This appeal centers upon the interpretation of § 101(16)(C) of the Bankruptcy Code. That provision states that “equity security” means “warrant or right, other than a right to convert, to purchase, sell, or subscribe to a share, security, or inter *512 est....” 11 U.S.C. § 101(16X0 (2000). This appeal requires us to decide issues of apparent first impression in this circuit. 1 The primary issues to be determined are whether the proofs of claims of a group of equity holders that include shares of stock (with a redemption provision) and warrants (with a repurchase provision)' are properly characterized as “equity securities” instead of “claims” under § 101(5) and whether these proofs of claims could also give rise to “claims” independent of the equity interests. The district court held that the proofs of claims of the equity holders were “equity securities” under § 101(16)(C), not “claims”, that the documents that gave rise to them did not- also contain independent “claims”, and affirmed the bankruptcy court’s order sustaining the objection to these proofs of claims. For the reasons that follow, we AFFIRM.
' I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
This is an appeal from the final judgment of the district court affirming the ordér of the bankruptcy court disallowing the claims of equity holders in the Jobs, com, Inc., Chapter 11 proceeding.
See Carrieri v. Jobs.com, Inc.,
We adopt, in relevant part, the bankruptcy court’s description of the factual and procedural background.
See In re Jobs.com, Inc.,
[a]t any time and from time to time after March 22, 2001, upon receipt of written demand from any holder of shares of Series C-l Preferred Stock, the Corporation, to the extent it has legally available funds therefor, shall redeem the whole or any part of such holder’s shares of Series C-l Preferred Stock at a per share redemption price equal to $4.00 (the “C-l Redemption Price”).
SARAI, Art. 4.11(a), 10 R.2029;' Statement, ¶ 5(a),
In addition to the C-l Stock, the Carri-eri Group also received warrants 4 for the purchase of additional preferred stock of the Debtor as part of the merger. Each member of the Carrieri Group received warrants to acquire a specific number of shares of Series C-2 Preferred Stock (“C-2 Warrants”) and Series C-3 Preferred Stock (“C-3 Warrants”) (collectively, ‘Warrants”) 5 at specified prices per share. Additionally, under the Warrant Rights *514 Documents (which are separate from the C-l Stock Rights Documents), the Debtor agreed to repurchase the Warrants at an agreed price if it had “legally available funds” at the time of the demand. 6 Specifically, the “Repurchase” provision, which is identical for each Warrantholder, provides that:
[a]t any time and from time to time after March 19, 2002, upon receipt of written demand from any Warrantholder of this Stock Warrant, the Company, to the extent it has legally available funds therefor, shall purchase the whole or any part of such Warrantholder’s Stock Warrant at a purchase price equal to $6.00 per share of Series C-2 Preferred Stock for which this Stock Warrant is then exercisable, provided that the Company shall have no such purchase obligation with respect to the Stock Warrant if it has closed an IPO on or before such date.
Series C-2 Preferred Stock Warrant, ¶ 5,
Each member of the Carrieri Group made a written demand for redemption of the C-l Stock on or about 20 February 2001, requesting a redemption date of either 22 or 23 March 2001, and returned his stock certificate to Jobs.com. The Debtor rejected all these demands in writing as defective, stating that the Rights Documents set forth the requirements that must be satisfied before a C-l Stock holder may exercise its redemption rights. None of the Carrieri Group members complied with the preliminary endorsement requirement when their first redemption demand was made and, therefore, the Debtor returned their redemption letters and C-l Stock certificates.
The Debtor filed a voluntary Chapter 11 petition on 15 March 2001 (“Petition Date”). The Petition Date occurred just a few days before the specified redemption *515 dates (22 or 23 March 2001). On 21 July 2001, each Carrieri Group member filed unsecured claims against the Debtor (“Carrieri Claims”) in the bankruptcy proceeding in “unknown amounts” arising from the C-l Stock, the Warrants, and the Rights Documents, prompting objections by Jobs.com. Through letters dated 19 March 2002, the Carrieri Group made (i) a demand on the Debtor for repurchase of the C-2 and C-3 Warrants; and (ii) a second redemption demand of the C-l Stock. In response to the second redemption demand, the C-l Stock certificates were again returned by the Debtor, even though they had been duly endorsed as required.
On 10 September 2002, after hearing evidence and testimony regarding the claims objection of the Debtor, the bankruptcy court disallowed the Carrieri Claims.
See In re Jobs.com, Inc.,
After applying TBCA Article 2.38, however, the bankruptcy court concluded that the Carrieri Claims for the C-l Stock Rights were “claims” but unallowable under § 502(b)(1). Section 502(b)(1) states that a claim is “unenforceable against the debtor and property of the debtor, under any agreement or applicable law for a reason other than because such claim is contingent or unmatured.” 11 U.S.C. .§ 502(b)(1) (1994). Because the Rights Documents required the Debtor to redeem the C-l Stock only if the certificates were “duly endorsed or assigned” to the corporation apd if the Debtor had “legally available funds”, a phrase not defined by the Rights Documents or the TBCA, the bankruptcy court looked to the TBCA’s definition for when such a corporate distribution may legally be made.
Under the TBCA, a “distribution may not be made if (1) after giving effect to the distribution, the corporation would be insolvent; or (2) the distribution exceeds the surplus of the corporation.” 7 The bankruptcy court found that the Carrieri Group’s stock redemption attempts failed for two reasons: (1) the Carrieri Group members initially failed to endorse or assign their C-l Stock certificates as required; and (2) the Debtor did not have “legally available funds” with which to make the redemption because it would not have been able to pay its debts as they became due in the usual course of business (for both demands). The bankruptcy court based its decision on .the credible testimony of Peter Gudmundsson (“Gudmunds-son”), the Debtor’s president, who testified that, at the time of the proposed $880,000 C-l Stock redemption on 22 or 23 March 2001, Jobs.com had a projected negative cash flow of $524,857 for March 2001, and was projecting a $3,424,577 cumulative negative cash flow over the next six months, at which point it would run out of cash if it did not file for Chapter 11 protection. Gudmundsson testified that members of the board of directors believed that Jobs.com was in the “zone of insolvency” at the time of their 14 March 2001 meeting where they decided to file for bankruptcy the following day. Thus, the board believed that their fiduciary duties had expanded from just the equity holders to all *516 of Jobs.com’s stakeholders, including all creditors.
As for the Warrants, the bankruptcy court first noted that Warrants are “equity securities” under § 101(16)(C).
See In re Jobs.com, Inc.,
On 20 September 2002, the Carrieri Group filed a timely Rule 59(e) motion for new trial and/or reconsideration and a stay of the order pending a hearing, adding an argument under TBCA Article 2.38C. After a hearing, the bankruptcy court denied the Rule 59(e) motion on 7 November 2002, stating that the case law cited by the Carrieri Group as “newly discovered” was previously available at trial. 8 On 14 November 2002, the Carrieri Group timely filed its Notice of Appeal of the underlying order disallowing the Carrieri Claims.
On appeal, the district court ruled on 31 October 2003 that the Carrieri Claims for both the C-l Stock Rights and Warrant Rights were “equity securities” rather than “claims” or “debts.”
See Carrieri v. Jobs.com, Inc.,
On 1 December 2003, the Carrieri Group timely filed a Notice of Appeal within thirty days of the entry of the district court’s final judgment affirming the order of the bankruptcy court. See Fed. R.App. P. 4(a)(1)(A); Fed. R.App. P. 26(a)(3) (stating that if the last day of the thirty-day period is a Sunday, as was the case here, the following business day is used as the last day). This court has jurisdiction to hear this appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 158(d) and Fed. R.App. P. 6(b).
II. DISCUSSION
This appeal mainly involves the proper interpretation of § 101(16)(C) of the Bankruptcy Code and whether the Carrieri Claims qualify as “equity securities” or “claims.” The six issues to be determined on appeal are divided up here into two decisions by the district court and four by the bankruptcy court.
A. Standard of Review
The Court of Appeals reviews the decision of a district court, sitting as an appellate court, by applying the same standards of review to the bankruptcy court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law as applied by the district court.
See United States Dep’t of Educ. v. Gerhardt (In re Gerhardt),
B. The District Court Rulings
The following two issues are key and, thus, require more explanation and analysis.
1. The Carrieri Claims Are “Equity Securities” Under § 101(16)(C)
The Carrieri Group contends that the district court erred in affirming the bank *518 ruptcy court’s decision to sustain the Debt- or’s objection to the Carrieri Group’s proofs of claim when it found, contrary to the bankruptcy court, that the Carrieri Claims were “equity securities.” 9 Contending that the bankruptcy court correctly characterized the Carrieri Claims as “rights to sell stock”, which were excluded from being “equity securities” under § 101(16)(C), the Carrieri Group asserts that its claims are not “equity securities.” While it believes that the bankruptcy court’s interpretation is correct, the Carri-eri Group argues that we need not make such a determination because it contends in its second issue on appeal that the district court was also incorrect in holding that “equity security” and “claim” are mutually exclusive in this case.
The Carrieri Group’s arguments are unpersuasive for three reasons: (1) the district court’s correct interpretation of § 101(16)(C); (2) the legislative history shows that Congress intended the C-l Stock Rights and Warrant Rights to be “equity securities”; and (3) the purpose of Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code under the “absolute priority rule” supports the finding that the Carrieri Claims are “equity securities.”
First, the district court properly ruled that the bankruptcy court had misread § 101(16)(C) to exclude the right to sell stock and to demand repurchase of warrants. The bankruptcy court concluded that the Carrieri Group’s C-l Stock Rights did not constitute “equity securities” because it interpreted § 101(16)(C) to exclude the right to sell stock by treating the list of words after “other than a right to convert” as a continuation of the exclusion.
10
The district court’s interpretation of § 101(16)(C), however, is the correct one, both under the “plain meaning” rule, as reinforced by the Supreme Court in
Lamie,
and under the legislative history.
See Lamie v. United States Trustee,
A proper statutory construction, and a clearer way to read § 101(16)(C), would be to place the words “other than a right to convert” in parentheses, in italics (as the Debtor suggests), 12 or at the end of the provision. Thus, § 101(16)(C) should be read as follows:
(16) “equity security” means—
(C) warrant or right (other than a right to convert) to purchase, sell, or subscribe to a share, security, or interest of a kind specified in subpara-graph (A) or (B) of this paragraph;
Second, even assuming arguendo that § 101(16)(C) is ambiguous, looking briefly at the legislative history makes it clear that the district court’s interpretation is the correct one. Congress did not-intend the definition of “equity security” to include “a security, such as a convertible debenture, that is convertible into equity security, but has not been converted.” S.Rep. No. 95-989, at 24, 95th Cong., 2d Sess. (1978),
reprinted in
1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5787, 5810; H.R.Rep. No. 95-595, at 311, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. (1978),
reprinted in
1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5963, 6268.
13
It follows then that Congress did not intend to exclude anything else from the definition of “equity security”, such as the right to sell/redeem stock or to demand repurchase of warrants, because it did not explicitly list any other restricted terms. The district court’s interpretation of § 101(16)(C), therefore, is the correct one based on the legislative history. This interpretation'adheres more closely to the plain language, of § 101(16)(C) by more accurately respecting the words of Congress.
See Lamie v. United States Trustee,
Accepting the district court’s interpretation also requires less alteration of § 101(16)(C) than does the bankruptcy court’s construction and does not lead to an absurd result as it is in accord with common bankruptcy practice. See id. We therefore reject the bankruptcy court’s interpretation and accept the district court’s reading of § 101(16)(C). Consequently, the Carrieri Group’s right to redeem its C-l Stock was an “equity security” because it is a right to sell a “security” or a “share in a corporation.” 11 U.S.C. §§ 101(16)(A) & (C) (2000). The district court’s ruling that the C-l Stock Rights *521 were “equity securities” and not “claims” is affirmed.
Similarly, the district court’s ruling that the Warrant Rights are “equity securities” is also affirmed. The Code defines “equity security” to expressly include the Warrants. 11 U.S.C. § 101(16)(C) (2000). Each of the Warrants contained a repurchase provision whereby the holder may demand repurchase of the warrant for $6.00 per share of C-2 or C-3 Preferred Stock “[a]t any time arid from time to time after March 19, 2002” for the C-2 and C-3 Warrants.
The district court ruled that, because the bankruptcy court’s interpretation of “equity security” was incorrect for the C-l Stock Rights, it was also incorrect as to the Warrant Rights. The right to demand repurchase of the Warrants falls within the definition of “equity security” under § 101(16)(C) because stock warrants are simply options to purchase stock at a given price. See
In re Daig Corp.,
Finally, in the alternative, the Debtor properly points out thát the “absolute priority rule” requires us to affirm the district court’s decision that the Carrieri Claims are “equity securities.” Although “interest” is not defined in the Code, it is universally understood to mean an equity interest' in the debtor.
See Bank of Am. Nat’l Trust & Sav. Ass’n v. 203 N. LaSalle St.
P’ship,
Warrants with redemption provisions, such as those of the Carrieri Group, are equity interests until their expiration (or until the right to receive a cash payment properly matures on or before the petition date).
See Duel Glass v. Search Fin. Servs. (In re Search Fin. Servs. Acceptance Corp.),
2. The Carrieri Claims Could Not Also Be “Claims” Under § 101(5)
The Carrieri Group argues that the district court erred by finding, contrary to the bankruptcy, court, that the Carrieri Claims could not also be “claims” under 11 U.S.C. § 101(5). Contending that the district court’s finding that “equity securities” and “claims” are mutually exclusive is flawed, the Carrieri Group asserts that even if the Carrieri Claims are “equity securities” under the Code, the Carrieri Group can also hold claims independent of its equity interests. The Carrieri -Group contends that, because of the intentionally broad definition of “claim”, see
In re Andrews,
The Carrieri Group’s argument that they also hold “claims” independent of its “equity interests” lacks merit, and we affirm the district court’s judgment for the following reasons: (1) the language in the Rights Documents plainly does not provide the Carrieri Group with an independent and enforceable “right to payment” as required to be a “claim” under § 101(5)(A); and (2) even if the Carrieri Claims could be construed as “claims”, they were subject to mandatory subordination under Sections 510(a) or (b) and were properly disallowed.
First, a “claim” includes the “right to payment, whether or not such right is reduced to judgment, liquidated, unliqui-dated, fixed, contingent, matured, unma-tured, disputed, undisputed, legal, equitable, secured, or unsecured.” 11 U.S.C. § 101(5)(A) (2000). The touchstone of any “claim” is that there is an “enforceable obligation” of the debtor or an enforceable “right to payment” from the debtor.
Johnson v. Home State Bank,
In
Einstein,
Bagel Funding, an equity security holder of the Chapter 11 debtor (Bagel Partners), had a “Put Right” giving it the right to require that its equity interest be purchased by the debtor in cash or stock at the
debtor’s
option.
See Einstein,
In this case, the language in the Rights Documents plainly does not include an independent “right to payment.” The Rights Documents contained a redemption provision that required the Debtor to redeem the C-l Stock “to the extent it has legally available funds.” The Debtor was also required to repurchase the Warrants at an agreed price if it had “legally available funds.” Both of these phrases were negotiated for by the Debtor for a reason. It is telling that this phrase is not found in the SARAI provisions describing the Series A, B, and E stock because those equity *525 holders bargained for a priority upon liquidation. The C-l Stock Rights and Warrant Rights, therefore, did not grant the Carrieri Group a “right to payment”, as required under § 101(5)(A). The Carrieri Group members were granted redemption rights and rights to demand repurchase, similar to the “Put Right” in Einstein, and were not given “rights to payment”, enforceable or otherwise. The Rights Documents plainly conditioned these rights on the Debtor having “legally available funds.” Although there is support for the Carrieri Group’s theory that “equity securities” are not mutually exclusive from “claims”, we need not definitively decide that issue as it does not specifically arise here. Even if one document can give rise to independent equity interests and claim rights, which we believe is possible if the payment obligation is guaranteed at specified intervals or at a specific time or event and is separate and distinct from the equity interests, the Rights Documents in this case plainly did not do so. 17
Furthermore, courts are clear that stock options, or the rights to exercise the stock option, are properly classified as equity security interests, not claims.
See In re Baldwin-United Corp.,
Moreover, three of the cases that the Carrieri Group cites for the proposition that equity securities are not mutually exclusive with claims are easily distinguishable from this case because they either rely on different language in the rights documents or on different state law. The
St. Charles
case dealt with a partnership agreement that stated that the partnership shall pay to the partners a “guaranteed payment of interest” on a monthly basis.
See In re St. Charles Pres. Investors, Ltd., 112
B.R. 469, 473-74 (D.D.C.1990) (holding that the “appellants’ entitlement to guar
*526
anteed payment obligations are
in addition to and separate from
their equity interests.”). In
Baldwin,
also cited by the Carrieri Group, option holders were granted “guaranteed” cash surrender rights to future cash payments in exchange for forbearance from exercising their stock options.
See In re Baldwin-United Corp.,
Here, in contrast to
St. Charles
and
Baldwin,
there is no “guaranteed” right to payment language, at specified intervals or otherwise, in the Rights Documents for either the C-l Stock or the Warrants.
See In re Revco D.S., Inc.,
Second, even assuming arguendo that the Carrieri Claims could also be construed as “claims” under § 101(5)(A), the bankruptcy court properly disallowed them because they would be subject to subordination under either Sections 510(a) or (b), but not 510(c) equitable subordination as the Debtor contended, 19 and because, at *527 the time of the C-l Stock and Warrant demands, these “claims” were not exercisable. Although the bankruptcy court only mentioned that the Carrieri Claims would be subordinated under § 510(b) to the unsecured creditors and higher priority equity holders, as further discussed below, § 510(a) also may provide support for the district court’s ruling.
Section 510(a) states that a “subordination agreement is enforceable in a case under this title to the same extent that such agreement is enforceable under applicable nonbankruptcy law.” At the time of the merger, the Carrieri Group contractually agreed to subordinate its equity interests to those of the Kania Appellees and other preferred equity holders in the event of liquidation.
Under § 502(b), the rights of holders of claims and interests are fixed as of the Petition Date. When the new Jobs, com was formed, the Carrieri Group contractually agreed to exchange its equity interests in the old Jobs.com for equity interests in the new Jobs.com. The Carri-eri Group’s interests in the Debtor, thus, would be determined as of 15 March 2001, the Petition Date. Even though the Carri-eri Group attempted to exercise its redemption rights in the C-l Stock on 20 February 2001 (per the Rights Documents, there was a short time period before 22 March 2001 when it could file its redemption demand), its redemption right did not ripen until after 22 March 2001, and its right to demand repurchase of the Warrants did not ripen until after 19 March 2002. The fact that it did not endorse the stock certificates, as required by the Rights Documents and discussed further below, is yet another reason that the Car-rieri Group had not exercised its rights in the C-l Stock as of the Petition Date. The Carrieri Group’s rights in the C-l Stock and Warrants, therefore, were unex-ercised and not ripe for exercise as of the Petition Date and properly classified as “equity securities.” Also, with respect to the second tender of the C-l Stock and the demand for repurchase of the Warrants, the Carrieri Group improperly attempted to take a post-petition step to change the nature of its pre-petition equity interests, to the detriment of other creditors, by trying to “leapfrog” over three groups of equity holders to which it had agreed to be subordinated, namely, the Kania Appellees and the Series A and B preferred stockholders. As “equity securities”, the C-l Stock Rights and Warrant Rights were properly subject to cancellation upon plan confirmation, as the Debt- or’s confirmed plan provided. See 11 U.S.C. § 1141(d)(1)(B) (1984). We affirm the district court’s decision, therefore, that the Carrieri Claims are “equity securities” and not “claims” in light of § 510(a) subordination because the Carrieri Group con *528 tractually agreed to subordinate its equity interests.
Furthermore, even if the Carrieri Claims could be construed as “claims” under § 101(5)(A), § 510(b) provides more support for the bankruptcy court’s ruling to disallow the Carrieri Claims. Section 510(b) states that, for purposes of distribution, “a claim arising from rescission of a purchase or sale of a security of the debtor ... or for reimbursement ... allowed under § 502 ... shall be subordinated to all claims or interests that are senior to or equal the claim or interest represented by such security....” 11 U.S.C. § 510(b) (1984). The bankruptcy court determined that § 510(b) provided unsecured creditors with another type of protection from claims which arise from equity securities because they must be subordinated to all senior or equal claims. Had the Carrieri Claims actually been deemed to be “claims” or to include independent “claims” by the bankruptcy court, because they arose from the “sale of a security of the debtor”, they nevertheless would have been subordinated to all senior or equal unsecured claims and preferred equity holders, such as the Kania Appellees. While the district court’s decision did not specifically address subordination, it. did cite case law that reiterates the above notion that equity security holders are junior to claims and are not entitled to participate as meaningfully in a bankruptcy case as do claim holders.
See Citicorp Real Estate, Inc. v. PWA, Inc. (In re Georgetown Bldg.
Assocs.
Ltd. P’ship),
C. The Bankruptcy Court’s Rulings
Even though the Carrieri Group did argue the following issues on appeal to the district court, that court failed to address specifically the issues below, .impliedly affirming them because it did not explicitly reverse them. It is likely that the district court chose not to address these issues below because it believed that it would first require the-assumption that the Car-rieri Group held only “claims”, not “equity securities” as the district court held and we have affirmed. But inextricably intertwined with the district court’s second ruling is the determination that the Debtor did not have “legally available funds” which would give rise to an enforceable “right to payment” or “claim.” As the district court did'not give any reasons for its decision, we will address these four bankruptcy court rulings de novo. 20
1. The Carrieri Claims, Which Matured Post-Petition, Were Properly Disallowed By Determining That No “Legally Available Funds” Existed Under the TBCA Rather Than Under the Bankruptcy Code
The Carrieri Group contends that the bankruptcy court erred by using the *529 TBCA instead of the Code to determine whether “legally available funds” existed to pay the Carrieri Claims. The Appellants state that the TBCA is inapplicable because it is designed to cover operating Texas companies rather than companies liquidating in Chapter 11. The Carrieri Group argues that its claims matured post-petition and, at least with respect to the C-2 and C-3 Rights Documents, its claims matured after the Debtor was no longer operating but in a liquidation mode. It contends that the Bankruptcy Code, rather than the TBCA, should govern the issue of “legally available funds.” The Carrieri Group argues that the “insolvency” definition under the Code, essentially the “balance sheet” test, should have been used to determine the Debtor to be solvent because the Debtor’s assets exceeded its liabilities and there was no legal impediment to use the funds to pay the Carrieri Claims. See 11 U.S.C. § 101(32)(A) (2000). We disagree.
The Carrieri Group’s arguments lack merit and we affirm the district court’s judgment because the bankruptcy court properly looked to the TBCA instead of the Code to determine whether “legally available funds” existed. The basic rule in bankruptcy is that “state law governs the substance of claims.”
See Raleigh v. Ill. Dep’t of Revenue,
*530 2. Assuming that the TBCA Applied, the Carrieri Claims Were Properly Disallowed, by Determining that “Legally Available■ Funds” Were Not Available Because the Debtor Was or Would Have Been Rendered Insolvent When the Demand Was Made or When the C-l Stock Rights and Warrant.Rights Matured
The Carrieri Group contends that, even if the TBCA is required to determine whether the Debtor had “legally available funds” to pay the Carrieri Claims, the bankruptcy court’s analysis of the TBCA when applied to the undisputed facts is clearly erroneous as a matter of law. It argues that the bankruptcy court improperly focused on Gudmundsson’s earlier testimony rather than his later testimony. Gudmundsson testified earlier in the hearing that the Debtor had “around twenty million” in negative cash flow in 2000, a negative $1,357,600 for January and February of 2001, and a projected negative cash flow of $524,857 for March 2001 and, had the Debtor redeemed the C-l Stock in March 2001, -the Debtor would have run out of cash “closer to June rather than August” 2001. He later admitted under cross-examination that the Debtor had sufficient funds available in March 2001 to redeem the C-l Stock. The Carrieri Group contends that the bankruptcy court’s use of TBCA Article 1.02A(16)’s insolvency definition, the “inability of a corporation to pay its debts as they become due in the usual course of its business”, was clearly erroneous as the Debtor was not “insolvent” according to Texas case law.
See Parkway/Lamar Partners v. Tom Thumb Stores,
We affirm the bankruptcy court’s decision that the Debtor had no “legally available funds” to redeem the C-l Stock or Warrants because the Debtor was insolvent or would have been rendered insolvent at the time of the demands for the following four reasons: (1) the language of the applicable law, the TBCA, allows for the use of one or more of six disjunctive factors to determine whether a corporation is insolvent and, thus, the bankruptcy court did not need to use more than one of the six factors; (2) there was undisputed evidence to support the bankruptcy court’s choice of the standard for insolvency based on projected economic performance, making the Parkway definition of “insolvency” inapplicable because that case dealt with the Texas UCC and a commercial lease, not a dot-com corporation; (3) the bankruptcy court’s determination that the Car-rieri Group failed in its burden to prove that the Debtor had “legally available funds” was not an improper application of the Code, and the TBCA; and (4) even if the bankruptcy court’s ruling that the Debtor had no “legally available funds” and was insolvent was in error, the determination that the Debtor would have been rendered insolvent can also be supported because the Debtor was in the “zone of insolvency.”
First, the TBCA allows for the use of one or more factors to determine insolvency and does not require the use of all six. The relevant section of the TBCA
*531
states that a distribution may not be made if, “(1) after giving effect to the distribution, the corporation would be rendered insolvent_” Tex. Bus. CoRP. Act Ann. art. 2.38B (Vernon Supp. 2004);
see also S. Pac. Transp. Co. v. Voluntary Purchasing Groups, Inc.,
Second, there was undisputed evidence to support the bankruptcy court’s use of factor (4) under the TBCA’s standard for insolvency, projected economic performance, making the Carrieri Group’s definition of “insolvency” from
Parkway
inapplicable in this case. The Carrieri Group argues that the
Parkway
court advocated for the “snap shot” method of determining insolvency as only looking at “existing debts”, not “future debts.”
See Parkway/Lamar Partners v. Tom Thumb, Stores,
Parkway
dealt with a commercial real estate lease and that court deemed the grocery store tenant solvent within the meaning of the lease because the tenant had never missed a payment and did not have maturing debts greater than liquid assets.
See id.
at 850-51. First,
Parkway
is inapplicable to the case at bar because that court used the Texas Business
&
Commercial Code — the Texas UCC — for the definition of “insolvent” in the context of a commercial real estate tenant.
Id.
at 849; Tex. Bus. & Com.Code Ann. 1.201(b)(23) (Vernon Supp. 2004). This case does not invoke the UCC, but rather the Texas Business
Corporation
Act (TBCA), and its definition of “insolvent”, because it in
*533
volves a proposed corporate distribution. Second, there was undisputed evidence from, inter alia, Gudmundsson’s credible testimony to support the bankruptcy court’s reliance on factor (4) of Article 2.38-3A to determine that the Debtor was or would be insolvent based on reasonable financial projections.
See In re Jobs.com, Inc.,
Third, the bankruptcy court’s determination, that the Carrieri Group failed in its burden to show that the Debt- or had “legally available funds” and would not be rendered insolvent, was not improper. After a brief review of the bankruptcy court’s analysis, it is clear that we should affirm the bankruptcy court because it properly applied the Code and TBCA to place the burden on the Carrieri Group. The bankruptcy court first found that the Carrieri Group, as claimant, bore the burden of persuasion with respect to its proof of claim under the Code.
See
6 R. Excerpt 41. Although the court noted that there was no consensus in Texas or other state case law as to who bears the burden in an action to enforce a stock redemption agreement, the court properly analogized that the burden analysis should be the same as for claim or interest holders under Sections 502(a) and (b)(1) of the Code.
See
6 R. Excerpt 39, 41 n. 3;
In re Southland Corp.,
Finally, although neither party addressed this argument, even if the Debtor was not actually insolvent at the time of the Carrieri Group’s demands, the bankruptcy court’s determination that the Debtor would have been rendered insol
*534
vent after the demands can alternatively be supported by a “zone of insolvency” analysis.
24
Gudmundsson testified that members of the board of directors believed that Jobs.com was in the zone of insolvency under Texas law based on the advice of counsel at the time of their 14 March 2001 meeting.
See
6 R. Excerpt 43. The Debt- or’s board believed then that its fiduciary duty had expanded from just the equity holders to all the stakeholders, including all creditors.
See id.
Once the Debtor’s board of directors became aware that Jobs.com was within the zone of insolvency, they held special knowledge that was unknown to their creditors and equity holders, particularly the Carrieri Group.
25
The fact that the Debtor’s board chose not to redeem the C-l Stock pre-petition to benefit the Carrieri Group equity holders at the expense of its creditors is in accordance with their expanded fiduciary duty to all creditors because the Debtor was within the zone of insolvency. On the contrary, had the board chosen to redeem the C-l Stock, to the detriment of creditors, at a time when they knew they were in the zone of insolvency, the board may have' opened itself up to breaches of fiduciary duty claims by other creditors.
See Weaver v. Kellogg,
S. Assuming the TBCA Applied, the ■ Carrieri Claims Were Properly Disallowed by Determining that “Legally Available Funds’Were Not Available Because the Debtor Did Not Have a ‘Surplus’’ When the . Demand Was Made or When the C-1 Stock Bights and Warrant Rights Matured
The Carrieri Group argues that the bankruptcy court erred in determining that no “legally available funds” were available to redéem the Carrieri Claims because the' Debtor did not have a “surplus”, as defined by the TBCA, at the *535 time of the demand or at the time the claims matured. It contends that: (1) the bankruptcy court focused on the “insolvency” factor in TBCA Article 2.38B(1) but ignored the “surplus” exceeding factor in Article 2.38B(2); (2) the bankruptcy court should have considered Article 2.38C(2)(d) of the TBCA, allowing the corporation to redeem its shares if the net assets are not less than the amount of the proposed distribution, even though this argument was not raised until the motion for rehearing; and (3) the bankruptcy court’s ruling is totally inconsistent with Article 2.38E, which states that a corporation’s indebtedness to a shareholder incurred by a distribution shall be at parity with the corporation’s indebtedness to its general, unsecured creditors. The bankruptcy court’s ruling, the Carrieri Group maintains, improperly places its distribution rights not only not on parity with unsecured claims, but also below that of shareholders who have no distribution rights and against whom creditor claims are to be protected under the TBCA. We disagree.
We affirm the ruling of the bankruptcy court that the Debtor had no “legally available funds” to redeem the Carrieri Claims because the Debtor did not have a “surplus” under the TBCA for three reasons: (1) as with the “insolvency” factors, Article 2.38B presents two disjunctive restrictions on a corporation’s ability to make a distribution and the bankruptcy court need not have analyzed whether the distribution would have exceeded the “surplus” of the corporation, under Article 2.38B(2), if it already determined that the Debtor would be insolvent under Article 2.38B(1); (2) the Carrieri Group’s Art. 2.38C(2)(d) argument, made in a post-trial motion, may have been waived on appeal, but even if it was preserved, and even if “surplus” under Article 2.38B(2) is ignored, the bankruptcy court need not have even considered Article 2.38C(2)(d) because the record shows that the Carrieri Group failed in its burden to prove that the Debtor’s proposed distribution would not have rendered it insolvent under Article 2.38B(1); and (3) the bankruptcy court’s ruling is consistent with Article 2.38E because the Debtor was not “indebted” to the Carrieri Group, and even if it was, the Rights Documents provided that the Carrieri Claims were subordinated by agreement, falling within an exception to Article 2.38E.
First, as with the six “insolvency” factors, Article 2.38B presents two disjunctive restrictions (not a two-pronged conjunctive test as the Debtor alleges) on a corporation’s ability to make a distribution. TBCA Article 2.38B states that a distribution may not be made if: “(1) after giving effect to the distribution the corporation would be insolvent; or (2) the distribution exceeds the surplus of the corporation.” Tex. Bus. CoRP. Act Ann. art. 2.38B (Vernon Supp.2004) (emphasis added). “Surplus” is defined as “the excess of the net assets 26 of a corporation over its stated capital.” 27 Tex. Bus. Cokp. Act Am art. 1.02A(27) (Vernon Supp.2004). The bankruptcy court need not have analyzed whether the distribution would have exceeded the “sur *536 plus” of the corporation, under Article 2.38B(2), because it had already determined that the Debtor would be insolvent under Article 2.38B(1). We therefore affirm the bankruptcy court’s ruling.
Second, the Carrieri Group’s Article 2.38C(2)(d) argument, made in a post-trial Rule 59(e) motion to the bankruptcy court, may have been'waived on appeal. Rule 59(e) motions generally “cannot be used to raise arguments which could, and should, have been made before the judgment issued” and “cannot be used to argue a case under a new legal theory.” 28 Even though it appears that these arguments could, and should, have been made before the bankruptcy court judgment issued, and are not really new “issues”, we will give the Carri-eri Group the benefit of the doubt that its arguments based on Article 2.38C(2)(d) and Parkway 29 “raised” new issues and were properly preserved for this appeal. Nevertheless, even if the Article 2.38C(2)(d) argument was preserved for appeal, and even ignoring the “surplus” test for insolvency as required, 30 the bankruptcy court need not have even considered Article 2.38C(2)(d) if it found that the Carrieri Group failed in its burden to show that the Debtor would not be rendered insolvent under Article 2.38B(1). As discussed above, the bankruptcy court properly ruled that the Carrieri Group failed in its burden to show that the Debtor would not have been rendered insolvent by the distribution, and we affirm to the extent it relates to Article 2.38C(2)(d).
Furthermore, notwithstanding the Article 2.38C(2)(d) argument, the bankruptcy court also properly found that the Carrieri Group failed in its burden to show that the proposed distribution would not have exceeded its “surplus.” As stated above, the bankruptcy court properly placed the burden on the Carrieri Group to show that the Debtor had “legally available funds” and would not have been rendered insolvent. Similarly, the bankruptcy court applied the Code and TBCA Article 2.38B(2) to place the burden on the Carrieri Group to show that the proposed distribution would not have exceeded its “surplus.” The bankruptcy court found that the Carrieri Group offered no evidence regarding the calculation of the “surplus” and, thus, it failed to carry its burden. See 6 R. Excerpt 44. We therefore affirm the bankruptcy court’s application of the Code and the TBCA to place the burden on the Carrieri Group to prove that the distribution would not exceed the Debtor’s “surplus.”
*537 Finally, in contrast to the Carrieri Group’s argument; the bankruptcy court’s ruling is consistent with Article 2.38E 31 for a couple of reasons. First, as stated above, the district court properly held that the Carrieri Claims are “equity securities”, not “claims” which would give rise to an indebtedness as the bankruptcy court found. The Debtor would, thus, not become “indebted” to the Carrieri Group until it was legally eligible to make a distribution, and, under Article 2.38E, the Debtor may not make a distribution if it would violate another section of this Article, namely Article 2.38B’s “insolvent” or “surplus” requirements. The bankruptcy court properly found that the Debtor either was insolvent or would have been rendered insolvent at the time of the demands. Second, even if the Debtor was “indebted” to the Carrieri Group, through independent “claims”, the Rights Documents stated that the C-l Stock and Warrants were subordinated by agreement, providing an exception to Article 2.38E. As discussed above, at the time of the merger, in exchange for the C-l Stock and Warrants, the Rights Documents provided that the Carrieri Group subordinated its equity interests to 'those of senior preferred equity holders, such as the Kama Appellees, in the event of liquidation. See supra Part.II.B.2 & text accompanying note 19. The bankruptcy court’s ruling, therefore, that no “legally available funds” were available to redeem the C-l Stock and repurchase the Warrants due to the Debtor not having a “surplus”, as defined by the TBCA, is affirmed because it is consistent with' Article 2.38E.
A . The Carrieri Claims for the C-l Stock Were Also Properly Disallowed Simply Because the Carrieri Group Initially Failed to Endorse Them
Finally, the Carrieri Group contends that the bánkruptcy court should not have disallowed its claims just because it initially failed to endorse the stock certificates. First, it argues that, while the stock" certificates were inadvertently not endorsed on the first demand, they were duly endorsed on the second demand.' Second, they argue that bankruptcy courts often allow a post-petition act to cure a deficiency, which was ministerial here, see
Soares v. Brockton Credit Union (In re Soares),
The bankruptcy court’s ruling disallowing the Carrieri Claims for initially failing to endorse the stock certificates was proper for three reasons: (1) the Carrieri Group’s initial redemption demand was de *538 fective under the C-l Rights Document’s “duly endorsed” requirement; (2) even if the second tender cured the endorsement defect, and relates back to the first demand, the second demand is not allowable because the Debtor did not have “legally available funds” in March 2001, or after the Petition Date, and the bankruptcy court properly disallowed the Carrieri Claims; and (3) the only cases the Carrieri Group cited, Soares and Texas Tamale, are easily distinguishable from the facts of this case and do not support the Carrieri Group’s argument that the bankruptcy court should have equitably ignored its defective tenders.
The Carrieri Group’s initial redemption demand was defective under the C-l Rights Document’s “duly endorsed or assigned to the corporation or in blank” requirement for redemption and was properly disallowed under § 502(b)(1). On 20 February 2001, the Carrieri Group made its first written demand for redemption of the C-l Stock, specifying a redemption date of 22 or 23 March 2001. It returned the stock certificates but failed to duly endorse or assign them to the Debtor or in blank, as the C-l Rights Document expressly stated. The Debtor returned the stock certificates to the Carrieri Group on 9 March 2001, indicating that its tender attempt did not satisfy the requirements of the C-l Rights Document. The bankruptcy court found that the Carrieri Group’s first attempt to redeem the C-l Stock was unenforceable because it failed to endorse or assign its shares to the Debtor “as the [C-l Rights Document] plainly required.” 6 R. Excerpt 41. The bankruptcy court shall allow a claim except to the extent it is “unenforceable against the debtor ... under any agreement or applicable law.” 11 U.S.C. § 502(b)(1) (1994). In this case, the Carrieri Claims were unenforceable against the Debtor under any agreement— the C-l Rights Document. Therefore, we affirm the bankruptcy court’s ruling disallowing the Carrieri Group’s initial redemption demand under § 502(b)(1) because that court properly found that the Carrieri Group failed to comply with the “duly endorsed” requirement.
Even if the second tender cured the endorsement defect, and relates back to the first demand, the second redemption demand was properly disallowed by the bankruptcy court because the Debtor neither had “legally available funds” to redeem the C-l Stock in March 2001 nor after the Petition Date. After receiving the rejected stock certificates in March of 2001, the Carrieri Group did not formally inquire as to the reason why its redemption attempt was defective, even though the Debtor had written in the letter with the returned certificates that the tender failed to satisfy the requirements of the C-1 Rights Document. The Carrieri Group failed to remedy its defective tender for more than one year, until March 2002, which was one year after the Debtor filed for bankruptcy. Furthermore, with regards to the Carrieri Group’s third argument, we have already discussed above why the Debtor did not have a “continuing redemption” obligation. The bankruptcy court found that, therefore, the Carrieri Group’s second redemption demand in March 2002, as with its first demand in March 2001, was also unenforceable against the Debtor because it did not have “legally available funds”, with which to make the proposed redemptions. Thus the bankruptcy court properly disallowed the Carrieri Claims under § 502(b)(1) and the TBCA, and we affirm.
Finally, the only cases the Carrieri Group cited,
Soares
and
Texas Tamale,
are easily distinguishable from the facts of this case and do not support the Carrieri Group’s argument that this court should equitably ignore its defective tenders.
*539
The Carrieri Group states that the
Soares
court held that “routine serivening, such as recordation or entry on the docket” is ministerial.
See Soares v. Brockton Credit Union (In re Soares),
The Carrieri Group also claims that
Texas Tamale
holds that the bankruptcy court’s responsibility to “do equity” will be hindered because strict compliance with technical requirements, such as the “duly endorsed” requirement, will elevate form over substance.
See Otto v. Texas Tamale Co. (In re Texas Tamale Co.),
Texas Tamale,
thus, does not apply to this case for two reasons. First,
Texas Tamale
dealt with the notice requirement under the Fifth Amendment, not a “duly endorsed” requirement for a stock certificate. Second,
Texas Tamale’s
holding does not actually support the Carrieri Group’s proposition that the bankruptcy court here should have used its equitable powers to overlook the failure to “duly endorse” the stock certificates. The
Texas Tamale
court actually concluded that it would choose
not
to use its equitable power to overlook the fact that the creditor failed to file timely his proof of claim because it determined that the creditor had actual notice.
Id.
at 739-40. Similarly, the bankruptcy court here chose not to overlook the “duly endorsed” requirement because it listed this failure as the first reason to disallow the attempted redemption.
See In re Jobs.com, Inc.,
III. CONCLUSION
Based on the foregoing analysis, we AFFIRM the district court’s final judgment affirming the bankruptcy court’s order disallowing the Carrieri Claims because they are “equity securities” under the Code. *540 To the extent necessary to support the district court’s second ruling that the Car-rieri Group did not also hold “claims” independent of their equity interests, we AFFIRM the bankruptcy court’s four rulings as discussed above.
Notes
. Although one of the older Fifth Circuit cases cited by the Debtor supports our decision, it is not squarely on point as it deals more with subordination than with "equity securities.” See Robinson v. Wangemann, TS F.2d 756, 758 (5th Cir.1935) (stating that when a former shareholder owns a promissory note from a bankrupt corporation, received in the redemption of his stock, he "cannot be permitted to share with the other unsecured creditors in the distribution of the assets of the bankrupt estate” but may file a claim that will be subordinate to the claims of other creditors).
. The Kania Appellees held Series E preferred equity interests classified under Class 4 of the Debtor's plan of liquidation and were entitled to a distribution if Classes 1-3 were paid in full.
See
Debtor's First Amended, Modified and Restated Chapter 11 Plan of Liquidation, dated 24 June 2002, Arts. 4.05(a)-(b), at 11,
. The Statement lists an identical "Redemption” provision, but adds the following words to the end, "provided that the Corporation shall have no redemption obligation with respect to the Series C-l Preferred if it has closed an initial offering of securities to the public (an ‘IPO’) on or before such date.” Statement, ¶ 5(a),
. A “stock warrant”, a type of security, is "an instrument granting the holder a long-term (usu. a five-to ten-year) option to buy shares at a fixed price” and is "commonly attached to preferred stocks or bonds.” Black's Law Dictionary (8th ed. 2004) ("warrant”). In other words, a warrant is simply an "option to purchase shares of corporate stock at a fixed price:”
In
re
Daig Corp.,
.Though the Cárrieri Group also received Series C-4 Preferred Stock Warrants, it did not appeal the bankruptcy court's decision disallowing its claim for them. The C-4 Warrants, thus, are not the subject of this appeal.
. The Carrieri Group was given four items from the merger that are relevant for this appeal and which may need clarification as to how they will be identified here: (1) the C-l shares ("C-l Stock"); (2) the rights to redeem the C-l Stock, included in the Rights Documents, or "C-l Stock Rights"; (3) the warrants to purchase additional preferred stock in C-2 and C-3 shares ("Warrants”); and (4) the rights to demand repurchase of the Warrants, included in the Rights Documents, or "Warrant Rights". There is no question here that both the C-l Stock and Warrants are "equity securities” under 11 U.S.C. § 101(16)(A) and (C).
See Carrieri v. Jobs.com, Inc.,
. Tex Bus. Coep. Act Ann. art. 2.3 8B (Vernon Supp. 2004).
. The case the Carrieri Group cited at the Rule 59(e) motion hearing was
Parkway/Lamar Partners, L.P. v. Tom Thumb, Stores, Inc.,
. Section 101(16) provides that “equity security” means:
(A) share in a corporation, whether or not transferable or denominated "stock”, or similar security;
(B) interest of a limited partner in a limited partnership; or
(C) warrant or right, other than a right to convert, to purchase, sell, or subscribe to a share, security, or interest of a kind specified in subparagraph (A) or (B) of this paragraph;
11 U.S.C. § 101(16) (2000).
. Essentially, the bankruptcy court’s interpretation rewrites § 101 (16)(C) to be:
(C) warrant or right, other' than a right to:
(1) convert,
(2) purchase,
(3) sell, or
(4) subscribe to
ía) a share,
(b) a security, or
(c) an interest of a kind specified in sub-paragraph (A) or (B) of this paragraph;
. Both the bankruptcy and district courts' interpretation of § 101(16)(C) could arguably follow the applicable canons of construction. One canon of construction,
ejusdem generis,
arguably supports the bankruptcy court’s interpretation.
Ejusdem generis
states that the general language of a statute is limited by the specific words and phrases that precede the general language.
See, e.g., First Am. Title Ins. Co. v. First Trust Nat’l Ass’n (In Re Biloxi Casino Belle Inc.),
On the other hand, other applicable canons of construction support the district court’s interpretation. A couple of canons of construction state that a statute should be construed such that none of its terms are redundant and should be read to avoid internal inconsistency.
See, e.g., Crist v. Crist (In re Crist),
Furthermore, using the bankruptcy court’s interpretation, the first part of § 101(16)(C), "warrant”, would become inconsistent with the second part, the exclusion of the right to purchase a share in a ^ corporation. As defined above, a "warrant” is a type of "security” under § 101(49)(A)(xv) and simply is an option to purchase stock at a given price.
See supra
n. 4. If "equity security” includes a "warrant”, but not a right to sell a security or to purchase a share in a corporation under the , bankruptcy court’s interpretation, § 101(16)(C) would be wholly inconsistent. First, it is hard to imagine that Congress had intended "warrant” in one provision of Section 101, § 101 (16)(C), to mean something different from "warrant” in another provision of Section 101, § 101(49)(A)(xv), where "security” includes a "warrant.”
See Cohen v. de la Cruz,
. A bankruptcy court outside of this circuit has also placed those words in italics for emphasis.
See In re Standard Oil & Exploration of Del., Inc.,
. A noted bankruptcy professor has also pointed out that Congress intended "equity security” under § 10l(l6)(C) to include warrants or other rights to purchase, sell, or subscribe to securities. See Alan N. Resnick, Bankruptcy Law Manual § 6:3 (5th ed.2003) (stating that "[e]quity security holders, including those persons who hold shares of stock in a debtor corporation, ... or warrants or other rights to purchase, sell, or subscribe to such securities, may also wish to participate in the case.”) (emphasis added).
. The bankruptcy court followed
Search
with reservations to form its holding, see
In re Jobs.com, Inc.,
. After the claims objection hearing on 1 July 2002, and closing arguments on 6 August 2002, the bankruptcy court requested an updated cash on hand and claim amount status from the Debtor. On 7 August 2002, the Debtor submitted a post-hearing letter updating Jobs.corn's cash on hand at the time to be $6,059,000 and all unpaid claims as follows: (1) unpaid administrative claims — $80,000; (2) estimated interest on allowed unsecured claims through 1 September 2002 — $150,000; (3) allowed unsecured claims — $3,100,000; (4) College Club claim — $537,000; (5) Series C-C-l claims — $880,000; and (6) Series CC-2 and C-3 claims — $1,320,000.
. Section 1141, "Effect of confirmation”, states that, "[ejxcept as otherwise provided in this subsection, in the plan, or in the order confirming the plan, the confirmation of a plan — ... (B) terminates all rights and interests of equity security holders :.. provided for1 by the plan.” .11 U.S.C. § 1141(d)(1)(B) (1984). In other words, the Debtor's plan mostly followed § 1141 by terminating all equity interests, but first granted the Kania Ap-pellees a distribution before termination,-after ■ paying all senior classes in full, while the Carrieri Group was not given any distribution. The Carrieri Group objected to the plan, but the bankruptcy court confirmed the plan over all objections on 27 June 2002. The objection was "designed to protect its members’ right to participate as creditors under the plan if they held allowable, non-subordinated claims against the Debtor.” 6 R. Excerpt 45. At confirmation, the parties agreed that if the Carrieri Claims were allowed, and not subordinated, they would be Class 3 claims, ahead of the Kania Appellees. Id. at n. 7.
.
See In re St. Charles Pres. Investors, Ltd., 112
B.R. 469, 473-74 (D.D.C.1990);
In re Sid Bernstein, Ltd.,
. • The only, provision that may arguably apply here is TBCA Article 2.38E, which the Carrieri Group points out below as support for one of its "surplus'' arguments. As discussed below, the bankruptcy court's ruling .that there were no "legally available funds” because the Debtor would have exceeded its "surplus” is consistent with Article 2.38E. See infra' Part II.C.3 & text accompanying note 31.
. Bankruptcy courts have equitable powers to adjust the rights between creditors under § 510(c).
See Raleigh v. Ill. Dep't of Revenue,
In this case, because the bankruptcy court only discussed § 510(b) subordination, a hearing would be required in order to determine whether to apply the principles of equitable subordination as the Debtor suggested. None of the prerequisites for equitable subordination, however, are present here to warrant such a remand, particularly because there is no evidence of inequitable conduct on the part of the Carrieri Group and all the creditors have been paid in full. It appears from the record that neither the Debtor nor the Kania Appellees even argued for equitable subordination under § 510(c) below, which may mean that they waived this argument on appeal.
. When the district court, sitting as a court of review of the bankruptcy court, “furnishes neither reasons nor findings for its decision, [the court of appeals] in essence disregards the legal conclusions of the district court and reviews- the findings, reasoning, and judgment of the bankruptcy court directly.’’
Adler v. Hill (In re Hill),
. In a case involving a nearly identical state law definition for "insolvency” as TBCA Art. 1.02A(16), a bankruptcy court in this circuit determined that the debtor-corporation was insolvent at the time of the pre-petition stock redemption and was thus entitled to avoid the transfer of consideration given to the stockholder and to turnover of that consideration under § 544.
See In re La. Indus. Coatings, Inc.,
. The six "insolvency” factors that may be used are:
(1) financial statements of the corporation, including subsidiaries, that present the financial condition of the corporation in accordance with the generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP);
(2) financial statements prepared on the basis of accounting used to file the corporation’s federal income tax return or any other reasonable accounting practices;
(3) financial information, including condensed financial statements prepared on a basis consistent with (1) and (2) above;
(4) projection, forecast, or other forward looking information relating to the future economic performance, financial condition, or liquidity of the corporation that is reasonable in the circumstances;
(5) a fair valuation or information from any other method that is reasonable in the circumstances; or
(6) any combination of the statements, valuations, or information authorized by this section.
Tex. Bus Corp. Act Ann. art. 2.38-3A (Vernon Supp.2004) (emphasis added).
. This argument of the Carrieri Group is based on the following 'language,
"[i]f at the time of any redemption or redemptions required pursuant to this [Section], ... the funds of the Corporation legally available for redemption of Series C-l Preferred Stock ... [are] insufficient ... at such time, such aggregate funds shall be used to redeem the maximum possible number of shares of Series C-l Preferred Stock.... Thereafter any additional funds shall immediately be so used by the Corporation to redeem the balance of the shares which the Corporation has become obligated to redeem, but which it has not redeemed.”
SARAI, Art. 4.11(g), 10 R.2030; Statement, ¶ 5(d),9 R. 1696 (emphasis added).
The problem with the Carrieri Group’s "partial redemption” or "continuing redemption” obligation argument is that the above language makes it clear that the Debtor only has a partial or continuing redemption obligation if the proposed redemption was
required
pursuant to the redemption provision. As discussed below, the "partied redemption” obligation was never properly invoked by the Carrieri Group on their first demand because their failure to endorse the certificates did not trigger the redemption provision. Also, the bankruptcy court properly determined that the Debtor did not have "legally available” funds with which to pay the Carrieri Group’s second redemption demand. Similarly, the "continuing redemption” was never invoked because the Debtor was never
obligated
to redeem the shares in the first place and, thus, did not have an obligation to redeem the •balance. Moreover, the Carrieri Group’s argument that the Debtor’s post-hearing letter showed that it had sufficient funds to pay all of its creditors in full, plus pay the Carrieri Claims, ignores the fact that it relies improperly on the balance sheet test for insolvency rather than the bankruptcy court's determination of "legally available funds” under the TBCA.
See supra
n. 15;
. Officers and directors that are aware that the corporation is insolvent, or within the ."zone of insolvency" as in this case, have expanded fiduciary duties to include the creditors of the corporation.
See Weaver v. Kellogg,
. The Carrieri Group admitted as much that they "had no idea that the Debtor was in financial difficulty or [was] planning to file a bankruptcy case” when it made its first demand for redemption of the C-l Stock. Appellant’s Br., at 10.
. "Net assets” are defined as the "amount by which the total assets of a corporation exceed the total debts of the corporation.” Tex. Bus. Corp. Act Ann. art. 1.02(A)(19) (Vernon Supp.2004).
. "Stated capital” means "the sum of: (a) the par value of all shares of the corporation having a par value that have been issued; (b) tiré consideration fixed by the corporation ... for all shares ... without par value that have been issued, ...; and (c) such amounts not included in ... (a) and (b) ... as have been transferred to stated capital ... minus all reductions from such sum as ... permitted by law.” Tex. Bus. Corp. Act Ann. art. 1.02(A)(24) (Vernon Supp.2004).
.
Pluet v. Frasier,
. Although it was not cited in its motion for a new trial, counsel for the Carrieri Group cited the
Parkway/Lamar Partners, L.P. v. Tom Thumb, Stores, Inc.,
.Article 2.38C(2)(d) states that, notwithstanding the "surplus” limitation on distributions in Article 2.38(B):
... if the net assets of a corporation are not less than the amount of the proposed distribution:
(2) the corporation may make a distribution involving a purchase or redemption of any of its own shares if the purchase or redemption is made by the corporation to:
(d) effect the purchase or redemption of redeemable shares in accordance with this Act; ...
Tex Bus. Corp. Act Ann. art. 2.38C(2)(d) (Vernon Supp.2004).
. Article 2.3 8E provides:
A corporation's indebtedness to a shareholder incurred by reason of a distribution made in accordance with this Article shall be at parity with the corporation’s indebtedness to its general, unsecured creditors, except to the extent the indebtedness is subordinated, or payment of that indebtedness is secured, by agreement.
Tex. Bus. & Corp. Act Ann. art. 2.3 8E (Vernon Supp.2004) (emphasis added).
