09-11233
Bankr. S.D.N.Y.Nov 23, 2016Background
- Chemtura (successor to multiple chemical companies including Witco) confirmed a Chapter 11 plan (Effective Date Nov. 10, 2010) that discharged prepetition claims and permanently enjoined prosecution of discharged claims (Confirmation Order ¶¶141,144).
- Debtors implemented a bar-date notice program (Bar Date Order, Oct. 30, 2009) including mailed notices to known creditors, site-specific notices and publication in the New York Times, USA Today and 112 local papers; fourteen site-specific notices identified benzene at certain sites but none identified benzene in Witco mineral spirits used by Safety-Kleen.
- Between 2015–2016 six plaintiffs (the “Benzene Claimants”) sued in Philadelphia County for benzene injuries allegedly from mineral spirits used in Safety-Kleen parts-washing solvents; none had filed proofs of claim in the bankruptcy.
- Chemtura moved to enforce the Plan’s discharge injunction and to sanction claimants and counsel; claimants argued inadequate notice of the bar date, that claims are postpetition or unknown, and that suits may proceed nominally to fix insurer liability.
- Court found the Benzene Claimants’ claims arose prepetition (exposure-based accrual), held them to be "unknown" creditors as of the bar date, found publication notice constitutionally adequate, and enjoined pursuit of the suits against Chemtura (including nominal suits to fix insurer liability because Chemtura would incur defense costs). Court denied discovery and declined to find civil contempt or award sanctions.
Issues
| Issue | Plaintiff's Argument | Defendant's Argument | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whether claimants’ tort claims arose prepetition | Claimants: injuries not diagnosed until after confirmation; some exposures continued and thus create postpetition claims | Debtors: injury accrues at time of exposure; all alleged exposures to Witco products occurred prepetition | Held: claims are prepetition (exposure-based accrual) and dischargeable |
| Whether claimants received adequate notice of the bar date | Claimants: Debtors should have provided benzene-/Safety-Kleen-specific notice; general notice lacked necessary detail and regional publication | Debtors: had no knowledge of Safety-Kleen-related claims; notice program (mail + broad publication) approved by court was reasonably calculated | Held: claimants were "unknown" creditors; publication/general notice satisfied due process |
| Whether claimants may proceed nominally against Chemtura to establish insurer liability | Claimants: suits can proceed nominally against debtor to reach insurers; Cost Sharing Agreement/assumption prevents debtor from invoking injunction | Debtors: nominal suits would force Chemtura to bear defense costs under assumed insurance/Cost Sharing Agreement, violating the fresh-start policy | Held: nominal suits barred because Chemtura will incur defense costs; section 524 protects debtor’s fresh start |
| Whether claimants/counsel should be held in civil contempt and sanctioned | Claimants: acted in good faith, believed injunction inapplicable; contested due process and insurer-access defenses | Debtors: claimants/counsel knowingly and willfully violated the discharge injunction despite warnings and prior enforcement decision | Held: contempt/sanctions denied — movant failed to show willful bad faith by clear and convincing evidence |
Key Cases Cited
- Travelers Indem. Co. v. Bailey, 557 U.S. 137 (2010) (bankruptcy court retains jurisdiction to interpret and enforce its prior orders)
- Mullane v. Central Hanover Bank & Trust Co., 339 U.S. 306 (1950) (due-process standard for notice: notice reasonably calculated to apprise interested parties)
- Tulsa Prof’l Collection Servs. v. Pope, 485 U.S. 478 (1988) (creditor is "reasonably ascertainable" test; publication suffices for unknown creditors)
- In re Johns-Manville Corp., 552 B.R. 221 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2016) (prepetition exposure gives rise to prepetition claim despite postpetition manifestation)
- In re Quigley Co., Inc., 383 B.R. 19 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2008) (same: exposure before petition creates a ‘‘claim’’)
- Edgeworth v. Houston (In re Edgeworth), 993 F.2d 51 (5th Cir. 1993) (discharge does not extinguish debt; liability of others remains; suits against debtor nominally permitted only if no cost to debtor)
