In Re: SUBMICRON SYSTEMS CORPORATION, et al, Debtors HOWARD S. COHEN, as Plan Administrator for the Estates of SubMicron Systems Corporation, SubMicron Systems Inc., SubMicron Wet Process Stations Inc. and SubMicron Systems Holdings I Inc., Appellants v. KB MEZZANINE FUND II, LP; EQUINOX INVESTMENT PARTNERS, LLC; and CELERITY SILICON, LLC
No. 03-2102
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
January 6, 2006
PRECEDENTIAL. Argued September 14, 2004. On Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Delaware (D.C. Civil Action No. 02-cv-00752). District Judge: Honorable Sue L. Robinson.
Opinions of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
1-6-2006
In Re: Submicron Sys
Precedential or Non-Precedential: Precedential
Docket No. 03-2102
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Recommended Citation
“In Re: Submicron Sys ” (2006). 2006 Decisions. Paper 1685. http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2006/1685
PRECEDENTIAL
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
No. 03-2102
In Re: SUBMICRON SYSTEMS CORPORATION, et al, Debtors
HOWARD S. COHEN, as Plan Administrator for the Estates of SubMicron Systems Corporation, SubMicron Systems Inc., SubMicron Wet Process Stations Inc. and SubMicron Systems Holdings I Inc., Appellants
v.
KB MEZZANINE FUND II, LP; EQUINOX INVESTMENT PARTNERS, LLC; and CELERITY SILICON, LLC
On Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Delaware (D.C. Civil Action No. 02-cv-00752) District Judge: Honorable Sue L. Robinson
Argued September 14, 2004
Before: SCIRICA, Chief Judge,
(Filed January 6, 2006 )
Rona J. Rosen, Esquire Klehr, Harrison, Harvey Branzburg & Ellers 260 South Broad Street Suite 400 Philadelphia, PA 19102
Joanne B. Wills, Esquire (Argued) Klehr, Harrison, Harvey, Branzburg & Ellers 919 North Market Street Suite 1000 Wilmington, DE 19083
Attorneys for Appellant
Laura D. Jones, Esquire Pachulski, Stang, Ziehl, Young, Jones & Weintraub 919 North Market Street P.O. Box 8705, 16th Floor Wilmington, DE 19801
Peter J. Korneffel, Jr., Esquire Brownstein, Hyatt & Farber 410 Seventeenth Street 22nd Floor Denver, CO 80202
Robert A. Klyman, Esquire (Argued) David D. Johnson, Esquire Latham & Watkins LLP 633 West Fifth Street, Suite 4000 Los Angeles, CA 90071-2007
Attorneys for Appellees
OPINION OF THE COURT
AMBRO, Circuit Judge
Appellant Howard S. Cohen (“Cohen“), as Plan Administrator for the bankruptcy estates of SubMicron Systems Corporation, SubMicron Systems, Inc., SubMicron Wet Process Stations, Inc. and SubMicron Systems Holdings I, Inc. (jointly and severally, “SubMicron“), challenges the sale to an entity created by Sunrise Capital Partners, LP (“Sunrise“) of SubMicron‘s assets under
District Court approved the sale.3 In re SubMicron Sys. Corp., 291 B.R. 314 (D. Del. 2003).
Cohen, seeking as Plan Administrator of the SubMicron estates to aid unsecured creditors “cut out of the deal” by the Lenders and Sunrise, attacks the sale on several fronts. First, he argues that the purportedly secured debt investments made by the Lenders and contributed to Akrion should have been recharacterized by the District Court as equity investments. In the alternative, if the District Court did not err in declining to recharacterize the investments as equity, Cohen contends that it erred by failing to conclude that the debt was unsecured. Even if the District Court properly considered the debt secured, Cohen challenges the propriety of the District Court‘s allowance of the credit bid portion of Akrion‘s offer. As a last option, Cohen asserts that the District Court erred by declining to equitably subоrdinate the Lenders’ secured claims to those of creditors with inferior claims. For the reasons discussed below, we reject these arguments and affirm the judgment of the District Court.
I. Facts and Procedural Posture
A. SubMicron‘s Financing
Before its sale in bankruptcy, SubMicron designed, manufactured and marketed “wet benches”4 for use in the
A steep downturn in the semiconductor industry made 1998 a similarly difficult year for SubMicron. By August of that year, it was paying substantially all of the interest due on the 1997 Notes as paid-in-kind senior subordinated notes. On December 2, 1998, SubMicron and Greyrock agreed to renew the Greyrock line of credit, reducing the maximum funds available from $15 to $10 million and including a $2 million overadvance conditioned on SubMicron‘s securing an additional $4 million in financing. To satisfy this condition, on December 3, SubMicron issued Series B 12% notes (thе “1998 Notes“) to KB/Equinox (for $3.2 million) and Celerity (for $800,000). The 1998 Notes ranked pari passu with the 1997 Notes and the interest was deferred until October 1, 1999. SubMicron incurred a net loss of $21.9 million for the 1998 fiscal year, and at year‘s end its liabilities exceeded its assets by $4.2 million.
SubMicron‘s financial health did not improve in 1999. By March of that year, its management determined that additional financing would be required to meet the company‘s immediate critical working capital needs. To this end, between March 10, 1999 and June 6, 1999, SubMicron issued a total of eighteen Series 1999 12% notes (the “1999 Tranche One Notes“) for a total of $7,035,154 (comprising nine notes to KB/Equinox totaling $5,888,123 and nine notes to Celerity totaling $1,147,031). The 1999 Tranche One Notes proved insufficient to keep SubMicron afloat. As a result, between July 8, 1999 and August 31, 1999, KB/Equinox and Celerity made periodic payments to SubMicron (the “1999 Tranсhe Two Funding“) totaling $3,982,031 and $147,969, respectively. No notes were issued in exchange for the 1999 Tranche Two Funding. Between the 1999 Tranche One Notes and the 1999 Tranche Two Funding (collectively, the “1999 Fundings“), KB/Equinox and Celerity advanced SubMicron a total of $9,870,154 and $1,295,000, respectively. (The 1999 Fundings were recorded as secured debt on SubMicron‘s 10-Q filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.) Despite the cash infusions, during the first half of 1999 SubMicron incurred a net loss of $9.9 million. On June 30, 1999, SubMicron‘s liabilities exceeded its assets by $3.1 million.
By January 1999, KB/Equinox had appointed three members to SubMicron‘s Board of Directors. All appointees were either principals or employees of KB/Equinox. By June 1999, following resignations of various SubMicron Board members, KB/Equinox employees Bonaparte Liu and Robert Wickey, and Celerity employee Mark Benham, reprеsented three-quarters
B. The Acquisition
SubMicron began acquisition discussions with Sunrise in July of 1999. By all accounts, it was generally understood that if SubMicron failed to reach a deal with Sunrise, it would be forced to liquidate, leaving secured creditors—with the exception of Greyrock—with pennies on the dollar and unsecured creditors and shareholders with nothing. KB/Equinox, not SubMicron‘s management, conducted negotiations with Sunrise, developing and agreeing on the terms and financial structure of an acquisition to occur in the context of a prepackaged bankruptcy.
On August 31, 1999, SubMicron entered into an asset purchase agreement with Akrion, the entity created by Sunrise to function as the acquisition vehicle. The following day, SubMicrоn filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition and an associated motion seeking approval of the sale of its assets to Sunrise outside the ordinary course of business pursuant to
The asset purchase agreement reiterated, inter alia, that KB/Equinox and Celerity would contribute their secured claims (i.e., the 1997 Notes, the 1998 Notes and the 1999 Fundings) in order for Akrion to credit bid these claims under
At the sale hearing Akrion submitted а bid of $55,507,587 for SubMicron. The cash component of the bid totaled $10,202,000 and included $5,500,000 in cash from Akrion, $3,382,000 to pay pre- and post-petition Greyrock secured debt, and $850,000 to cover administrative claims.5 The credit portion of the bid consisted of the $38,721,637 outstanding for the 1997 Notes, the 1998 Notes, and the 1999 Fundings (all of which KB/Equinox and Celerity had contributed to Akrion), plus $1,324,138 in individual secured claims, for a total of $40,045,775. Finally, the bid included SubMicron‘s liabilities that would be assumed by Akrion—$681,346 in lease obligations and $4,578,466 in other assumed liabilities for a total of $5,259,812. No other bid for SubMicron‘s assets was made, SubMicron‘s Board and the Court both approved Akrion‘s bid over the objection of the Creditors’ Committee, and on October 15, 1999, the asset sale closed.
On April 18, 2000, the Creditors’ Committee brought against the Lenders, among others, an adversary proceeding in which it madе the claims before us on appeal. (Cohen was subsequently substituted for the Creditors’ Committee.) After a bench trial before Judge Sue Robinson in late July/early August 2001, she ruled against Cohen, setting out her reasoning in a comprehensive opinion. Cohen appeals.
II. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
Because the typical reference of bankruptcy cases to bankruptcy courts was withdrawn here by the District Court,
III. Recharacterization as Equity
Cohen argues that the District Court erred by failing to recharacterize the infusion of the 1999 Fundings as an equity investment. To succeed with this argument, he must demonstrate that the District Court abused its discretionary authority or premised its determination on clearly erroneous findings of fact. Bеcause he has failed to do so, we affirm the District Court‘s recharacterization holding.
A. Recharacterization / Equitable Subordination
At the outset, it is important to distinguish recharacterization from equitable subordination. Both remedies are grounded in bankruptcy courts’ equitable authority6 to ensure “that substance will not give way to form, that technical considerations will not prevent substantial justice from being done.” Pepper v. Litton, 308 U.S. 295, 305 (1939). Yet recharacterization and equitable subordination address distinct concerns. Equitable subordination is apt when equity demands that the payment priority of claims of an otherwise legitimate creditor be changed to fall behind those of other claimants. See, e.g., Citicorp Venture Capital, Ltd. v. Comm. of Creditors Holding Unsecured Claims, 160 F.3d 982, 986–87 (3d Cir. 1998); Bayer Corp. v. MascoTech, Inc. (In re Autostyle Plastics, Inc.), 269 F.3d 726, 749 (6th Cir. 2001). In contrast, the focus of the reсharacterization inquiry is whether “a debt actually exists,” In re Autostyle Plastics, 269 F.3d at 748 (internal
quotation marks omitted) or, put another way, we ask what is the proper characterization in the first instance of an investment.7 For these reasons, we agree with those courts that have determined that “the issues of recharacterization of debt as equity capital and equitable subordination should be treated separately.” Blasbalg v. Tarro (In re Hyperion Enters., Inc.), 158 B.R. 555, 560 (D.R.I. 1993); see, e.g., In re Autostyle Plastics, 269 F.3d at 749 (explaining that “[b]ecause both recharacterization and equitable subordination are supported by the
recharacterization a separate cause of action“).
Cohen advances both arguments. He argues that the infusion of the 1999 Fundings is most accurately characterized as an equity investment—a recharacterization argument—and, in the alternative, that if the infusion is deemed a debt investment, the Lenders’ claims should be equitably subordinated. We turn first to the recharacterization argument, as “[d]etermining [an] equitable subordination issue prior to determining whether [an] advance is a loan or [an equity investment] is similar to taking the cart before the horse.” Diasonics, Inc. v. Ingalls, 121 B.R. 626, 630 (Bankr. N.D. Fla. 1990). If a “particular advance is a capital contribution, . . . . then equitable subordination never comes into play.” In re Georgetown Bldg. Assocs., 240 B.R. at 137.
B. Recharacterization Framework
In defining the recharacterization inquiry, courts have adopted a variety of multi-factor tests borrowed from non-bаnkruptcy caselaw.8 While these tests undoubtedly
- the names given to the instruments, if any, evidencing the indebtedness;
- the presence or absence of a fixed maturity date and schedule of payments;
- the presence or absence of a fixed rate of interest and interest payments;
- the source of repayments;
- the adequacy or inadequacy of capitalization;
- the identity of interest between the creditor and the stockholder;
- the security, if any, for the advances;
- the corporation‘s ability to obtain financing from outside lending institutions;
- the extent to which the advances were subordinated to the claims of outside creditors;
- the extent to which the advances were used to acquire capital assets; and
- the presence or absence of a sinking fund to provide repayments.
Roth Steel Tube Co., 800 F.2d at 630.
The Courts of Appeal for the Eleventh and Fifth Circuits also employ a multi-factor test in the tax context. They have identified the following thirteen factors:
- the names given to the certificates evidencing the indebtedness;
- the presence or absence of a fixed maturity date;
- the source of payments;
- the right to enforce payment of principal and interest;
- participation in management flowing as a result;
- the status of the contribution in relation to regular corporate creditors;
- the intent of the parties;
- “thin” or adequate capitalization;
- identity of interest between creditor and stockholder;
- source of interest payments;
- the ability of the corporation to obtain loans from outside lending institutions;
- the extent to which the advance was used to acquire capital assets; and
- the failure of the debtor to repay on the due date or to seek a postponement.
Stinnett‘s Pontiac Serv., Inc. v. Comm‘r, 730 F.2d 634, 638 (11th Cir. 1984) (citing Estate of Mixon v. United States, 464 F.2d 394, 402 (5th Cir. 1972)).
In re Cold Harbor Assocs., L.P., 204 B.R. at 915, discussed both of the above tests in the recharacterization context and applied the factors relevant to that case, and In re Georgetown Bldg. Assocs., 240 B.R. at 137, cited with approval Cold Harbor‘s use of these factors in the recharacterization context (but found it unnecessary
In this case, the District Court applied a seven-factor test used in an unpublished District of Delaware case that was bankruptcy relаted, Official Comm. of Unsecured Creditors of Color Tile, Inc. v. Blackstone Family Inv. P‘ship (In re Color Tile, Inc.), No. Civ. A. 98-358-SLR, 2000 WL 152129 (D. Del. Feb. 9, 2000) (Robinson, J.). Those factors are
- the name given to the instrument;
- the intent of the parties;
- the presence or absence of a fixed maturity date;
- the right to enforce payment of principal and interest;
- the presence or absence of voting rights;
- the status of the contribution in relation to regular corporate contributors; and
- certainty of payment in the event of the corporation‘s insolvency or liquidation.
In re SubMicron Sys., 291 B.R. at 323 (citing In re Color Tile, 2000 WL 152129, at *4).
include pertinent factors, they devolve to an overarching inquiry: the characterization as debt or equity is a court‘s attempt to discern whether the parties called an instrument one thing when in fact they intended it as something else. That intent may be inferred from what the parties say in their contracts, from what they do through their actions, and from the economic reality of the surrounding circumstances. Answers lie in facts that confer context case-by-case.
No mechanistic scorecard suffices. And none should, for Kabuki outcomes elude difficult fact patterns. While some cases are easy (e.g., a document titled a “Note” calling for payments of sums certain at fixed intervals with market-rate interest and these obligations are secured and are partly performed, versus a document issued as a certificate indicating a proportional interest in the enterprise to which the certificate relates), others are hard (such as a “Note” with conventional repayment terms yet reflecting an amount proportional to prior equity interests and whose payment terms are ignored). Which course a court discerns is typically a commonsense conclusion that the party infusing funds does so as a banker (the party expects to be repaid with interest no mаtter the borrower‘s fortunes; therefore, the funds are debt) or as an investor (the funds infused are repaid based on the borrower‘s fortunes; hence, they are equity). Form is no doubt a factor, but in the end it is no more than an indicator of what the parties actually intended and acted on.
C. Review of the District Court‘s Recharacterization Holding
i) Standard of Review
We must first determine whether the District Court‘s recharacterization conclusion is a finding of fact we review for clear error or a conclusion of law over which we exercise plenary review. Direct precedent on this issue is lacking,9 but several courts have considered this issue in the tax context.
In tax cases addressing whether for tax purposes a
contribution should be treated as debt or equity, courts of appeal are split. The United States Courts of Appeals for the Sixth and Ninth Circuits have сoncluded the issue is one of fact to be reviewed for clear error. Roth Steel Tube, 800 F.2d at 629 (citing Smith v. Comm‘r, 370 F.2d 178, 180 (6th Cir. 1966)); Bauer v. Comm‘r, 748 F.2d 1365, 1367 (9th Cir. 1985) (citing A.R. Lantz Co. v. United States, 424 F.2d 1330, 1334 (9th Cir. 1970)). The Fifth and Eleventh Circuit Courts of Appeals, on the other hand, have held the issue to be primarily one of law subject to de novo review. Lane v. United States (In re Lane), 742 F.2d 1311, 1315 (11th Cir. 1984); Estate of Mixon v. United States, 464 F.2d 394, 402–03 & n.13 (5th Cir. 1972).10 In our Court, we were called
As discussed above, the determinative inquiry in
classifying advances as debt or equity is the intent of the parties as it existed at the time of the transaction. So framed, we agree with our Sixth and Ninth Circuit colleagues that this is a question of fact that, “once resolved by a district court, cannot be overturned unless clearly erroneous.” A.R. Lantz Co., 424 F.2d at 1334.
ii) The District Court‘s Determination Was Not Clearly Erroneous
The District Court‘s opinion includes ample findings of fаct to support its recharacterization determination. Because these findings are not clearly erroneous and overwhelmingly support the Court‘s decision to characterize the 1999 Fundings as debt (under any framework or test), we affirm its factual determination.
The District Court set out numerous facts to support a debt characterization. Looking to the lending documents, it found “beyond dispute in the record that . . . the name given to the 1999 fundings was debt . . . and . . . the 1999 fundings had a fixed maturity date and interest rate.” In re SubMicron Sys., 291 B.R. at 325. The Court also found evidence of the parties’ intent to create a debt investment outside the lending documents. For example, it noted that “[t]he 1999 notes were recorded as secured debt on SubMicron‘s 10Q SEC filing and UCC-1 financing statements.” Id. at 319.
The District Court could not find, on the other hand, convincing evidence to support an equity investment characterization of the 1999 Fundings. It rejected Cohen‘s argument that the dire financial circumstances surrounding the infusion of the 1999 Fundings supported an equity characterization. Instead, it concluded, with reference to the conflicting testimony and relative credibility of witnesses presented by both parties, that Cohen “failed to prove that[,] under SubMicron‘s dire circumstances, [the Lenders‘] transactions were improper or unusual [as debt investments].” Id. at 325. Recognizing that “‘[w]hen a corporation is undercapitalized, a court is more skeptical of purported loans made to it because they may in reality be infusions of capital,‘” id. (quoting In re Autostyle Plastics, 269 F.3d at 746-47), the District Court also noted that “when existing lenders make loans to a distressed company, they are trying to protect their existing loans аnd traditional factors that lenders consider (such as capitalization, solvency, collateral, ability to pay cash interest and debt capacity ratios) do not apply as they would when lending to a financially healthy company,” id. Weighing these competing considerations, it did not find SubMicron‘s undercapitalization greatly supported an equity characterization. Id.
Similarly, the Court found the Lenders’ participation on the SubMicron Board did not, in and of itself, provide support for an equity characterization. Again relying on expert testimony, it emphasized that it is “not unusual for lenders to have designees on a company‘s board, particularly when
Lastly, the Court found unpersuasive Cohen‘s argument that SubMicron‘s failure to issue notes for the 1999 Tranche Two Funding should be understood as evidence of the parties’ understanding that the 1999 Fundings were, in effect, equity investments. It noted that “[t]he record is clear that SubMicron‘s accounting department made numerous mistakes and errors when generating notes,” concluding that “[t]he fact that notes were generated for some fundings and not others is not sufficient, in and of itself, to recharacterize the 1999 fundings as equity.” Id. at 326.
In short, the District Court found ample evidence to support a dеbt characterization and little evidence to support a characterization of equity infusion. On the basis of these findings, which comport with the record, it was hardly clear error for the Court to conclude that “[Cohen] ha[d] not proven by a preponderance of the evidence that the 1999 [F]undings should be recharacterized as equity.” Id. at 325.
IV. The 1999 Fundings Were Secured Debt
Having established that the District Court properly concluded the 1999 Fundings were debt, we turn to Cohen‘s assertion that the Lenders did not present a valid secured claim. In determining whether claims asserted by creditors in bankruptcy are secured, state law applies. See In re Bollinger Corp., 614 F.2d 924, 925 n.1 (3d Cir. 1980). Cohen concedes that, whether one applies Delaware, Pennsylvania, California or New York law, the requirements to obtain a security interest are the same. Thus each state‘s сodification of Uniform Commercial Code (“U.C.C.“) §§ 9-203 and 9-302 existing in 199911 requires a written security agreement in favor of the lender describing the collateral and, for the collateral in question (inventory, equipment, receivables and general intangibles), the filing of a properly executed financing statement (unless the inventory and equipment are possessed by the lender or its representative, something normally, and here highly, impractical).
Cohen contends that the Lenders did not comply with state U.C.C. law (and thus the requirements for assertion of a secured claim). The main source of contention is that financing statements filed by the Lenders only list “Equinox Investment Partners, LLC, as Collateral Agent,” as the secured party.12 Cohen asserts that the listing of Equinox solely (and not also KB and Celerity) rendered the financing statement ineffective under the then-extant
We also conclude that, on the record before us, there can be no doubt that KB and Celerity were intended secured parties served by their agent, Equinox. Indeed, in the schedule of liabilities filed with the District Court, SubMicron lists KB and Celerity аs secured noteholders. The District Court found on the basis of overwhelming evidence that KB and Celerity were intended secured parties with respect to the 1999 Fundings and we discern no basis to believe this determination was erroneous. In sum, we conclude that the Lenders presented valid secured claims for the 1999 Fundings.
V. Propriety of § 363 Credit Bid
Having determined that the 1999 Fundings represented an extension of secured debt, we turn to Cohen‘s argument that the
It is well settled among district and bankruptcy courts that creditors can bid the full face value of their secured claims under
In fact, logic demands that
A hypothetical is illustrative.
Assume that Debtor has a single asset: a truck, T. Lender is a secured creditor that has loaned Debtor $15, taking a security interest in T. Debtor is in Chapter 11 bankruptcy and has filed a § 363 motion to sell T to Bidder for $10. Debtor argues that Lender can only credit bid $10 for T and must bid any excess in cash if it wishes to outbid B.
This hypothetical reveals the logical problem with an actual value bid cap. If Lender bids $12 for T, by definition $12 becomes the value of Lender‘s security interest in T. In this way, until Lender is paid in full, Lender can always overbid Bidder. (Naturally, Lender will not outbid Bidder unless Lender believes it could generate a greater return on T than the return for Lender represented by Bidder‘s offer.) As Lender holds a security interеst in T, any amount bid for it up to the value of Lender‘s full claim becomes the secured portion of Lender‘s claim by definition.14 Given the weight of reason‘s demand that “it must be so,” we see no reason to catalog the myriad other arguments that have been advanced to support this “interpretation.”15
Unable squarely to rest this argument on a theoretically sound construction of the Bankruptcy Code‘s credit bidding provisions, Cohen enlists the aid of
Moreover, as a practical matter, no
For these reasons, we conclude that the District Court properly allowed the Lenders to contribute their credit bids under the §363 sale.
VI. Equitable Subordination
Cohen also argues that the Lenders’ claims related to the 1999 Fundings should be equitably subordinated to the claims of the general unsecured creditors. In Citicorp Venture Capital, Ltd. v. Comm. of Creditors Holding Unsecured Claims, we explained that
[b]efore ordering equitable subordination, most courts have required a showing involving three elements: (1) the claimant must have engaged in some type of inequitable conduct, (2) the misconduct must have resulted in injury to the creditors or conferred an unfair advantage on the claimant, and (3) equitable subordination of the claim must not be inconsistent with the provisions of the [B]ankruptcy [C]ode.
160 F.3d 982, 986-87 (3d Cir. 1998) (citing United States v. Noland, 517 U.S. 535 (1996)). We declined, however, to adopt the first generally recognized element as a formal requirement for equitable subordination, noting instead that because the Bankruptcy Court in Citicorp Venture Capital properly found inequitable conduct, there was no “need . . . [to] resolve the issue of whether misconduct is always a prerequisite to equitable subordination . . . .”16 160 F.3d at 987 n.2. In a similar vein, because the District Court found in our case, through a proper exercise of its discretion, that no injury resulted to SubMicron‘s unsecured creditors as a result of the Lenders’ dealings with Akrion, we need not reach the issue of inequitable conduct in order to affirm the District Court‘s equitable subordination holding.
As the District Court explained, the doctrine of equitable subordination “is remedial, not penal, and should be applied only to the extent necessary to offset specific harm that creditors have suffered on account of the inequitable conduct.” 291 B.R. at 327 (citing Trone v. Smith (In re Westgate-California Corp.), 642 F.2d 1174, 1178 (9th Cir.1981)); see also Citicorp Venture Capital, 160 F.3d at 991 (“A bankruptcy court should . . . attempt to identify the nature and extent of the harm it intends to compensate in a manner that will permit a judgment to be made regarding the proportionality of the remedy to the injury that has been suffered by those who will benefit from the subordination.“); Stoumbos v. Kilimnik, 988 F.2d 949, 960 (9th Cir. 1993) (“A claim will be subordinated only to the claims of creditors whom the inequitable conduct has disadvantaged.“); Estes v. N & D Props., Inc. (In re N & D Props., Inc.), 799 F.2d 726, 733 (11th Cir. 1986) (stating that “equitable subordination operates only to redress the amount of actual harm done“).
Considering Cohen‘s equitable subordination claim, the District Court held:
[P]laintiff has failed to show that . . . the unsecured creditors suffered any harm as the result of defendants’ actions.
The trial testimony is uncontradicted that had defendants not made the 1999 [F]undings to SubMicron, the company would have been forced to close down and liquidate, leaving thе unsecured creditors with nothing.
Furthermore, the record shows that there were no other parties interested in acquiring SubMicron at the time of the bid. Plaintiff has failed to show that any other party was willing to bid on SubMicron at any price. In fact, the testimony shows that Sunrise/Akrion was the deal of last resort for SubMicron and the company aggressively sought other suitors prior to the Sunrise/Akrion deal. Given these facts, plaintiff has not proven that any harm
resulted from any improper double bidding or inflated bid price.
In re SubMicron Sys., 291 B.R. at 329.
The record supports the Court‘s findings, and Cohen barely argues otherwise.17 Further, Cohen points to no evidence showing that unsecured creditors were in any way disadvantaged or harmed by the sale of assets.18 In this context, equitable subordination would serve no purpose and the Court thus properly denied Cоhen‘s claim.
* * * * *
We affirm the District Court‘s approval of the
Notes
At a sale under subsection (b) of this section of property that is subject to a lien that secures an allowed claim, unless the court for cause orders otherwise the holder of such claim may bid at such sale, and, if the holder of such claim purchases such property, such holder may offset such claim against the purchase price of such property.
after notice and a hearing, the court may (1) under principles of equitable subordination, subordinate for purposes of distribution all or part of an allowed claim to all or part of another allowed claim or all or part of an allowed interest to all or part of another allowed interest; or (2) order that any lien securing such a subordinated claim be transferred to the estate.
An argument might be made that the “allowed claim” referred to in the Congressional Record is only the secured portion of [the creditor]‘s claim. But this is an argument of form and not of substance. Until [the nonrecourse undersecured lender] is paid in full, any bid received is subject to overbid by [the lender]. If [the bidder]‘s bid were valued [below the full value of the lender‘s claim], [the lender] could overbid it, and [the lender]‘s bid would then become, by definition, the “allowed” claim. . . . [I]t is practical that [the lender] will bid in its entire obligation and therefore that is its “allowed” claim. Because no one could buy the property without [the lender]‘s consent, unless [the lender] is paid in full, the “allowed claim” of [the lender] must (for purposes of credit bidding) be its total claim without reference to the “value” of the property.
