This is а bankruptcy appeal that involves interpretation of the Bankruptcy Code’s provision affording the highest level of priority to claims for “administrative expenses.” 11 TXS.C. § 507(a)(1).
Nearly three years before filing his bank-ruptey petition, the debtor, David Abercrom-bie, prevаiled in state court on a real estate contract claim. His adversary, Hayden Corporation, appealed. While the appeal wended its way through the Oregon appellate courts, Abercrombie filed his bankruptcy petition. The final judgment of the Orеgon Supreme Court reversing his trial court victory was entered after the bankruptcy proceedings had commenced. Because the real estate contract provided for attorneys’ fees in favor of the prevailing party in litigation, Hayden was awardеd fees against Abercrom-bie.
The question before us is whether Hayden’s claim for attorneys’ fees is entitled to be treated as an administrative expense. The term is defined in 11 U.S.C. § 503(b)(1)(A) as a cost and expense of “preserving the estate ... after the commencement of the ease.” The bankruptcy court held that Hayden’s claim was an administrative expense, but on appeal, the district court disagreed. We hold that the claim is not an administrative expense, because it arises not out of the efforts to preserve the estаte, but out of litigation over a contract entered into before the bankruptcy petition was filed. In so holding, we agree with the only ease involving similar circumstances and legal issues, the First Circuit’s decision in
In re Hemingway Transport, Inc.,
BACKGROUND
In 1991 Abercrombie obtained a $4.65 million judgment against Hayden in Multnomah County (Orеgon) Circuit Court for the breach of a real estate contract. Hayden appealed and was unsuccessful in the Oregon Court of Appeals. Hayden then appealed to the Oregon Supreme Court. The appeal had been briefed and argued prior to June of 1994. On June 6, 1994, Abercrombie filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition. Thereafter, the Oregon Supreme Court reversed the judgment and in 1995 entered a judgment requiring Abercrombie to pay Hayden’s appellate attorneys’ fees. The grant of fees was premised оn a provision of the real estate contract that was the subject of the original dispute. The parties do not dispute that postpetition fees total $18,550.50.
Hayden moved to allow the postpetition fees as administrative expenses. The bankruptcy cоurt originally denied the request but later granted it upon a motion for reconsideration. The court relied upon the decision of the Ninth Circuit Bankruptcy Appellate Panel in
In re Madden,
Abercrombie appealed the order and the District Court for the Western District of Washington rеversed, holding that Ninth Circuit precedent directed a result contrary to Madden.
DISCUSSION
In classifying the order of payment for creditors’ claims, the Bankruptcy Code affords the highest level of priority to claims denominated “administrative expenses.” 11 U.S.C. § 507(a)(1). Section 503(b)(1) of the Code defines administrative expenses, enumerating six specific types of claims that qualify for first priority. Appellant Hayden relies on the following language:
After notice and a hearing, there shall be allowed administrative expenses ..., including(l)(A) the actual, necessary costs аnd expenses of preserving the estate, including wages, salaries, or commissions forservices rendered after the commencement of the case.
11 U.S.C. § 503(b).
The present statute was preceded by a similar provision in the earlier Bankruptcy Act. Interpreting the earlier provision, the Supreme Court explained that the purposе of the administrative expense priority is to facilitate the operation of the debtor-in-possession’s business, with a view to rehabilitation.
See Reading Co. v. Brown,
To limit the administrative expense priority to those situations where the purpose of rehabilitation will be served, our court has adopted the test originally established by the First Circuit in Mammoth Mart:
The claimant must show that the debt asserted to be an administrative expense
(1) arose from a transaction with the debt- or-in-possession as opposed to the preceding entity (or, alternatively, that the claimant gave consideration to the debtor-in-possession); and
(2) directly and substantially benefitted the estate.
In re DAK Indus.,
In DAK we considered whether administrative expense priority was appropriate for postpetition installment payments on a software licensing agreement. The Microsoft Corporation had licensed its Word software to debtor DAK for a term of one year. DAK then installed the software on its computers and sold the computers to end consumers. Although the licensing fees were calculated per unit sold, DAK was obligated to make minimum installment payments to Microsoft regardless of the number of computers sold. DAK’s sales never exceeded the contrаctual minimum. Midway through the contract year, DAK filed for bankruptcy. DAK continued selling computers with Microsoft Word installed, but later rejected the contract without having assumed it under the provisions of 11 U.S.C. § 365.
We held that the computer sales during the postpetition period did not trigger administrative expense priority. We reasoned that the licensing agreement was more akin to a sale of technology rather than a royalties agreement, because (1) DAK’s entire debt to Microsoft arose prepetition; (2) the minimum commitment resembled an installment sales provision; and (3) the transfer of technology rights was complete and irrevocable at the moment of the prepetition contract. Thus, the technology sale was entirely a prepetition contract event. By selling the computers postpetition with software that Microsoft had already delivered, DAK was not dealing with Microsoft. “In this ease, Microsoft was not induced to and did not do business with the debtor postpetition.”
The
DAK
inquiry thus focuses on whether the contrаct giving rise to the claim was entered into before or after the bankruptcy petition. Postpetition contracts may qualify for administrative expense priority, but costs and expenses arising out of prepetition contracts are treated under the Bankruptсy Code as nonprioritized unsecured claims.
See
Applying similar logic, we have denied administrative expense priority for an award of backpay that accrued after the filing of a petition.
See In re Palau Corp.,
Leading cases from the other circuits employ a rationale similar to that of
DAK
and
Applying our established law in this case, we must conclude that Hayden’s award of fees does not qualify as an administrative expense. It does not meet our requirement that the claim arise out of a postpetition transaction. The Oregon court awarded attorneys’ fees in accordance with the debtor’s prepetition contract with Hayden. Thus, the fees arose out of a transaction with the individual debtor rather than the debtor-in-possession. No § 503 concerns are triggered.
Appellant characterizes the dеfense of the appeal as postpetition conduct of the debtor-in-possession, and contends that it therefore qualifies as a postpetition expense necessary to preserve the estate within the meaning of the statute. Both
DAK
and
Jartran
refute such a contention, however. In
DAK,
the debtor сontinued to sell computers with Microsoft software installed after the bankruptcy petition had been filed. This sort of post-petition conduct did not alter our contract analysis and did not convert Microsoft’s pre-petition claim into an administrative expensе.
See
Hayden seeks to bring itself within
Reading v. Brown,
The
Reading
exception operates to deter the trustee from injuring third parties. Several circuit cases have applied the
Reading
exception in differing contexts. For example, the First Circuit has held that the administrative еxpense priority is appropriate when the trustee’s intentional violations of the law injure others.
See In re Charlesbank Laundry, Inc.,
Appellant argues that the
Reading
exception should apply in this case because Hayden was “injured” by the debtor-in-possession’s postpetition decision to continue
In
Hemingway,
the trustee in bankruptcy filed a third party complaint against Woburn Associates as a “potentially responsible party” in a CERCLA action. The bankruptcy court granted summary judgment to Woburn and required the trastee to pay Woburn’s attorneys’ fees pursuant to a prepetition contractual provision. Woburn subsequently moved to allow the fees as administrative expenses. The First Circuit persuasively ruled that Woburn could not meet the requirements it established in
Mammoth Mart,
and which this circuit adopted in
DAK.
Wo-burn’s right to attorneys’ fees arose from the prepetition contract between the parties, not from a postpetition transaction.
See
The Ninth Circuit Bankruptcy Appellate Pаnel reached an opposite result in
In re Madden,
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
