In Re Exide Technologies ( 2010 )


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  •                                        PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    No. 08-1872
    In re: EXIDE TECHNOLOGIES,
    Debtors
    ENERSYS DELAWARE, INC., formerly known as
    EnerSys Inc.,
    Appellant.
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Delaware
    (D. C. No. 1-06-cv-00302)
    District Judge: Hon. Sue L. Robinson
    Argued on May 12, 2009
    Before: AMBRO, ROTH and ALARCÓN*, Circuit Judges
    (Opinion filed: June 1, 2010 )
    Robert Lapowsky, Esquire (Argued)
    Neil C. Schur, Esquire
    Stevens & Lee, P. C.
    1818 Market Street, 29 th Floor
    Philadelphia, PA 19104
    Joseph Grey, Esquire
    Stevens & Lee, P. C.
    1105 North Market Street, 7 th Floor
    Wilmington, DE 19801
    Counsel for Appellant Enersys Delaware, Inc.
    Laura Davis Jones, Esquire
    James O’Neill, Esquire
    Pachulski, Stang, Ziehl & Jones, LLP
    919 North Market Street, 17 th Floor
    P. O. Box 8705
    Wilmington, DE 19899-8705
    *Honorable Arthur L. Alarcón, Senior United States
    Circuit Judge for the Ninth Circuit, sitting by designation.
    Matthew N. Kleiman, Esquire (Argued)
    Matthew N. Kleiman, P. C.
    2506 North Clark Street, Suite 307
    2
    Chicago, IL 60614
    Roger P. Furey, Esquire
    John P. Sieger, Esquire
    Andrew L. Wool, Esquire
    Katten, Muchin, Rosenman, LLP
    2900 K Street NW, Suite 200
    Washington, DC 20007-5118
    Counsel for Appellee Exide Technologies
    OPINION
    ROTH, Circuit Judge:
    This case presents the question whether the parties’
    Agreement is an executory contract. EnerSys Delaware, Inc.,
    appeals the judgment of the District Court, which affirmed the
    Bankruptcy Court’s order that the Agreement was an executory
    contract, subject to rejection under 
    11 U.S.C. § 365
    (a), and that
    Exide Technologies could reject it. We conclude, however, that
    EnerSys has substantially performed the Agreement. As a
    result, EnerSys does not have any unperformed material
    obligations that would excuse Exide from performance. We
    hold, therefore, that the Agreement is not an executory contract.
    We will vacate the District Court’s order and remand this case
    to the District Court with instructions to remand it to the
    Bankruptcy Court for further proceedings consistent with this
    3
    opinion.
    I. BACKGROUND
    A. Factual background
    On April 15, 2002, Exide filed a voluntary petition for
    bankruptcy protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy
    Code, 11 U.S.C § 1101, et seq. After filing for bankruptcy,
    Exide sought to reject various agreements that it had with
    EnerSys arising from their June 1991 transaction. In June 1991,
    Exide sold substantially all of its industrial battery business to
    EnerSys for about $135 million.1 The assets that Exide sold to
    EnerSys included physical manufacturing plants, equipment,
    inventory, and certain items of intellectual property. To
    formalize the sale, Exide and EnerSys entered into over twenty-
    three agreements. Four of these agreements constitute the crux
    of the dispute: (1) the Trademark and Trade Name License
    Agreement, (2) the Asset Purchase Agreement, (3) the
    Administrative Services Agreement, and (4) a letter agreement.
    The Bankruptcy Court held, in an order predating the order
    challenged here, that the four agreements constituted a single
    integrated Agreement (the Agreement). In re Exide Techs., 
    340 B.R. 222
    , 227 (Bankr. D. Del. 2006). Neither Exide nor
    EnerSys have challenged this determination. We therefore take
    the next step of determining whether the Agreement is an
    executory contract.
    1
    EnerSys was known then as Yuasa Battery (America), Inc.
    4
    Under the Agreement, Exide licensed its “Exide”
    trademark to EnerSys for use in the industrial battery business.
    Exide wanted to continue to use the Exide mark outside of the
    industrial battery business. To accommodate the needs of both
    parties, Exide granted EnerSys a perpetual, exclusive, royalty-
    free license to use the Exide trademark in the industrial battery
    business. This division worked, and, for almost ten years, each
    party appeared satisfied with the results of the transaction.
    In 2000, however, Exide expressed a desire to return to
    the North American industrial battery market. After the parties
    agreed to the early termination of a ten-year noncompetition
    Agreement (thus granting Exide permission to reenter the
    market), Exide made several attempts to regain the trademark
    from EnerSys, but EnerSys refused. Exide wanted to regain the
    mark as a part of its strategic goal to unify its corporate image.
    Exide hoped to use a single name and trademark on all the
    products that it produced; this single name and trademark were,
    naturally, “Exide.”
    Exide reentered the industrial battery business by
    purchasing GNB Industrial Battery Company. Exide, however,
    remained bound by the ongoing obligation to forbear from using
    the Exide trademark in that business for as long as the license
    continued in effect. Thus, from 2000 until Exide filed for
    bankruptcy protection in 2002, Exide was forced to compete
    directly against EnerSys, which was selling batteries under the
    name “Exide.” Then, when Exide filed for bankruptcy under
    Chapter 11, Exide was presented the opportunity to try to regain
    the Exide trademark by rejecting the Agreement. Exide sought
    the Bankruptcy Court’s approval to do so.
    5
    B. Bankruptcy and District Court Proceedings
    On April 3, 2006, the Bankruptcy Court entered an order
    granting Exide’s motion to reject the Agreement. The court held
    that the Agreement was an executory contract, subject to
    rejection under 
    11 U.S.C. §365
    (a), and that rejection terminated
    Exide’s obligations under it. About three months later, on July
    11, the Bankruptcy Court entered an order approving the
    transition plan and denying EnerSys’s motion to stay. EnerSys
    appealed these two orders to the District Court. The District
    Court, on February 27, 2008, affirmed the Bankruptcy Court’s
    orders.
    EnerSys appeals the District Court’s order, arguing two
    issues: (1) the District Court erred in holding that Agreement
    was an executory contract, and (2) it erred in holding that
    rejection terminates EnerSys’s rights under the Agreement.
    II. DISCUSSION
    The Bankruptcy Court had jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. §§ 157
    (a) and 1334(b). The District Court had jurisdiction to
    decide EnerSys’s appeal under 
    28 U.S.C. §158
    (a). We have
    jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. §§ 158
    (d) and 1291 to review the
    District Court’s final order.
    We exercise plenary review of an order from a district
    court sitting as an appellate court in review of a bankruptcy
    court. E.g., In re CellNet Data Sys., Inc., 
    327 F.3d 242
    , 244 (3d
    6
    Cir. 2003). We will review both courts’ legal conclusions de
    novo. Id.; In re Gen. DataComm Indus., Inc., 
    407 F.3d 616
    , 619
    (3d Cir. 2005). Furthermore, we will set aside a bankruptcy
    court’s factual findings only if clearly erroneous. In re CellNet
    Data, 
    327 F.3d at 244
    . For mixed questions of law and fact, we
    will engage in “a mixed standard” of review, “affording a
    clearly erroneous standard to integral facts, but exercising
    plenary review of the lower court’s interpretation and
    application of those facts to legal precepts.” 
    Id.
    A. Executory contract
    The policy behind Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code is
    the “ultimate rehabilitation of the debtor.” Nichols v. United
    States, 
    384 U.S. 678
    , 687 (1966). The Code therefore allows
    debtors in possession, “subject to the court’s approval, . . . [to]
    reject any executory contract or unexpired lease of the debtor.”
    
    11 U.S.C. § 365
    (a). But the Bankruptcy Code does not define
    “executory contract.” Relevant legislative history demonstrates
    that Congress intended the term to mean a contract “on which
    performance is due to some extent on both sides.” H.R. Rep.
    No. 95–595, 347 (1977); see In re Columbia Gas Sys. Inc., 
    50 F.3d 233
    , 238 (3d Cir. 1995).
    With congressional intent in mind, this Court has adopted
    the following definition: “‘An executory contract is a contract
    under which the obligation of both the bankrupt and the other
    party to the contract are so far underperformed that the failure
    of either to complete performance would constitute a material
    breach excusing the performance of the other.’” In re Columbia
    Gas, 
    50 F.3d at 239
     (alteration omitted) (quoting Sharon Steel
    7
    Corp. v. Nat’l Fuel Gas Distrib. Corp., 
    872 F.2d 36
    , 39 (3d
    Cir.1989)).2 “Thus, unless both parties have unperformed
    obligations that would constitute a material breach if not
    performed, the contract is not executory under § 365.” In re
    Columbia Gas, 
    50 F.3d at 239
    . The party seeking to reject a
    contract bears the burden of demonstrating that it is executory.
    And “[t]he time for testing whether there are material
    unperformed obligations on both sides is when the bankruptcy
    petition is filed.” 
    Id. at 240
    . Finally, to conduct this
    determination, we “consider contract principles under relevant
    nonbankruptcy law.” 
    Id.
     at 240 n.10; see In re Gen. DataComm,
    407 F.3d at 623. New York, because it is the forum selected in
    the Agreement’s choice-of-law provision, provides the relevant
    nonbankruptcy law.
    Accordingly, our inquiry is to determine whether the
    Agreement, on April 15, 2002, contained at least one obligation
    for both Exide and EnerSys that would constitute a material
    breach under New York law if not performed. If not, then the
    Agreement is not an executory contract.3 See In re Gen.
    DataComm, 407 F.3d at 623.
    2
    Professor Vern Countryman, a leading bankruptcy scholar,
    created and advocated this definition in a law-review article.
    See Sharon Steel Corp., 872 F.2d at 39 (citing Countryman,
    Executory Contracts in Bankruptcy: Part I, 
    57 Minn. L. Rev. 439
     (1973)).
    3
    There is no remaining contention made that Exide had any
    unperformed obligations.
    8
    Under New York law, a material breach, which
    “justif[ies] the other party to suspend his own performance,” is
    “a breach which is so substantial as to defeat the purpose of the
    entire transaction.” Lipsky v. Commonwealth United Corp., 
    551 F.2d 887
    , 895 (2d Cir. 1976) (citation omitted); see In re
    Lavigne, 
    114 F.3d 379
    , 387 (2d Cir. 1997):
    [U]nder New York law, only a breach in a
    contract which substantially defeats the purpose
    of that contract can be grounds for rescission.
    The non-breaching party will be discharged from
    the further performance of its obligations under
    the contract when the breach goes to the root of
    the contract.
    
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    But when a breaching party “has substantially performed”
    before breaching, “the other party’s performance is not
    excused.” Hadden v. Consolidated Edison Co., 
    312 N.E.2d 445
    ,
    449 (N.Y. 1974); see Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc., v. Allegheny
    Energy, Inc., 
    500 F.3d 171
    , 186 (2d Cir. 2007).
    New York’s high court has instructed how to determine
    when a party has rendered substantial performance:
    There is no simple test for determining whether
    substantial performance has been rendered and
    several factors must be considered, including the
    ratio of the performance already rendered to that
    9
    unperformed, the quantitative character of the
    default, the degree to which the purpose behind
    the contract has been frustrated, the willfulness of
    the default, and the extent to which the aggrieved
    party has already received the substantial benefit
    of the promised performance.
    Hadden, 312 N.E.2d at 449. “The issue of whether a party has
    substantially performed is usually a question of fact and should
    be decided as a matter of law only where the inferences are
    certain.” Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc., 
    500 F.3d at
    186 (citing
    Anderson Clayton & Co. v. Alanthus Corp., 
    457 N.Y.S.2d 578
    ,
    579 (App. Div. 1983)).
    The Bankruptcy Court here failed to properly measure
    whether either party had substantially performed.              Our
    inspection of the record, however, reveals that the inferences are
    clear that EnerSys has substantially performed. Applying
    Hadden’s balancing test, EnerSys’s performance rendered
    outweighs its performance remaining and the extent to which the
    parties have benefitted is substantial. Specifically, EnerSys has
    substantially performed by paying the full $135 million purchase
    price and operating under the Agreement for over ten years.
    EnerSys has been producing industrial batteries since 1991,
    using all the assets transferred under the Agreement, including
    real estate, real-estate leases, inventory, equipment and the right
    to use the trademark “Exide.” Moreover, EnerSys has provided
    Exide with the substantial benefit of assuming the latter’s
    liabilities, including numerous contracts and accounts
    receivable, within the business EnerSys purchased.
    10
    Exide argues that EnerSys’s ongoing, unperformed
    obligations outweigh its performance. It relies on the following
    four obligations of EnerSys: (1) an obligation to satisfy the
    Quality Standards Provision, and obligations to observe (2) the
    Use Restriction, (3) the Indemnity Obligations, and (4) the
    Further Assurances Obligations. 4 We reject Exide’s argument;
    these four obligations do not outweigh the substantial
    performance rendered and benefits received by EnerSys.
    First, EnerSys’s obligation to observe the Use
    Restriction, i.e., not to use the Trademark outside the industrial
    battery business, is not a material obligation because it is a
    condition subsequent that requires EnerSys to use the mark in
    accordance with the terms of the Trademark Licence. A
    condition subsequent is not a material obligation. See In re
    Columbia Gas System, Inc., 
    50 F.3d 233
    , 241 (3d Cir. 1995)
    (“Non-occurrence of a condition is not a breach by a party
    unless he is under a condition that the condition occur.” (quoting
    R ESTATEMENT (S ECOND) OF C ONTRACTS § 225(3) (1981)).
    Moreover, the Use Restriction does not relate to the purpose of
    the Agreement – which is that Exide would transfer its industrial
    battery business and the concomitant assets and liabilities to
    EnerSys and EnerSys in exchange would pay Exide about $135
    million. Therefore, even if the obligation were not a condition
    subsequent, it nevertheless would not affect the substantial
    performance of the Agreement.
    4
    Exide does not argue in its Brief that other obligations, set
    out by the Bankruptcy Court, such as the pension obligation, are
    substantially unperformed.
    11
    Second, EnerSys’s obligation to observe the Quality
    Standards Provision is minor because it requires meeting the
    standards of the mark for each battery produced; it does not
    relate to the transfer of the industrial battery business.
    Furthermore, the record reveals that Exide never provided
    EnerSys with any quality standards. (J.A. 297.) The parties, in
    fact, do not ever seem to have discussed any such standards.
    (See id. at 321–22.) It is an untenable proposition to find an
    obligation to go to the very root of the parties’ Agreement when
    the parties themselves act as if they did not know of its
    existence.
    Finally, the other two obligations that Exide argues are
    substantial, the Indemnity Obligation and the Further
    Assurances Obligation, do not outweigh the factors supporting
    substantial performance. In regard to the Indemnity Obligation,
    under the Asset Purchase Agreement, all representations and
    warranties arising from it expired in 1994, on the third
    anniversary of the closing and Exide did not present any
    evidence that any liability assumed by EnerSys was still
    pending. Similarly, under the Further Assurances Obligation,
    EnerSys agreed to cooperate to facilitate the 1991 transaction.
    Exide has identified no remaining required cooperation.
    Exide argues, however, citing Hadden, that the
    substantial-performance doctrine is “irrelevant here” because it
    applies only in cases involving construction or employment
    contracts. See Hadden, 312 N.E.2d at 449. Our review of New
    York law reveals that no New York court has held (or even
    intimated, see id.) that the doctrine should be confined to the
    construction/employment contract areas. Indeed, the Second
    12
    Circuit Court of Appeals, applying New York law, recently
    applied Hadden’s substantial-performance doctrine in a $490
    million asset-purchase contract that formalized the sale of an
    energy trading commodities business to a larger energy business.
    See Merrill Lynch, 
    500 F.3d at 186
    . That contract was neither
    a construction nor employment contract. We also now conclude
    that we will not confine the doctrine to construction and
    employment contract cases.
    III. CONCLUSION
    For the reasons stated above, we have determined that the
    Agreement is not an executory contract because it does not
    contain at least one ongoing material obligation for EnerSys.
    Because the Agreement is not an executory contract, Exide
    cannot reject it. We will vacate the District Court’s order and
    remand this case to it for remand to the Bankruptcy Court for
    further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    13
    In Re: Enersys Delaware, Inc.
    No. 08-1872
    AMBRO, Circuit Judge, concurring
    I join Judge Roth’s opinion in full, and write separately
    to address the Bankruptcy Court’s determination, adopted by the
    District Court, that “[r]ejection of the Agreement leaves EnerSys
    without the right to use the Exide mark.” In re Exide Techs.,
    
    340 B.R. 222
    , 250 (Bankr. Del. 2006). I disagree with that
    determination, as I believe a trademark licensor’s rejection of a
    trademark agreement under 
    11 U.S.C. § 365
     does not necessarily
    deprive the trademark licensee of its rights in the licensed mark.
    In Lubrizol Enterprises, Inc. v. Richmond Metal
    Finishers, Inc., 
    756 F.2d 1043
     (4th Cir. 1985), cert. denied, 
    475 U.S. 1057
     (1985), a licensor, Richmond Metal Finishers, granted
    a nonexclusive technology license to Lubrizol. The license
    stated that Richmond and Lubrizol owed each other certain
    duties. See 
    id. at 1045
    . Shortly thereafter, Richmond filed for
    bankruptcy protection and sought to rescind the license by
    rejecting it under § 365. The Fourth Circuit Court granted this
    request and “deprive[d] Lubrizol of all rights” under the license:
    Under 
    11 U.S.C. § 365
    (g), Lubrizol would be
    entitled to treat rejection as a breach and seek a
    money damages remedy; however, it could not
    seek to retain its contract rights in the technology
    by specific performance even if that remedy
    would ordinarily be available upon breach of this
    type of contract.
    
    Id. at 1048
    . The Court acknowledged that this interpretation of
    rejection as a termination “could have a general chilling effect
    upon the willingness of . . . parties to contract at all with
    businesses in possible financial difficulty.” 
    Id.
     “But,” it said,
    “under bankruptcy law such equitable considerations may not be
    indulged by courts in respect of the type of contract here in
    issue.” 
    Id.
    Reacting to industry concerns that “after Lubrizol any
    patent or trademark licensor could go into Chapter 11 and
    invalidate a license perfectly valid under contract law,”
    Congress enacted 
    11 U.S.C. § 365
    (n).             Jay Lawrence
    Westbrook, A Functional Analysis of Executory Contracts, 
    74 Minn. L. Rev. 227
    , 307 (1989). Through this provision,
    Congress sought “to make clear that the rights of an intellectual
    property licensee to use the licensed property cannot be
    unilaterally cut off as a result of the rejection of the license
    pursuant to Section 365 in the event of the licensor’s
    bankruptcy.” S. Rep. No. 100-505, at 1 (1988), reprinted in
    1988 U.S.C.C.A.N. 3200, 3200.
    Section 365(n) reads in relevant part:
    If the trustee rejects an executory contract under
    which the debtor is a licensor of a right to
    intellectual property, the licensee under such
    contract may elect—
    (A) to treat such contract as terminated by
    such rejection if such rejection by the
    trustee amounts to such a breach as would
    2
    entitle the licensee to treat such contract as
    terminated by virtue of its own terms,
    applicable nonbankruptcy law, or an
    agreement made by the licensee with
    another entity; or
    (B) to retain its rights (including the right
    to enforce any exclusivity provision of
    such contract, but excluding any other
    right under applicable nonbankruptcy law
    to specific performance of such contract)
    under such contract and under any
    agreement supplementary to such contract,
    to such intellectual property . . . , as such
    rights existed immediately before the case
    commenced for—
    (i) the duration of such contract; and
    (ii) any period for which such
    contract may be extended by the
    licensee as of right under applicable
    nonbankruptcy law.
    11 U.S.C. 365(n)(1). Thus, in the event that a bankrupt licensor
    rejects an intellectual property license, § 365(n) allows a
    licensee to retain its licensed rights—along with its
    duties—absent any obligations owed by the debtor-licensor.
    Congress, however, did not include trademarks within the
    relevant definition of “intellectual property.” Instead, it defined
    3
    “intellectual property” only to include a:
    (A) trade secret;
    (B) invention, process, design, or plant protected
    under title 35;
    (C) patent application;
    (D) plant variety;
    (E) work of authorship protected under title 17; or
    (F) mask work protected under chapter 9 of title
    17;
    to the extent protected             by   applicable
    nonbankruptcy law.
    
    11 U.S.C. § 101
    (35A).
    Because Congress did not protect trademark licensees
    under § 365(n), courts have reasoned by negative inference that
    it intended for Lubrizol’s holding to control when a bankrupt
    licensor rejects a trademark license. See, e.g., In re Old Carco
    LLC, 
    406 B.R. 180
    , 211 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2009) (“Trademarks
    are not ‘intellectual property’ under the Bankruptcy Code . . . [,
    so] rejection of licenses by [a] licensor deprives [the] licensee of
    [the] right to use [a] trademark . . . .”); In re HQ Global
    Holdings, Inc., 
    290 B.R. 507
    , 513 (Bankr. D. Del. 2003)
    (“[S]ince the Bankruptcy Code does not include trademarks in
    4
    its protected class of intellectual property, Lubrizol controls and
    the Franchisees’ right to use the trademark stops on rejection.”);
    In re Centura Software Corp., 
    281 B.R. 660
    , 674–75 (Bankr.
    N.D. Cal. 2002) (“Because Section 365(n) plainly excludes
    trademarks, the court holds that [the licensee] is not entitled to
    retain any rights in [the licensed trademarks] under the rejected
    . . . [t]rademark [a]greement.”); In re Chipwich, Inc., 
    54 B.R. 427
    , 431 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 1985) (“[B]y rejecting the
    [trademark] licenses[,] the debtor will deprive [the licensee] of
    its right to use the . . . trademark for its products.”).
    The Bankruptcy Court here adopted this reasoning:
    Congress certainly could have included
    trademarks within the scope of § 365(n)[,] but
    saw fit not to protect them. Therefore, the
    holding in [Lubrizol v.] Richmond Metal
    Finishers, as well as the holdings in the other pre
    and post § 365(n) trademark rejection cases . . . ,
    still retain vitality insofar as they relate to
    trademark licenses. As a result, a trademark
    license is terminated upon rejection and the
    licensee is left only with a claim for damages.
    In re Exide, 
    340 B.R. at
    250 n.40.
    But while the Supreme Court has endorsed reasoning
    from negative inference in the context of § 365, see NLRB v.
    Bildisco & Bildisco, 
    465 U.S. 513
    , 522–23 (1984) (holding that
    § 365(a) applied to collective-bargaining agreements covered by
    the National Labor Relations Act because Congress failed to
    5
    draft an exclusion for them), I believe such reasoning is inapt for
    trademark license rejections.
    When Congress enacted § 365(n), it explicitly explained
    why it excluded trademark licensees from the protection
    afforded to “intellectual property” licensees:
    [T]he bill does not address the rejection of
    executory trademark, trade name or service mark
    licenses by debtor-licensors. While such rejection
    is of concern because of the interpretation of
    section 365 by the Lubrizol court and others, see,
    e.g., In re Chipwich, Inc., 54 Bankr. Rep. 427
    (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 1985), such contracts raise
    issues beyond the scope of this legislation. In
    particular, trademark, trade name and service
    mark licensing relationships depend to a large
    extent on control of the quality of the products or
    services sold by the licensee. Since these matters
    could not be addressed without more extensive
    study, it was determined to postpone
    congressional action in this area and to allow the
    development of equitable treatment of this
    situation by bankruptcy courts.
    S. Rep. No. 100-505, at 5, reprinted in 1988 U.S.C.C.A.N. at
    3204. “Nor does the bill address or intend any inference to be
    drawn concerning the treatment of executory contracts which are
    6
    unrelated to intellectual property.” Id.1
    In light of these direct congressional statements of intent,
    it is “simply more freight than negative inference will bear” to
    read rejection of a trademark license to effect the same result as
    termination of that license. Michael T. Andrew, Executory
    Contracts Revisited, 
    62 U. Colo. L. Rev. 1
    , 11 (1991). “[T]he
    purpose of § 365” is not “to be the functional equivalent of a
    rescission, rendering void the contract and requiring that the
    parties be put back in the positions they occupied before the
    contract was formed.” Thompkins v. Lil’ Joe Records, Inc., 
    476 F.3d 1294
    , 1306 (11th Cir. 2007). It “merely frees the estate
    from the obligation to perform,” and “has absolutely no effect
    upon the contract’s continued existence.” 
    Id.
     (internal citations
    omitted); see also 3 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 365.14 n.3 (Alan
    N. Resnick & Henry J. Sommer eds., 16th ed. 2009) (noting
    some take the view that “rejection by the debtor terminates the
    1
    This statement may stem from the recommendation of the
    National Bankruptcy Conference that “there should be in this
    legislative history a caveat that makes it clear that no negative
    inferences are to be drawn or should be drawn by courts that,
    because Congress has legislated in a particular way a licensing
    agreement, those other agreements that are not within the
    parameters of the legislation are to be dealt with in any
    particular way.” Intellectual Property Contracts in Bankruptcy:
    Hearing on H.R. 4657 Before the Subcomm. on Monopolies and
    Commercial Law of the H. Comm. on the Judiciary, 100th Cong.
    101 (1988) (statement of George Hahn, Esq., Representative,
    National Bankruptcy Conference).
    7
    rights of the other parties to the contract as opposed to being
    simply a determination not to perform, more in the nature of an
    abandonment, which was the intellectual source of the rejection
    concept”); 2 Norton Bankruptcy Law and Practice § 46:57 (3d
    ed. 2008) (“The Bankruptcy Code instructs us that rejection is
    a breach of the executory contract. It is not avoidance,
    rescission, or termination.” (footnotes omitted)).
    By permitting Exide to “extinguish[]” EnerSys’s right in
    the “Exide” mark through § 365 rejection, the Bankruptcy and
    District Courts failed to follow this path. Rather than reasoning
    from negative inference to apply another Circuit’s holding to
    this dispute, the Courts here should have used, I believe, their
    equitable powers to give Exide a fresh start without stripping
    EnerSys of its fairly procured trademark rights. Cf. In re
    Matusalem, 
    158 B.R. 514
    , 521–22 (Bankr. S.D. Fla. 1993)
    (suggesting that rejection of a trademark license would not
    deprive a licensee of its rights in the licensed mark).
    Courts may use § 365 to free a bankrupt trademark
    licensor from burdensome duties that hinder its reorganization.
    They should not—as occurred in this case—use it to let a
    licensor take back trademark rights it bargained away. This
    makes bankruptcy more a sword than a shield, putting debtor-
    licensors in a catbird seat they often do not deserve.
    8