In re: FOREVER GREEN ATHLETIC FIELDS, INC., Debtor. Charles C. Dawson; Kelli Dawson, Appellants.
No. 14-3906
United States Court of Appeals, Third Circuit
Argued: July 9, 2015. Opinion Filed: Oct. 16, 2015.
804 F.3d 328
Steven K. Eisenberg, Esq. [ARGUED], Stern & Eisenberg, Warrington, PA, Attorney for Appellants, Charles C. Dawson and Kelli Dawson.
Frederic J. Baker, Esq., United States Department of Justice, Philadelphia, PA, Attorney for Trustee, Frederic J. Baker.
Robert H. Holber, Esq., Media, PA, Attorney for Trustee, Robert H. Holber.
Before: FUENTES, NYGAARD, and ROTH, Circuit Judges.
OPINION OF THE COURT
FUENTES, Circuit Judge.
Creditors who file an involuntary bankruptcy petition against a debtor must satisfy several statutory requirements before obtaining relief. See
I.
The parties are familiar foes. Founded by Keith Day, Forever Green Athletic Fields sells artificial turf playing fields. In 2005, Forever Green sued one of its competitors, ProGreen, for $5 million for diversion of corporate assets (the “Bucks County Action“). Charles Dawson, who is an owner of ProGreen and a former Forever Green sales representative, would be liable if damages are awarded in that suit.
That same year, Charles and his wife, Kelli Dawson, sued Forever Green for unpaid commissions and wages (the “Louisi
While the Louisiana Action was still running its course, the parties to the Bucks County Action agreed to arbitrate their claims. However, on March 30, 2011, just a few weeks after the consent judgment was entered in the Louisiana Action, ProGreen filed a motion to terminate the arbitration. In support of this motion, ProGreen argued that “it has become clear that [Forever Green] is insolvent” and that Keith Day does not “have the ability or desire to pay the Arbitrator‘s fees and expenses.” Supp.App. 505. In addition, ProGreen said that “Charles and Kelli Dawson have a $300,000+ judgment against [Forever Green] and expect judgments in the same amount against [Day] very soon. As such, any monies paid as advance deposits to the Arbitrator by [Forever Green] are subject to execution and garnishment.” Id. The next month, the Dawsons transferred their judgment in the Louisiana Action to Pennsylvania and obtained a writ of execution against the arbitrator and his law firm. At that point, with his fees in peril, the arbitrator recognized he was adverse to the Dawsons, so he suspended the arbitration until the fee issue was resolved.
During his deposition, Charles Dawson offered some strategic insight into these actions. With the consent judgment in hand, he intended to “[f]ind any available asset that Forever Green may have and try to use the lien to seize it.” Id. at 710. He testified, “I‘m going to use that judgment to levy any monies I can find anywhere, whether it be the arbitrator or anyone else. So, yeah, if we can get the lien paid, that‘s my number one objective. If I can get it paid, I‘m very happy.” Id. at 711.
In response to the suspension of the arbitration, Forever Green filed a complaint in state court trying to reinstate the arbitration (the “Philadelphia Action“). Day testified that Forever Green was forced to file this complaint because “Charles Dawson and his counsel were determined to derail the arbitration and this was our own legitimate response to it.” Id. at 198. According to Day, Charles Dawson and his counsel had “threatened to put [Forever Green] into bankruptcy” if Forever Green did not agree to terminate the arbitration. Id. at 199. After Forever Green commenced the Philadelphia Action, the Dawsons’ counsel sent a letter to Forever Green saying that the arbitration was in an “indefinite state of suspension” and “[u]nless and until the [consent judgment] for about $300,000.00 is paid off in full, that indefinite state of suspension will continue.” Id. at 568.
The judge in the Philadelphia Action issued a scheduling order for the parties to brief the issues identified in Forever Green‘s complaint. The Dawsons’ brief was due on May 3, 2012. They never filed it. Instead, they chose a different tack.
Two weeks before their brief was due, the Dawsons and the law firm Cohen Seglias Pallas Greenhall & Furman, which was owed $206,000 from Forever Green, filed an involuntary Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition against Forever Green. Justifying this decision, Charles Dawson said that his counsel “suggested the best way to get to [Forever Green‘s] assets would be involuntary bankruptcy.” App. 268. It is undisputed that the Dawsons and Cohen Seglias satisfied the statutory criteria for commencing an involuntary bankruptcy case because (1) they are three creditors, (2) they each hold an uncontested claim
The Bankruptcy Court convened an evidentiary hearing on the motion. In addition to receiving evidence of the parties’ course of conduct in the years leading up to the filing, the Bankruptcy Court heard testimony about Forever Green‘s financials. It was established that Forever Green has essentially shut down its business—in 2012, its operating account had no activity and its balance never exceeded $30. Forever Green‘s focus has been on winding down its affairs and recovering assets for its approximately 50 creditors. As for the balance sheet, Forever Green has $6 million in assets, the largest by far being its claims against ProGreen for $5 million. On the other side of the ledger, Forever Green has $2.3 million in debts, including a $1.3 million secured line of credit.
Although Forever Green itself has not been paying any of its debts, Day has personally paid off hundreds of thousands of dollars of Forever Green debt. He explained that he has paid debts for which he had “financial personal guarantees.” App. 256. Day acknowledged that neither he nor Forever Green has paid anything to the Dawsons, but he said that secured creditors and certain unsecured creditors are ahead of them in the pecking order. Day also is personally funding all of Forever Green‘s current litigation, including this suit and the suspended arbitration against ProGreen.
After the parties made their pitches as to whether the petition was filed in bad faith, the Bankruptcy Court ruled in Forever Green‘s favor and granted the motion to dismiss. It explained that, because bankruptcy courts are courts of equity, a petitioning creditor (for involuntary bankruptcies) or debtor (for voluntary bankruptcies) must come to the court for a proper purpose. Involuntary Chapter 7 proceedings, it said, are intended to protect creditors from debtors who are making preferential payments to other creditors or from the dissipation of the debtor‘s assets. Creditors who file petitions for other reasons—such as to collect on a personal debt, to gain an advantage in pending litigation, or to harass the debtor—act in bad faith. The Bankruptcy Court concluded that, even though the petitioning creditors met the statutory filing requirements, Charles Dawson was a bad-faith creditor because he was motivated by two improper purposes: to frustrate Forever Green‘s efforts to litigate its claim against ProGreen and to collect on a debt. The District Court affirmed. The Dawsons (without Cohen Seglias) filed this appeal.1
II.
We discuss three issues on appeal. First, whether an involuntary petition may be dismissed as a bad-faith filing. Second, whether the Bankruptcy Court erred in finding bad faith. And third, whether other good-faith creditors could have cured the petition.
A.
Section 303 has one reference to bad faith. It says that if the court dismisses an involuntary petition, it may award damages against any creditor “that filed the petition in bad faith.”
Less often litigated is the issue here, namely, whether bad faith may serve as a basis for dismissal even where the criteria for commencing a suit are satisfied and where the debtor is admittedly not paying its debts as they become due. According to the Dawsons, we cannot engage in a bad-faith inquiry in these circumstances. They say a creditor‘s subjective motivations are irrelevant because
Section 303, by contrast, does not have any similar statutory hook for allowing bad-faith dismissals. Congress must have intended something by this distinction, the argument goes.
We disagree that the text of
The one reference to bad faith in
The bigger flaw in the Dawsons’ argument is that it overlooks the equitable nature of bankruptcy. Time and again, we have emphasized that “good faith” filing requirements have “strong roots in equity.” In re SGL Carbon Corp., 200 F.3d at 161; see also In re Tamecki, 229 F.3d at 207. “At its most fundamental level, the good faith requirement ensures that the Bankruptcy Code‘s careful balancing of interests is not undermined by petitioners whose aims are antithetical to the basic purposes of bankruptcy.” In re Integrated Telecom Express, Inc., 384 F.3d 108, 119 (3d Cir.2004). As courts of equity, bankruptcy courts are equipped with the doctrine of good faith so that they can patrol the border between good- and bad-faith filings. See In re SGL Carbon Corp., 200 F.3d at 161; In re Little Creek Dev. Co., 779 F.2d 1068, 1072 (5th Cir.1986) (explaining that the “good faith” requirement protects the “integrity of the bankruptcy courts by rendering their powerful equitable weapons . . . available only to those debtors and creditors with ‘clean hands‘“). We will not depart from this general “good faith” filing requirement in the context of involuntary petitions for bankruptcy. The majority of courts agree.5
Policy considerations lend further support to this conclusion. “[T]he filing of an involuntary petition is an extreme remedy with serious consequences to the alleged debtor, such as loss of credit standing, inability to transfer assets and carry on business affairs, and public embarrassment.” In re Reid, 773 F.2d 945, 946 (7th Cir.1985). Given these serious consequences, courts should be wary of creditors who may find alluring the “retributive quality” of thrusting a debtor into bankruptcy.6 Allowing for the dismissal of bad-faith filings will encourage creditors to file petitions for proper reasons such as to protect against the preferential treatment of other creditors or the dissipation of the debtor‘s assets. See In re Silverman, 230 B.R. at 53. Accordingly, we hold that an involuntary petition filed under
B.
We review the decision to dismiss the case as a bad-faith filing for abuse of discretion. In re Myers, 491 F.3d at 125. The determination of bad faith is “a fact intensive determination better left to the discretion of the bankruptcy court.” In re Lilley, 91 F.3d 491, 496 (3d Cir.1996) (citations omitted). In terms of allocating burdens of proof, creditors are presumed to have acted in good faith. See In re Bayshore, 209 F.3d at 105. To dismiss the petition, the debtor must show by a preponderance of the evidence that the creditors acted in bad faith. In re Petralex Stainless Ltd., 78 B.R. 738, 743 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1987).
At the outset, we must decide on the standard for evaluating bad faith, which is not defined in the Code. On this issue, courts have applied a dizzying array of standards, mostly with regard to post-dismissal motions for damages under
We adopt the “totality of the circumstances” standard for determining bad faith under
Looking at the totality of the circumstances, we conclude that the Bankruptcy Court did not abuse its discretion in finding that Charles Dawson filed the involuntary petition in bad faith. In the Bankruptcy Court‘s view, “Dawson‘s prepetition conduct indicates that his litigation strategy was to use any means necessary to force the payment of the Consent Judgment and the abandonment of Forever Green‘s claims against [ProGreen].” In re Forever Green Athletic Fields, Inc., 500 B.R. 413, 427 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.2013). In the weeks after Dawson obtained the consent judgment in the Louisiana Action, he filed a motion to terminate Forever Green‘s arbitration proceedings against ProGreen, which arose from the separate Bucks County Action and sought $5 million in damages. Light on meritorious arguments, Dawson‘s plan was to use the consent judgment to garnish the arbitrator‘s fees, thereby forcing the arbitrator to halt the arbitration. Dawson and his counsel said they would keep the arbitration suspended until Forever Green paid on the consent judgment. They also threatened to file an involuntary petition unless Forever Green agreed to stop the proceedings. Keeping his word, Dawson filed an involuntary petition after Forever Green tried to reinstate the arbitration.
As the Bankruptcy Court found, Dawson‘s actions ran counter to the spirit of collective creditor action that should animate an involuntary filing. He put his own interests above all others. By trying to end the arbitration, Dawson was obstructing Forever Green from pursuing its largest asset, the potential proceeds of which Forever Green could have used to pay its creditors. He was also using the bankruptcy process to exert pressure on Forever Green to pay the consent judgment without regard to Forever Green‘s other creditors, many of which had higher priority claims. Courts routinely find it
Nor is there any evidence that Dawson engaged in the type of due diligence and sober decision-making process that should precede any involuntary filing. Instead, the suspicious timing of Dawson‘s filing—days before his responsive brief was due in the Philadelphia Action—and his threatening comments to Day suggest he was just using bankruptcy as an alternative weapon for stopping the arbitration and cashing in on the consent judgment. If Dawson had done an investigation prior to filing, he would have learned that Forever Green was not making preferential payments to its creditors. Although Day was using his personal assets to pay some of Forever Green‘s creditors who also happened to be his creditors, the Dawsons offer no argument as to why we should attribute these payments to Forever Green. Further absent from the record is any evidence of Forever Green‘s assets depleting. The only supposed evidence of asset dissipation is Forever Green‘s prosecution of its claims against ProGreen. But Forever Green is not even footing the bill for any of its litigation—Day is. And more importantly, as the Bankruptcy Court said, it is difficult to “credit[] the notion that the pursuit of Forever Green‘s only asset that may yield a meaningful recovery to its creditors can be characterized as a dissipation of estate assets. To the contrary, the very act of prosecuting this claim would be instrumental to the marshaling of assets integral to any bankruptcy administration.” In re Forever Green, 500 B.R. at 429-30. Accordingly, the record supports the Bankruptcy Court‘s decision to dismiss the petition as a bad-faith filing.
C.
The Dawsons’ final argument is that, even if Charles Dawson acted in bad faith, other good-faith creditors should have been given the chance to cure the petition. This argument arises from
An interesting question percolating in the courts is the application of the so-called “bar to joinder” rule. Under this rule, a petition that was filed in bad faith cannot be saved by joining good-faith creditors under
We need not take a stance on this issue because, even if we found the “bar to joinder” rule misguided, it is too late for any creditor to save the petition. The text of
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we will affirm the order of the District Court.
