This appeal presents the question whether the bankruptcy court erred in holding that a debenture did not, as a matter of law, include original issue discount (“OID”). Concluding that the bankruptcy court erred, its judgment is reversed and this adversary proceeding is remanded for further proceedings.
I
The relevant background facts are largely undisputed and may be found in the bankruptcy court’s decision below.
In re I.C.H. Corp.,
Under the terms of the Debenture, an ACFC subsidiary was obligated to make interest payments to Sayyah Corporation beginning with a prorated payment of $1,375,-000 on March 31, 1982 and continuing with payments of $3 million annually until March 31, 2001. The $30 million redemption value of the Debenture was due in a single payment upon the October 15, 2001 maturity date. The Debenture also provided that ACFC could prepay the indebtedness for an amount below the Debenture’s face value on three specific dates: (1) on October 15, 1986, for a payment of $24,125,000; 5 (2) on October 15, 1991, for a payment of $26,625,000; or (3) on October 15, 1996, for a payment of $29,125,-000.
After ACFC received the necessary regulatory approvals, the parties closed the transaction on October 15, 1981. At this time, an ACFC subsidiary paid Sayyah Corporation $15 million cash and executed and delivered the $30 million Debenture to Sayyah Corporation. Sayyah Corporation subsequently assigned the Debenture, the Guaranty, and the Letter of Credit to Sayyah, and debtor ICH Corporation (“ICH”) became the direct obli-gor under the Debenture due to a merger with ACFC. 6
ICH later attempted to obtain about $368 million in financing to acquire other insurance companies. To meet certain conditions imposed by the lenders, ICH sought to amend various aspects of the deal. On October 29,1984 Sayyah agreed to an amendment of the Debenture that released ICH from its Guaranty and released the Letter of Credit that secured the Guaranty. In consideration for these releases, ICH relinquished its right to prepay the Debenture and, as substitute collateral for the Letter of Credit, agreed to loan Sayyah up to $29.5 million under a revolving credit loan agreement (“Revolving
ICH filed a voluntary chapter 11 petition on October 10, 1995. Sayyah timely filed a proof of claim listing the Debenture and stating that it was subject to partial setoff. 7 ICH originally scheduled Sayyah’s claim in the aggregate amount of $31,250,000, which was composed of $28,064,835.63 that was secured by right of setoff due to the ICH Loans and $3,185,165.00 that constituted an unsecured claim. 8
On February 7, 1997 the bankruptcy court entered an order confirming ICH’s first amended joint plan of reorganization. This order created the Lone Star Liquidating Trust (the “Trust”), named plaintiff-appellant Susan A. Brown (“Trustee”) as the trustee, and authorized ICH to convey to the Trust its rights, title, and interest in Sayyah’s obligations to ICH.
The Trustee then brought the instant adversary proceeding in which she objected to Sayyah’s proof of claim. The Trustee contended that Sayyah was improperly seeking to recover OID in the Debenture that had not accrued as of the petition date, and that an offset of the parties’ debts resulted in Sayyah’s owing a debt to the Trust. Sayyah and the Trustee subsequently filed cross-motions for summary judgment, disputing
inter alia
whether the Debenture contained OID. The bankruptcy court granted Sayyah’s motion in part, holding that the Debenture did not, as a matter of law, contain OID.
I.C.H.,
The parties then tried the remaining issues to the bankruptcy court, which held that the setoff of the debts was effected on February 15,1997, the effective date of ICH’s reorganization plan, but that 11 U.S.C. § 502(b) required the court to calculate Sayyah’s claim, as affected by the setoff, by using the amounts owed by ICH and Sayyah as of the petition date. Using this method of calculation, the bankruptcy court held that Sayyah had an allowed unsecured claim for $3,246,-390 and was entitled to collect costs and attorney’s fees in the amount of $362,402.26. The Trustee appeals.
II
This court reviews the bankruptcy court’s summary judgment ruling
de novo,
applying the same standards as did the bankruptcy court.
In re Maple Mortgage, Inc.,
Civil Action No. 3:94-CV-0457-D, slip op. at 5-6 (N.D.Tex. Apr. 18, 1995) (Fitzwater, J.),
aff'd,
The Trustee argues that the bankruptcy court committed reversible error when it held that the Debenture did not, as a matter of law, contain OID.
A
OID results when an entity issues a debt instrument for consideration that is less than its face value.
In re Pengo Indus., Inc.,
B
The Bankruptcy Code does not provide guidance concerning how to determine the existence of OID in a debt-for-stock transaction.
12
Circuit courts likewise have not had occasion to address whether OID was created in a debt-for-stock transaction. The two circuits that have decided OID issues have done so in the specific context of a debt-for-debt exchange in a consensual, out-of-court workout.
See Pengo,
In
Pengo,
for example, the Fifth Circuit decided an appeal that involved a bankrupt corporation that had originally issued debentures with a face value of $1,000.
Pengo,
The Second and Fifth Circuits disagreed with the bankruptcy courts, holding that the new debentures did not contain OID. In so doing, they limited their holdings to “the narrow issue of whether a debt-for-debt face value exchange generates OID.”
Id.
at 549;
see Chateaugay,
In re Allegheny Int’l, Inc.,
C
Absent guiding precedent, the court now considers whether the bankruptcy court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of Sayyah.
ACFC and Sayyah Corporation originally executed the Agreement to consummate an arrangement in which ACFC would purchase 1,892,325 shares of HCA stock that Sayyah Corporation owned. See Sayyah App.Ex. 5 at 1. The Agreement set forth the terms and conditions of the stock purchase and expressly stated that the stock had an aggregate purchase price of $45 million, payable $15 million in cash and by the $30 million Debenture. See id. at 3. Sayyah contends that the parol evidence rule governs this case because the Agreement unambiguously states that the aggregate amount of the Debenture and the cash, which totaled $45 million, equaled the parties’ stated purchase price of the stock. See id. The court disagrees.
Bankruptcy policy mandates that the court determine the existence of OID by considering evidence outside the parties’ agreement.
Cf. Pengo,
There is persuasive, although not controlling, authority that the court should look beyond the four corners of the Agreement. Under the Tax Code, 14 OID exists when the debt instrument’s stated redemption price at maturity exceeds its issue price. 26 U.S.C. § 1273(a)(1). When a debt instrument is issued for property that is traded on an established market, the issue price of the debt instrument equals the fair market value of the property received. Id. § 1273(b)(3). The Tax Code therefore determines the existence of OID by examining evidence other than a specific contract’s language.
There is further support for this rule in dicta contained in
Chateaugay.
The Second Circuit in
Chateaugay
declined to look beyond the face value of the exchanged notes, but stated that a different rule could apply outside the context of a debt-for-debt exchange in a consensual workout.
See Chateaugay,
The Bankruptcy Code also requires that the court look beyond a contract’s language when determining whether interest is unmatured. In this context, the Code requires that the court determine the maturity of interest without reference to any
ipso facto
or any bankruptcy clause in the agreement creating a claim against the bankrupt entity.
See Allegheny,
Even if the court were to conr elude that it should consult the parol evidence rule, this principle would not settle the issue on summary judgment. The parol evidence rule bars the introduction of extrinsic evidence concerning a prior or contemporar neous agreement to vary or contradict the terms of an unambiguous and fully integrated agreement.
See In re Marriage of Pylawka,
D
The court now determines whether Sayyah was entitled to summary judgment that the Debenture did not, as a matter of law, contain OID. As noted, OID exists when the face value of a debt instrument exceeds the value of the consideration given in exchange for the debt instrument.
Pengo,
Sayyah presented some evidence that the stock was worth $45 million: the Agreement recited that it was worth $45 million, and ICH stated in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing that the stock was worth this amount. Sayyah App.Ex. 5 at 3; Ex. 9 at 10. The Trustee, however, has pointed the court to the Debenture’s prepayment provision and the Letter of Credit. The prepayment provision allowed ICH to retire the Debenture before its maturity date at an amount below the Debenture’s stated face value.
See
Sayyah App.Ex. 7 at 2 (permitting ICH to pay back $24,125,000 on October 15, 1986; $26,625,000 on October 15, 1991; or $29,125,000 on October 15, 1996). ACFC also provided Sayyah Corporation the Letter of Credit to secure its debt on the Debenture.
See
Trustee App.Ex. 114. The Letter of Credit was in the amount of $37.5 million, which equals the $24,125,000 that ICH could prepay on October 15, 1986, plus the scheduled interest payments for 1982 until 1986.
See id.
at 2. Evidence that a party can prepay a loan for an amount lower than its stated principal amount, and that the
IV
The Trustee also maintains that the bankruptcy court erred when it concluded that it must calculate Sayyah’s debt to ICH as of the effective date of the setoff rather than as of the petition date, and allowed Sayyah to recover costs and attorney’s fees. Upon remand of this case, the bankruptcy court must determine whether the Debenture contained OID and, if it did, in what amount. Depending on this finding, Sayyah may become an oversecured creditor. If so, he may obtain post-petition interest on his claim, and potentially the attorney’s fees he seeks, as provided in the Debenture. See 11 U.S.C. § 506(b). Because the resolution of these issues depends on the bankruptcy court’s determination of the OID question, it would be premature for the court now to decide these questions.
‡ ‡ ‡ ‡
The bankruptcy court’s judgment is REVERSED and this adversary proceeding is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. This interest equaled 1,892,325 shares of HCA, Inc. stock, or approximately 66.7% of its outstanding shares.
. HCA was a holding company that owned and controlled life insurance companies domiciled in several states.
. Contrary to its label, the debt instrument that ACFC issued was not a "debenture" in its truest sense. A debenture is a long-term debt security that is issued, pursuant to a trust indenture, to a large number of investors in order to raise capital.
See Broad v. Rockwell Int’l Corp.,
. The Debenture’s 10% interest rate was below the 19% prevailing market interest rate for debentures in 1981.
. The October 15, 1986 prepayment amount of $24,125,000, plus the scheduled interest payments for 1982 until 1986, totaled $37.5 million, which was the amount of the Letter of Credit.
. After the merger, ICH recorded the Debenture on its books, using generally accepted accounting principles, as a debt in the amount of $17,153,-000.
. Sayyah did not, however, seek relief from the automatic stay or petition for the right to effect the setoff.
. ICH did not admit the validity of the claim, and it reserved the right to dispute the validity of the claim.
. Although the Trustee also moved for summary judgment, she was the nonmovant with respect to the partial summary judgment now on appeal. The court therefore analyzes the Trustee’s contentions as those of a summary judgment non-movant.
. As noted, part of the judgment on appeal was entered following a trial. The standard of review that applies in that context is different. The court reviews the bankruptcy court’s conclusions of law
de novo, In re Ambassador Park Hotel, Ltd.,
. A typical example of OID is reflected in a transaction in which an entity issues a $1,000 promissory note, or a debenture, in exchange for $900. The $100 difference represents the discount.
See Pengo,
. The legislative history of § 502(b)(2) offers an example of OID, explaining that OID is created when an entity issues a $1,000 note in exchange for $900 cash. See H.R.Rep. No. 595, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. 352-53 (1977), reprinted, in 1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5787, 5963, 6308-09. This illustration demonstrates the existence of OID only when the proceeds received by the issuer have a definite dollar amount, e.g., $900. It does not address how to calculate the value of the proceeds when the issuer receives property, such as stock, that has a value that may fluctuate over time based on factors such as market demand and a party’s subjective opinion. Cf. Gary B. Wilcox & David M. Rievman, Restructuring Troubled Debt under the New Debt Exchange Rules, 10 Va.Tax Rev. 665, 669 n. 28 (Winter 1991) (noting that "legislative history of § 502(b)(2) does not address how [OID] is to be determined in the context of a pre-bankruptcy exchange offer.”).
. See Victor Brudney, Corporate Bondholders and Debtor Opportunism: In Bad Times and Good, 105 Harv.L.Rev. 1821, 1860 & n. 115 (1992); John C. Coffee & William A. Klein, Bondholder Coercion: The Problem of Constrained Choice in Debt Tender Offers and Recapitalizations, 58 U.Chi.L.Rev. 1207, 1248 n. 121 (Fall 1991); Richard L. Epling, Exchange Offers, Defaults, and Insolvency: A Short Primer, 8 Bankr.Dev.J. 15, 44 (1991); Ford Lacy & David M. Dolan, Legal Aspects of Public Debt Restructuring: Exchange Offers, Consent Solicitations and Tender Offers, 4 DePaul Bus.L.J. 49, 58-59 (Fall/Winter 1991); see generally Robin E. Phelan & Stacey Jernigan, OID and the “LTV Risk": An Original Investment Disaster, 567 PLI/Comm 465 (1991).
. Tax law is not controlling authority in the bankruptcy context, but a court may refer to it as persuasive authority.
See Pengo,
. The parties do not dispute that Illinois law governs the Agreement's provisions. See Sayyah App.Ex. 5 at 38.
