Gecc v. Future Media ( 2008 )


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  •                  FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    GENERAL ELECTRIC CAPITAL                  No. 07-55694
    CORPORATION,                                 D.C. No.
    Petitioner-Appellant,       BK-SV-06-10170-
    v.                              GM
    FUTURE MEDIA PRODUCTIONS INC.,              ORDER
    Respondent-Appellee.          AMENDING
    OPINION AND
    AMENDED
          OPINION
    Appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court
    for the Central District of California
    Geraldine Mund, Bankruptcy Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted
    June 9, 2008—Pasadena, California
    Filed July 3, 2008
    Amended August 7, 2008
    Before: Stephen S. Trott, Sidney R. Thomas, and
    Raymond C. Fisher, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge Trott
    9979
    GENERAL ELECTRIC CAPITAL v. FUTURE MEDIA    9981
    COUNSEL
    Michael K. Maly, Hannah L. Blumenstiel, Winston & Strawn
    LLP, San Francisco, California, for the appellant.
    Harry D. Hochman, Pachulski Stang Ziehl & Jones LLP, Los
    Angeles, California, for the appellee.
    ORDER
    The Opinion filed on July 3, 2008, is hereby amended as
    follows: on slip Opinion page 8112, delete footnote #2.
    9982      GENERAL ELECTRIC CAPITAL v. FUTURE MEDIA
    OPINION
    TROTT, Circuit Judge:
    General Electric Capital Corporation (“GECC”), an overse-
    cured creditor, appeals the bankruptcy court’s order denying
    it default interest and attorneys’ fees. GECC argues that the
    bankruptcy court improperly applied a per se rule against
    default interest to the facts of this case. We have jurisdiction
    pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(d)(2)(A), and we reverse and
    remand to the bankruptcy court with instructions to apply the
    rule adopted by the majority of federal courts and to then
    determine if an award of attorneys’ fees is proper.
    BACKGROUND
    GECC and Future Media Productions, Inc. (“Debtor”) were
    parties to a Loan and Security Agreement (“loan agreement”),
    dated August 13, 2004. The loan agreement included a $10.5
    million, 42-month term loan, as well as a $5 million revolving
    line of credit. Interest under the loan agreement accrued prior
    to default (“pre-default rate”) at the Index Rate plus 1.5% per
    annum, with additional interest of 2% per annum after default
    (“default rate”). The loan agreement, governed by New York
    law, obligated Debtor to pay attorneys’ fees and costs
    incurred by GECC in connection with any dispute relating to
    the loan agreement. All advances under the loan agreement
    were secured by a perfected, first priority security interest in
    substantially all of Debtor’s assets.
    On March 31, 2005, an event of default occurred, and the
    loans began to bear interest at the default rate. Additional
    events of default occurred thereafter. These difficulties, and
    others, led Debtor to conclude that an orderly liquidation of
    its assets would best serve its interests and those of its credi-
    tors. On February 14, 2006, Debtor filed a petition for relief
    under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. After filing its
    bankruptcy petition, Debtor had a need for cash to wind down
    GENERAL ELECTRIC CAPITAL v. FUTURE MEDIA         9983
    its operations and to prepare for the sale of its assets. GECC
    agreed to Debtor’s use of GECC’s “cash collateral” subject to
    the terms of a stipulation (“the stipulation”) executed by
    GECC and Debtor on February 15, 2006. On February 16,
    2006, Debtor filed a motion in the bankruptcy court request-
    ing approval of the stipulation.
    In the stipulation, Debtor represented that it had executed
    an agency agreement to sell its assets in an auction, which
    was guaranteed to produce at least $7,636,500 in net pro-
    ceeds. Debtor conceded that it owed GECC about $5.4 mil-
    lion dollars including principal and interest under the loan
    agreement. Debtor conceded also that this obligation was pay-
    able to GECC and that the obligation was not subject to, nor
    would Debtor assert, any defense of any kind to the obliga-
    tion. The stipulation reserved the right of any other interested
    party to object to GECC’s claim. Also, the stipulation permit-
    ted Debtor to continue to maintain a “lockbox” account into
    which it deposited its cash, including the proceeds of its asset
    sales, and which GECC periodically “swept” for the purposes
    of paying down Debtor’s obligation.
    On February 21, 2006, the bankruptcy court provisionally
    approved the stipulation and set a final hearing for March 3,
    2006. On March 1, the Official Committee of Unsecured
    Creditors (“the Committee”) was formed, and on March 2, the
    Committee objected to the stipulation. At the March 3 hear-
    ing, and a subsequent March 30 hearing, the bankruptcy court
    continued the final hearing on the stipulation. During that
    time, other issues arose between Debtor, the Committee, and
    another creditor, preventing GECC and the Committee from
    resolving their differences as to the stipulation.
    On or about April 10, 2006, GECC and Debtor entered into
    an amended stipulation (“the amended stipulation”). In
    response, the Committee withdrew its original objection to the
    payment of asset sale proceeds to GECC, subject to its request
    for a ruling that GECC was not entitled to payment of interest
    9984      GENERAL ELECTRIC CAPITAL v. FUTURE MEDIA
    at the default rate, or alternatively that GECC’s right to inter-
    est at the default rate as part of its allowed claim would be
    determined by the court as if GECC had been paid in full
    through a confirmed plan of reorganization.
    On April 25, 2006, the bankruptcy court held a hearing on
    approval of the amended stipulation. At that hearing, GECC’s
    counsel proposed an interim solution to stop the accrual of
    interest on GECC’s unpaid claim. The solution proposed that
    GECC would be paid in full, including interest at the default
    rate as specified in the loan agreement, and any dispute about
    default interest would be resolved at a later time. The parties
    agreed, and the court approved the proposal—allowing the
    default rate issue to be litigated independently. The Final
    Cash Collateral Order was entered on May 4, 2006, and
    GECC was paid $5,728,584.20, representing the amount
    owed on its claims for unpaid principal and loan fees, interest
    at the contract rate including default interest since the first
    event of default occurred, plus all reimbursable expenses of
    GECC, consisting of all remaining auditor fees and legal fees
    through April 30, 2006.
    On August 28, 2006, the Committee filed a motion in the
    bankruptcy court requesting a determination of the interest
    rate applicable to GECC’s secured claim. The Committee
    asserted that the proper interest rate to be applied to GECC’s
    oversecured claim was the pre-default rate rather than the
    default rate, and that GECC should return the amount it had
    collected over the pre-default rate (“the default rate differen-
    tial”) in the amount of $164,995. GECC opposed this motion
    and sought attorneys’ fees, costs, and expenses in connection
    with this aspect of the controversy.
    On November 15, 2006, the bankruptcy court entered an
    order concluding that GECC was entitled to interest at the
    pre-default rate and was not entitled to attorneys’ fees or
    costs. The order required GECC to return the default rate dif-
    ferential to Debtor pursuant to our holding in In re Entz-White
    GENERAL ELECTRIC CAPITAL v. FUTURE MEDIA           9985
    Lumber and Supply, Inc., 
    850 F.2d 1338
    (9th Cir. 1988).
    Additionally, the court denied GECC’s request for attorneys’
    fees and costs on the ground that GECC was not the prevail-
    ing party. GECC appeals from the bankruptcy court’s order.
    DISCUSSION
    A.   Standard of Review.
    We review de novo a bankruptcy court’s conclusions of
    law. In re Salazar, 
    430 F.3d 992
    , 994 (9th Cir. 2005).
    B.   Analysis.
    [1] Bankruptcy Code § 506(b) provides that the claim of an
    oversecured creditor “shall be allowed . . . interest . . . and any
    reasonable fees, costs, or charges provided for under the
    agreement or State statute under which such claim arose.” 11
    U.S.C. § 506(b). The parties do not dispute that GECC is an
    oversecured creditor entitled to interest. However, the parties
    do dispute the type of interest due to GECC. The Committee
    argues that the bankruptcy court correctly determined that
    GECC is entitled to collect interest only at the loan agree-
    ment’s pre-default rate, whereas GECC argues that it is enti-
    tled to a presumption in favor of the loan agreement’s default
    rate (an additional 2% interest), subject only to reduction
    based upon any equities involved.
    That disagreement presents three issues for our consider-
    ation: 1) whether Entz-White applies to the case at bar; 2) if
    Entz-White does not apply, how the bankruptcy court should
    evaluate the viability of the contractual default interest rate on
    remand; and 3) whether GECC is entitled to attorneys’ fees
    and costs under § 506(b).
    9986        GENERAL ELECTRIC CAPITAL v. FUTURE MEDIA
    1.   The Applicability of Entz-White.
    [2] In Entz-White, we announced the rule that an overse-
    cured creditor was not entitled to interest at the default rate
    where its claim was paid in full pursuant to the terms of a
    Chapter 11 plan. 
    Entz-White, 850 F.2d at 1342
    .1 In the case
    at bar, the bankruptcy court extended Entz-White to a claim
    that was paid in full as a result of a series of asset sales out-
    side of a Chapter 11 plan. Because a Chapter 11 plan impli-
    cates provisions of the Bankruptcy Code that an asset sale
    outside of a plan does not, we respectfully conclude that the
    bankruptcy court’s extension of Entz-White was error.
    [3] Our analysis starts from a general premise recently
    articulated by the Supreme Court: “[c]reditors’ entitlements in
    bankruptcy arise in the first instance from the underlying sub-
    stantive law creating the debtor’s obligation, subject to any
    qualifying or contrary provisions of the Bankruptcy Code.”
    Travelers Cas. & Sur. Co. of Am. v. Pac. Gas & Elec. Co.,
    
    127 S. Ct. 1199
    , 1204-05 (2007). We read Travelers to mean
    the default rate should be enforced, subject only to the sub-
    stantive law governing the loan agreement, unless a provision
    of the Bankruptcy Code provides otherwise.
    [4] In Entz-White we identified such a “qualifying or con-
    trary provision” of the Bankruptcy Code. There, the debtor’s
    proposed treatment of the oversecured creditor’s claim was
    presented in a Chapter 11 plan. A creditor’s claim is consid-
    ered “impaired” for purposes of voting on a Chapter 11 plan
    unless the plan leaves the creditor’s legal, equitable, and con-
    tractual rights unaltered, or the debtor “cures” any default that
    occurred prior to or during the bankruptcy case. See 11 U.S.C.
    § 1124(1)-(2). We have explained that the provision allowing
    “cures” under § 1124(2)(A) “authorizes a plan to nullify all
    1
    Soon after, we again applied the same rule in a case involving a Chap-
    ter 11 plan with substantially similar facts. See In re Southeast Co., 
    868 F.2d 335
    , 338 (9th Cir. 1989).
    GENERAL ELECTRIC CAPITAL v. FUTURE MEDIA          9987
    consequences of default, including avoidance of default pen-
    alties such as higher interest.” Southeast 
    Co., 868 F.2d at 338
    (quoting 
    Entz-White, 850 F.2d at 1342
    ). Because the Code
    allows the debtor to “cure” defaults under a Chapter 11 plan,
    we permitted the debtor to nullify the interest owed at the
    default rate. See 
    id. In the
    case before us today, however,
    there was never any question of whether the debtor needed to
    cure a default to render it unimpaired for voting on a Chapter
    11 plan. Instead, GECC’s oversecured claim was paid through
    a sale of assets governed by § 363, outside the context of a
    Chapter 11 plan. As a result, the facts of Entz-White are dis-
    tinguishable, and thus our per se rule from that case is inappli-
    cable.
    The Committee asks us to consider two cases in which
    other courts have applied Entz-White’s rule against default
    interest in contexts outside of a Chapter 11 plan, In re 433
    South Beverly Drive, 
    117 B.R. 563
    (Bankr. C.D. Cal. 1990),
    and In re Casa Blanca Project Lenders, L.P., 
    196 B.R. 140
    (B.A.P. 9th Cir. 1996). We have carefully reviewed these
    cases, and find their analysis unpersuasive.
    The bankruptcy court in South Beverly, and the Bankruptcy
    Appellate Panel (“BAP”) in Casa Blanca, used our holding in
    Entz-White as the basis for their analysis. Both courts noted
    that “cure” as used in § 1124(2)(A) means a return to pre-
    default status, which nullifies all consequences of default
    including an obligation to pay default interest. South 
    Beverly, 117 B.R. at 566
    ; Casa 
    Blanca, 196 B.R. at 143
    . Each court
    noted also that the concept of a “cure” is not exclusive to
    Chapter 11 plans; for example, trustees are permitted to cure
    defaults in executory contracts under 11 U.S.C. § 365. South
    
    Beverly, 117 B.R. at 566
    -67; Casa 
    Blanca, 196 B.R. at 144
    .
    The next step of both courts’ analyses, however, departed
    from and improperly extended our holding in Entz-White.
    Each court transposed the concept of “cure” from § 1124 and
    § 365 into 11 U.S.C. § 363. South 
    Beverly, 117 B.R. at 566
    ;
    Casa 
    Blanca, 196 B.R. at 144
    -45 (citing South Beverly, 117
    9988       GENERAL ELECTRIC CAPITAL v. FUTURE MEDIA
    B.R. at 566-67). The problem with that transposition is that
    the text of § 363 does not mention “cure” and the procedures
    set out in that section do not implicate the concept of “cure.”
    See 11 U.S.C. § 363. In short, there is no “cure” of events of
    default, de facto or otherwise, in the context of an asset sale.
    Because the bankruptcy court in South Beverly and the BAP
    in Casa Blanca improperly read “cure” into § 363, we do not
    find those decisions compelling.
    [5] Because the Bankruptcy Code does not provide a “qual-
    ifying or contrary provision” to the underlying substantive
    law here, the bankruptcy court’s extension of Entz-White to
    the loan agreement’s default rate was error. Consistent with
    the Supreme Court’s holding in Travelers, we hold that the
    parties’ arms length bargain, governed by New York law,
    controls.
    2.   The Bankruptcy Court, on Remand, Should
    Evaluate the Viability of the Default Rate Under the
    Rule Adopted by the Majority of Federal Courts.
    [6] Because we have decided that Entz-White does not con-
    trol the analysis in this case, we remand to allow the bank-
    ruptcy court to decide whether the default rate should apply
    under the rule adopted by the majority of federal courts. That
    rule simply stated is: The bankruptcy court should apply a
    presumption of allowability for the contracted for default rate,
    “provided that the rate is not unenforceable under applicable
    nonbankruptcy       law.”      4    Collier     on     Bankruptcy,
    ¶ 506.04[2][b][ii] (15th Ed. 1996) (“Most courts have
    allowed, or at least recognized a presumption of allowability
    for, default rates of interest, provided that the rate is not unen-
    forceable under applicable nonbankruptcy law.”).
    This rule has been applied in many bankruptcy courts and
    in two of our sister circuits. See, e.g., In re Laymon, 
    958 F.2d 72
    , 75 (5th Cir. 1992) (holding “that when an oversecured
    creditor’s claim arises from a contract, the contract provides
    GENERAL ELECTRIC CAPITAL v. FUTURE MEDIA              9989
    the rate of post-petition interest,” subject to examination of
    “the equities involved in [the] bankruptcy proceeding”), cert.
    den., 
    506 U.S. 917
    (1992); In re Terry Ltd. P’ship, 
    27 F.3d 241
    , 243 (7th Cir. 1994) (noting the general rule that there is
    a “presumption in favor of the contract rate subject to rebuttal
    based on equitable considerations”).2
    GECC argues that if we decide to apply the new rule we
    need not remand because there is no evidence that the default
    rate differential of 2% is unreasonable. We reject the creation
    of a bright line rule that would accept 2% as an allowable
    default rate differential. We reject also GECC’s assertion that
    the Committee waived any argument as to the enforceability
    of the default rate under New York law. Because the Commit-
    tee initially prevailed in convincing the bankruptcy court to
    reject the default rate in its entirety, there was no need for fur-
    ther argument. As a result, we remand the case for proper
    consideration as prescribed under the majority rule.
    3.   The Issue of Attorneys’ Fees Should be Considered
    on Remand in Light of Remand on the Merits.
    [7] The bankruptcy court concluded that GECC was not
    entitled to attorneys’ fees, costs, and expenses incurred in the
    litigation to determine the applicability of the default rate
    because GECC did not prevail. Because we remand for a
    proper determination of the applicable interest rate, and
    because GECC may prevail on the merits, we remand also the
    issue of attorneys’ fees, costs, and expenses allowable under
    506(b).
    CONCLUSION
    Because the bankruptcy court improperly applied our rule
    2
    The majority rule is consistent with the Supreme Court’s decision in
    Travelers as well as with the plain language of 11 U.S.C. § 1123(d) as
    promulgated in the 1994 amendments to the Bankruptcy Code.
    9990      GENERAL ELECTRIC CAPITAL v. FUTURE MEDIA
    from Entz-White to the facts of this case, we reverse and
    remand with instructions to the bankruptcy court to apply the
    rule adopted by the majority of federal courts and to then
    determine if an award of attorneys’ fees is proper.
    REVERSED and REMANDED.