In re: Dr. R. C. Samanta Roy Institute of Science Technology Inc. ET AL.
No. 10-2535
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
June 15, 2011
NOT PRECEDENTIAL
Submitted Under Third Circuit LAR 34.1(a) March 8, 2011
Before: SCIRICA, AMBRO, and VANASKIE, Circuit Judges
(Opinion filed June 15, 2011)
OPINION
AMBRO, Circuit Judge
Debtors-Appellants Dr. R.C. Samanta Roy Institute of Science & Technology, Inc. (SIST), U.S. Acquisitions and Oil (USA&O), MidWest Oil of Wisconsin, MidWest Oil of Minnesota (“MWOM“), MidWest Oil of Shawano, MidWest Properties of Shawano,
I.
SIST is the parent corporation of USA&O, MidWest Oil of Wisconsin, MidWest Oil of Shawano, MidWest Oil of Minnesota, MidWest Properties of Shawano, and MidWest Hotels and Motels of Shawano. On March 16, 2009, SIST and its subsidiary companies (collectively, the “Debtors“) filed voluntary petitions under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. They are opеrating entities and holding companies owning real property leased to Debtor-owned subsidiaries as well as non-Debtor entities. Through affiliates, they own, among other things, hotels, gas stations, and an amusement park/racetrack. Debtors use income from their business enterprises to fund not-for-profit educational activities.
On June 9, 2009, Debtors filed a motion, which the Bankruptcy Court granted, to extend the initial 120-day period of exclusivity, see
Vermillion State Bank, a secured creditor of MWOM, sought relief from the automatic stay in order to conduct a sheriff‘s sale of a vacant, non-operating gas statiоn
On September 16, 2009, following the Vermillion lift-stay hearing, thе Bankruptcy Court sua sponte issued a Rule to Show Cause Order “at which the Debtors must show cause why the Court should not dismiss the cases or appoint a Chapter 11 Trustee.” Following the hearing on the order, the Bankruptcy Court, on September 22, 2009, dismissed the cases. In doing so, it made the following findings:
- Debtors had not filed tax returns since 2004, including the return for 2008 that was due after the petition date;
- Debtоrs’ Monthly Operating Reports revealed continuing losses, and, despite the losses, Debtors had no “business plan and therefore were unable at the hearing to meet their burden of proving a reasonable likelihood of rehabilitation;”
“Debtors belatedly responded to the interested purchaser but only in the face of the Show Cause Order. The [C]ourt is left to its concern about other lost or delayed opportunities and, moreover, to Debtors’ inattention to action it could or should have be taking to market its assets;” - Debtors failed to obtain financing six months into the Chapter 11 cases, and belatedly hired a financial advisor only “after six months of inaction during which time their business continued to falter and only when Debtors’ first extension of exclusivity is about to expire;”
- Debtors’ did not advise the Court or the United States Trustee where or the manner in which they were holding $60,000 in cash from other business operations, and that “such ‘cash management’ constitutes not only gross mismanagement but, as well, a lack of candor.”
On appeal, the District Court affirmed the Bankruptcy Court, holding that the dismissal wаs not an abuse of discretion where the Bankruptcy Court had made the findings listed above. Debtors timely appeal to us the District Court‘s order.2
II.
The decision to dismiss a Chapter 11 petition “is committed to the sound discretion of the bankruptcy or district court[,] and [we] . . . review for abuse of discretion.” In re SGL Carbon Corp., 200 F.3d 154, 159 (3d Cir. 1999). Because the District Court sat as an appellate court to review the Bankruptcy Court, our review of that [C]ourt‘s factual and legal determinations is plenary.” Fellheimer, Eichen & Braverman, P.C. v. Charter Technologies, Inc., 57 F.3d 1215, 1223 (3d Cir. 1995). “[W]e review the Bankruptcy Court‘s legal determinations de novo, its factual findings for clear error, and its exercise of discretion for abuse thereof.” In re Goody‘s Family Clothing, 610 F.3d 812, 816 (3d Cir. 2010) (citation omitted). A bankruptcy court has broad discretion to
Absent unusual circumstance,
Debtors advance five theories for finding an abuse of discretion, none of which is persuasive.
1) Statutory Bar To Dismissal
Debtors arguе dismissal was barred during the exclusivity period because a debtor should be allowed time to submit a plan, even if the plan ultimately proposed proves unworkable. They cite In re Toyota of Yonkers, Inc., 135 B.R. 471, 476-77 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 1992). Here, there was no infusion of new capital or new management, as existed in Toyota of Yonkers. Also unlike Toyota of Yonkers, management had not developed a business plan that could form the basis of a plan of reorganization.4
There is nothing in the plain language of § 1112(b) creating a statutory bar to considering a motion to dismiss during the exclusivity period. See § 1112(b) (stating
We thus see no bar to considering a motion to dismiss in а Chapter 11 case within the period of exclusivity, particularly where, as here, the period has been extended at least once, there is no business or confirmation plan, and there are sufficient factors supporting the court‘s finding of cause.
2) Tax Returns
Debtors argue that the Bankruptcy Court erroneously considered their failure to file pre-petition tax returns since 2004. They assert that the Court‘s reliance on the failure to pay taxes was misplaced because, as a § 501(c)(3) corporation, SIST has no income tax liability. They further contend that the deadline for filing 2008 taxes had not yet passed by the March 2009 filing date, they had in any event an extension for filing 2008 taxes, and pre-petition tax or filing obligations arе irrelevant under § 1112(b)(4)(I).
That subsection provides that failure to file a tax return or pay taxes post-petition can be a ground for dismissal. Pre-petition tax-filing conduct was not irrelevant to the Court‘s inquiry. The Court found also that Debtors had failed to file any tax returns post-
3) Notice of the subject matter of the hearing
Debtors argue that the Court failed to give sufficient notice of the subjeсt matter of the show-cause hearing, resulting in their inability to prepare adequately. Subsection 1112(b)(1) permits a bankruptcy court to dismiss a case for cause “after notice and a hearing.”
The Bankruptcy Court gave six days notice to the parties and clearly detailed in the Order for Rule to Show Cause its specific concerns: “no progress towards confirmation;” the failure to consider a “substantial offer for the sale of a property in default” and on which Debtors had made no post-petition pаyments; monthly reports showing that Debtors were “operating at a continuing loss;” “gross mismanagement;” and
Debtors also contend the Court erred by relying on the U.S. Trustee‘s oral motion to dismiss made at the show-cause hearing without notice to Debtors. There is no evidence the Court decided to dismiss based on the U.S. Trustee‘s motion. Further, the Debtors had adequate notice that they needed to defend a motion to dismiss because the Court itself had ordered a show-cause hearing. Debtors’ concern over other topics discussed at the hearing is misplaced, as the Court did not rely on these in dismissing the cases. See supra at 3-4. The Bankruptcy Court thus provided Debtors sufficient notice of the areas they needed to address at the show-cause hearing.
4) Considering evidence outside the record
Debtors argue that the Court erred by dismissing the cases based on assertions thаt were not of record in their cases. First, they contend that the Court erred in finding that the estates were diminishing in value by purportedly relying on a document showing income for the racetrack/amusement park that operated on property owned by USA&O, where the document had not been admitted as part of the record. However, the Court made no mеntion of this disputed document. In addition, other record evidence – such as
Second, Debtors contend that the Court erroneously relied on factual assertions in two relief-from-stay motions that had not been decided. One assertion involved the cash management system of MidWest Amusement Park (“MAP“), a non-debtor subsidiary that operated the racеtrack/amusement park property. Debtors argue that a key issue in the relief-from-stay motion was whether the cash generated by the amusement park was owned by its operating entity MAP or Debtor USA&O, MAP‘s landlord. The other assertions involved testimony in the Vermillion proceeding that Debtors had not responded to a purchaser interested in the Oakdale Property, as well as testimony by Vermillion‘s representative that the monthly reports showed continuing losses (a conclusion Debtors dispute).
SIST‘s CEO testified at the show-cause hearing that Debtors were reporting to the creditors weekly gross sales totals and bank statements for the money collected at the amusement park. She explained in detail the park‘s аccounting methods and that the balance of the money was being kept in cash in a safe at a gas station with no security rather than being reported to the Trustee, invested, or kept in a more secure place. The Court did not err in considering the issue and evaluating whether Debtors had properly
Debtors claim also that the Court erred in considering testimony from the Vermillion proceeding and dismissing their cases based on the Court‘s finding that the Debtors were dilatory in trying to sell the Oakdale Property, when in their view they had delayed to avoid telling the buyer they were in bankruptcy in order to maximize the sale рrice. Debtors only responded to a potential purchaser for the Oakdale Property at the urging of the Court in September 2009 and counter-offered with a price close to that made to them the preceding December. The Court‘s finding that Debtors unreasonably delayed in responding to a reasonable purchase offer was supported by record evidence, including testimony from Isaacson, and was obviously not clearly erroneous.
During the show-cause hearing, the U.S. Trustee represented that Debtors’ monthly reports overall showed losses. In addition, the Court had before it the reports for July 2009, which showed a loss. The Court‘s finding therefore is supported by record evidence. Debtors also аllege that viewing all the reports as a whole shows no loss, but that the Court did not have the other monthly reports before it. The show-cause hearing was Debtors’ opportunity to present other evidence of profits and losses, and they failed to take advantage of that opportunity. The Court clearly apprised them in the show-cause order оf its concerns that “the Monthly Operating Reports indicate that the Debtors are operating at a continuing loss.” If Debtors had other relevant evidence, their obligation was to introduce it. They did not, and the Bankruptcy Court did not err when it interpreted the evidence before it to reach its conclusion.
5) Good faith effort to make progress
Finally, Debtors find error in the Bankruptcy Court‘s conclusion that Debtors’ failed to make progress in their cases where they argue they were involved in a “constant flow of litigation” and were administering “their estates in good faith and [making] progress towards the formulation of a plan of reorganization.” Appellants’ Br. at 40. The Court found that the Debtors had hired a financial advisor “only after six months of inaction during which time their businesses continued to falter.” It further found there was no business plan yet developed – let alone a plan of reorganization – six months into the bankruptcy, and that the Debtors had thus been unable to obtain financing. This finding is supported by evidence in the record and by the Debtors’ own admissions. It is therefore not clearly erroneous.
* * * * *
In this context, we affirm the dismissal of Debtors’ bankruptcy cases.
AMBRO
UNITED STATES CIRCUIT JUDGE
