Archer-Daniels-Midland Compan v. Country Visions Cooperative ( 2022 )


Menu:
  •                               In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________________
    No. 21-1400
    ARCHER-DANIELS-MIDLAND COMPANY,
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    v.
    COUNTRY VISIONS COOPERATIVE,
    Respondent-Appellee.
    ____________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Wisconsin.
    No. 17-cv-0313-bhl — Brett H. Ludwig, Judge.
    ____________________
    ARGUED NOVEMBER 29, 2021 — DECIDED APRIL 4, 2022
    ____________________
    Before EASTERBROOK, SCUDDER, and ST. EVE, Circuit Judges.
    EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge. In 2007 Olsen Brothers Enter-
    prises, LLP, granted a right of first refusal (the “Right”) on a
    parcel of land in Wisconsin to the predecessors in interest of
    Country Visions Cooperative. The Right had a term of ten
    years and entitled Country Visions to buy the parcel by
    matching any other person’s offer, should Olsen Brothers de-
    cide to sell. Olsen Brothers soon dissolved, distributing its as-
    sets to the partners, an event that did not trigger the Right but
    2                                                          No. 21-1400
    also did not extinguish it. In 2010 the former partners filed for
    bankruptcy. They did not notify Country Visions, list it as a
    creditor, or aZempt to make it a party, nor did they tell the
    bankruptcy judge about the Right. An agreed plan was pre-
    sented to the bankruptcy court in 2011 and approved after
    perfunctory proceedings. Under the plan, the parcel’s buyer
    was to acquire title free and clear of all other interests. Archer-
    Daniels-Midland (ADM) emerged as the parcel’s new owner.
    No one offered Country Visions an opportunity to match the
    price that ADM paid.
    In 2015 ADM arranged for the re-sale of the parcel, again
    without offering it to Country Visions, which responded with
    a suit in state court, demanding compensation for the viola-
    tion of the Right. ADM then returned to the bankruptcy court,
    asking it to enforce the free-and-clear aspect of the 2011 sale
    by barring Country Visions from seeking any remedy in state
    court. ADM relied on 
    11 U.S.C. §363
    (m), which provides:
    The reversal or modification on appeal of an authorization … of a
    sale or lease of property does not affect the validity of a sale or
    lease … to an entity that purchased or leased such property in
    good faith, whether or not such entity knew of the pendency of
    the appeal, unless such authorization and such sale or lease were
    stayed pending appeal.
    No one appealed from the order authorizing the sale to ADM,
    but this language has been read broadly to protect the inter-
    ests of any good-faith purchaser. See In re Edwards, 
    962 F.2d 641
     (7th Cir. 1992). That is the basis of ADM’s request.
    The bankruptcy court denied ADM’s request, and the dis-
    trict court affirmed. 
    628 B.R. 315
     (E.D. Wis. 2021). Both judges
    concluded that ADM had not acquired the parcel in good
    faith, because it knew of the Right yet failed to alert the
    No. 21-1400                                                   3
    bankruptcy judge. Country Visions filed a copy of the Right
    in the local real estate records; even a cursory title search
    would have turned it up—indeed, did turn it up. ADM had a
    copy of the title report and also knew that Country Visions
    was not a party to the bankruptcy. What’s more, the bank-
    ruptcy judge concluded that ADM knew that, about a week
    before the sale, counsel for Country Visions got wind that
    something was happening and began to inquire how he could
    protect his client’s rights. Bankruptcy Judge Kelley was
    tempted to deem the failure of anyone to alert her to the Right
    a form of fraud on the court, but she did not set aside the sale
    to ADM. The bankruptcy judge mentioned Fed. R. Civ. P.
    60(b)(4) (applied through Fed. R. Bankr. P. 9024) but did not
    alter or vacate the judgment approving the sale to ADM. In-
    stead she just denied ADM’s proposal to stop the state litiga-
    tion, which is ongoing. See Country Visions Cooperative v.
    Archer-Daniels-Midland Co., 
    2021 WI 35
     (Apr. 21, 2021) (re-
    manding for further proceedings).
    In the district court, and again in this court, the parties
    have devoted a lot of time and space to the question whether
    Country Visions knew enough, before the 2011 sale, to supply
    it with the notice and opportunity for a hearing required by
    the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. We do not
    address that subject, however, because statutory questions
    precede constitutional ones. Gulf Oil Co. v. Bernard, 
    442 U.S. 89
    , 99 (1981). This is a statutory case. If ADM did not buy the
    parcel in “good faith” in 2011, then it loses no maZer what the
    Constitution has to say about the sort of notice Country Vi-
    sions should have received.
    It seems clear that Paul and David Olsen, the debtors in
    bankruptcy, proceeded in bad faith. They knew of the Right,
    4                                                   No. 21-1400
    yet they did not notify Country Visions about the bankruptcy.
    They did not cause Country Visions to be served with process,
    although it had an entitlement under both statute and rule to
    formal notice and party status. 
    11 U.S.C. §363
    (b)(1), (d), (f);
    Fed. R. Bankr. P. 2002(f). Indeed, it was entitled to at least 21
    days’ notice of any proposed sale, see Fed. R. Bankr. P.
    2000(a)(2), yet the liZle birdie that eventually tipped off Coun-
    try Visions provided less notice than that. What’s more, the
    Olsens did not alert the bankruptcy judge to Country Visions’
    interest in the parcel. If anyone should be made to compen-
    sate Country Visions, it is the Olsens.
    Yet the current dispute pits ADM against Country Visions,
    not ADM (or Country Visions) against the Olsens. The ques-
    tion is whether ADM bought the parcel in good faith, not
    whether the Olsens sold it in bad faith. And on that score it is
    impossible to disagree with the bankruptcy and district
    judges that someone who has both actual and constructive
    knowledge of a competing interest, yet permits the sale to
    proceed without seeking the judge’s assurance that the com-
    peting interest-holder may be excluded from the proceedings,
    is not acting in good faith. Constructive knowledge was es-
    tablished by the Right’s presence in the real estate records.
    Actual knowledge was established by ADM’s possession of a
    title search report showing the Right, plus the fact that ADM
    learned of Country Visions’ inquiries. At oral argument coun-
    sel for ADM asserted that his client lacked actual knowledge
    of the Right, but ADM’s brief does not contend that any of the
    findings by the bankruptcy or district judges is clearly errone-
    ous. This leaves ADM in an untenable appellate posture.
    If Country Visions had been made a party, and the bank-
    ruptcy judge had decided that the Right could be ignored
    No. 21-1400                                                   5
    (which is unlikely), then Country Visions would have needed
    to appeal in order to protect its interests. See United Student
    Aid Funds, Inc. v. Espinosa, 
    559 U.S. 260
     (2010). But it was not
    a party, and a non-party cannot be expected to appeal. Deci-
    sions such as In re Pence, 
    905 F.2d 1107
     (7th Cir. 1990), on
    which ADM relies, deal with the rights and obligations of lit-
    igants in bankruptcy, but Country Visions never became one.
    A bankruptcy judge has ample power to resolve compet-
    ing claims to debtors’ assets, even to extinguish them, but
    only if the claimants receive proper notice as litigants. The
    bankruptcy court, which did not learn of the Right in 2011,
    did not purport to extinguish it without compensation to
    Country Visions.
    Good-faith purchasers enjoy strong protection under
    §363(m). But ADM is not a good-faith purchaser. It must de-
    fend the state litigation.
    AFFIRMED