McKinstry v. Sergent et al
Filing
31
MEMORANDUM OPINION & ORDER: A&M Parties' and Sergent's motions to certify the Court's 3/21/12 Order for interlocutory appeal 26 ; 27 are DENIED. Signed by Judge Amul R. Thapar on 8/28/2012. (RKT) cc: COR
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY
SOUTHERN DIVISION
PIKEVILLE
TAFT A. MCKINSTRY,
as Trustee of the BD Unsecured Creditors
Trust,
Petitioner,
v.
HAROLD E. SERGENT, et al.,
Respondents.
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Civil No. 11-133-ART
MEMORANDUM OPINION
& ORDER
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The Court previously issued an opinion addressing several novel and complex
questions about whether a bankruptcy debtor’s representative, Taft A. McKinstry, is entitled
to a jury trial on her claims against the debtor’s former officers, Harold Sergent and the
A&M Parties.
Those officers have now moved to certify the Court’s opinion for
interlocutory appeal. Since Sergent and the A&M have not shown that substantial room for
disagreement exists about the correctness of the Court’s rulings, their motions for
interlocutory appeal are denied.
BACKGROUND
The Court has already described the facts of this case elsewhere. See Sergent v.
McKinstry, 472 B.R. 387, 391–95 (E.D. Ky. 2012). Briefly, Harold Sergent formed a coal
company called Black Diamond to buy promising but undeveloped coal assets in Floyd
County, Kentucky. Id. at 391. While in charge of Black Diamond, he allegedly engaged in
self-dealing by funneling royalties to himself for each ton of coal that Black Diamond sold
regardless of whether Black Diamond would profit on the sale.
Id. at 391–92.
He
supposedly committed Black Diamond to long-term supply contracts with coal purchasers to
sell more coal than the company could produce from its own mines. Id. at 392. This
production deficit required Black Diamond to purchase the difference on the spot market to
fulfill its supply contracts. Id. This strategy was successful for the first two years. Id. But it
turned out to be a disastrous gamble when the spot-market price exceeded the selling price
under the company’s existing supply contracts. Id. Concerned about Black Diamond’s
continued ability to satisfy its liabilities, the company’s lenders insisted that it hire Alvarez &
Marsal North America, LLC (“A&M”) as a financial advisor. Id. Yet at this point A&M’s
financial advice was of limited use: the spot-market price continued to increase, and Black
Diamond remained locked into the supply contracts. Id.
With Black Diamond’s liabilities rapidly outstripping its assets, the company’s
lenders turned to the Chapter 11 bankruptcy process with the hope of reorganizing Black
Diamond as a profitable company. Id. The lenders filed involuntary petitions in the United
States Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky against Black Diamond and its
seven subsidiaries. Id. Once there, the parties agreed to create a new senior management
position within the company—Chief Restructuring Officer (“CRO”)—and to appoint a
specialist in turnaround management from A&M to this position. Id. The Bankruptcy Court
authorized Black Diamond to hire Ira Genser as the CRO; Genser, in turn, hired his
colleague, Larry Tate, as the Chief Financial Officer (“CFO”). Id. at 393. Consistent with
the Bankruptcy Court’s order authorizing the CRO position, Black Diamond and A&M
entered into a court-approved Engagement Letter that described the scope of A&M’s
turnaround management services, Genser’s responsibilities as CRO, and Tate’s employment
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as CFO. Id.
A&M, Genser, and Tate (collectively, the “A&M Parties”) took over Black
Diamond’s day-to-day management while in bankruptcy. Id. While in charge, the A&M
Parties allegedly ignored the advice of Black Diamond’s senior management in favor of the
lenders’ preference to sell the company at a profit, regardless of whether those preferences
were in the company’s best interests. Id. Then the global economic collapse struck in the
fall of 2008. The spot-market price of coal dropped, taking Black Diamond’s value down
with it. Id. The hope of a profitable reorganization quickly dissipated. Id. The company
filed a plan of liquidation, which the Bankruptcy Court confirmed in July 2009. Id. This
plan created a trust and appointed Taft McKinstry as its trustee to liquidate some of the
company’s assets, including any claims against Sergent and the A&M Parties for
mismanagement. Id. at 393–94. McKinstry and the A&M Parties then entered into a
Settlement Agreement to set some of the ground rules for the forthcoming litigation. Id. at
394.
McKinstry sued Sergent and the A&M Parties (collectively, the “Defendants”) in
state court before the case was removed to federal court and referred to the Bankruptcy
Court. Id. She asserted state-law breach of fiduciary duty and gross negligence claims
against Sergent, id. at 405, gross negligence claims against Genser and Tate, id. at 409, and
vicarious liability against A&M., id. at 415. Soon after, the Bankruptcy Court decided to
abstain from and remand the claims against Sergent, but to keep the claims against A&M.
Id. at 394. Sergent appealed this severing of the case, and McKinstry moved to withdraw
this Court’s reference of this case, which would allow the Court to adjudicate both sets of
claims. Id. In a Memorandum Opinion and Order dated March 21, 2012 (the “Order”), the
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Court reversed the Bankruptcy Court in Sergent’s appeal because mandatory abstention did
not apply to the Sergent Claims. Id. at 403. And because McKinstry was entitled to a jury
trial on all of her claims, the Court held that withdrawal of the reference would be
appropriate when the case was trial-ready because the Bankruptcy Court could not conduct a
jury trial. Id. at 420. Since discovery and dispositive motions were not yet finished,
however, withdrawal was premature. Id. at 421. So the Court referred the case back to the
Bankruptcy Court to conduct all remaining pretrial matters. Id. at 422. Twenty-eight days
later, the Defendants moved to certify the Order for interlocutory appeal. R. 26; R. 27.
DISCUSSION
In the “great bulk” of cases, the federal judiciary permits litigants only one shot at an
appeal. McFarlin v. Conseco Servs., LLC, 381 F.3d 1251, 1264 (11th Cir. 2004).
A
litigant’s case proceeds until he loses or wins on all of his claims and the district court enters
final judgment, triggering his right to appeal. 28 U.S.C. § 1291. Of course, Congress
recognized that in “rare” circumstances, certain questions should not wait for final judgment
before the Court of Appeals enters the fray. McFarlin, 381 F.3d at 1264. When a district
judge finishes grappling with such a question, he has discretion to certify his ruling to the
Court of Appeals for immediate review. In re Powerhouse Licensing, LLC, 441 F.3d 467,
471 n.2 (6th Cir. 2006) (“Certification of an order under § 1292(b) is discretionary with the
district court and is not subject to review.”).
What type of question merits such exceptional treatment? A “controlling question of
law” where “substantial ground for difference of opinion exists about the correctness of the
decision” and “an immediate appeal may materially advance the ultimate termination of the
litigation.” W. Tenn. Ch. of Assoc. Builders & Contractors, Inc. v. City of Memphis (In re
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City of Memphis), 293 F.3d 345, 350 (6th Cir. 2002) (citing 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b); Cardwell v.
Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co., 504 F.2d 444, 446 (6th Cir.1974)). Because the Defendants
have not presented a substantial ground for disagreement about the Court’s Order, no
deviation from the normal appellate process is warranted.
I.
The Defendants’ motions for certification are timely.
As a threshold matter, McKinstry argues that the Court should deny the Defendants’
motions as untimely because the Defendants moved for certification more than ten days after
the Order. R. 28 at 22–23 (Br. at 21–22). This argument is meritless. The procedure for
obtaining interlocutory review is straightforward. Such review requires permission from
both the district court and the Court of Appeals. The district judge must first certify in its
order that the requirements for interlocutory review are satisfied. 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b). If the
district judge does so, then the Court of Appeals may, “in its discretion, permit an appeal to
be taken from such order, if application is made to it within ten days after the entry of the
order.” Id.
Of course, a district judge often does not certify an order when entered. This makes
sense: the district judge “naturally looks to the parties to advise him on whether to certify an
order for immediate appeal, and they can hardly do that until they have seen the order.” Weir
v. Propst, 915 F.2d 283, 286 (7th Cir. 1990). In addition, whether an order should be
certified sometimes does not become apparent until later in the case. Id. Regardless of the
reason, the ten-day limit for applying to the Court of Appeals does not prevent a district
judge from certifying a stale order. Instead, the judge simply amends his order to include the
necessary certification. Fed. R. App. P. 5(a)(3). And “in that event, the time to petition [the
Court of Appeals] runs from entry of the amended order” that includes the certification. Id.
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As a result, the ten-day time limit restricts the time for appealing to the Court of Appeals
once an order has been certified—not, as McKinstry argues, “to filing a motion for
interlocutory appeal with a district court.” Eagan v. CSX Transp., Inc., 294 F. Supp. 2d 911,
914 (E.D. Mich. 2003); see also W. Tenn. Ch. of Assoc. Builders & Contractors, Inc. v. City
of Memphis (In re City of Memphis), 293 F.3d 345, 348 (6th Cir. 2002) (“[A]n application for
appeal must be made within 10 days after the entry of the district court’s certification order.”
(emphasis added)).
What, then, is the deadline for requesting certification from a district court? Section
1292(b) does not impose one. Because the Courts of Appeals may decline to accept a
certified order for interlocutory appeal for any reason, see 16 Charles Alan Wright et al.,
Federal Practice & Procedure: Civil § 3929 (2d ed. 2012), though, courts generally require
such requests to “be filed in the district court within a reasonable time after the order sought
to be appealed.” Ahrenholz v. Bd. of Trs. of Univ. of Ill., 219 F.3d 674, 675 (7th Cir. 2000).
Here, the Defendants moved for certification within a reasonable time. The Court
issued its Memorandum Opinion and Order on March 21, 2012. R. 25. Twenty-eight days
later, the Defendants moved to amend this order by certifying it for interlocutory appeal.
R. 26; R. 27. That length of time was reasonable given the length and complexity of the
Court’s Order and is in line with similar post-judgment deadlines under the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure. See, e.g., Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(d) (requiring a motion for a new trial to be filed
within twenty-eight days); Fed. R. Civ. P. 59(e) (requiring motions to alter or amend a
judgment to be filed within twenty-eight days). Besides, McKinstry does not identify any
prejudice that resulted from the twenty-eight-day wait.
The Defendants’ motions were
therefore timely. Cf. In re Yasmin & Yaz Mktg., 2012 WL 662334, at *1 (S.D. Ill. Feb. 29,
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2012) (holding that a two-month delay was unreasonable); Lindley v. Life Investors Ins. Co.
of Am., 2010 WL 2465515, at *2–3 (N.D. Okla. June 11, 2012) (holding the same for a twoand-a-half month delay); Fabricant v. Sears Roebuck & Co., 2001 WL 883303, at *1 (S.D.
Fla. Jan. 29, 2001) (holding that a one-and-a-half-month delay was untimely).
II.
Interlocutory appeal is not appropriate here.
Sergent and the A&M Parties seek interlocutory review of the Court’s ruling that
McKinstry had the right to a jury trial on all of her claims. R. 26-1 at 5; R. 27-1 at 2 (“By the
Motion, Sergent seeks certification only of [the jury trial] ruling.”). That ruling turned on
three holdings: (1) that the Seventh Amendment preserved McKinstry’s jury-trial right on all
of her claims; (2) that Black Diamond’s bankruptcy did not extinguish her jury-trial right;
and (3) that her jury-trial rights against A&M were not contractually waived. Sergent, 472
B.R. at 405, 415–16, 418.
Even assuming that these rulings involve controlling questions of law and that an
interlocutory appeal may materially advance this case, the Defendants have not satisfied their
burden of showing that there is a substantial ground for disagreement about their correctness.
See United States v. Stone, 53 F.3d 141, 143–44 (6th Cir. 1995) (holding that “[d]oubts
regarding appealability . . . [should be] resolved in favor of finding that the interlocutory
order is not appealable” (quotation omitted)). A substantial ground for disagreement exists
when the controlling law is unclear on a difficult issue. Couch v. Telescope, Inc., 611 F.3d
629, 633–34 (9th Cir. 2010). Indicators include a difference of opinion among the district
courts within a circuit, a circuit split that the Sixth Circuit has not yet entered, precedent that
does not substantially guide the Court’s decision, or a novel and difficult question of first
impression. Pipefitters Local 636 Ins. Fund v. Blue Cross Blue Shield of Mich., 2009 WL
7
3390244, at *2 (E.D. Mich. Oct. 20, 2009) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted);
Couch, 611 F.3d at 634. Here, the Defendants have not established a substantial ground for
disagreement on any of the Court’s three holdings, and thus interlocutory appeal is improper.
A.
McKinstry had a Seventh Amendment right to a jury trial on her claims.
The Court held that the Seventh Amendment afforded McKinstry jury-trial rights on
all of her claims. Sergent, 472 B.R. at 405. Only the A&M Parties seek certification on this
ruling, but there can be no serious dispute over this constitutional question. The Seventh
Amendment preserves the right to a jury trial on issues that resolve legal rights rather than
equitable ones. Bledsoe v. Emery Worldwide Airlines, Inc., 635 F.3d 836, 841 (6th Cir.
2011) (citing Wooddell v. Int’l Bhd. of Elec. Wkrs., Local 71, 502 U.S. 93, 97 (1991)). That
legal-versus-equitable determination depends on a two-party inquiry into (1) the historical
nature of the cause of action and (2) the nature of the remedy sought, with this second
inquiry being the tiebreaker (the “Granfinanciera” test). See generally Granfinanciera, S.A.
v. Nordberg, 492 U.S. 33, 42 (1989).
Under the first prong, history is clear: a corporation’s suit against its officers could be
heard in either courts of law under negligence or courts of equity under breach of fiduciary
duty. Sergent, 472 B.R. at 406–08. So the Court held that the A&M Claims, which seek
recovery for breach of the fiduciary duty to maximize the value of Black Diamond for all
creditors and equity holders, were historically equitable. Id. at 409–10. The A&M Parties
do not dispute this conclusion. R. 26-1 at 9.
Instead, the A&M Parties claim that there is substantial disagreement over the second
and “more important” step of the Granfinanciera inquiry—that McKinstry’s monetary
remedy sought is legal rather than equitable. Chauffeurs, Local No. 391 v. Terry, 494 U.S.
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558, 565 (1989). And to show this substantial disagreement, they point to other courts
holding that “actions against officers of a debtor in possession for breaches of their fiduciary
duties to the estate” invoke an equitable remedy called “surcharge.” R. 26-1 at 10. To be
fair, even “[t]he authorities are split” on when and how an equitable surcharge is the
equivalent of legal compensatory damages. Sergent, 472 B.R. at 411.
Focusing on the disagreement over the nature of a surcharge, though, mistakes the
forest for the trees. As the Court also held, even if money damages against a fiduciary were
equivalent to a surcharge, history is clear that there was “concurrent equitable and legal
jurisdiction over compensatory money damages against a corporate director.” Id. The
existence of concurrent jurisdiction meant that the Seventh Amendment preserved
McKinstry’s right to have a jury determine the amount of damages. The Defendants have
not pointed to any events since the merger of law and equity that would have eliminated legal
jurisdiction over such monetary relief.
To be sure, this second part of the inquiry is not supposed to “replicate the ‘abstruse
historical’ inquiry of the first part,” but instead “requires consideration of the general types
of relief provided by courts of law and equity.” Terry, 494 U.S. at 571 n.8 (quoting Ross v.
Bernhard, 396 U.S. 531, 538 n.10 (1970)). Consistent with that instruction, the Supreme
Court has limited equitable remedies to two bright-line categories: when the plaintiff seeks
equitable restitution of property or funds in the defendant’s possession or when the money is
“incidental to or intertwined with injunctive relief.” Id. at 570–71 (quoting Tull v. United
States, 481 U.S. 412, 424 (1987)). Neither applies here. If the Supreme Court wants to
create a third category of equitable relief that includes all monetary relief against corporate
officers for their mismanagement, it may choose to do so in the future, but such speculation
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is not a basis for an interlocutory appeal.
Most importantly, and as the Court already held, even if a surcharge against corporate
officers were an exclusively equitable remedy, a surcharge is not what McKinstry seeks.
That remedy is available when a plaintiff asks for an equitable accounting, which requires
the estate’s trustee to “account for” the property on hand.
Sergent, 472 B.R. at 410.
McKinstry simply does not seek such an accounting. See id. at 411. Nor could she: as
corporate officers, Genser and Tate were not analogous to trustees because their positions
were not authorized by the Bankruptcy Court’s limited equitable power to supervise Chapter
11 trustees and other court-appointed officers. Id. at 413. Their powers and positions were
simply the result of their contractual employment as corporate officers. Id. Now protesting
that reasonable minds could disagree, they simply proclaim that “[a]nother neutral arbiter
could analogize Genser and Tate’s fiduciary duties to those of a trustee.” R. 26-1 at 11. For
this proposition, they cite no competing case law and no authority in the Bankruptcy Code.
See id. And “just because a court is the first to rule on a particular question . . . does not
mean that there is . . . a substantial difference of opinion.” Couch, 611 F.3d at 633 (citation
omitted). All the more reason that an interlocutory appeal is inappropriate.
B.
Black Diamond’s bankruptcy did not extinguish McKinstry’s jury trial
right.
Given that McKinstry had a constitutional right to a jury trial on her claims, the
Court’s next step was to determine whether Black Diamond waived that right when it entered
bankruptcy. Sergent, 472 B.R. at 415–16. In the Sixth Circuit, “the Seventh Amendment
confers no right to a jury trial on a debtor . . . who files voluntarily for bankruptcy and is a
defendant in an adversary proceeding.” Longo v. McLaren (In re McLaren), 3 F.3d 958, 961
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(6th Cir. 1993). The Sixth Circuit based this holding on one specific concern: A potential
defendant could run into bankruptcy court to trigger the automatic stay, which prevents the
would-be plaintiff from suing outside of the bankruptcy court and require him to submit his
claims to the bankruptcy court’s claims-allowance process. Id. (quoting Hallahan, 936 F.2d
at 1506). By funneling the plaintiff’s claims to this equitable process, the defendant would
force the plaintiff to give up his jury trial rights on those claims. As the Sixth Circuit
reasoned, allowing the defendant to turn around and demand a jury trial in the bankruptcy
process would be inequitable. See Sergent, 472 B.R. at 417–18 (explaining McLaren’s
reasoning). The Defendants argued that McLaren should be extended here, eliminating
Black Diamond’s (and as its assignee, McKinstry’s) jury trial rights. Sergent, 472 B.R. at
416. The Court rejected this extension for three reasons, each of which, according to
Sergent, involves substantial room for disagreement. See R. 27-1 at 4. He is incorrect.
First, the Court refused to extend McLaren to involuntary debtors like Black
Diamond. Sergent, 472 B.R. at 416–17. This difference mattered because the McLaren
Court’s concern did not logically extend to an involuntary bankruptcy. Id. at 417. Sergent
tries to make room for substantial disagreement by reading the tea leaves floating in
McLaren. He argues that the Sixth Circuit, by choosing not to comment on any distinction
between voluntary and involuntary debtors, “was signaling that there is no difference.” See
R. 27-1 at 9. McLaren, however, expressly limited its holding to a debtor “who files
voluntarily for bankruptcy.” McLaren, 3 F.3d at 961 (emphasis added). Nor does Sergent
point to any competing case law holding that involuntary debtors lose their jury trial rights
by entering bankruptcy. A “‘dearth of cases’ does not constitute ‘substantial ground for
difference of opinion.’” Couch v. Telescope, Inc., 611 F.3d at 633–34 (quoting Union Cnty.,
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Iowa v. Piper Jaffray & Co., Inc., 525 F.3d 643, 647 (8th Cir. 2008)).
Undeterred, Sergent argues that even if the voluntary/involuntary distinction is
correct, there is uncertainty about whether the Court applied it correctly here. R. 27-1 at 9–
11. Sergent returns to a familiar argument: that Black Diamond was a “de facto voluntary
debtor” because its management “actively supported the entry of orders of relief” on behalf
of Black Diamond. Id. at 10–11. Yet Sergent’s argument misunderstands the distinction.
As the Court held, this distinction is a bright-line rule that depends on whether the petitions
were voluntary or involuntary—not a case-by-case standard that depends on the debtor’s
conduct after the petition is filed. Sergent does not cite any authority supporting his notion
that courts should take a “hard look” behind a petition to determine whether it is voluntary or
involuntary for determining jury trial rights. Nor would a “hard look” be consistent with
how the Bankruptcy Code treats the voluntary/involuntary distinction in Chapter 11 cases.
See 11 U.S.C. § 301(a) (looking to the face of the petition to determine whether a voluntary
case has been commenced); 11 U.S.C. § 303(a) (same for involuntary cases). And relying
solely on the face of the petition is exactly what the Sixth Circuit did in McLaren. As
Sergent must concede, the petitions in Black Diamond’s underlying bankruptcy were
involuntary. That is the beginning and end of the inquiry, and one about which there can be
no substantial disagreement.
Second, McLaren held that a potential defendant who becomes a voluntary debtor
loses its jury trial rights, but the Court declined to extend that holding to a potential plaintiff
who enters bankruptcy, like Black Diamond. Sergent, 472 B.R. at 417–18. To be sure, some
other courts outside the Sixth Circuit have not adopted this distinction. See R. 27-1 at 6
(collecting cases).
But those cases do so based on concerns different from the one
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underlying McLaren. McLaren’s holding targeted a specific inequity: allowing a potential
defendant to become a debtor, thereby invoking the automatic stay and forcing that potential
plaintiff to become a creditor in bankruptcy court without any jury-trial right. That inequity
does not exist when a potential plaintiff becomes a debtor because a crucial link is broken. A
plaintiff who enters bankruptcy does not trigger the automatic stay, which applies only to
claims against a debtor, and thus does not necessarily force the would-be defendant to give
up its jury-trial rights on the plaintiff’s claims. Id. at 418. Sergent does not explain why it is
substantially unclear whether McLaren’s logic should be extended. And faced with this
extension of McLaren, at least one other district court in this circuit has agreed with the
Court. WSC, Inc. v. The Home Depot (In re WSC, Inc.), 286 B.R. 321, 326 (Bankr. M.D.
Tenn. 2002). Of course, the Sixth Circuit may identify new concerns in the future that justify
a similar rule for potential plaintiffs, but the inequity addressed by McLaren is not one of
those concerns.
Consequently, there is no basis for an immediate appeal on whether
McLaren applies to a plaintiff-debtor.
Third, the Court held that, even under McLaren, potential defendants who become
voluntary debtors do not lose their jury trial rights on “all possible claims.” Sergent, 472
B.R. at 418. Rather, a debtor waives its jury trial right only on those claims “whose
resolution ‘is necessarily part of the process of the disallowance and allowance of claims.’”
Id. (quoting Billing v. Ravin, Greenberg & Zackin, P.A., 22 F.3d 1242, 1252 n.14 (3d Cir.
1994)). Because the state-law Sergent Claims and A&M Claims were not intertwined with
the Bankruptcy Court’s claims-allowance process, the Court concluded that McLaren would
not extinguish those claims. Sergent, 472 B.R. at 418.
Sergent claims that a circuit split exists on whether “a debtor’s submission to the
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equitable jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court affects a blanket forfeiture of jury trial rights.”
R. 27-1 at 7. According to Sergent, the Sixth Circuit in McLaren and the Seventh Circuit in
N.I.S. Corp. v. Hallahan (In re Hallahan), 936 F.2d 1496, 1506 (7th Cir. 1991)), endorsed
such a blanket forfeiture, while the Second and Third Circuits have held that only
proceedings implicating the claims-allowance process are forfeited. R. 27-1 at 7.
While McLaren contains one sentence in dicta vaguely hinting at an across-the-board
waiver, “[t]here are good reasons not to read McLaren so broadly.” WSC, Inc., 286 B.R. at
961. McLaren held only that a potential defendant who becomes a voluntary debtor is not
entitled to a jury trial to defend the dischargeability and amount of his debt to a creditor—a
proceeding that was both historically equitable and part of the claims-allowance process. In
re McLaren, 3 F.3d at 960. Its holding was no broader. And the Supreme Court has
“rejected the argument that lies at the heart” of a blanket-forfeiture theory—that “the filing of
the bankruptcy case itself somehow forfeits all Seventh Amendment rights in actions by a
debtor to gather the bankruptcy estate.” WSC, Inc., 286 B.R. at 327 (discussing why the
Supreme Court’s precedent undermines a blanket-forfeiture theory). Unsurprisingly, other
circuits, too, have rejected a blanket-forfeiture theory. See Germain v. Conn. Nat’l Bank,
988 F.2d 1323, 1329–31 (2d Cir. 1993); In re Jensen, 946 F.2d 369, 373–74 (5th Cir. 1991);
Billing, 22 F.3d at 1247–53 & n.14. And Sergent does not cite any cases extending the
concerns in McLaren to claims that are not integral to the restructuring of debtor-creditor
relationship. In fact, at least one other district court in this circuit has also held that McLaren
does not mandate an across-the-board forfeiture of jury-trial rights. See WSC, Inc., 286 B.R.
at 328–29 (concluding that McLaren’s holding is limited to proceedings that are part of the
equitable claims-resolution process). No ground for substantial disagreement exists here.
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C.
McKinstry’s right to a jury trial on the A&M Claims was not
contractually waived.
Lastly, the Court held that McKinstry’s jury-trial right on the A&M Claims had not
been contractually waived. Sergent, 472 B.R. at 418. After Black Diamond entered into an
Engagement Letter that waived its jury trial rights on claims against the A&M Parties,
McKinstry (as Black Diamond’s assignee) and the A&M Parties entered into a Settlement
Agreement, which did not contain a jury-trial waiver.
Id.
The Settlement Agreement
superseded all prior agreements to the extent that they were inconsistent with the Settlement
Agreement on the same subject matter. Id. at 419. So the question arose: what was the
scope of the Settlement Agreement?
Numerous provisions indicated that the Settlement Agreement had set a
“comprehensive framework for recovering” from the A&M Parties. Id. For example, it
specified the recovery limits on the A&M Claims; assigned the A&M Claims to a liquidation
trust for prosecution instead of releasing the A&M Parties from liability; and laid out various
timing and procedural requirements for suing the A&M Parties. Because these and other
provisions governed “the scope of [McKinstry’s] rights to bring claims against the A&M
Defendants for mismanaging Black Diamond during the bankruptcy,” the Court concluded
that the Settlement Agreement controlled the jury trial question. Id. Since the Settlement
Agreement did not contain a jury-trial waiver, McKinstry’s jury-trial right was not
contractually waived.
According to the A&M Parties, this question is in serious dispute (and thus worthy of
interlocutory review) because the Bankruptcy Court held that the Settlement Agreement was
“far from clear and unambiguous.” R. 26-1 at 13–14. Thus, “two different respected Judges
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reaching different conclusions demonstrates substantial grounds for reasonable minds to
differ.”
Id.
That might be true except for one hurdle: to show room for substantial
disagreement, it is not enough for the A&M Parties to show that their interpretation of the
Settlement Agreement is within the range of permissible interpretations. After all, the Court
must “indulge every reasonable presumption against waiver” of McKinstry’s jury-trial right.
Sambo’s Rests., Inc. v. City of Ann Arbor, 663 F.2d 686, 690 (6th Cir. 1981) (quoting Aetna
Ins. Co. v. Kennedy, 301 U.S. 389, 393 (1937)); see also Winter v. Minn. Mut. Life. Ins. Co.,
199 F.3d 399, 407 n.11 (7th Cir. 1999) (“There is a presumption against waiver of the
constitutional right to trial by jury[.]” (citation omitted)). They must explain why there are
substantial grounds for disagreement about whether they overcame this thumb on the scale.
Yet the A&M Parties argue only that their interpretation was a reasonable one without
offering any reason why the Court’s was unreasonable. Their “strong disagreement with the
Court’s ruling is not sufficient for there to be a ‘substantial ground for difference.’” Couch,
611 F.3d at 633 (internal quotation marks omitted).
The A&M Parties try to flip this presumption back onto McKinstry: as the party
objecting to the contractual waiver, they claim, she has “the burden of demonstrating that
[Black Diamond’s] consent to the provisions was not knowing and voluntary.” R. 26-1 at 13
(quoting K.M.C. Co., Inc. v. Irving Trust Co., 757 F.2d 752, 758 (6th Cir. 1985)). This
argument conflates whether a party’s actions amount to a waiver of its jury-trial rights in the
first place with whether a waiver is knowing and voluntary. On the latter, the party objecting
to the voluntariness of an applicable waiver certainly bears the burden. E.g., K.M.C. Co.,
757 F.2d at 758. Yet that was never the issue in this case: the Court did not hold that
McKinstry’s waiver was coerced. The question was whether there was an applicable waiver
16
at all—a question that requires “indulg[ing] every reasonable presumption against waiver.”
Sambo’s Rests., Inc., 663 F.2d at 690. The A&M Parties have not shown that there is room
for substantial disagreement as to whether they have overcome this presumption.
CONCLUSION
At the end of the day, everyone acknowledges that the jury-trial issue was factually
and legally complex. That issue depended on the Court’s review of (1) the events leading to
Black Diamond’s bankruptcy; (2) the bankruptcy case itself, especially Sergent’s proofs of
claim; (3) the Bankruptcy Court’s authorization of a CRO; (4) the liquidation plan and
McKinstry’s objections to that plan; (5) the history of corporate officer and director liability
before the merger of law and equity; (6) the Engagement Letter and Settlement Agreement;
and (7) McKinstry’s complaint. That same complexity is what makes it impossible for the
Sixth Circuit to “quickly and cleanly” review the jury-trial issue “without having to study the
record.” Ahrenholz v. Bd. of Trs., 219 F.3d 674, 677 (7th Cir. 2000). Indeed, these same
pieces of the record would be necessary background for an immediate appeal as well as a
second appeal at the end of this case, and prudence counsels against asking the Sixth Circuit
to learn the case twice.
On the flip side, even in the unlikely event that the Sixth Circuit disagrees with the
Court’s conclusion in a post-trial appeal, a new trial would not be necessary. At best, any
error would be harmless if “it is clear from the record that the [Court] would have reached
the same conclusion as the jury.” Dombeck v. Milwaukee Valve Co., 40 F.3d 230, 237 (7th
Cir. 1994). At worst, the Sixth Circuit would remand the case for the limited purpose of
allowing the Court (or the Bankruptcy Court) to issue its own factual findings and legal
conclusions based on the jury-trial record. Id.; Cargill, Inc. v. Commodity Credit Corp., 275
17
F.2d 745, 751 (2d Cir. 1960); Hurwitz v. Hurwitz, 136 F.2d 796, 799 (D.C. 1943); Great Am.
Ins. Co. v. Johnson, 25 F.2d 847, 850 (4th Cir. 1928). The Court will ensure that the jurytrial record is sufficient to serve as the basis for its independent factual findings and legal
conclusions. The parties should prepare accordingly.
It is therefore ORDERED that the A&M Parties’ and Sergent’s motions to certify the
Court’s March 21, 2012 Order for interlocutory appeal, R. 26; R. 27, are DENIED.
This the 28th day of August, 2012.
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