Lack's Stores, Incorporated
Filing
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MEMORANDUM AND OPINION affirming the bankruptcy court's 7/25/12 Order.(Signed by Judge Gregg Costa) Parties notified.(arrivera, )
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS
VICTORIA DIVISION
IN RE: LACK’S STORES, INC., et al.,
Debtors,
THE GROUP FAMILY LIMITED
PARTNERSHIP,
Appellant,
VS.
THRIVENT FINANCIAL FOR
LUTHERANS,
Cross-Appellant.
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§ CIVIL ACTION NO. 6:12-CV-37
§ CIVIL ACTION NO. 6:12-CV-41
§ BANKRUPTCY CASE NO. 10-60149
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OPINION ON BANKRUPTCY APPEAL
This is an appeal from a bankruptcy court decision ruling on competing
claims to lease rejection damages in a commercial bankruptcy. In November 2010,
Debtor Lack’s Stores, Inc. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and rejected the lease
for one of its retail stores located in Austin. Lack’s landlord, Appellant The Group
Family Limited Partnership (GFP), and GFP’s secured lender, Cross-Appellant
Thrivent Financial for Lutherans, filed competing claims for the lease rejection
damages in Lack’s Chapter 11 case. The bankruptcy court awarded the damages to
GFP subject to a lien in Thrivent’s favor. Both parties have appealed that ruling.1
1
Due to a docketing error, the cross-appeals and briefing were docketed under the separate cause
numbers 6:12-CV-37 and 6:12-CV-41. Where appropriate, the Court will preface its citations
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After a detailed review of the facts of this case, the argument and briefing of
counsel, and the applicable law, the Court AFFIRMS the ruling of the bankruptcy
court.
I.
BACKGROUND
A.
The Lack’s Lease and the GFP–Thrivent Loan
Lack’s Stores, Inc., a longtime Texas-based furniture retail chain
headquartered in Victoria, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in November 2010 and
subsequently closed its stores. This appeal concerns the parties’ rights to damages
arising out of Lack’s rejection of the lease for one of those stores, located on U.S.
Highway 183 in north Austin. In 2003, Lack’s signed a 20-year lease on the
Austin store premises with The J-Bar Group, Inc. Case No. 37, Docket Entry No.
7-2 at 2; Case No. 41, Docket Entry No. 3-5 at 3. GFP later bought out J-Bar’s
interest and became Lack’s landlord at the Austin store.
In September 2005, GFP took out a $3,400,000 loan from Thrivent. To
secure the note on the loan, GFP executed several documents in favor of Thrivent:
a Deed of Trust, an Assignment of Leases and Rents, and a Subordination and
Attornment Agreement.
Together, these documents gave Thrivent a security
interest in the Austin store premises, assigned all rents and profits from the Lack’s
lease to Thrivent, and gave Thrivent the right to collect the rents directly from
with “Case No. 37” or “Case No. 41” to avoid confusion.
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Lack’s. See Case No. 41, Docket Entry Nos. 4-2 at 2; 3-3 at 4; 3-4 at 3. However,
under the Assignment, GFP retained a license to “collect all of the Rents, but not
prior to accrual, and to retain, use and enjoy the same unless and until an Event of
Default,” though it was prohibited from anticipating the rents more than one month
in advance of accrual. Case No. 41, Docket Entry Nos. 3-3 at 4; 4-2 at 1.
This appeal implicates a number of provisions in the loan documents. The
first is the granting clause of the Assignment, under which GFP assigned to
Thrivent all of its rights in the “Rents,” a defined term that included not only
normal rent payments, but also all “claims for damages resulting from default
under [the Lack’s lease] whether resulting from acts of insolvency or acts of
bankruptcy or otherwise, and lump sum payments for the cancellation of [the
Lack’s lease] . . . .” Case No. 41, Docket Entry No. 3-3 at 3. The second provision
is Section 6.3 of the Deed of Trust, which, in relevant part, states as follows:
[GFP] does hereby unconditionally and absolutely sell, assign and
transfer unto [Thrivent] all of the leases, rents, issues, income and
profits . . . provided, [GFP] is hereby given a license by [Thrivent] to
collect and retain such rents and profits unless and until an Event of
Default exists under this Deed of Trust.
[GFP] assigns to
[Thrivent] . . . all claims for damages arising from rejection of any
lease under the bankruptcy laws.
Case No. 41, Docket Entry No. 4-2 at 2. Additionally, the final part of Section 6.3
states that the rights granted Thrivent in the Deed were in addition to those granted
in the Assignment, but, in the event of a conflict between Section 6.3 and the
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Assignment, the terms of the Assignment would control.
The final provision at issue is the first covenant in the Subordination and
Attornment Agreement, under which GFP, Thrivent, and Lack’s agreed that:
[GFP] shall absolutely grant, transfer, and assign to [Thrivent] the
Lease and all rents and other sums payable under the Lease; provided,
however, that until written demand is made by [Thrivent] to [Lack’s],
all rents . . . shall be paid to [GFP], but only as they accrue. [GFP]
covenants and agrees that upon [Lack’s] receipt of written notice from
[Thrivent] to pay the rent to [Thrivent] . . . [Lack’s] shall pay the rent
and all other sums due under the Lease . . . to [Thrivent] and shall
have no liability to [GFP] for such rent and other sums . . . . [Lack’s]
hereby recognizes the Assignment made by [GFP] to [Thrivent] and
agrees to pay, upon receipt of written demand from [Thrivent], all
rents and other sums as directed by [Thrivent].
Case No. 41, Docket Entry No. 3-4 at 3.
B.
The Bankruptcy Court Proceedings
On January 20, 2011, two months after it filed for bankruptcy, Lack’s filed a
notice of intent to vacate the Austin store and reject its lease pursuant to section
365 of the bankruptcy code, effective January 31, 2011. Case No. 37, Docket
Entry No. 7-2 at 9. In February 2011, GFP and Thrivent each filed proofs of
claims for the limited lease rejection damages allowed under the bankruptcy code.
See 11 U.S.C. § 365(g) (stating that the rejection of an unexpired lease constitutes
a breach of that lease); 11 U.S.C. § 502(b)(6) (limiting recovery for such breaches
to 15% of the rent due on the remaining term of the lease). The parties calculated
the amount owed differently: GFP’s claim was for $879,791.97, while Thrivent’s
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claim was for $780,955.41. Case No. 37, Docket Entry No. 7-2 at 9. Lack’s
objected to Thrivent’s claim.2 Id.
The bankruptcy court held hearings on the parties’ competing claims and on
Lack’s objection in January, April, and June 2012. Id. at 10–11. On July 25, 2012,
that court issued an order and written opinion disallowing Thrivent’s claim and
allowing GFP to collect the lease rejection damages, but ruling that Thrivent had a
lien on the damages such that GFP could only use and enjoy the damages as
allowed under the terms of the loan documents. See Case No. 37, Docket Entry
Nos. 7-1; 7-2. The keystone of the court’s opinion was its holding that Thrivent
was not entitled to collect the lease rejection damages GFP had assigned it as
security for the loan until GFP defaulted. This holding rested on the following,
stepwise set of conclusions.
First, the lease rejection damages were rents, and thus, Texas law and the
express terms of Assignment and Deed of Trust required GFP to be in default
before Thrivent could collect the damages from GFP. See Case No. 37, Docket
Entry No. 7-2 at 13–16, 20. Second, even though allowing GFP to retain the
damages might violate the prohibition on anticipating rents more than one month
in advance, Thrivent was not entitled to collect the rents because it had stipulated
2
The Court notes that an insider relationship exists between GFP and Lack’s. GFP is owned by
the Lack family, in part through the interestingly named “Keeping It Together, LLC.” See Case
No. 37, Docket Entry No. 7-2 at 9 n.7.
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that GFP was not in default. See id. at 16–20. Third, Thrivent could not collect the
rents directly from Lack’s under the Subordination and Attornment Agreement,
even though the plain text of the Agreement did not condition collection from
Lack’s on GFP’s default, because the Agreement had to be construed in
conjunction with the other loan documents. See id. at 20–24. Fourth and finally,
the bankruptcy court concluded that, even though Thrivent could not collect the
damages itself, Thrivent had a lien on the damages under the Deed of Trust as
proceeds of its lien on the Lack’s lease and as rents assigned under the
Assignment. See id. at 25–26.
Both parties timely appealed the adverse parts of the bankruptcy court’s
ruling. GFP agrees with the bankruptcy court’s holding that Thrivent was not
entitled to the damages, but it argues that court erred by encumbering them with an
“equitable lien” in Thrivent’s favor. Case No. 37, Docket Entry No. 7 at 16–17.
Thrivent, in contrast, contends that the lien was appropriate given the bankruptcy
court’s ruling in favor of GFP, but it argues that the court erred on a more basic
level by holding that Thrivent had no right to collect the damages in its own right.
Case No. 41, Docket Entry No. 3 at 4–5. After several continuances granted at the
parties’ request to allow settlement negotiations, negotiations that ultimately
proved fruitless, this Court heard oral argument in June 2013. The appeal is now
ripe for decision.
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II.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
A district court has jurisdiction to hear an appeal from a bankruptcy court’s
final judgment or order. 28 U.S.C. § 158(a). The bankruptcy court’s “[f]indings of
fact, whether based on oral or documentary evidence, shall not be set aside unless
clearly erroneous, and due regard shall be given to the opportunity of the
bankruptcy court to judge the credibility of the witnesses.” Fed. R. Bankr. P. 8013.
A finding of fact is clearly erroneous if, after review of all the evidence, the court
is “left with a firm and definite conviction that the bankruptcy court erred.” In re
McDaniel, 70 F.3d 841, 843 (5th Cir. 1995) (citations omitted). A bankruptcy
court’s conclusions of law and conclusions on mixed questions of law and fact are
reviewed de novo. In re U.S. Bass Corp., 171 F.3d 1016, 1021 (5th Cir. 1999).
III.
DISCUSSION
A. Thrivent’s Appeal
The Court first addresses Thrivent’s appeal of the bankruptcy court’s
holding that GFP was allowed to collect the lease rejection damages. This is the
closer question, and in any case is a natural predecessor to the issue in GFP’s
appeal whether any damages GFP does collect are encumbered by a lien. The
Court determines that the reasoning of the bankruptcy court was substantially
correct and that the decision below should be affirmed; however, because Thrivent
raises three colorable arguments in its favor, the Court will discuss those
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arguments and why they are not sufficient to warrant reversal.
The first argument is that Thrivent should have been allowed to collect the
rents from GFP—even though GFP had not defaulted—because Section 6.3 of the
Deed of Trust specifically assigns the lease rejection damages to Thrivent without
conditioning this assignment on a default by GFP.3 The first, lengthy sentence of
Section 6.3 assigns the “leases, rents, issues, incomes, and profits” to Thrivent
subject to a license in GFP’s favor terminating only on GFP’s default. See Case
No. 41, Docket Entry No. 4-2 at 2. But the second sentence of Section 6.3 assigns
to Thrivent “all claims for damages arising from rejection of any lease under the
bankruptcy laws”—full stop—with no requirement that GFP has to be in default
before Thrivent can collect the damages. Id.
By itself, this distinction between the normal “rents” and the lease rejection
damages in Section 6.3 is strong support for Thrivent’s argument that the damages
should not be subject to GFP’s license to collect the rents. But Section 6.3 is not
the only provision in play. As noted, the Assignment’s granting clause also assigns
3
The bankruptcy court did not address the effect of Section 6.3 on whether the lease rejection
damages counted as “rents” that GFP had a license to collect. See Case No. 37, Docket Entry
No. 7-2 at 13 n.10. Because absolute assignments under Texas law are creatures of the parties’
intent, and may be triggered by events other than the assignor’s default, a closer examination of
the Assignment’s granting clause and the Deed of Trust’s Section 6.3 is necessary to determine
whether the parties intended to condition Thrivent’s collection of the damages on GFP’s default.
See Taylor v. Brennan, 621 S.W.2d 592, 594 (Tex. 1981) (stating that an absolute assignment
“operates to transfer the right to rentals automatically upon the happening of a specified
condition, such as default,” but not requiring that the triggering condition be a default); F.D.I.C.
v. Int’l Prop. Mgmt., 929 F.2d 1033, 1035 n.2 (5th Cir. 1991) (noting that under the “contingent
present assignment” theory of absolute assignments the Taylor court adopted, the condition
triggering the assignee’s right to receive the rentals was “usually” default).
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the rents to Thrivent effective on a default by GFP, but, unlike Section 6.3, it
specifically includes the lease rejection damages, i.e., “claims for damages
resulting from default under [the Lack’s lease] whether resulting from . . . acts of
bankruptcy or otherwise” in its general definition of “rents.”4 Case No. 41, Docket
Entry No. 3-3 at 3. Thus, whether Thrivent is entitled to collect the lease rejection
damages depends on whether those damages are treated as “rents” subject to the
Assignment’s granting clause and requirement that GFP default, or if instead they
are carved out of this general definition of “rents” by the specific reference to lease
rejection damages in Section 6.3.
In Thrivent’s favor is the textbook rule of contractual interpretation that
specific provisions control over more general ones. See Forbau v. Aetna Life Ins.
Co., 876 S.W.2d 132, 133–34 (Tex. 1994) (citations omitted); Wells Fargo Bank v.
N. Cent. Plaza I, L.L.P., 194 S.W.3d 723, 726 (Tex. App.—Dall. 2006, pet.
denied) (citations omitted). Because Section 6.3 expressly distinguishes lease
rejection damages from the normal rents, and because it refers to them more
specifically than the Assignment does (compare Section 6.3’s “claims for damages
arising from rejection of any lease under the bankruptcy laws” with the
Assignment’s “claims for damages resulting from default under said Leases
4
Because the bankruptcy code defines the rejection of a lease as a breach of that lease, see 11
U.S.C. § 365(g), lease rejection damages are indeed “claims for damages resulting from default
under” a lease that result from “an act of bankruptcy.” Case No. 41, Docket Entry No. 3-3 at 3.
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whether resulting from . . . acts of bankruptcy or otherwise”), all things being
equal, Section 6.3’s disposition of the lease rejection damages would control over
that prescribed by the Assignment.
But, notwithstanding this canon of construction, the Court concludes that it
is the Assignment’s disposition of the damages that controls. Section 6.3 of the
Deed of Trust itself states in its final sentence that, “[t]o the extent inconsistent
with the terms of this Article 6, the terms of the Assignment of Leases shall
control.” Case No. 41, Docket Entry No. 4-2 at 3. There is no doubt that the two
provisions are in conflict; if the terms of Section 6.3 control the disposition of the
damages, Thrivent may collect all of the damages immediately, even though GFP
has never defaulted—a result that is disallowed by the Assignment. Thus, this
reading of Section 6.3 is inconsistent with the Assignment and, under Section 6.3’s
own terms, the Assignment’s terms control.
Moreover, at oral argument,
Thrivent’s counsel conceded in response to this Court’s questioning that the lease
rejection damages are indeed “rents” subject to the Assignment. Therefore, as the
bankruptcy court held, the lease rejection damages are rents that Thrivent may not
collect from GFP until GFP defaults under the loan documents.
The second argument Thrivent makes is that Lack’s was required to pay the
lease rejection damages directly to Thrivent under the Subordination and
Attornment Agreement regardless whether GFP was in default. In Thrivent’s
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view, the bankruptcy court erred by reading in a requirement that GFP be in default
before Lack’s had to pay, a requirement that Thrivent argues flies in the face of the
Agreement’s plain language and the parties’ unambiguous intent.
Thrivent is correct that the text of the Agreement does not expressly
condition Lack’s duty to pay on a default by GFP. But this does not end the story.
In full, the sentence that gives rise to Lack’s duty to pay is as follows: “[Lack’s]
hereby recognizes the Assignment made by [GFP] to [Thrivent] and agrees to pay,
upon receipt of written demand from [Thrivent], all rents and other sums as
directed by [Thrivent].” Case No. 41, Docket Entry No. 3-4 at 3. This sentence
creates a duty in Lack’s to pay Thrivent, for sure, but it does so only upon Lack’s
recognition of the Assignment, the document that guarantees GFP the right to
collect the rents until it defaults.
Tried and true principles of contractual interpretation support the bankruptcy
court’s construction of the Agreement. “Under generally accepted principles of
contract interpretation, all writings that pertain to the same transaction will be
considered together.” DeWitt Cnty. Elec. Co-op. v. Parks, 1 S.W.3d 96, 102 (Tex.
1999) (citations omitted). In order to determine the parties’ true intentions as
expressed in the contract, courts consider the entire writing “in an effort to
harmonize and give effect to all the provisions of the contract so that none will be
rendered meaningless.” Seagull Energy E. & P., Inc. v. Eland Energy, Inc., 207
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S.W.3d 342, 345 (Tex. 2006) (quoting Coker v. Coker, 650 S.W.2d 391, 393 (Tex.
1983) (emphasis in original)).
The bankruptcy court’s construction of the
Agreement harmonizes the different loan documents because it maintains the grant
of a license to GFP in the Assignment and Deed of Trust to collect the rents until it
defaults. And it does not render the Subordination and Attornment Agreement
meaningless because the covenant at issue still serves a purpose: as the bankruptcy
court stated, in the event that GFP had defaulted, it would give Thrivent a
contractual hook to collect the rents directly from Lack’s.
See Case No. 37,
Docket Entry No. 7-2 at 23 & n.21.
By contrast, Thrivent’s interpretation of the Subordination and Attornment
Agreement would allow it to demand payment of the rents from the tenant at any
time, regardless whether the borrower was performing its obligations under the
loan agreement or even whether the tenant was performing under its lease. This
construction would conflict with the provisions in the Assignment and Deed of
Trust stating that GFP’s license to collect the rents continues until GFP defaults. If
Lack’s can be obligated to pay Thrivent, and not GFP, at Thrivent’s whim, then the
license GFP has to collect the rents does not truly last “unless and until an Event of
Default” as the Assignment states—it lasts only so long as Thrivent refrains from
exercising its right to demand the rents from Lack’s. Case No. 41, Docket Entry
No. 3-3 at 4.
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The third argument in Thrivent’s favor is that GFP cannot collect the lease
rejection damages because the Assignment and Deed of Trust prohibit it from
anticipating the rents more than one month in advance. See Case No. 41, Docket
Entry No. 3-3 at 4; 4-2 at 1. There is some inconsistency in the fact that the
Assignment both grants a license to GFP to collect the lump-sum lease rejection
damages but also prohibits GFP from anticipating the rents more than one month in
advance. See Case No. 41, Docket Entry No. 3-3 at 3–4. The best reading of these
possibly conflicting provisions may be that the ban on anticipating rents only
prevents GFP from collecting the normal rent payments in advance, but does not
apply to lump-sum payments of lease rejection damages.
But even if the
prohibition on anticipating rents does apply to GFP’s collection of the lease
rejection damages, GFP would not be anticipating rents because Thrivent’s lien
encumbers the damages and prevents GFP from making full use of them. Given
the ruling that Thrivent has a lien on the damages that prevents GFP from taking
them free of its obligations under the loan documents, the Court holds that GFP
would not violate the ban on anticipating rents by collecting the damages.
However, even assuming that GFP would be anticipating rents by collecting
the damages, the bankruptcy court correctly held that this is not relevant to whether
GFP is entitled to the damages because Thrivent does not argue that GFP is
currently in default. See Case No. 37, Docket Entry No. 7-2 at 18 (“Though GFP
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may be ‘anticipating rents,’ Thrivent has not alleged any default.”). The Deed of
Trust’s definition of “Event of Default” makes clear that GFP does not
automatically default if it anticipates the rents; such a violation only constitutes a
default if Thrivent chooses to treat it as a default and provides GFP with written
notice of default and time to cure. See Case No. 41, Docket Entry No. 4-2 at 5.
Thrivent may choose to treat GFP’s collection of the lease rejection damages as a
default and act on it, as it has the option to do under the Deed of Trust, but the
potential of a future default does not affect GFP’s entitlement to the damages at
this time.
As demonstrated above, this is a difficult issue because there are provisions
in the various agreements that, viewed in isolation, support both sides’ position.
However this tension is reconciled, one party will be able to point to a provision
that points in the other direction.
The Court concludes, however, that the
bankruptcy court’s interpretation is the one that best harmonizes the agreements as
a whole and defers to the Assignment as a tie-breaker per the parties’ intention.
The Court will therefore affirm the bankruptcy court’s ruling that GFP was entitled
to collect the Lack’s lease rejection damages.
B. GFP’s Appeal
The Court next turns to GFP’s appeal of the bankruptcy court’s ruling that
the lease rejection damages are encumbered with a lien in Thrivent’s favor.
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Although GFP argues that the bankruptcy court erred by imposing an unjustifiable
“equitable” lien on the damages, Case No. 37, Docket Entry No. 7 at 16,
examination of the bankruptcy court’s opinion reveals it did no such thing.
Instead, the bankruptcy court ruled as a matter of course that Thrivent’s security
interest on the lease attached to the damages as proceeds of the lease. See Case
No. 37, Docket Entry No. 7-2 at 24–26.
This ruling is correct. GFP has a license to collect the damages as part of the
rents, but Thrivent has still been assigned those damages, and GFP can only use
them as allowed under the loan documents. Moreover, the Deed of Trust (and not
principles of equity) creates a lien in the damages by granting Thrivent a security
interest in “[a]ll rents . . . now due or which may hereafter become due under or by
virtue of and together with all right, title and interest of [GFP] in and to any
lease . . . for the use or occupancy of the Premises . . . .” Case No. 41, Docket
Entry No. 4 at 8.
The prohibition on GFP anticipating rents more than a month in advance, see
Case No. 41, Docket Entry No. 4-2 at 1, if construed to apply to the lease rejection
damages as Thrivent argues, is further support for this conclusion. Under this
view, if the bankruptcy court had allowed GFP to take all $880,000 in lease
rejection damages free and clear of any obligation to Thrivent, GFP would have
been placed in violation of the ban on anticipating rents (which ranged between
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$28,000 and $33,000 per month over the remaining term of the Lack’s lease) more
than a month in advance. See Case No. 41, Docket Entry No. 3-5 at 3. Because
the lien prevents GFP from enjoying the full use the rents, see Case No. 37, Docket
Entry No. 7-1 at 2–3 (bankruptcy court Order allowing GFP to use the damages
only “as allowed by the Loan Documents”), GFP is forced to abide by its
obligation not to anticipate rents.
The bankruptcy court’s ruling must therefore be affirmed. The Court will,
however, note that an additional controversy has arisen regarding the meaning and
effect of the bankruptcy court’s Order establishing Thrivent’s lien. That Order
states that “Thrivent’s lien attaches to [the damages] until all obligations are paid
in full under the Note relating to Thrivent’s $3,400,000.00 Loan to GFP, and that
until the obligations under the Note are paid, GFP may only use the funds as
allowed by the Loan Documents.” Id. Because GFP’s license allows it to “use and
enjoy” the rents as they accrue, it argues that the Order gives it free use of all the
damages that would have accrued under the normal course of the Lack’s lease
(essentially, given the time that has passed, the entire sum of damages). Thrivent
argues in response that the Order does not give GFP free use of any of the damages
until it has completely repaid its debt to Thrivent and discharged the Note.
This issue is one in the first instance for the bankruptcy court. Although
GFP moved for reconsideration of that court’s ruling, see Bankruptcy Case No. 1016 / 17
60149, Docket Entry No. 1790, it did not file a motion asking the court to clarify
its Order. In the absence of a full record, the Court declines to interpret the
bankruptcy court’s Order for the first time on appeal. The proper avenue for
raising this issue is in a motion for clarification to the bankruptcy court.
IV.
CONCLUSION
The Court concludes that the bankruptcy court correctly interpreted the law
when it held that GFP had a license to collect the lease rejection damages subject
to a lien in Thrivent’s favor. Accordingly, the Court AFFIRMS the bankruptcy
court’s July 25, 2012 Order Regarding Debtors’ Sixth Omnibus Objection to (1)
Undocumented Claims, and (2) Claims For Which the Debtors Are Not Liable
(Bankruptcy Case No. 10-60149, Docket Entry No. 1769).
IT IS SO ORDERED.
SIGNED this 29th day of August, 2013.
___________________________________
Gregg Costa
United States District Judge
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