EASTERN MINERALS & CHEMICALS CO.; CARY W. AHL, SR., Appellants v. GARY H. MAHAN
No. 99-3320
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
August 23, 2000
2000 Decisions, Paper 173
Before: MANSMANN, NYGAARD and RENDELL, Circuit Judges
On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania (D.C. Civil No. 97-cv-01941). District Judge: Hon. William W. Caldwell. Argued February 3, 2000.
244 Butler Avenue
Lancaster, PA 17601
Counsel for Appellants
James J. Kutz, Esq. [ARGUED]
Kathleen Misturak-Gingrich, Esq.
Eckert, Seamans, Cherin & Mellott
213 Market Street, 8th Floor
Harrisburg, PA 17101
Counsel for Appellees
OPINION OF THE COURT
RENDELL, Circuit Judge.
Eastern Minerals & Chemicals Co., a creditor of Delta Carbonate Inc., appeals an order of the District Court precluding it from seeking recovery from Delta‘s sole shareholder, Gary Mahan, on an alter ego theory because Eastern should have pursued this claim in the context of Delta‘s bankruptcy case. We conclude that the District Court misapplied claim preclusion in this bankruptcy setting. Therefore, we will reverse the District Court‘s order granting Mahan‘s motion for summary judgment.
Eastern also appeals the District Court‘s denial of its motion to amend its complaint to add a RICO count against Mahan and to join other defendants believed tо be jointly and severally liable. The District Court did not abuse its discretion in denying Eastern‘s motion, and therefore we will affirm as to that order.
We have jurisdiction to hear this appeal under
Facts and Procedural History
Eastern was party to a sales agency contract with Bestone, Inc., a business in York, Pennsylvania that mined a quarry and produced calcium carbonate. In 1989, Delta acquired Bestone‘s assets and assumed Bestone‘s contracts, including the Eastern contract. Delta, which is solely owned by Mahan, was one of a group of companies owned or partially owed by Mahan, including Millington Quarry, Inc. and PenRoc, Inc. In January 1994, Delta and PenRoc both filed petitions for relief under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code,1 and Delta liquidated its assets in the context of its chapter 11 case.
Eastern was quite aggressive in challenging Delta and its dealings with affiliated entities at every turn of the bankruptcy case and repeatedly asserted that Delta had been used for the benefit of the affiliated companies, primarily Millington, to the detriment of Delta‘s creditors. Eastern circulated a draft application to disqualify Delta‘s counsel, asserting that he could not properly represent Delta in light of his representation of PenRoc, had not disclosed facts relevant to his representation as debtor‘s counsel, actively concealed facts, and arranged for employment of special counsel that was not disinterested by virtue of its prepetition claim against Delta. App. 405a. It also attempted to disqualify Delta‘s special counsel, asserting that counsel was a prepetition creditor of Delta and thus was not disinterested, and that counsel had an actual conflict of interest based on its representation of Millington. App. 452a-454a. Not only did Eastern object to Delta‘s request for appointment of appraisers and consultants in connection with the valuation and sale of Delta‘s assets, alleging that they were not disinterested because they previously had performed services for Millington, App. 27a, but it also objected to a proposed sale of Delta‘s assets, alleging that the sale was not proposed in good faith and that such a sale should go forward only in the context of a confirmed plan of reorganization. App. 254a-255a.
Eastern attached to its objection to the sale of Delta‘s assets a draft complaint seeking equitable subordination of
In October 1997, after Delta‘s bankruptcy case was closed, Eastern filed a complaint in the York County Court of Common Pleas naming Mahan as defendant. Eastern sought to recover $580,783.13, the remaining 58% of the $900,000 claim that Eastern did not receive from Delta by piercing the corporate veil on an alter ego theory. App. 649a.6 Eastern alleged that Mahan caused Delta to be undercapitalized, “pilfered” corporate opportunity, and acted to further his own personal ends, thereby abusing corporate privilege and breaching his fiduciary duty and his duty of loyalty.7 App. 650a, 668a. The complaint provides
By way of conclusory overview . . . Eastern contends that Mahan invested heavily in Delta in the late ‘80s, realized his investment was in trouble by the end of 1991, and spent the next several years dеsigning and implementing a course of conduct calculated to shift the risk of loss from himself and other affiliated alter egos of Delta, to Eastern and other trade creditors. Mahan‘s manipulation began with garden variety pilfering of corporate opportunity and breach of fiduciary obligation, continued with highly inappropriate conversion of his equity investment to secured indebtedness at a time when the company was both undercapitalized and insolvent, and culminated in his use and abuse of the federal bankruptcy system to assure for himself and other alter egos, the benefit of the unconscionable advantage he had taken. Along the way he routinely ignored verbal commitments and acted in knowing and intentional violation of written agreements. Self dealing, misrepresentation, and deceit were the order of the day. Mahan continuously and unabashedly used Delta and other affiliated entities as the means for the achievement of personal ends. Especially as pertains to Eastern, an involuntary creditor of Delta, giving regard and effect to the
corporate form of organization would result in perpetration of fraud, illegality, or injustice, would defeat public policy, and would render the entire theory of corporate existence useless.
App. 650a-651a. Specifically, Eastern‘s complaint contends that Delta was severely undercapitalized and that Mahan engaged in a pattern of improper conduct:
Among other things, prior to the filing of the Bankruptсy Case, Mahan (i) set up a competing company, violating the corporate opportunity doctrine, (ii) caused Delta to prefer Millington over other creditors, in violation of fiduciary responsibility, when he granted a blanket security interest in unencumbered assets in 1992, (iii) caused Delta to pay Millington, Rockcrest and other Affiliated Entities management, development, and administrative fees that were not bona fide fees; (iv) caused Delta to violate along with Penroc [sic.], the restrictive covenant assumed by Delta in connection with the Bestone transaction, and (v) caused Delta to mislead creditors with conflicting UCC filings and descriptions subject to Millington‘s security interest. During the pendency of the Bankruptcy Case, through his company‘s attorney, Mаhan (i) treated the Affiliated Entities as though they were alter egos of each other and himself, (ii) misled gullible Committee counsel and the Bankruptcy Court to believe that Millington held a secured position justifying a post-petition payment (before plan confirmation) in the amount of $4.7 million, when in fact it did not, and (iii) made every decision entrusted to Delta as debtor-in-possession with a view toward promoting his own self interest, not the interest of the estate generally.
App. 669a-670a. In December 1997, the action was removed to the United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania.
Mahan filed a motion to dismiss Eastern‘s complaint on several grounds, including the affirmative defense of claim preclusion. App. 12a. The District Court found that the first element of claim preclusiоn -- that the first suit was a final
In the context of the summary judgment motion, Mahan argued that the record -- including Eastern‘s draft complaint seeking equitable subordination in Delta‘s bankruptcy case, which the District Court noted “parallels the material averments of the complaint in the instant case” -- demonstrated that Eastern knew all of the facts supporting its instant cause of action against Mahan while Delta‘s bankruptcy case was unfolding. Slip Op. at 4. Mahan also argued that there was ample precedent for the Bankruptcy Court to exercise jurisdiction over alter ego claims. Eastern contended that the chapter 11 plan had not specifically provided for the extinguishment of Eastern‘s claim against Mahan, that there would have been no subject matter jurisdiction, and that barring his claim would burden bankruptcy courts with every claim creditors may have against third parties.
Although the District Court correctly set forth the third element of claim preclusion аt the outset, e.g. , that the later claim is based on the same cause of action as the prior claim, the Court ultimately re-stated the test incorrectly when it concluded that “it appears that claim preclusion should bar the instant action because it is based on a cause of action that could have been raised in the bankruptcy proceedings, but for whatever reason, was not.” Slip Op. at 5. In other words, the District Court‘s claim preclusion ruling is not predicated on a finding that Eastern‘s instant claim against Mahan is based on the same cause of action as a claim raised by Eastern in Delta‘s bankruptcy. Interestingly, the District Court later expressed second thoughts regarding this ruling, but that
Urging us to affirm the District Court‘s ruling that Eastern‘s complaint against Mahan is barred, Mahan emphasizes that Eastern knew all the facts necessary to assert its present claim during Delta‘s bankruptcy, and that Eastern‘s present claim against Mahan arises out of the same cause of action that Eastern raised in Delta‘s bankruptcy case.9 Eastern argues that the District Court erred by applying the claim preclusion test to bar the second action even if the prior proceeding did not involve the same cause of action, that it is not pursuing the same cause of action that was at issue in Delta‘s bankruptcy case, and that the District Court‘s ruling, if affirmed, would
Under the doctrine of claim preclusion, a final judgment on the merits of an action involving the same parties (or their privies) bars a subsequent suit based on the same cause of action. See Gillman v. Continental Airlines (In re Continental Airlines), 203 F.3d 203, 208 (3d Cir. 2000); Arab African Int‘l Bank v. Epstein, 10 F.3d 168, 171 (3d Cir. 1993). Eastern‘s focus, and accordingly ours as well, is the third element.11
The issue facing us, therefore, is whether the claim currently being asserted by Eastern against Mahan is based on the same cause of action as the claims actually asserted by Eastern in Delta‘s bankruptcy such that its instant claim should have been asserted in that forum. Mahan says it is; Eastern says it is not.
Our case law often suggests that we consider whether there is an “essential similarity of the underlying events” to
Claim preclusion is complicated in this case not only because the instant claim involves a multifaceted factual scenario and extensive course of events, but also because the prior litigation involved an expansive and complex chapter 11 bankruptcy case. A bankruptcy case is not a discrete lawsuit. It is commenced by the filing of a petition for relief, which then provides a forum in which any
Claim preclusion doctrine must be properly tailored to the unique circumstances that arise when the previous litigation took place in the context of a bankruptcy case.13 Difficult as it may be to define the contours of a cause of action in a bankruptcy setting, we conclude that a claim should not be barred unless the factual underpinnings, theory of the case, and relief sought against the parties to the proceeding are so close to a claim actually litigated in the bankruptcy that it would be unreasonable not to have brought them both at the same time in the bankruptcy forum.14 Here, that is not the case.
Eastern‘s participation in Delta‘s bankruptcy case, as previously described, was undoubtedly active and aggressive. Yet, Eastern never litigated any cause of action
Both Eastern and Mahan take the position that our decision in Huls dictates that they prevail on their respective positions as to whether Eastern‘s suit against Mahan is barred. Huls involved a lawsuit between two lenders, CoreStates and Huls, based on a subordination agreement between them. After the conclusion of the bankruptcy case of their mutual borrower, United Chemical Technologies (“UCT“), CoreStates sued Huls to recover
We affirmed the District Court‘s decision that claim preclusion barred CoreStates’ later suit. The underlying question in Huls was whether “CoreStates has a right to receive the funds, when both CoreStates‘s and Huls‘s rights in the bankruptcy estate, and CoreStates‘s objection based on the payment in particular, were settled in the confirmation proceeding.” Huls, 176 F.3d at 190-191. We concluded that “CoreStates functionally raised the Subordination Agreement in its objection to the Reorganization Plan,” id. at 203, and that CoreStates‘s objection in UCT‘s confirmation proceedings was, in fact, a claim against Huls:
The objection put Huls‘s rights in the bankruptcy estate into question. The $600,000 payment was all Huls was entitled to receive under the Reorganization Plan. A challenge to that payment amounted to a challenge to Huls‘s position in the scheme of distribution the Plan envisioned. In addition, Huls clearly felt that it had an interest in the issue worth preserving, since it opposed the objection extensively throughout the bankruptcy proceedings. Furthermore, Huls filed a brief in opposition to CoreStates‘s appeal in the District Court, and CoreStates filed a reply brief dealing almost solely with Huls‘s arguments. Accordingly, the Bankruptcy Judge‘s dismissal of CoreStates‘s objection and the subsequent confirmation of the Plan constitute a final judgment on CoreStates‘s claim against Huls.
Id. at 206. Noting that our holding was largely fact-bound and was the result of “the coincidence of several unusual circumstances,” we emphasized the significance of the fact
Huls illustrates, in what we recognized to be a somewhat unique factual and procedural setting, that one does not get a second bite at the proverbial apple simply because the first bite was taken in a bankruptcy case. See Huls, 176 F.3d at 202 (citations omitted). Similarly, we note that care must be taken in determining whether the first bite was actually taken such that it would preclude the second. Huls does not stand for the proposition that nondebtors must assert all potential claims in a bankruptcy case or be forever barred, nor does Mahan ask us to reach such a conclusion. Rather, Huls helps us frame the key question that the parties agree we should ask whenever the affirmative defense of claim preclusion is raised on the basis of a prior bankruptcy confirmation order, namely, whether the later claim arises from the same cause of action as a claim that was actually asserted or interposed in the earlier bankruptcy case and resolved in the confirmation order. Here, we have concluded that it does not.16
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that Eastern‘s suit against Mahan is not barred and we will, therefore, reverse the District Court‘s grant of summary judgment and remand for further proceedings.
Denial of Eastern‘s Motion to Amend
Eastern also appeals the District Court‘s denial of Eastern‘s motion requesting leave to amend its complaint a second time to add RICO claims against Mahan and to join two additional defendants.17 Eastern contends that the District Court erroneously relied on Rule 16(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure without sufficient consideration of Rules 15(a) and 42. We review the District Court‘s determination for abuse of discretion. See Epstein, 10 F.3d at 174.
The District Court‘s case management conference order set the amendment and joinder deadlines for June 30, 1998. App. 121a-122a. On January 6, 1999, more than six months after the deadline, Eastern filed its motion for leave to amend. App. 124a. As justification for seeking leave to amend, Eastern stated that it had become aware of the viability of new claims and that filing an amended complaint would conserve judicial resources and would obviate the need for a separate action. App. 125a. Opposing Eastern‘s motion, Mahan argued that Eastern had to comply with Rule 16(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure beforе seeking amendment under Rule 15(a);18 because Eastern had not been diligent, Mahan contended, the amendment should not be allowed under Rule 16(b). Slip Op. at 5.
Agreeing with Mahan‘s reasoning, the District Court concluded that good cause had not been shown under Rule 16(b) to modify the case management order. According to the District Court, Eastern had not specified what led it to decide that RICO claims could be pled or why information
We conclude that the District Court acted well within its discretion when it denied Eastern‘s motion to amend the complaint six months after the amendment and joinder deadlines had expired, and we will not disturb the Court‘s ruling in this regard.19
For the foregoing reasons, we will REVERSE the District Court‘s entry of summary judgment. We will AFFIRM the District Court‘s denial of Eastern‘s untimely motion to amend its complaint.
A True Copy:
Teste:
Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
Notes
Slip Op. 99-0366 at 23-28 (emphasis added) (appended to Reply Brief for Appellants).[W]e have concluded that we erred in the No. 97-1941 memorandum. . . . Our ruling in No. 97-1941 was based on an unstated, but erroneous, premise -- that an alter ego of the debtor was the debtor for all intents and purposes. . . .[N]either Mahan nor Millington, even as an alter ego of Delta, can be considered the debtor and entitled to force their creditors to pursue their claims against them in the Delta bankruptcy. To the contrary,
section 524(e) would prohibit them from invoking Delta‘s discharge in bankruptcy. . . . . No. 97-1941 was an alter ego action against Mahan alone for Delta‘s breach of the sales agency agreement. That case was erroneously dismissed on the basis of claim preclusion.
