In the Matter of: RESOURCE TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION (by Gregg E. Szilagyi, Trustee), Debtor-Appellee.
Appeal of: Leon Greenblatt; Banco Panamericano, Inc.; and Chiplease, Inc.
No. 05-1779.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Argued Nov. 7, 2005. Decided Dec. 9, 2005.
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied Jan. 11, 2006.*
430 F.3d 884
*Judge Williams did not take part in the consideration of this matter.
Diane F. Klotnia, Miller, Shakman & Hamilton, Chicago, IL, for Trustee-Appellee.
Phillip L. Comella (argued), Seyfarth & Shaw, William I. Kohn, Patricia J. Fokuo (argued), Schiff, Hardin & Waite, Chicago, IL, for Appellees.
Floyd D. Perkins, Ungaretti & Harris, Chicago, IL, for Debtor-Appellee.
Before POSNER, EASTERBROOK, and WOOD, Circuit Judges.
EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge.
Resource Technology Corporation turns garbage into money by collecting methane from landfills, reducing the emission of a greenhouse gas in the process. It either sells the methane or burns the gas to make electricity. Installing methane-collection systems is tricky, however, and Resource Technology landed in bankruptcy because its outlays exceed its revenues from harvested methane. This appeal concerns one of its money-losing ventures.
In 1996 Resource Technology agreed with Chastang Landfill, Inc., in Mount Vernon, Alabama, to build a gas-collection system. Consortium Service Management Group contracted to buy the scavenged gas, which it planned to purify and resell to a local utility. By 1999 the collection system had not been completed, and Chas-
Before the bankruptcy court approved this settlement, Resource Technology‘s principal creditors (holding about $40 million in debt claims, secured by a floating lien on the firm‘s assets) made the Trustee a better offer. In exchange for a right to complete the system and collect the methane, the lenders offered to pay the estate $200,000 and release $2 million of their debt claims; they promised to indemnify the estate for any sums it should be required to pay on account of delay in completing the system. The Trustee preferred this offer to Chastang‘s but could not see how to implement the proposal, for the contract between Resource Technology and Chastang has an anti-assignment clause, and at all events had been terminated because of Resource Technology‘s enduring delinquency.
The lenders proposed that the right to collect the gas could be transferred to them if the Trustee were to abandon the executory portion of the contract between Resource Technology and Chastang. The lenders then could use their security interest to step into Resource Technology‘s position. Bankruptcy Judge Wedoff concluded, however, that an executory contract cannot be abandoned under
The lenders’ appeal has been met at the outset with a contention that the litigation is moot. All requests for a stay were denied, and the settlement between Chastang and the Trustee has been consummated. The $75,000 has been paid; Chastang‘s claims have been released; someone else has taken over completion of the system and the collection of gas. Yet why should this end the controversy? A case is moot when no further judicial relief is possible. See Church of Scientology v. United States, 506 U.S. 9, 113 S.Ct. 447, 121 L.Ed.2d 313 (1992). By that standard, this dispute is live. A court could order the Trustee to return Chastang‘s money, reinstate its claims for damages and payment on the note, and direct Chastang to deliver the gas to the lenders. Unscrambling a transaction may be difficult, but it can be done. No one (to our knowledge) thinks that an antitrust or corporate-law challenge to a merger becomes moot as soon as the deal is consummated. Courts can and do order divestiture or damages in
The lenders want us to decide whether
Normally a duty is the opposite of a right. And that‘s the lenders’ main problem. Resource Technology had a duty to complete the gas-collection system; it had a right to collect the gas only after fulfilling that duty. When the lenders asked the Trustee to “abandon” the contract, Resource Technology had not finished the collection system. Abandonment then would have been nothing but breach; and if Resource Technology repudiated its promise (already broken by delay), it would have lost any right to the gas. There was no property interest the Trustee could abandon.
If one were to treat a package of rights and duties as a single property interest, in the way a contract as a whole might be sold (in the absence of an anti-assignment clause), how would abandonment of that package give the lenders any entitlement to the gas? A right that is abandoned is gone. Once Resource Technology‘s right to harvest gas disappears, the entitlement reverts to the landfill‘s owner—Chastang. The lenders seem to think that their security interest would direct the gas to them, free from the anti-assignment clause, but their security is in the contract rather than in the gas. If the contract is abandoned, the security disappears. A contract right in this respect differs from real estate or chattels, which continue to exist even if a given party‘s stake is abandoned. When a contract terminates, the asset covered by the floating lien vanishes in a puff of smoke. So the bankruptcy judge was right to hold that the lenders’ proposal is legally impossible.
AFFIRMED.
