Robert G. Mayer, United States Bankruptcy Judge
This case is before the court on the motion of Gordon Properties, LLC, brought under 11 U.S.C. § 107(b)(2) to seal eight letters filed by members of First Owners' Association of Forty Six Hundred
Forty Six Hundred Condominium was formed in 1975 and consists of a sixteen-floor high-rise building and two separate structures fronting on a major street (the "street-front" units) — a gas station and a building previously used as a restaurant. There are a total of 450 condominium units. The high-rise building consists of 396 residential units and 52 commercial units. Each street-front structure and described land is a separate condominium unit. The condominium is governed by First Owners' Association of Forty Six Hundred Condominium, Inc., a unit owners' association. The debtor owned 41 condominium units in the high-rise building and the restaurant unit when it filed its petition on October 2, 2009. The debtor's aggregate interest in the common elements and its aggregate vote at the annual meeting was about 19.7%. On average, individual condominium units in the high-rise building held a 0.25% interest in the common elements and of the votes at the annual meeting.
Gordon Properties is a limited liability company with four members. All four members are related as siblings or cousins. The managing member, a practicing attorney, was the sole managing member and the member most involved in the day-to-day bankruptcy and litigation matters. See, Statement of Financial Affairs, Question 21b. Condominium Services, Inc. ("CSI") is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Gordon Properties and had managed FOA for most of the time since the mid-1970's. The real estate and CSI were owned by the four members' grandfather who died prematurely. He left the assets in a trust of which the four members were the residuary beneficiaries. Some time about 2004, the trust was dissolved and the properties were conveyed to Gordon Properties.
FOA and CSI entered into a two-year management contract for the term from November 1, 2005 to October 31, 2007. FOA terminated the contract as of August 1, 2006. CSI disputed the termination and insisted that it remained FOA's management agent. Gordon Properties continued to pay its condominium fees to CSI from which CSI paid its management fee. Litigation ensued. As to CSI,
Condominium Services, Inc. v. First Owners' Assoc. of Forty Six Hundred Condominium, Inc., 281 Va. 561, 570, 709 S.E.2d 163, 169 (2011).
The verdict was sustained on appeal to the Supreme Court of Virginia. Id.
To further complicate matters, the condominium documents provide that any unit owner in arrears in the payment of his condominium fees cannot vote at the annual meeting. Gordon Properties did not pay the recalculated condominium fee and was, prepetition, denied its right to vote at annual meetings. Gordon Properties asserted that the automatic stay prevented FOA from enforcing the provision and that it had the right to vote at post-petition annual meetings. When FOA did not allow Gordon Properties to vote at a post-petition annual meeting, Gordon Properties filed an adversary proceeding alleging that FOA had violated the automatic stay. Litigation ensued. Gordon Properties LLC v. First Owners Ass'n. (In re Gordon Properties), 460 B.R. 681 (Bankr.E.D.Va. 2011).
To further complicate matters, FOA passed a rule that limited owners of multiple units to only one seat on the seven-person board of directors. The managing member had purchased a residential unit in his individual capacity and was not delinquent in the payment of his condominium fees.
This court found that FOA had violated the automatic stay by denying Gordon Properties its right to vote at the 2010 annual meeting. Id. Gordon Properties was awarded its attorney's fees and the court supervised the election of directors at the next annual meeting. The court also held that FOA's rule limiting Gordon Properties and its related entities to one seat on the board of directors exceeded its authority. At the next annual meeting, four directors who were members or relatives of members of Gordon Properties were elected as directors of FOA. On further consideration, this court found that only three could serve. During the brief period when four members of the board of directors were affiliated with Gordon Properties, the board fired FOA's counsel who had represented FOA in all of the prior litigation and was representing FOA in an appeal in the district court that was scheduled to be argued in the very near future. The order resolving the election issues prohibited CSI from entering into a management contract with FOA without court approval.
FOA's managing agent resigned after the election. FOA which was effectively
At the same time, another judge of this court mediated a settlement between FOA, CSI and Gordon Properties and a motion was filed to approve the settlement.
A number of unit owners opposed the CSI management contract and the settlement. The court was concerned with the potential conflicts of interest because of the Gordon Properties' affiliated directors. The United States Trustee requested that an examiner be appointed. Gordon Properties opposed the appointment and after the appointment sought to limit the examiner's investigation by limiting funds that would be available to pay him, by limiting the scope of the investigation, and by demanding to be present at every interview that he conducted. In re Gordon Properties LLC, 514 B.R. 449 (Bankr.E.D.Va. 2013). All of the efforts were rebuffed and the examiner submitted a comprehensive report in which he opined that there were conflicts of interest that vitiated the settlement agreement. The settlement was not approved. Gordon Properties LLC v. First Owners Ass'n. (In re Gordon Properties LLC), 515 B.R. 454 (Bankr.E.D.Va. 2013).
The letters in question were written to the court during the period when the CSI contract and the settlement were pending. Seven of the eight letters in question were filed from March 11, 2013 to April 22, 2013. The eighth letter was filed on September 3, 2013, immediately before the 2013 annual meeting and election of directors.
Other letters were also filed by unit owners. Gordon Properties has not sought to seal them. In light of the number of letters being filed with the court and to establish the use of the letters in the context of the hearings, the court entered an order on May 10, 2013. The order identified the two matters before the court and acknowledged that the letters were intended by the unit owners to address their concerns with respect to the two motions. The order clearly stated that the letters were not evidence but would be considered as if they were arguments of counsel or of an amicus curiae. It also directed the unit owners to the United States Trustee if they had concerns other than the two matters then before the court.
The order addressed requests of some of the unit owners to restrict public access to their letters. The order stated:
Id. at 2. Since that order — except for the present motion — no one has asked for the letters to be sealed. They have remained available to the public for more than two years without complaint.
The seven letters all address the condition of the condominium and were related to the CSI contract or the proposed settlement. Some are more closely related to the subjects at issue, but all are relevant.
In considering FOA's side of the settlement agreement, the court made clear that it was doing so to determine whether there was a contract properly ratified by all the parties that, if approved by the court, would be binding on all the parties. If FOA's approval of the settlement agreement or the management contract was tainted by a conflict of interests that vitiated the settlement agreement or the management contract, the court could not approve it. There would be no agreement for the court to approve. It was in this context that the actions of FOA's board, with Gordon Properties' members and affiliates as members, became relevant and important.
Gitto v. Worcester Telegram & Gazette Corp. (In re Gitto Global Corp.), 422 F.3d 1 (1st Cir.2005) analyzes 11 U.S.C. § 107. It first discussed the common law presumption of access to judicial records and a court's inherent "supervisory power over its own records and files." It noted that "access has been denied where court files might have become a vehicle for improper purposes." Id. at 6 (quoting Nixon v. Warner Communications, Inc., 435 U.S. 589, 597-598, 98 S.Ct. 1306, 1312, 55 L.Ed.2d 570 (1978).
The Court of Appeals then directed its attention to 11 U.S.C. § 107. Section 107 consists of three parts or subsections.
The rest of § 107 establishes exceptions to the rule of public access. Section 107(b)(2) is the applicable provision in this case.
The Court of Appeals discussed the untruthfulness prong. See Gitto, 422 F.3d at 11. It noted that while some parties might be able to "demonstrate untruthfulness solely on the basis of the papers filed with the court, such situations will be rare." It continued:
Id.
The second prong of the test is potential untruthfulness. While potentially untrue statements also are covered by § 107, the Court stated that "given the relative ease of showing potential untruthfulness, such a showing, standing alone, cannot be enough to trigger the exception." Id. at 11. It would simply be too easy for a party in interest to assert the untruthfulness of a statement or allegation and conclude that he had, therefore, shown
Id. at 11-12. The additional showing is that the potentially untrue statement also be irrelevant or be included for an improper end.
An examiner's report was at issue in Gitto. The Court assumed that the statements that the parties found offensive were potentially untrue and proceeded to consider the relevance of the statements and whether they were included for improper ends. The Report addressed "precisely" the types of allegations described in § 1104(c).
Id. at 16.
Nor was there an improper end. The examiner was disinterested and there was no indication that he drafted the Report in bad faith or with an ulterior motive.
Gitto has been well-received in most, but not all jurisdictions. See United States v. Coney, 689 F.3d 365, 379-380 (5th Cir.2012); In re Neal, 461 F.3d 1048 (8th Cir.2006); In re City of Detroit, 2014 WL 8396419 (Bankr.E.D.Mich.2014); In re Copeland, 2010 WL 4683941 (Bankr. N.D.Okla.2010); In re North Bay General Hospital, Inc., 404 B.R. 429 (Bankr. S.D.Tex.2009); and In re Wyatt, 368 B.R. 99 (Bankr.D.N.H.2007).
The principal case rejecting Gitto is Father M v. Various Tort Claimants (In re Roman Catholic Archbishop of Portland in Oregon, 661 F.3d 417 (9th Cir.2011). In this case, Father M sought to seal the portions of the record alleging his sexual abuse of children. The Court of Appeals agreed with Gitto that § 107 supplanted the common law right of access to judicial records. However, it rejected Gitto's test. Id. at 431. The Court stated:
Id. at 432. The Court held that the allegations of child sexual abuse were scandalous and granted the motion to seal.
Gitto furthers the historic practice in American courts of maintaining almost unlimited public access to court records as expanded by Congress in bankruptcy proceedings. If potentially defamatory allegations were sufficient grounds for sealing court records, the publicly available court records would look like Swiss cheese. As City of Detroit notes:
In re City of Detroit, 2014 WL 8396419, at *6. The American practice has been to allow public access to court papers alleging embarrassing and derogatory, even defamatory, matters. The records are not sealed, even if the defendant is ultimately successful in his defense.
But, American courts have also protected litigants against scandalous allegations. Courts recognize that some allegations are so damaging to a litigant's reputation that even if he were to prevail in the litigation and prove the allegations false, it would take years or even be impossible to overcome the damage of the allegation. The allegations in Roman Catholic Archbishop of Portland fall within that category. Allegations of sexual misconduct by a priest with children are extremely toxic, particularly in the present environment where numerous such allegations have been made worldwide and many sustained. Gitto would not seal a paper with this type of allegation if it were relevant to the matter in the litigation.
Gitto and Roman Catholic Archbishop of Portland can be reconciled. Each addresses a different type of offensive statement. Section 107(b)(2) directs the court to protect persons against a scandalous
Roman Catholic Archbishop of Portland concerned scandalous allegations. It noted that Gitto addressed defamatory statements. Id. at 432 ("Gitto Global focused only on the `defamatory' exception in § 107(b)."). It did not apply the Gitto analysis for a defamatory statement to the scandalous statements in its case. It looked for the plain meaning of scandalous. Id. at 432. It then held that if the statement was scandalous, the analysis came to an end and the statement should be sealed. Id. at 433.
Both Gitto and Roman Catholic Archbishop of Portland seek to define terms used in § 107(b)(2). Gitto sought to define defamatory; Roman Catholic Archbishop of Portland, scandalous. They are not synonymous. Nor have they been treated historically in the same manner in American courts. The protections afforded the different types of statements are different.
In this case, none of the statements complained of are defamatory. While some may be critical of the managing member or his conduct, they do not rise to the level of defamation. More importantly, it is not possible from the record to determine, as the court in City of Detroit did, that they are false. They may be potentially false, but the court would need to conduct a hearing to determine that they are false. In any event, they were relevant to the two motions pending before the court, the motion to authorize CSI to enter into a contract with FOA and the motion to approve the settlement. A few statements could be considered scandalous. The court applied Roman Catholic Archbishop of Portland and redacted them. To be sure, they were not nearly as scandalous as those in Roman Catholic Archbishop of Portland, but if found to be scandalous, the court is required to protect the parties involved.
The motion will be granted in part and denied in part. The original letters with the scandalous statements will be sealed and redacted copies will be filed.