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Supreme Court Protects Credit Bid in Hotel Bankruptcy
Martin J. Bienenstock, Partner, Geoffrey T. Raicht, Partner, and Chris Theodoridis, Associate, Proskauer Rose LLP, New York, USAHow does RadLAX impact conventional chapter 11 plan structures?
On 29 May 2012, the United States Supreme Court held in RadLAX Gateway Hotel LLC v Amalgamated Bank ('RadLAX'), that a debtor-owner of a hotel encumbered by a mortgage lien securing over USD 120 million, could not obtain confirmation of a chapter 11 plan proposing to sell the hotel free of the lien to a stalking horse bidder offering USD 55 million cash, or to any bidder offering more, unless the mortgagee were allowed to credit bid up to its full claim. Justice Scalia called it 'an easy case' of statutory construction of Bankruptcy Code section 1129(b)(2)(A). What are the implications of the ruling?
1. What if the chapter 11 plan provides for the mortgagee to be paid the judicially determined value of the hotel, say USD 70 million raised from a new mortgage loan and creditor contributions under a rights offering, with the unsecured claimholders (including the mortgagee’s USD 50 million deficiency claim) and participants in the rights offering to receive their pro rata shares of 100% of the equity in the reorganized debtor? Is that a sale of the debtor’s assets entitling the mortgagee to credit bid?
This hypothetical substantively amounts to a sale of the hotel, free of the mortgage lien, to creditors. Rad- LAX may appear to allow the mortgagee to credit bid up to USD 120 million. But, based on RadLAX’s reasoning that the specific statutory provision overrules the general provision, and the sequencing of the provisions matters, it is certainly plausible that Bankruptcy Code section 1129(b)(2)(A)(i) would control. It allows for the mortgagee to be crammed down with a secured note in the amount of the value of the collateral. Certainly, the creditor cannot complain that cash is substituted for the note, or that the note is a one-day note as the court posited in Bank of New York Trust Co. v Official Unsecured Creditors’ Committee (In re Pacific Lumber Co.), 584 F.3d 229, 247 (5th Cir. 2009). The issue here is whether the traditional conversion of debt into equity through a plan should be construed as a sale free and clear of liens, subject to credit bidding pursuant to Bankruptcy Code sections 1129(b)(2)(A)(ii), or 103(a) and 363(k).
2. What if the chapter 11 plan provides for the mortgagee to be paid the judicially determined value of the hotel, say USD 70 million raised from a third party? Is the secured lender entitled to credit bid?
This was the hypothetical posed by the Fifth Circuit in Bank of New York Trust Co. v Official Unsecured Creditors’ Committee (In re Pacific Lumber Co.), 584 F.3d 229 (5th Cir. 2009). The Fifth Circuit reasoned that once the value of a secured lender’s collateral has been judicially determined, section 1129(b)(2)(A)(i) can be satisfied by issuance of a ‘one-day note’. The Fifth Circuit noted that: '[w]hatever uncertainties exist about indubitable equivalent, paying off secured creditors in cash can hardly be improper if the plan accurately reflected the value of the [secured creditors’] collateral'. 584 F.3d at 247. That said, the Supreme Court has expressed a preference for market testing the value of collateral over judicially determining its value for purposes of determining whether the debtor’s owners are contributing sufficient new value to reacquire ownership of the real property. Bank of America v 203 North LaSalle Street Partnership, 119 S. Ct. 1411, 1424 (1999).
3. If an investor buys a secured claim during the chapter 11 case with the intent of using its rights to credit bid to acquire ownership of the estate’s assets, should the investor’s vote on the plan be designated (i.e., not counted) because the investor bought the claim to obtain control?
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