed petitioner U. S. Bank over
  $10 million and MBP another $2.76 million. Lakeridge submitted a
  reorganization plan, proposing to impair the interests of both U. S.
  Bank and MBP. U. S. Bank refused the offer, thus blocking Lake-
  ridge’s option for reorganization through a fully consensual plan.
  See 
11 U.S. C
. §1129(a)(8). Lakeridge then turned to the so-called
  “cramdown” plan option for imposing a plan impairing the interests
  of a non-consenting class of creditors. See §1129(b). Among the pre-
  requisites for judicial approval of such a plan is that another im-
  paired class of creditors has consented to it. See §1129(a)(10). But
  crucially here, the consent of a creditor who is also an “insider” of the
  debtor does not count for that purpose. 
Ibid. The Bankruptcy Code’s
  definition of an insider “includes” any director, officer, or “person in
  control” of the entity. §101(31)(B)(i)–(iii). Courts have devised tests
  for identifying other, so-called “non-statutory” insiders, focusing, in
  whole or in part, on whether a person’s transactions with the debtor
  were at arm’s length.
     Here, MBP (an insider of Lakeridge) could not provide the partial
  agreement needed for a cramdown plan, and Lakeridge’s reorganiza-
  tion was thus impeded. MBP sought to transfer its claim against
  Lakeridge to a non-insider who could agree to the cramdown plan.
  Kathleen Bartlett, an MBP board member and Lakeridge officer, of-
  fered MBP’s claim to Robert Rabkin, a retired surgeon, for $5,000.
  Rabkin purchased the claim and consented to Lakeridge’s proposed
2        U. S. BANK N. A. v. VILLAGE AT LAKERIDGE, LLC

                                Syllabus

 reorganization. U. S. Bank objected, arguing that Rabkin was a non-
 statutory insider because he had a “romantic” relationship with Bart-
 lett and the purchase was not an arm’s-length transaction. The
 Bankruptcy Court rejected U. S. Bank’s argument. The Ninth Cir-
 cuit affirmed. Viewing the Bankruptcy Court’s decision as one based
 on a finding that the relevant transaction was conducted at arm’s
 length, the Ninth Circuit held that that finding was entitled to clear-
 error review, and could not be reversed under that deferential stand-
 ard.
Held: The Ninth Circuit was right to review the Bankruptcy Court’s
 determination for clear error (rather than de novo). At the heart of
 this case is a so-called “mixed question” of law and fact—whether the
 Bankruptcy Court’s findings of fact satisfy the legal test chosen for
 conferring non-statutory insider status. U. S. Bank contends that
 the Bankruptcy Court’s resolution of this mixed question must be re-
 viewed de novo, while Lakeridge (joined by the Federal Government)
 argues for a clear-error standard.
    For all their differences, both parties rightly point to the same que-
 ry: What is the nature of the mixed question here and which kind of
 court (bankruptcy or appellate) is better suited to resolve it? Mixed
 questions are not all alike. Some require courts to expound on the
 law, and should typically be reviewed de novo. Others immerse
 courts in case-specific factual issues, and should usually be reviewed
 with deference. In short, the standard of review for a mixed question
 depends on whether answering it entails primarily legal or factual
 work.
    Here, the Bankruptcy Court confronted the question whether the
 basic facts it had discovered (concerning Rabkin’s relationships, mo-
 tivations, etc.) were sufficient to make Rabkin a non-statutory insid-
 er. Using the transactional prong of the Ninth Circuit’s legal test for
 identifying such insiders (whether the transaction was conducted at
 arm’s length, i.e., as though the two parties were strangers) the
 mixed question became: Given all the basic facts found, was Rabkin’s
 purchase of MBP’s claim conducted as if the two were strangers to
 each other? That is about as factual sounding as any mixed question
 gets. Such an inquiry primarily belongs in the court that has presid-
 ed over the presentation of evidence, that has heard all the witness-
 es, and that has both the closest and deepest understanding of the
 record—i.e., the bankruptcy court. One can arrive at the same point
 by asking how much legal work applying the arm’s-length test re-
 quires. It is precious little—as shown by judicial opinions applying
 the familiar legal term without further elaboration. Appellate review
 of the arm’s-length issue—even if conducted de novo—will not much
 clarify legal principles or provide guidance to other courts resolving
                    Cite as: 583 U. S. ____ (2018)                    3

                               Syllabus

  other disputes. The issue is therefore one that primarily rests with a
  bankruptcy court, subject only to review for clear error. Pp. 5–11.
814 F.3d 993
, affirmed.

   KAGAN, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court. KENNEDY, J.,
filed a concurring opinion. SOTOMAYOR, J., filed a concurring opinion,
in which KENNEDY, THOMAS, and GORSUCH, JJ., joined.
                        Cite as: 583 U. S. ____ (2018)                              1

                             Opinion of the Court

     NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
     preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to
     notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Wash­
     ington, D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in order
     that corrections may be made before the preliminary print goes to press.


SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
                                   _________________

                                   No. 15–1509
                                   _________________


 U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, TRUSTEE, BY 

  AND THROUGH CWCAPITAL ASSET MANAGEMENT

       LLC, PETITIONER v. THE VILLAGE AT

                LAKERIDGE, LLC 

 ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF 

            APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

                                 [March 5, 2018]


  JUSTICE KAGAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
  The Bankruptcy Code places various restrictions on
anyone who qualifies as an “insider” of a debtor. The
statutory definition of that term lists a set of persons
related to the debtor in particular ways. See 
11 U.S. C
.
§101(31). Courts have additionally recognized as insiders
some persons not on that list—commonly known as “non­
statutory insiders.” The conferral of that status often
turns on whether the person’s transactions with the debtor
(or another of its insiders) were at arm’s length. In this
case, we address how an appellate court should review
that kind of determination: de novo or for clear error? We
hold that a clear-error standard should apply.
                             I
  Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code enables a debtor
company to reorganize its business under a court-
approved plan governing the distribution of assets to
creditors. See 
11 U.S. C
. §1101 et seq. The plan divides
claims against the debtor into discrete “classes” and speci­
2      U. S. BANK N. A. v. VILLAGE AT LAKERIDGE, LLC

                      Opinion of the Court

fies the “treatment” each class will receive. §1123; see
§1122. Usually, a bankruptcy court may approve such a
plan only if every affected class of creditors agrees to its
terms. See §1129(a)(8). But in certain circumstances, the
court may confirm what is known as a “cramdown” plan—
that is, a plan impairing the interests of some non-
consenting class. See §1129(b). Among the prerequisites
for judicial approval of a cramdown plan is that another
impaired class of creditors has consented to it. See
§1129(a)(10). But crucially for this case, the consent of a
creditor who is also an “insider” of the debtor does not
count for that purpose. See 
ibid. (requiring “at least
one”
impaired class to have “accepted the plan, determined with­
out including any acceptance of the plan by any insider”).
   The Code enumerates certain insiders, but courts have
added to that number. According to the Code’s defini-
tional section, an insider of a corporate debtor “includes” any
director, officer, or “person in control” of the entity.
§§101(31)(B)(i)–(iii). Because of the word “includes” in
that section, courts have long viewed its list of insiders as
non-exhaustive. See §102(3) (stating as one of the Code’s
“[r]ules of construction” that “ ‘includes’ and ‘including’ are
not limiting”); 2 A. Resnick & H. Sommer, Collier on
Bankruptcy ¶101.31, p. 101–142 (16th ed. 2016) (discuss­
ing cases). Accordingly, courts have devised tests for
identifying other, so-called “non-statutory” insiders. The
decisions are not entirely uniform, but many focus, in
whole or in part, on whether a person’s “transaction of
business with the debtor is not at arm’s length.” 
Ibid. (quoting In re
U. S. Medical, Inc., 
531 F.3d 1272
, 1280
(CA10 2008)).
   This case came about because the Code’s list of insiders
placed an obstacle in the way of respondent Lakeridge’s
attempt to reorganize under Chapter 11. Lakeridge is a
corporate entity which, at all relevant times, had a single
                 Cite as: 583 U. S. ____ (2018)           3

                     Opinion of the Court

owner, MBP Equity Partners, and a pair of substantial
debts. The company owed petitioner U. S. Bank over $10
million for the balance due on a loan. And it owed MBP
another $2.76 million. In 2011, Lakeridge filed for Chap­
ter 11 bankruptcy. The reorganization plan it submitted
placed its two creditors in separate classes and proposed
to impair both of their interests. U. S. Bank refused that
offer, thus taking a fully consensual plan off the table.
But likewise, a cramdown plan based only on MBP’s con­
sent could not go forward. Recall that an insider cannot
provide the partial agreement needed for a cramdown
plan. 
See supra, at 2
; §1129(a)(10). And MBP was the
consummate insider: It owned Lakeridge and so was—
according to the Code’s definition—“in control” of the
debtor. §101(31)(B)(iii). The path to a successful reorgan­
ization was thus impeded, and Lakeridge was faced with
liquidation. Unless . . .
   Unless MBP could transfer its claim against Lakeridge
to a non-insider who would then agree to the reorganiza­
tion plan. So that was what MBP attempted. Kathleen
Bartlett, a member of MBP’s board and an officer of Lake-
ridge, approached Robert Rabkin, a retired surgeon, and
offered to sell him MBP’s $2.76 million claim for $5,000.
Rabkin took the deal. And as the new holder of MBP’s old
loan, he consented to Lakeridge’s proposed reorganization.
As long as he was not himself an insider, Rabkin’s agree­
ment would satisfy one of the prerequisites for a
cramdown plan. See 
§1129(a)(10); supra, at 2
. That
would bring Lakeridge a large step closer to reorganizing
its business over U. S. Bank’s objection.
   Hence commenced this litigation about whether Rabkin,
too, was an insider. U. S. Bank argued that he qualified
as a non-statutory insider because he had a “romantic”
relationship with Bartlett and his purchase of MBP’s loan
“was not an arm’s-length transaction.” Motion to Desig­
nate Claim of Robert Rabkin as an Insider Claim in No.
4       U. S. BANK N. A. v. VILLAGE AT LAKERIDGE, LLC

                         Opinion of the Court

11–51994 (Bkrtcy. Ct. Nev.), Doc. 194, p. 11 (Motion).1 At
an evidentiary hearing, both Rabkin and Bartlett testified
that their relationship was indeed “romantic.” App. 128,
142–143.2 But the Bankruptcy Court still rejected U. S.
Bank’s view that Rabkin was a non-statutory insider. See
App. to Pet. for Cert. 66a. The court found that Rabkin
purchased the MBP claim as a “speculative investment”
for which he did adequate due diligence. 
Id., at 67a.
And
it noted that Rabkin and Bartlett, for all their dating,
lived in separate homes and managed their finances inde­
pendently. See 
id., at 66a.
   The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit affirmed by a
divided vote. According to the court, a creditor qualifies as
a non-statutory insider if two conditions are met: “(1) the
closeness of its relationship with the debtor is comparable
to that of the enumerated insider classifications in [the
Code], and (2) the relevant transaction is negotiated at
less than arm’s length.” In re Village at Lakeridge, LLC,
814 F.3d 993
, 1001 (2016). The majority viewed the
Bankruptcy Court’s decision as based on a finding that the
relevant transaction here (Rabkin’s purchase of MBP’s
claim) “was conducted at arm’s length.” 
Id., at 1003,
n. 15.
That finding, the majority held, was entitled to clear-error
review, and could not be reversed under that deferential
——————
   1 U. S. Bank also contended that Rabkin automatically inherited

MBP’s statutory insider status when he purchased its loan. See Mo­
tion, p. 10 (“[A]n entity which acquires a claim steps into the shoes of
that claimant” (internal quotation marks omitted)). We did not grant
review of that question and therefore do not address it in this opinion.
   2 Perhaps Bartlett expressed some ambivalence on that score. The

transcript of her direct examination reads:
   “Q. Okay. And I think the term has been a romantic relationship—
you have a romantic relationship?
   A. I guess.
   Q. Why do you say I guess?
   A. Well, no—yes.” App. 142–143.
One hopes Rabkin was not listening.
                  Cite as: 583 U. S. ____ (2018)            5

                      Opinion of the Court

standard. See 
id., at 1001–1003.
Rabkin’s consent could
therefore support the cramdown plan. See 
id., at 1003.
Judge Clifton dissented. He would have applied de novo
review, but in any event thought the Bankruptcy Court
committed clear error in declining to classify Rabkin as an
insider. See 
id., at 1006.
  This Court granted certiorari to decide a single question:
Whether the Ninth Circuit was right to review for clear
error (rather than de novo) the Bankruptcy Court’s deter­
mination that Rabkin does not qualify as a non-statutory
insider because he purchased MBP’s claim in an arm’s­
length transaction. 580 U. S. ___ (2017).
                               II
   To decide whether a particular creditor is a non-
statutory insider, a bankruptcy judge must tackle three
kinds of issues—the first purely legal, the next purely
factual, the last a combination of the other two. And to
assess the judge’s decision, an appellate court must con­
sider all its component parts, each under the appropriate
standard of review. In this case, only the standard for the
final, mixed question is contested. But to resolve that
dispute, we begin by describing the unalloyed legal and
factual questions that both kinds of courts have to address
along the way, as well as the answers that the courts
below provided.
   Initially, a bankruptcy court must settle on a legal test
to determine whether someone is a non-statutory insider
(again, a person who should be treated as an insider even
though he is not listed in the Bankruptcy Code). But that
choice of standard really resides with the next court: As all
parties agree, an appellate panel reviews such a legal
conclusion without the slightest deference. See Highmark
Inc. v. Allcare Health Management. System, Inc., 572 U. S.
___, ___ (2014) (slip op., at 4) (“Traditionally, decisions on
questions of law are reviewable de novo” (internal quota­
6      U. S. BANK N. A. v. VILLAGE AT LAKERIDGE, LLC

                     Opinion of the Court

tion marks omitted)); Tr. of Oral Arg. 29–30, 33. The
Ninth Circuit here, as noted earlier, endorsed a two-part
test for non-statutory insider status, asking whether the
person’s relationship with the debtor was similar to those
of listed insiders and whether the relevant prior transac­
tion was at “less than arm’s 
length.” 814 F.3d, at 1001
;
see supra, at 4
–5. And the Ninth Circuit held that the
Bankruptcy Court had used just that standard—more
specifically, that it had denied insider status under the
test’s second, transactional prong. 
See 814 F.3d, at 1002
–
1003, and n. 
15; supra, at 4
–5. We do not address the
correctness of the Ninth Circuit’s legal test; indeed, we
specifically rejected U. S. Bank’s request to include that
question in our grant of certiorari. See 580 U. S. ___; Pet.
for Cert. i. We simply take that test as a given in deciding
the standard-of-review issue we chose to resolve.
   Along with adopting a legal standard, a bankruptcy
court evaluating insider status must make findings of
what we have called “basic” or “historical” fact—
addressing questions of who did what, when or where, how
or why. Thompson v. Keohane, 
516 U.S. 99
, 111 (1995).
The set of relevant historical facts will of course depend on
the legal test used: So under the Ninth Circuit’s test, the
facts found may relate to the attributes of a particular
relationship or the circumstances and terms of a prior
transaction. By well-settled rule, such factual findings are
reviewable only for clear error—in other words, with a
serious thumb on the scale for the bankruptcy court. See
Fed. Rule Civ. Proc. 52(a)(6) (clear-error standard); Fed.
Rules Bkrtcy. Proc. 7052 and 9014(c) (applying Rule 52 to
various bankruptcy proceedings). Accordingly, as all
parties again agree, the Ninth Circuit was right to review
deferentially the Bankruptcy Court’s findings about Rab­
kin’s relationship with Bartlett (e.g., that they did not
“cohabitate” or pay each other’s “bills or living expenses”)
and his motives for purchasing MBP’s claim (e.g., to make
                 Cite as: 583 U. S. ____ (2018)            7

                     Opinion of the Court

a “speculative investment”). App. to Pet. for Cert. 66a–
67a; see Tr. of Oral Arg. 8, 39.
   What remains for a bankruptcy court, after all that, is to
determine whether the historical facts found satisfy the
legal test chosen for conferring non-statutory insider
status. We here arrive at the so-called “mixed question” of
law and fact at the heart of this case. Pullman-Standard
v. Swint, 
456 U.S. 273
, 289, n. 19 (1982) (A mixed ques­
tion asks whether “the historical facts . . . satisfy the
statutory standard, or to put it another way, whether the
rule of law as applied to the established facts is or is not
violated”). As already described, the Bankruptcy Court
below had found a set of basic facts about Rabkin; and it
had adopted a legal test for non-statutory insider status
that requires (as one of its two prongs) a less-than-arm’s­
length transaction. 
See supra, at 4
, 6. As its last move,
the court compared the one to the other—and determined
that the facts found did not show the kind of preferential
transaction necessary to turn a creditor into a non-
statutory insider. For that decisive determination, what
standard of review should apply?
   The parties, after traveling so far together, part ways at
this crucial point. U. S. Bank contends that the Bank­
ruptcy Court’s resolution of the mixed question must be
reviewed de novo. That is because, U. S. Bank claims,
application of the Ninth Circuit’s “very general” standard
to a set of basic facts requires the further elaboration of
legal principles—a task primarily for appellate courts.
Brief for Petitioner 35; see 
id., at 53
(The “open-ended
nature of the Ninth Circuit’s standard” compels courts to
“develop the norms and criteria they deem most appropri­
ate” and so should be viewed as “quasi-legal”). By con­
trast, Lakeridge (joined by the Federal Government as
amicus curiae) thinks a clear-error standard should apply.
In Lakeridge’s view, the ultimate law-application question
is all “bound up with the case-specific details of the highly
8       U. S. BANK N. A. v. VILLAGE AT LAKERIDGE, LLC

                        Opinion of the Court

factual circumstances below”—and thus falls naturally
within the domain of bankruptcy courts. Brief for Re­
spondent 17; see Brief for United States 21 (similarly
describing the mixed question as “fact-intensive”).
  For all their differences, both parties rightly point us to
the same query: What is the nature of the mixed question
here and which kind of court (bankruptcy or appellate) is
better suited to resolve it? See Miller v. Fenton, 
474 U.S. 104
, 114 (1985) (When an “issue falls somewhere between
a pristine legal standard and a simple historical fact,” the
standard of review often reflects which “judicial actor is
better positioned” to make the decision).3 Mixed questions
are not all alike. As U. S. Bank suggests, some require
courts to expound on the law, particularly by amplifying or
elaborating on a broad legal standard. When that is so—
when applying the law involves developing auxiliary legal
principles of use in other cases—appellate courts should
typically review a decision de novo. See Salve Regina
College v. Russell, 
499 U.S. 225
, 231–233 (1991) (discuss­
ing appellate courts’ “institutional advantages” in giving
legal guidance). But as Lakeridge replies, other mixed
questions immerse courts in case-specific factual issues—
compelling them to marshal and weigh evidence, make
credibility judgments, and otherwise address what we
have (emphatically if a tad redundantly) called “multifari­
ous, fleeting, special, narrow facts that utterly resist
generalization.” Pierce v. Underwood, 
487 U.S. 552
, 561–
562 (1988) (internal quotation marks omitted). And when
that is so, appellate courts should usually review a deci­
sion with deference. See Anderson v. Bessemer City, 
470 U.S. 564
, 574–576 (1985) (discussing trial courts’ “superi­
——————
  3 In selecting standards of review, our decisions have also asked

whether a “long history of appellate practice” supplies the answer.
Pierce v. Underwood, 
487 U.S. 552
, 558 (1988). But we cannot find
anything resembling a “historical tradition” to provide a standard for
reviewing the mixed question here. 
Ibid. Cite as: 583
U. S. ____ (2018)                     9

                          Opinion of the Court

ority” in resolving such issues).4 In short, the standard of
review for a mixed question all depends—on whether
answering it entails primarily legal or factual work.
  Now again, recall the mixed question the Bankruptcy
Court confronted in this case. 
See supra, at 7
. At a high
level of generality, the court needed to determine whether
the basic facts it had discovered (concerning Rabkin’s
relationships, motivations, and so on) were sufficient to
make Rabkin a non-statutory insider. But the court’s use
of the Ninth Circuit’s legal test for identifying such in­
siders reduced that question to a more particular one:
whether the facts found showed an arm’s-length transaction
between Rabkin and MBP. See ibid.5 And still, we can
further delineate that issue just by plugging in the widely
(universally?) understood definition of an arm’s-length
transaction: a transaction conducted as though the two
parties were strangers. See, e.g., Black’s Law Dictionary
1726 (10th ed. 2014). Thus the mixed question becomes:
——————
  4 Usually  but not always: In the constitutional realm, for example, the
calculus changes. There, we have often held that the role of appellate
courts “in marking out the limits of [a] standard through the process of
case-by-case adjudication” favors de novo review even when answering
a mixed question primarily involves plunging into a factual record.
Bose Corp. v. Consumers Union of United States, Inc., 
466 U.S. 485
,
503 (1984); see Ornelas v. United States, 
517 U.S. 690
, 697 (1996)
(reasonable suspicion and probable cause under the Fourth Amend­
ment); Hurley v. Irish-American Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Group of
Boston, Inc., 
515 U.S. 557
, 567 (1995) (expression under the First
Amendment); Miller v. Fenton, 
474 U.S. 104
, 115–116 (1985) (voluntar­
iness of confession under the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process
Clause).
  5 A bankruptcy court applying the Ninth Circuit’s test might, in an­

other case, reach its separate, non-transactional prong: whether “the
closeness of [a person’s] relationship with the debtor is comparable to
that of the enumerated insider classifications” in the Code. In re
Village at Lakeridge, LLC, 
814 F.3d 993
, 1001 (2016); 
see supra, at 4
.
We express no opinion on how an appellate court should review a
bankruptcy court’s application of that differently framed standard to a
set of established facts.
10        U. S. BANK N. A. v. VILLAGE AT LAKERIDGE, LLC

                         Opinion of the Court

Given all the basic facts found, was Rabkin’s purchase of
MBP’s claim conducted as if the two were strangers to
each other?
   That is about as factual sounding as any mixed question
gets. Indeed, application of the Ninth Circuit’s arm’s­
length legal standard really requires what we have previ­
ously described as a “factual inference[ ] from undisputed
basic facts.” Commissioner v. Duberstein, 
363 U.S. 278
,
291 (1960) (holding that clear-error review applied to a
decision that a particular transfer was a statutory “gift”).
The court takes a raft of case-specific historical facts,6
considers them as a whole, balances them one against
another—all to make a determination that when two
particular persons entered into a particular transaction,
they were (or were not) acting like strangers. Just to
describe that inquiry is to indicate where it (primarily)
belongs: in the court that has presided over the presenta­
tion of evidence, that has heard all the witnesses, and that
has both the closest and the deepest understanding of the
record—i.e., the bankruptcy court.
   And we can arrive at the same point from the opposite
direction—by asking how much legal work applying the
arm’s-length test requires. Precious little, in our view—as
shown by judicial opinions addressing that concept. Our
own decisions, arising in a range of contexts, have never
tried to elaborate on the established idea of a transaction
conducted as between strangers; nor, to our knowledge,
have lower courts. See, e.g., Jones v. Harris Associates
L. P., 
559 U.S. 335
, 346 (2010); Commissioner v. Wemyss,
324 U.S. 303
, 307 (1945); Pepper v. Litton, 
308 U.S. 295
,
306–307 (1939). The stock judicial method is merely to

——————
  6 Or, to use the more abundant description we quoted above, “multi­
farious, fleeting, special, narrow facts that utterly resist generaliza­
tion.” 
Pierce, 487 U.S., at 561
–562 (internal quotation marks omitted);
see supra, at 8
.
                     Cite as: 583 U. S. ____ (2018)                  11

                         Opinion of the Court

state the requirement of such a transaction and then to do
the fact-intensive job of exploring whether, in a particular
case, it occurred. See, e.g., 
Wemyss, 324 U.S., at 307
.
Contrary to U. S. Bank’s view, there is no apparent need
to further develop “norms and criteria,” or to devise a
supplemental multi-part test, in order to apply the famil­
iar term. Brief for Petitioner 53; see Tr. of Oral Arg. 
18; supra, at 7
. So appellate review of the arm’s-length is­
sue—even if conducted de novo—will not much clarify
legal principles or provide guidance to other courts resolv­
ing other disputes. And that means the issue is not of the
kind that appellate courts should take over.7
   The Court of Appeals therefore applied the appropriate
standard in reviewing the Bankruptcy Court’s determina­
tion that Rabkin did not qualify as an insider because his
transaction with MBP was conducted at arm’s length. A
conclusion of that kind primarily rests with a bankruptcy
court, subject only to review for clear error. We accordingly
affirm the judgment below.
                                               It is so ordered.


——————
  7 That conclusion still leaves some role for appellate courts in this

area. They of course must decide whether a bankruptcy court commit­
ted clear error in finding that a transaction was arm’s length (or not).
(We express no view of that aspect of the Ninth Circuit’s decision
because we did not grant certiorari on the question. 
See supra, at 5
.)
In addition, an appellate court must correct any legal error infecting a
bankruptcy court’s decision. So if the bankruptcy court somehow
misunderstood the nature of the arm’s-length query—or if it devised
some novel multi-factor test for addressing that issue—an appellate
court should apply de novo review. And finally, if an appellate court
someday finds that further refinement of the arm’s-length standard is
necessary to maintain uniformity among bankruptcy courts, it may step
in to perform that legal function. By contrast, what it may not do is
review independently a garden-variety decision, as here, that the
various facts found amount to an arm’s-length (or a non-arm’s-length)
transaction and so do not (or do) confer insider status.
                 Cite as: 583 U. S. ____ (2018)           1

                   KENNEDY, J., concurring

SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
                         _________________

                         No. 15–1509
                         _________________


 U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, TRUSTEE, BY 

  AND THROUGH CWCAPITAL ASSET MANAGEMENT

       LLC, PETITIONER v. THE VILLAGE AT

                LAKERIDGE, LLC 

 ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF 

            APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

                        [March 5, 2018] 


  JUSTICE KENNEDY, concurring.
  I join the opinion for the Court and the concurring opin-
ion by JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR. In doing so, it seems appro-
priate to add these further comments.
  As the Court’s opinion makes clear, courts of appeals
may continue to elaborate in more detail the legal stand-
ards that will govern whether a person or entity is a non-
statutory insider under the Bankruptcy Code. Ante, at 6,
11, n. 7. At this stage of the doctrine’s evolution, this
ongoing elaboration of the principles that underlie non-
statutory insider status seems necessary to ensure uni-
form and accurate adjudications in this area.
  In particular, courts should consider the relevance and
meaning of the phrase “arms-length transaction” in this
bankruptcy context. See 
ibid. As courts of
appeals ad-
dress these issues and make more specific rulings based
on the facts and circumstances of individual cases, it may
be that instructive, more specifically defined rules will
develop.
  This leads to an additional point. Under the test that
the Court of Appeals applied here, there is some room for
doubt that the Bankruptcy Judge was correct in conclud-
ing that Rabkin was not an insider, especially without
2      U. S. BANK N. A. v. VILLAGE AT LAKERIDGE, LLC

                    KENNEDY, J., concurring

further inquiry into whether the offer Bartlett made to
Rabkin could and should have been made to other parties
who might have paid a higher price. See In re Village at
Lakeridge, LLC, 
814 F.3d 993
, 1006 (CA9 2016) (Clifton,
J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (“[E]ven if
the clear error standard applies, the finding that Rabkin
was not a non-statutory insider cannot survive scrutiny”).
MBP’s failure to offer its claim more widely could be a
strong indication that the transaction was not conducted
at arm’s length. As the Court is careful and correct to
note, however, certiorari was not granted on this question.
See ante, at 11, n. 7. As a result, whether the test for non-
statutory insider status as formulated and used by courts
in the Ninth Circuit is sufficient is not before us; and
whether on these facts it was clear error to find that
Rabkin was not an insider is also not before us.
   The Court’s holding should not be read as indicating
that the non-statutory insider test as formulated by the
Court of Appeals is the proper or complete standard to use
in determining insider status. Today’s opinion for the
Court properly limits its decision to the question whether
the Court of Appeals applied the correct standard of re-
view, and its opinion should not be read as indicating that
a transaction is arm’s length if the transaction was nego-
tiated simply with a close friend, without broader solicita-
tion of other possible buyers.
                 Cite as: 583 U. S. ____ (2018)           1

                  SOTOMAYOR, J., concurring

SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
                         _________________

                         No. 15–1509
                         _________________


 U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, TRUSTEE, BY 

  AND THROUGH CWCAPITAL ASSET MANAGEMENT

       LLC, PETITIONER v. THE VILLAGE AT

                LAKERIDGE, LLC 

 ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF 

            APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

                        [March 5, 2018] 


  JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR, with whom JUSTICE KENNEDY,
JUSTICE THOMAS, and JUSTICE GORSUCH join, concurring.
  The Court granted certiorari to decide “[w]hether the
appropriate standard of review for determining non-
statutory insider status” under the Bankruptcy Code is
de novo or clear error. Pet. for Cert. i. To answer that
question, the Court “take[s] . . . as a given” the two-prong
test that the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit has
adopted for determining whether a person or entity is an
insider. Ante, at 6. I join the Court’s opinion in full be-
cause, within that context, I agree with the Court’s analy-
sis that a determination whether a particular transaction
was conducted at arm’s length is a mixed question of law
and fact that should be reviewed for clear error. See ante,
at 10–11.
  I write separately, however, because I am concerned
that our holding eludes the more fundamental question
whether the Ninth Circuit’s underlying test is correct. If
that test is not the right one, our holding regarding the
standard of review may be for naught. That is because the
appropriate standard of review is deeply intertwined with
the test being applied. As the Court puts it, “the standard
of review for a mixed question all depends—on whether
2         U. S. BANK N. A. v. VILLAGE AT LAKERIDGE, LLC

                          SOTOMAYOR, J., concurring

answering it entails primarily legal or factual work.”
Ante, at 9.
   Here, the Court identifies the Ninth Circuit as having
affirmed on the basis of the second prong of its test, pur-
suant to which the Ninth Circuit concluded that the rele-
vant transaction between Robert Rabkin and MBP Equity
Partners was conducted at arm’s length. Ante, at 6. Be-
cause that analysis is primarily factual in nature, the
Court rightly concludes that appellate review of the Bank-
ruptcy Court’s decision is for clear error. Ante, at 10–11.
However, if the proper inquiry did not turn solely on an
arm’s-length analysis but rather involved a different
balance of legal and factual work, the Court may have
come to a different conclusion on the standard of review.
   The Court’s discussion of the standard of review thus
begs the question of what the appropriate test for deter-
mining non-statutory insider status is. I do not seek to
answer that question, as the Court expressly declined to
grant certiorari on it. I have some concerns with the
Ninth Circuit’s test, however, that would benefit from
additional consideration by the lower courts.
   As the Ninth Circuit interpreted the Code, “[a] creditor
is not a non-statutory insider unless: (1) the closeness of
its relationship with the debtor is comparable to that of
the enumerated insider classifications in [
11 U.S. C
.]
§101(31), and (2) the relevant transaction is negotiated at
less than arm’s length.” In re Village at Lakeridge, LLC,
814 F.3d 993
, 1001 (2016) (emphasis added). Under this
test, because prongs one and two are conjunctive, a court’s
conclusion that the relevant transaction was conducted at
arm’s length necessarily defeats a finding of non-statutory
insider status, regardless of how close a person’s relation-
ship with the debtor is or whether he is otherwise compa-
rable to a statutorily enumerated insider.1
——————
    1 Other   Circuits have developed analogous rules. See, e.g., Matter of
                    Cite as: 583 U. S. ____ (2018)                   3

                      SOTOMAYOR, J., concurring

   It is not clear to me, however, that the Ninth Circuit has
explained how this two-prong test is consistent with the
plain meaning of the term “insider” as it appears in the
Code. The concept of “insider” generally rests on the
presumption that a person or entity alleged to be an in-
sider is so connected with the debtor that any business con-
ducted between them necessarily cannot be conducted at
arm’s length. See Black’s Law Dictionary 915 (10th ed.
2014) (defining “insider” as “[a]n entity or person who is so
closely related to a debtor that any deal between them will
not be considered an arm’s-length transaction and will be
subject to close scrutiny”). Title 
11 U.S. C
. §101(31) de-
fines “insider” by identifying certain individuals or entities
who are considered insiders merely on the basis of their
status, without regard to whether any relevant transac-
tion is conducted at arm’s length. Such an individual is
not under any circumstance able to vote for a reorganiza-
tion plan. See §1129(a)(10).
   In contrast, under prong two of the Ninth Circuit’s test,
an individual who is similar to, but does not fall precisely
within, one of the categories of insiders listed in §101(31)
will not be considered an insider and will be able to vote
under §1129(a)(10) so long as the transaction relevant to
the bankruptcy proceeding is determined to have been
conducted at arm’s length. This would include, for exam-
ple, a romantic partner of an insider, even one who in all
or most respects acts like a spouse.
   Given that courts have interpreted “non-statutory insid-
ers” as deriving from the same statutory definition as the
enumerated insiders in §101(31), the basis for the dispar-
ate treatment of two similar individuals is not immediately

—————— 

Holloway, 
955 F.2d 1008
, 1011 (CA5 1992); In re U. S. Medical, Inc., 

531 F.3d 1272
, 1277–1278 (CA10 2008); In re Winstar Communica-
tions, Inc., 
554 F.3d 382
, 396–397 (CA3 2009). But see In re Longview 

Aluminum, LLC, 
657 F.3d 507
, 510 (CA7 2011). 

4      U. S. BANK N. A. v. VILLAGE AT LAKERIDGE, LLC

                   SOTOMAYOR, J., concurring

apparent. Lower courts have concluded that the Code’s
use of the term “includes” in the definition of “insider” in
§101(31) signals that Congress contemplated that certain
other persons or entities in addition to those listed would
qualify as insiders. See ante, at 2. Notably, this Court has
never addressed that issue directly, although the Court
has held in other contexts that “the term ‘including’ is not
one of all-embracing definition, but connotes simply an
illustrative application of the general principle.” Federal
Land Bank of St. Paul v. Bismarck Lumber Co., 
314 U.S. 95
, 100 (1941).
   Assuming §101(31) encompasses such “non-statutory
insiders,” the only clue we have as to which persons or
entities fall within that category is the list of enumerated
insiders and the presumption of lack of arm’s length that
follows from that label. Because each of those persons or
entities are considered insiders regardless of whether a
particular transaction appears to have been conducted at
arm’s length, it is not clear why the same should not be
true of non-statutory insiders. That is, an enumerated
“insider” does not cease being an insider just because a
court finds that a relevant transaction was conducted at
arm’s length. Then why should a finding that a transac-
tion was conducted at arm’s length, without more, conclu-
sively foreclose a finding that a person or entity is a “non-
statutory insider”?
   Of course, courts must develop some principled method
of determining what other individuals or entities fall
within the term “insider” other than those expressly pro-
vided. I can conceive of at least two possible legal stand-
ards that are consistent with the understanding that
insider status inherently presumes that transactions are
not conducted at arm’s length. First, it could be that the
inquiry should focus solely on a comparison between the
characteristics of the alleged non-statutory insider and the
enumerated insiders, and if they share sufficient common-
                  Cite as: 583 U. S. ____ (2018)            5

                   SOTOMAYOR, J., concurring

alities, the alleged person or entity should be deemed an
insider regardless of the apparent arm’s-length nature of
any transaction. Cf. In re Longview Aluminum, LLC, 
657 F.3d 507
, 510–511 (CA7 2011) (considering only whether
a manager of a debtor corporation was comparable to the
enumerated insiders, regardless of whether any transac-
tion was conducted at less-than-arm’s length).
   Second, it could be that the test should focus on a broader
comparison that includes consideration of the circum-
stances surrounding any relevant transaction. If a trans-
action is determined to have been conducted at less-than-
arm’s length, it may provide strong evidence in the context
of the relationship as a whole that the alleged non-
statutory insider should indeed be considered an insider.
Relatedly, if the transaction does appear to have been
undertaken at arm’s length, that may be evidence, consid-
ered together with other aspects of the parties’ relation-
ship, that the alleged non-statutory insider should not, in
fact, be deemed an insider.
   Neither of these conceptions reflects the Ninth Circuit’s
test. Rather, the Ninth Circuit considered separately
whether Rabkin was comparable to an enumerated insider
and whether the transaction between Rabkin and MBP
was conducted at arm’s length. 
See 814 F.3d, at 1002
–
1003. Because the Ninth Circuit concluded that the
transaction was undertaken at arm’s length, that finding
was dispositive of non-statutory insider status under their
test, leading this Court, in turn, to consider the standard
of review only with respect to that prong.
   It is conceivable, however, that if the appropriate test
were different from the one articulated by the Ninth Cir-
cuit, such as the two examples I outlined above, the appli-
cable standard of review would be different as well. See
ante, at 6, 9, n. 5. To make more concrete how this may
play out in practice, I briefly walk through how I might
apply my two proposed tests to the facts of this case.
6        U. S. BANK N. A. v. VILLAGE AT LAKERIDGE, LLC

                       SOTOMAYOR, J., concurring

   If a comparative analysis were the right test, and as-
suming, arguendo, that it involves more legal than factual
work thus resulting in de novo review, certain aspects of
Rabkin’s relationship with Kathleen Bartlett, an undis-
puted insider of the debtor, strike me as suggesting that
Rabkin should have been designated as a non-statutory
insider. Rabkin purchased the claim from MBP, but Bart-
lett, a member of MBP’s board, facilitated the transaction.
Even though Rabkin and Bartlett kept separate finances
and lived separately, they shared a “romantic” relation-
ship, see ante, at 4; Rabkin knew that the debtor was in
bankruptcy, 814 F.3d, at 1003
; and Bartlett approached
only Rabkin with the offer to sell MBP’s claim, 
id., at 1002.
In a strict comparative analysis, Rabkin’s interac-
tions with Bartlett and MBP suggest that he may have
been acting comparable to an enumerated insider, for
example, like a relative of an officer of an insider. See
§101(31)(B)(vi).
   Even if the comparative analysis included a broader
consideration of features of the transaction that suggest it
was conducted at arm’s length, and assuming, arguendo,
that de novo review would apply, it is not obvious that
those features would outweigh the aspects of the relation-
ship that are concerning. Even though Rabkin purport-
edly lacked knowledge of the cramdown plan prior to his
purchase and considered the purchase a “small invest-
ment” not warranting due 
diligence, 814 F.3d, at 1003
,
there was no evidence of negotiation over the price, 
id., at 1004
(Clifton, J., dissenting), or any concrete evidence that
MBP obtained real value in the deal aside from the pro-
spect of Rabkin’s vote in the cramdown.2
——————
   2 Outside the context of a determination of insider status, it is possi-

ble that the nature of a transaction is relevant to assessing the integ-
rity of bankruptcy proceedings in other ways; for example, in assessing
whether a vote in a reorganization plan was “not in good faith, or was
not solicited or procured in good faith.” §1126(e). It troubles me here
                     Cite as: 583 U. S. ____ (2018)                    7

                       SOTOMAYOR, J., concurring

   Even if the proper test for insider status called for clear
error review, it is possible that the facts of this case when
considered through the lens of that test, as opposed to one
focused solely on arm’s length, may have warranted a
finding that Rabkin was a non-statutory insider.
   This is all to say that I hope that courts will continue to
grapple with the role that an arm’s-length inquiry should
play in a determination of insider status. In the event
that the appropriate test for determining non-statutory
insider status is different from the one that the Ninth
Circuit applied, and involves a different balance of legal
and factual work than the Court addresses here, it is
possible I would view the applicable standard of review
differently. Because I do not read the Court’s opinion as
foreclosing that result, I join it in full.




——————
that neither the Bankruptcy Court nor the Ninth Circuit considered
whether Rabkin’s purchase of MBP’s claim for $5,000 was for value.
See App. to Pet. for Cert. 67a (bankruptcy order); In re Village at
Lakeridge, LLC, 634 Fed. Appx. 619, 621 (2016). Cf. In re DBSD North
Am., Inc., 
634 F.3d 79
, 104 (CA2 2011) (stating that a transferee’s
overpayment for claims was relevant to a good-faith determination
under §1126(e)); §548(c) (providing that a transfer will not be consid-
ered constructively fraudulent, and will not be voidable under §548(a),
where “a transferee . . . takes for value and in good faith”). Indeed, we
have no concrete information about what benefit MBP received from
the transaction aside from the prospect of Rabkin’s vote in the
cramdown. Of course, the Ninth Circuit’s decision with respect to
§1126(e) is not before this Court, but it again prompts a concern with
how the courts below considered the nature of the transaction.

Source:  CourtListener

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