In re: Energy Future Holdings Corp., et al
Filing
65
MEMORANDUM OPINION. Signed by Judge Richard G. Andrews on 1/24/2019. (nms)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF DELAWARE
INRE:
ENERGY FUTURE HOLDING CORP., et al. ,
Debtors.
SHIRLEY FENICLE, INDIVIDUALLY, AND
AS SUCCESSOR-IN-INTEREST TO THE
ESTATE OF GEORGE FENICLE, DAVID
WILLIAM FAHY, JOHN H. JONES, DAVID
REINMANN, HAROLD BISSELL, KURT
CARLSON, ROBERT ALBINI,
INDIVIDUALLY, AND AS SUCCESSOR-ININTEREST TO THE ESTATE OF GINO
ALBINI, AND DENIS BERGSCHNEIDER,
Civil Action No . 18-381-RGA
Chapter 11
Bankruptcy Case No . 14-10979
Appellants;
V.
DEBTORS ENERGY FUTURE HOLDINGS
CORP., et al. , AND THE EFH PLAN
ADMINISTRATOR BOARD,
Appellees.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Daniel K. Hogan, HOGAN MCDANIEL, Wilmington, DE, attorney for Appellants.
Leslie M. Kelleher (argued) and Jeanna M. Koski, CAPLIN & DRYSDALE, CHARTERED,
Washington, DC, attorneys for Appellants Shirley Fenicle, individually and as successor-ininterest to the Estate of George Fenicle, and David William Fahy.
Steven Kazan, KAZAN MCCLAIN SATTERLEY & GREENWOOD, Oakland, CA, attorney
for Appellants Shirley Fenicle, individually and as successor-in-interest to the Estate of George
Fenicle, and Denis Bergschneider.
Jeffrey M. Schlerf, FOX ROTHSCHILD LLP, Wilmington, DE; Thomas E. Lauria, Matthew C.
Brown, and Joseph A. Pack, WHITE & CASE LLP, Miami, FL; J. Christopher Shore (argued),
WHITE & CASE LLP, New York, NY, attorneys for Appellee Reorganized EFH/EFIH Debtors.
Jason M. Madron, RICHARDS , LAYTON & FINGER, P.A. , Wilmington, DE; Mark McKane
(argued), KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP, San Francisco, CA; James H.M. Sprayregen, Marc
Kieselstein, Chad J. Husnick, KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP, Chicago, IL; Apama Yenamandra,
KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP, New York, NY, attorneys for Appellee EFH Plan Administrator
Board.
January
Ji, 2019
~J~vpl ao/\dut{,;ANDREws, U.S./ !STRICT JUDGE :
Currently pending before the Court is an appeal from the Bankruptcy Court's Order
Confirming the First Amended Joint Plan of Reorganization of Energy Future Holdings Corp.
("the Confirmation Order"). (D.I. 1-1). Also pending is Appellees' Motion to Dismiss the
Appeal. (D.I. 40). The parties have fully briefed the issues. (D.I. 30, 40, 54, 59). The Court
held oral argument on December 13, 2018 . (D.I. 64). For the following reasons, the Court
dismisses the appeal as statutorily moot.
I.
BACKGROUND
Energy Future Holdings Corp. ("EFH") and several subsidiaries (together, the "Debtors")
filed Chapter 11 petitions on April 29, 2014. (D.I. 30 at 13). A subsidiary of EFH, Debtor
Energy Future Intermediate Holding Company LLC, held approximately 80% ownership interest
in Oncor Electric Delivery Company LLC ("Oncor"). (Id.). Oncor is subject to the regulatory
authority of the Public Utility Commission of Texas ("PUCT"). (Id.) Previous plans were
approved by the Bankruptcy Court but did not become effective because PUCT did not approve
the necessary transactions. (Id.) The Confirmed Plan incorporates a merger transaction between
Sempra Energy (" Sempra") and Debtor EFH. (Id.). PUCT approved the transaction with
Sempra, and the Confirmed Plan became effective March 9, 2018. (Id.; D.I. 40 at 33).
Debtors EECI, Inc., EEC Holdings, Inc., LSGT Gas Co. LLC, and LSGT SACROC, Inc.
(the "Asbestos Debtors") are wholly-owned subsidiaries of EFH. (D.I. 30 at 14). The Asbestos
Debtors were in the business of building, maintaining, and servicing power plants. (Id.) Workers
in those power plants were exposed to asbestos. (Id.) The last of the Asbestos Debtors' operating
assets were sold in 2004 and the proceeds of those sales were up-streamed to EFH as interest
bearing loans. (Id.) .
1
During the bankruptcy proceedings, the Debtors moved the Bankruptcy Court to set a bar
date for all prepetition claims (the "Bar Date Motion"). (Id. at 15). The United States Trustee
appointed an official creditors' committee comprising five unsecured creditors of EFH, EFIH,
EFIH Finance, Inc., and EECI (the "E-Side Committee"). (D.I. 30 at 16; D.I. 40 at 19). After
hearing objections on the Bar Date Motion, the Bankruptcy Court ordered that there would be a
bar date for all prepetition claims, including those of Unmanifested Asbestos Claimants. 1 (D.I.
30 at 16; D.I. 40 at 20). This order was not appealed by any party. (D.I. 40 at 21). As the
bankruptcy proceedings continued, Appellants 2 made repeated efforts to ensure that the
Unmanifested Asbestos Claims were not discharged. (D.I. 40 at 24-30).
The Confirmation Order was entered on February 27, 2018 . (B.D.I. 12763).3 The
Confirmation Order approved the reorganization plan ("the Plan"), including the Merger
Agreement, a central piece of the restructuring transactions. 4 The Plan and Merger Agreement,
as approved, provided for the restructuring of the EFH and Asbestos Debtors, including the sale
of the EFH Debtors to Sempra. Appellants did not seek a stay of either the Order authorizing the
merger agreement or the Confirmation Order. Appellants filed a timely notice of appeal on
March 9, 2018. (D.I. 1). On appeal, Appellants assert, among other things, that the Bankruptcy
1
"Unmanifested Asbestos Claimants" refers to persons who had not suffered cognizable injuries caused by
prepetition exposure to the Debtors' asbestos-containing products before the bar date set in these cases but who have
since suffered or will suffer such injuries. "Unmanjfested Asbestos Claims" refers to the claims of such claimants.
These definitions are adopted from Appellants ' brief. (D.I. 30 at 9 n.l).
2
The majority of Appellants are Unmanifested Asbestos Claimants who did not file timely proofs of claim.
Appellants Fenicle and Fahy are creditors in the bankruptcy proceeding who filed timely proofs of claim and served
as members of the E-Side Committee.
3
The docket of the Chapter 11 case, captioned in re Energy Future Holding Corp., Case No. 14-10979-CSS (Bankr.
D. Del.) is cited herein as "B.D.I. - ."
4
The Merger Agreement states that "an order ... confirming plan ofreorganization and authorizing all of the
transactions and agreements contemplated by" the Merger Agreement was necessary for the Merger Agreement to
take effect. (D.I. 45 at 353 ; B.D.I. 11873-1 at 85).
2
Court erred in discharging the claims of Unmanifested Asbestos Claimants who failed to timely
file proofs of claim. (D .I. 3 0 at 21).
Appellees 5 move to dismiss this appeal on the following grounds: statutory mootness,
equitable mootness, untimeliness, and standing. (D.I. 40 at 22). Appellees also argue that the
Bankruptcy Court did not violate Due Process by discharging the claims of the Unmanifested
Asbestos Creditors who failed to timely file proofs of claim. (Id. at 56). The constitutional issue
is an interesting one. Courts should, however, avoid deciding constitutional issues unnecessarily,
Bowen v. United States, 422 U.S. 916, 920 (1975), and therefore I express no opinion about it.
II.
JURISDICTION
Appeals from the Bankruptcy Court to this Court are governed by 28 U.S.C. § 158.
District Courts have mandatory jurisdiction to hear appeals " from final judgments, orders, and
decrees." 28 U.S .C. § 158(a)(l). The Confirmation Order is a final order.
Ill.
LEGAL ST AND ARD
The Bankruptcy Code provides,
The reversal or modification on appeal of an authorization under [11 U .S.C.
§ 363(b) or ( c)] of a sale or lease of property does not affect the validity of a sale
or lease under such authorization 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.
11 U.S .C. § 363(m). Only a good faith purchaser can claim the protections of§ 363(m).
Therefore, the Court is "first required to ask whether the purchaser ... ' purchased ... [the]
property in good faith."' In re Pursuit Capital Management, LLC, 874 F.3d 124, 135 (3d Cir.
2017) (quoting 11 U.S.C. § 363(m)). If its protections are warranted, § 363(m) "moots a
5
Appellees are the Debtors and the EFH Plan Administrator Board.
3
challenge to a sale if two conditions are satisfied: ' (1 ) the underlying sale or lease was not stayed
pending the appeal, and (2) the court, if reversing or modifying the authorization to sell or lease,
would be affecting the validity of such a sale or lease. "' Pursuit, 87 4 F .3d at 13 5 (quoting Krebs
Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc. v. Valley Motors, Inc., 141 F.3d 490, 499 (3d Cir. 1998)). If an order
authorizing a sale is not stayed during the pendency of an appeal, the appeal is moot where the
"requested remedy, if entered, would affect the validity of the sale." Pursuit, 874 F.3d at 127;
see also In re ICL Holding Co., 802 F.3d 547, 554 (3d Cir. 2015) ("the provision stamps out only
those challenges that would claw back the sale"). "The purpose of§ 363(m) is to promote the
finality of sales." Pursuit, 874 F.3d at 133. "Without it, the risk oflitigation would chill
prospective bidders or push them to 'demand a steep discount. "' ICL Holding, 802 F.3d at 554
(quoting In re River West Plaza-Chicago, LLC, 664 F.3d 668, 671 (7th Cir. 2011)).
"A challenge to a ' central element' of a sale inevitably challenges the validity of the
sale." Pursuit, 874 F.3d at 139 (citing Pittsburgh Food & Beverage, Inc. v. Ranallo, 112 F.3d
645, 649 (3d Cir. 1997)). "The validity prong of§ 363(m) provides a narrow exception that may
lie for challenges to the Sale Order that are so divorced from the overall transaction that the
challenged provision would have affected none of the considerations on which the purchaser
relied." Pursuit, 874 F.3d at 139 (cleaned up).
IV.
DISCUSSION
A. The Confirmation Order is a "Sale Order" under§ 363(m)
Appellees assert that the Confirmation Order was an "order authorizing the sale" under
§ 363(m) because "the Debtors could not have consummated the sale absent the Bankruptcy
Court' s authorization in the Confirmation Order." (D.I. 59 at 11). Appellants argue that the
Confirmation Order does not trigger the protections of§ 363(m) because 1) the sale order was
4
the order approving the merger and 2) § 363(m) only addresses direct appeals, not collateral
attacks on sales orders. (D.I. 54 at 30).
I agree with Appellees. The Confirmation Order is an "order authorizing the sale" under
§ 363(m). Where "the underlying asset sale [is] conducted under§ 363(b) of the Bankruptcy
Code ... it implicates 11 U.S .C. § 363(m)." !CL Holding, 802 F.3d at 553. Appellants contend
that the Confirmation Order cannot be an "order authorizing the sale" because the Bankruptcy
Court previously entered a separate order approving the Merger Agreement. (B.D.I. 11873).
That Order authorized the "Debtors' entry into the Merger Agreement" and approved the Merger
Agreement in "its entirety." (Id. at 3). However, the Merger Agreement specifically provided
that the closing of the Merger Agreement was subject to the following condition: "The
Bankruptcy Court shall have entered . . . (i) the order . . . approving [the Merger] Agreement . . .
and (ii) an order ... confirming the Plan of Reorganization .. . and authorizing all of the
transactions and agreements contemplated by [the Merger] Agreement." (B.D.I. 11873-1 at 85
(emphasis added)). As a result, both the Merger Approval Order and the Confirmation Order
were necessary for full authorization of the Merger Agreement. Additionally, the Plan itself
contemplated that:
The EFH Confirmation Order shall and shall be deemed to, pursuant to both
Section 1123 and Section 363 of the Bankruptcy Code, authorize, among other
things, all actions as may be necessary or appropriate to effect any transaction
described in, approved by, contemplated by, or necessary to effectuate the plan,
including the Restructuring Transactions.
(B.D.I. 12763-1 at 58). Thus, the Confirmation Order is an order authorizing a sale (the merger
agreement) and § 363(m) applies.
5
B. Sempra is a Good Faith Purchaser
The Bankruptcy Court included a good faith finding in the Confirmation Order. (B.D.I.
12763 at 64). It stated, "Sempra Energy and its affiliates are good faith purchasers within the
meaning of section 363(m)" as " [t]he purchase price to be provided by Sempra ... was not
controlled by any agreement between Sempra ... and any potential bidders ... and was not
reduced or suppressed in any manner by any arrangement involving Sempra ... and any
creditor." (Id.). Appellants have not challenged this finding of good faith under§ 363(m).6
Therefore, I will adopt the Bankruptcy Court' s finding that Sempra is a good faith purchaser. 7
C. A Stay of the Confirmation Order was not Requested or Issued
It is undisputed that Appellants did not request a stay of the Confirmation Order and no
stay has been issued. (D.1. 54 at 29). Appellants argue that they "could not pay a bond sufficient
to stay the $9.45 billion transaction." (Id. at 29 n.19). But the requirement of seeking a stay and
securing a stay is not excused simply because Appellants purportedly could not pay a bond
sufficient to stay the Confirmation Order. Courts may invoke their equitable powers to grant a
stay without requiring a bond in extraordinary circumstances. Bank of Nova Scotia v.
Pemberton, 964 F. Supp. 189, 191-92 (D.V.I. 1997) (summarizing case law). Inability to pay
does not excuse a party from seeking the required stay under§ 363(m). Therefore, the appeal
will be moot unless the requested relief will not affect the validity of the sale.
6
Appellants did suggest at oral argument that the § 363(m) statement in the Confirmation Order is boilerplate and
therefore insufficient to trigger the § 363(m) protections. (D.l. 64 at 24 : 1-4, 25 :20-25). I disagree. Additionally,
there was no objection or challenge to the Bankruptcy Court 's good faith finding below. Thus, this issue was not
preserved for appeal.
7
Whether Sempra was a good faith purchaser should not be confused with Appellants ' challenge to the
determination that the Debtors entered the Plan in good faith . (D.I. 30 at 46-48).
6
D. The Requested Relief Will Affect the Validity of the Sale
Under Third Circuit law, an appeal is statutorily moot where the Appellants ' requested
relief will affect the validity of the sale if granted. "A challenge to a ' central element' of a sale
inevitably challenges the validity of the sale." Pursuit, 874 F.3d at 139 (citing Pittsburgh Food,
112 F.3d at 649). "The validity prong of§ 363(m) provides a narrow exception that may lie for
challenges to the Sale Order that are so divorced from the overall transaction that the challenged
provision would have affected none of the considerations on which the purchaser relied."
Pursuit, 874 F.3d at 139 (cleaned up). Appellants ' requested relief is a holding that,
"Unmanifested Asbestos Claims are not discharged by the Confirmation Order, and that the
holders of such claims retain their causes of action against the Reorganized Debtors." (D.I. 30 at
49). Thus, the Court must ask whether the discharge of the untimely filed Unmanifested
Asbestos Claims is a "central element" of the sale such that a challenge to the discharge is a
challenge to the validity of the sale.
Appellants argue that the discharge of the Unmanifested Asbestos Claims is "a collateral
issue[] not implicating a central or integral element of a sale." Pursuit, 874 F.3d at 139. As
Appellants frame the issue, "A ruling that the Unmanifested Asbestos Claimants are not
discharged by the plan would not impact the validity of the sale of EFH' s stock; it would not
' claw back' the sale, or render the deal invalid." (D.I. 54 at 32). Appellees argue that the
preservation of the Asbestos Bar Date "was a consideration on which Sempra relied in entering
into and consummating the" Merger Agreement. (D.I. 59 at 13). Further, they argue the
Asbestos Bar Date was integral to the sale and its removal would alter the parties' bargained-for
exchange. (D.I. 59 at 14).
7
The requested relief requires either reversal of the Confirmation Order in its entirety or
"blue-penciling" its contents. A reversal of the confirmation order would have the effect of
"clawing back" the Merger Agreement because its closing is dependent on the Confirmation
Order being entered. (B.D.I. 11873-1 at 85). I determine that "blue-penciling" the Confirmation
Order would also affect the validity of the Merger Agreement.
The Confirmation Order limits the liability of Sempra, the purchaser, and enumerates
those liabilities that will survive the reorganization plan. (B.D.I. 12763 at 47). Specifically, the
Confirmation Order provides for the survival of the Class A3 claims (the Legacy General
unsecured claims against the EFH debtors), the Class A12 claims (EFH Debtor Intercompany
Claims), and certain property tax claims limited in amount. (Id.; B.D.I. 12763-1 at 45). The
relief requested by Appellants would necessitate the inclusion of a fourth group of claims: any
prepetition claim of an Unmanifested Asbestos Claimant against an Asbestos Debtor. (D.I. 64 at
68:4-10).
Sempra, as the purchaser of the EFIH stock, bargained to ensure that the accompanying
liabilities they would take on as a result of the merger would be limited and certain.
Furthermore, the Confirmation Order provides that all terms and provisions of the Plan are
nonseverable and mutually dependent. (B.D.I. 12763 at 60-61). Appellants' analogies to ICL
Holding are thus inapposite. In that case, the court dealt with an appeal of distributional terms of
escrowed funds for administrative expenses and settlement proceeds from the sale of the assets.
802 F.3d at 552. The distribution of those funds had no impact on the considerations of the
purchaser. Here, Appellants challenge the discharge of the Unmanifested Asbestos Claims and
ask that the purchaser be saddled with more liability than it bargained for. This is not a situation
8
where the challenged provision is "so divorced from the overall transaction" that the relief may
be granted. Pursuit, 874 F.3d at 139.
There is significant evidence that to attract a purchaser in bankruptcy, the debtors needed
to craft a plan that gave purchasers certainty. (See D.I. 64 at 48:22-25; B.D.I. 12763 at 47;
B.D.I. 12763-1 at 45 ; see also B.D.I. 7407 at 77:20-21 (investor representative stating the need
for "a cordoning off of the liability so that we can know what we ' re investing into"); B.D.I. 1682
at 16; B.D.I. 12666 at 80, 86 (recognizing that bar date was included in every proposed plan)).
Indeed, certainty and finality for the purchaser is one of the central goals of§ 363(m). See
Pursuit, 874 F.3d at 133. The discharge of the untimely claims, including those of the
Unmanifested Asbestos Claimants, was a central and integral element of the sale. As such, any
challenge to that discharge "inevitably challenges the validity of the" Merger Agreement. Id. at
139. Thus, Appellants request relief that I cannot grant without affecting the validity of the sale
and the appeal is therefore moot under§ 363(m).
V.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Court dismisses the appeal. An accompanying order will
be entered.
9
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