Chapter 11
DECISION WITH RESPECT TO NO STAY PLEADING AND RELATED MOTION TO DISMISS FOR LACK OF SUBJECT MATTER JURISDICTION (ELLIOTT PLAINTIFFS)
Once again, a plaintiff group wishing to proceed ahead of all of the others (only one week after I issued the written opinion memorializing my earlier oral ruling proscribing such an effort)
Discussion
Given the ease of these issues, and my earlier discussion in Phaneufiincorporated into this decision by reference), this discussion will be brief.
I.
Subject Matter Jurisdiction
In addition to contending that they should be allowed to proceed on their own because the Sale Order should not be deemed to apply to them, the Elliott Plaintiffs contend that I lack subject matter jurisdiction to enforce the Sale Order. They say “[bjecause New GM’s claims are not ‘related to’ any proceedings before this Court, this Court lacks jurisdiction to stay
I disagree. Their argument misses the point. “Related to” jurisdiction has nothing to do with the issues here. Bankruptcy courts (and when it matters, district courts) have subject matter jurisdiction to enforce their orders in bankruptcy cases and proceedings under those courts’ “arising in ” jurisdiction.
As explained in many of those cases,
(b) .... the district courts shall have original but not exclusive jurisdiction of all civil proceedings arising under title 11, or arising in or related to cases under title 11.
The three types of jurisdiction that district (and hence bankruptcy) courts may exercise are thus those colloquially referred to as (1) “arising under”;
Nor is it an answer for the Elliott Plaintiffs’ to premise jurisdictional arguments on the conclusion they ultimately want me to reach — that upon construction of the Sale Order and the Sale Agreement, their claims would be permissible under each. That assumes the fact to be decided, in the proceedings the Elliott Plaintiffs wish to sidestep. Their argument conflates the conclusion I might reach after analysis of matters before me — that certain claims ultimately might not be covered by the Sale Order — with my jurisdiction to decide
The motion to dismiss for asserted lack of subject matter jurisdiction is denied.
II.
The No Stay Request
I then reach the issue that the plaintiffs in 86 other Ignition Switch actions did not bother to raise, and that I addressed in the only other exception, Phaneuf. The Elliott Plaintiffs have given me no greater reason to conclude that they should be a special case than the Phaneuf Plaintiffs did.
Like Phaneuf plaintiffs Lisa Phaneuf, Adam Smith, and Catherine and Joseph Cabral, Elliott Plaintiffs Lawrence and Celestine Elliott purchased a car manufactured by Old GM — in this case, a 2006 Chevy Cobalt.
have any liability for any claim that arose prior to the Closing Date, relates to the production of vehicles prior to the Closing Date, or otherwise is assertable against the Debtors or is related to the Purchased Assets prior to the Closing Date.25
On their face, the Elliott Plaintiffs’ claims “relate[ ] to the production of vehicles pri- or to the Closing Date” — even assuming, without deciding, that the Elliott Plaintiffs do not also assert liability for a claim that “that arose prior to the Closing Date,” or “otherwise is assertable against the Debtors or is related to the Purchased Assets prior to the Closing Date.”
And while the Elliott Plaintiffs’ brief disclaims reliance on Old GM acts, their complaint doesn’t bear that out. Though to a lesser degree than in Phaneuf, the Elliott Plaintiffs’ complaint also relies on the conduct of Old GM in asserting claims against New GM, accusing Old GM of “unlawful concealment”: “New GM acquired all the books, records and accounts of [Old GM], including records that document the unlawful concealment of defects in vehicles sold by Old GM prior to New GM’s existence.”
As in Phaneuf, I find that the Elliott Plaintiffs are asserting claims with respect to vehicles that were manufactured before the 868 Sale, and, although to a lesser extent than in Phaneuf, relying on the conduct of Old GM. Thus I find as a fact,
And once again, even if the Sale Order did not apply in the first instance, a preliminary injunction would also be appropriate here, for the reasons discussed at length in Phaneuf, which I will not repeat at comparable length here — other than to say that the prejudice to all of the other litigants, and to the case management concerns I had with respect to the Phaneuf Plaintiffs, is just as much a matter of concern here.
As in Phaneuf, I will not allow the Elliott Plaintiffs to 'go it alone. The Elliott Plaintiffs’ claims can be satisfactorily addressed — and will have to be addressed— as part of the coordinated proceedings otherwise pending before me.
Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above and in Phaneuf, the relief requested in the Elliott Plaintiffs’ No Stay Pleading (including their motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction) is denied. The Elliott Plaintiffs’ claims will be treated the same as those in all of the other Ignition Switch Actions. The stay already imposed by the injunctive provisions of Paragraphs 8 and 47 of the Sale Order (and that the Court may also impose by preliminary injunction) will remain in place insofar as it affects the Elliott Plaintiffs’ complaint — subject to the right, shared by all of the other plaintiffs in the Ignition Switch Actions, to ask that the Court revisit the issue after September 1.
Notes
. This written decision memorializes and amplifies on the oral decision that I issued after the close of oral argument at the hearing on this matter on August 5, 2014. Because it had its origins in the originally dictated decision, it has a more conversational tone.
. In re Motors Liquidation Company,
. Defined terms are as used in Phaneuf.
. Travelers Indem. Co. v. Bailey,
. Luan Investment S.E. v. Franklin 145 Corp. (In re Petrie Retail, Inc.),
. Lothian Cassidy, LLC v. Lothian Exploration & Dev. II, L.P.,
. See Sterling Vision, Inc. v. Sterling Optical Corp. (In re Sterling Optical Corp.),
.In re Portrait Corp. of Am., Inc.,
. See 10 Collier ¶ 7087.01 (discussing GM-Trusky, noting that while the bankruptcy court's subject matter jurisdiction over the underlying merits of a contract dispute between New GM and the UAW was debatable, construction of the Sale Order was a matter over which the bankruptcy court had "unquestioned subject matter jurisdiction” under the “arising in” prong of 28 U.S.C. § 1334).
. Though the argument comes second in the Elliott Plaintiff’s brief, I consider it as a threshold issue. See, e.g., Millenium Seacarriers, Inc. v. Allfirst Bank (In re Millenium Seacarriers, Inc.),
. Elliott Pis.' Br. at 5.
. See page 381 below. For this reason, I found the Elliott Plaintiffs’ reference to Johns-Manville puzzling. See Elliott Pis.’ Br. at 28, 32, 33 (citing Johns-Manville Corp. v. Chubb Indem. Ins. Co. (In re Johns-Manville Corp.),
. See, e.g., Sterling Optical,
. This is analytically the same as “federal question” jurisdiction, but the claim must arise under title 11, as contrasted to any other title or provision, of the U.S. Code. It is not relevant here.
. See, e.g., Ames Dept. Stores,
. See Sterling Optical,
. Id. Accord Lothian Cassidy,
. See n.22 below.
. See Elliott Pis.’ Br. at 5 (“Because their claims are not ‘related to’ any proceedings before this Court, this Court lacks jurisdiction to stay their lawsuit or to restrict the Elliotts in any way ...."); id. at 31 (“The technical jurisdiction issue presented is whether the Elliotts' claims against New GM 'relate to’ any proceeding properly before the Court _”); id. at 32 ("The Second Circuit has ... made clear that this Court’s ‘related to’ jurisdiction is limited to power over litigants in proceedings only when the outcome of that proceeding could conceivably have any effect on the estate being administered in bankruptcy” (emphasis in original) (citing Cuyahoga Equipment, n. 21 below)). In the portion of their brief beginning at page 31 (captioned “The Elliotts Claims Do Not 'Relate to’ Any Proceeding Before the Court”), the Elliott Plaintiffs continue in conclusory terms, after stating the issue to be whether their claims against New GM " 'relate to' any proceeding properly before the Court,” “that their claims themselves assuredly do not 'arise in’ the proceedings that Old GM initiated.” Id. That conclusory assertion is the only place in their brief where "arising in” jurisdiction is mentioned, and — apart from misstating how "arising in” jurisdiction is analyzed — it is made without any explanation or, especially, authority.
. See, e.g., Pacor, Inc. v. Higgins,
. As I held in GM-Trusky :
The Trusky Plaintiffs' claims, arising under state law, don’t arise under title 11 (the Bankruptcy Code), and as they’re asserted against New GM, not Old GM, it’s difficult to see, under the Pacor and Cuyahoga Equipment tests applicable in this Circuit, ... how they would have sufficient impact on Old GM or the administration of its chapter 11 case to be "related to” that case. But construction of my bankruptcy court Sale Order, which was entered in Old GM’s chapter 11 case, and which would not have been entered, or necessary to construe, if there were no bankruptcy case, is a garden-variety example of a proceeding "arising in” a chapter 11 case.
2013 Bankr.LEXIS 620, at *33,
. See, e.g., Ames Dept. Stores,
.I considered a similar issue in GM-Trusky, where I exercised my "arising in” jurisdiction to construe the very same Sale Order that we have here, and then abstained with respect to the remainder of the controversy, sending it to the Eastern District of Michigan. See 2013 Bankr.LEXIS 620, at *33,
. It appears that the amended Elliotts' complaint includes the claims of an additional plaintiff, Berenice Summerville, who purchased a 2010 Chevy Cobalt in December 2009. (Am.Comp.i 5.) Assuming that the facts bear this out, this additional plaintiff seemingly is in the same category as some of the Phaneuf Plaintiffs — those who purchased vehicles that conceivably could have been manufactured after the July 2009 363 Sale. For the avoidance of doubt, I am not going to put this additional plaintiff in a different category than the Phaneuf Plaintiffs, or Lawrence and Celestine Elliott, as discussed below.
. Sale Order ¶ 46 (emphasis added).
. Am. Compl. ¶ 6 (emphasis added).
