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Third Circuit Approves Use of Structured Dismissal, but Rarely
June 8, 2015 download PDF
On May 21, 2015, the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit (the "Third Circuit") held that in rare instances a bankruptcy court may approve a "structured dismissal"- that is, a dismissal "that winds up the bankruptcy with certain conditions attached instead of simply dismissing the case and restoring the status quo ante" - that deviates from the Bankruptcy Code's priority scheme. See Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors v. CIT Group/Business Credit Inc. (In re Jevic Holding Corp.), Case No. 14-1465, -- F.3d --, 2015 WL 2403443, at *2 (3d Cir. May 21, 2015).
Background
In 2006, a subsidiary of Sun Capital Partners ("Sun") acquired
Jevic Transportation, Inc. ("Jevic"), a New Jersey trucking company
in a leveraged buyout. A group led by CIT Group ("CIT")
financed the purchase. Two years later, Jevic was struggling
and on May 19, 2008, it stopped operating and notified its
employees that they were being terminated. The next day,
Jevic filed a voluntary chapter 11 case in
Delaware.
Two adversary proceedings were filed during the pendency of the
chapter 11 case. First, a group of former Jevic truck drivers
(the "Drivers") filed a class action complaint against Jevic and
Sun alleging violations of federal and state Worker Adjustment and
Retraining Notifications (WARN) Acts, which require 60 days'
written notice before termination. Second, the official
committee of unsecured creditors (the "Committee") brought a
fraudulent conveyance action against Sun and CIT on behalf of the
bankruptcy estate.
In March 2012, Jevic, the Committee, Sun, CIT, and the Drivers met
to discuss a settlement of the fraudulent conveyance action.
By then, Jevic's assets had been depleted, with only $1.7 million
in cash (subject to Sun's priority lien) and the fraudulent
conveyance action remaining. Jevic, the Committee, Sun and
CIT negotiated a settlement in which: (i) the settling parties
would provide mutual releases and the Committee's action against
Sun and CIT would be dismissed; (ii) CIT would pay $2 million to
cover Jevic and the Committee's legal fees and administrative
expenses; (iii) Sun's priority lien on Jevic's remaining cash would
be assigned to a trust to pay tax and administrative claimants
first and general unsecured creditors second on a pro rata
basis; and (iv) the chapter 11 case would be dismissed. The
proposed settlement thus provided for a "structured
dismissal." The Drivers-who asserted a claim of $12.4
million, with $8.3 million allegedly entitled to priority wage
claim status under the Bankruptcy Code-were not part of the
settlement.[1]
The United States Trustee and the Drivers objected to the
settlement agreement, maintaining that by making distributions to
creditors junior to the Drivers, it violated the Bankruptcy Code's
priority scheme. The Bankruptcy Code grants priority to
certain categories of unsecured claims, including certain employee
wage claims, and requires a debtor to pay these claims in full
before making distributions to holders of general (that is,
non-priority) unsecured claims.[2] The United States Trustee
also argued that structured dismissals are not permitted under the
Bankruptcy Code.
The Bankruptcy Court overruled the objections and approved the
settlement. It acknowledged that the Bankruptcy Code does not
expressly authorize structured dismissals but concluded that the
relief was justified given the "dire circumstances" present in the
case: (i) there was "no prospect of a confirmable Chapter 11
plan," and (ii) conversion to chapter 7 would be impracticable
because the chapter 7 trustee would have no resources to fund the
case. Jevic at *6. The Bankruptcy Court
rejected the contention that it could not approve the settlement
agreement because the arrangement violated the absolute priority
rule, explaining that the Bankruptcy Code's priority scheme does
not extend to settlements. Finding that the settlement
provided the best option under the circumstances, the Bankruptcy
Court approved the settlement agreement.
The Drivers appealed to the District Court, which affirmed the
Bankruptcy Court's decision. An appeal to the Third Circuit
followed.
The Majority Decision
In affirming, the Third Circuit focused on two issues: (i)
whether a structured dismissal is permissible under the Bankruptcy
Code; and (ii) if so, whether a settlement in the context of a
structured dismissal must adhere to the priority scheme of section
507 of the Bankruptcy Code.[3]
The Drivers maintained that there are only "three exits from
bankruptcy: confirmation of a plan of reorganization,
conversion to Chapter 7 liquidation, or plain dismissal with no
strings attached." Jevic at *5. The Circuit
Court recognized that the Bankruptcy Code does not expressly
provide for structured dismissals, but noted that it "explicitly
authorizes the bankruptcy court to alter the effect of dismissal
'for cause' - in other words, the Code does not strictly require
dismissal of a Chapter 11 case to be a hard reset."
Id. It pointed out that the Drivers did not dispute
the Bankruptcy Court's finding that there was no prospect of a
confirmable plan and that chapter 7 conversion was
impracticable. It concluded that "absent a showing that a
structured dismissal has been contrived to evade the procedural
protections and safeguards of the plan confirmation or conversions
processes, a bankruptcy court has discretion to order such a
disposition." Id. at *6.[4]
The Court turned next to the Driver's argument that structured
dismissals, if permissible, may not distribute estate assets in
violation of the Bankruptcy Code's priority scheme. Noting
that the "Drivers' argument is not without force," it held that
"bankruptcy courts may approve settlements that deviate from the
priority scheme of § 507 of the Bankruptcy Code
only if they have 'specific and credible
grounds to justify the deviation.'" Jevic at *7, *9
(emphasis added). In coming to this conclusion, the Third
Circuit considered two decisions from other circuits addressing
whether settlements must adhere to the priority scheme set forth in
section 507 of the Bankruptcy Code.
In Matter of AWECO, Inc., 725 F.2d 293 (5th Cir. 1984),
the Fifth Circuit adopted a per se rule and rejected a
settlement that did not comply with the Bankruptcy Code's priority
scheme. However, in In re Iridium Operating LLC, 478
F.3d 452 (2d Cir. 2007), the Second Circuit criticized AWECO and
adopted a more flexible standard. The Second Circuit held
that while compliance with the Bankruptcy Code's priority scheme
was the most important factor to consider when determining whether
to approve a settlement, "a noncompliant settlement could be
approved when 'the remaining factors weigh heavily in favor of
approving a settlement.'" Jevic at *8. The
Court favored the Iridium approach, which it viewed as
facilitating settlements.
While the Court of Appeals noted that it was a "close call", it
concluded that the Bankruptcy Court had sufficient reason to
approve the settlement and structured dismissal, including
distributions that deviated from the Bankruptcy Code's priority
scheme. Jevic at *9. On the record before it,
the "disposition, unsatisfying as it was, remained the least bad
alternative since there was 'no prospect' of a plan being confirmed
and conversion to Chapter 7 would have resulted in the secured
creditors taking all that remained of the estate."
Id.
Conclusion
Structured dismissals are a "hot topic" in the restructuring community-proponents note how cost-effective and efficient they are in certain circumstances (e.g., when all of the assets have been sold, the debtor becomes administratively insolvent, etc.) but critics have argued that the practice is not provided for in the Bankruptcy Code and permits debtors to avoid disclosure, solicitation and other Bankruptcy Code requirements. Indeed, in its 2014 report, the American Bankruptcy Institute Commission to Study the Reform of Chapter 11 recommended eliminating structured dismissals. See Report at 272-73 (recommending "strict compliance with the Bankruptcy Code in terms of orders ending the chapter 11 case" and explaining that dismissal orders should "satisfy the applicable provisions of, and [] not permit the parties to work around, the Bankruptcy Code"). The Third Circuit is the first Court of Appeals to fully confront the practice. While the Third Circuit suggested that the result achieved here will "likely [] be justified only rarely," the impact of the decision-and the extent to which parties invoke it to support structured dismissals in other circumstances-remains to be seen. Jevic at *10.
[1] While the record is unclear as to why the Drivers were left
out of the settlement, it seems that Sun was not willing to pay the
Drivers while the WARN Act class action lawsuit was still
pending. Essentially, Sun "did not want to fund litigation
against itself." Jevic at *2.
[2] The Drivers also argued that the Committee breached its
fiduciary duty by signing on to a settlement agreement that
"effectively, freezes [them] out." Jevic at
*3. The Bankruptcy Court rejected the argument, noting that
such fiduciary duty does not give each creditor veto power over a
potential settlement.
[3] The Bankruptcy Court's findings of fact and discretionary
exercise were not being challenged.
[4] Based on the facts of the case, the Third Circuit did not have
to decide whether structured dismissals are permissible where there
are prospects for a chapter 11 plan being confirmed and/or where
conversion to chapter 7 is feasible.