ORDER SUSTAINING JOINT OBJECTION TO CLAIM OF PDVSA PETRÓLEO, S.A.
THIS MATTER came before the Court for hearing on December 18, 2014 upon the Joint Objection to Claim of PDVSA Petróleos, S.A. [sic] [ECF No. 168] (the “Joint Objection”) filed by (i) Trigeant Holdings, Ltd., Trigeant, LLC, and Trigeant, Ltd. (together, the “Debtors”), and (ii) Harry Sargeant, II, Daniel Sargeant, and James Sargeant (together, the “Consenting Owners,” and with the Debtors, collectively, the “Objectors”). The Objectors ask the Court to disallow that portion of the claim filed by PDVSA Petróleo, S.A. (“PDVSA”) representing interest accruing after еntry of a judgment confirming the underlying arbitration award on' the grounds that such portion as calculated exceeds the statutory maximum rate set by 28 U.S.C. § 1961.
STATEMENT OF FACTS
In 2002 and 2003, PDVSA and Trigeant, Ltd. entered into two similar contracts whereby PDVSA agreed to supply Trigeant, Ltd. with crude oil at a stated price. Each contract incorporated certain General Conditions, which included the following clause:
PDVSA deliverеd crude oil under the contracts. The parties failed to perform contractual obligations to mutual satisfaction. As a result of alleged defaults, Trigeant, Ltd. and PDVSA entered into arbitration.
On September 24, 2008, the International Court of Arbitration (“ICA”) issued a final award in favor of PDVSA and against Trigeant, Ltd. (the “Final Award”) in the amount of approximately $35.1 million, comprising principal in the amount of about $17.8 million, interest in the amоunt of about $16.6 million at the rate of 18% per annum through the date of the award, and certain costs. The ICA also awarded future interest at the rate of “18% per annum ... to the date of payment.” During arbitration, the parties disputed the appropriate rate of interest to be applied to the arbitral award. However, it does not appear that the parties argued, or that the arbitration рanel considered, what rate of interest might apply to a judgment confirming the arbitral award. The Final Award issued by the ICA does not explicitly address the rate of interest that would apply after entry of a confirmation judgment.
Trigeant, Ltd. did not pay the arbitration award. PDVSA filed an application to confirm the Final Award in the United States District- Court for the Southern District of Florida. On November 5, 2009, the District Court entered judgment cоnfirming the arbitration award (the “Confirmation Judgment”), stating.that “final judgment is hereby entered in favor of Plaintiff PDVSA Petróleo S.A. for .the amount stated in the September 24, 2008, Final Arbi-tral Award.” There is no evidence before this Court to suggest that the parties argued the issue of post-judgment interest to the District Court. The Confirmation Judgment does not state what rate of interest applies after its entry. The Confirmation Judgment was not appealed and is now final.
Following the issuance of the Confirmation Judgment, the parties engaged in significant litigation in which the amount of PDVSA’s judgment was arguably relevant.
In 2009, prior to entry of the Confirmation Judgment, PDVSA brought suit against Trigeant, Ltd. and BTB in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas. BTB, as the holder of a mortgage lien on the oil refinery in Nueces County, Texas, previously owned by Trigeant, Ltd., had foreclosed its mortgage, thereby obtaining title tо the oil refinery. In the Texas litigation, among other things, PDVSA sought reversal of the foreclosure sale of the oil refinery on state law theories of fraudulent transfer. The litigation in Texas continued after entry of the Confirmation Judgment. In the Texas litigation, several parties including Trigeant, Ltd. stipulated to the fact that Trigeant, Ltd. owed PDVSA some $47 million. It is not disputed that this amount 'included interest at a rate of 18% per annum both before and after entry of the Confirmation Judgment. In its ruling, the Texas District Court made a finding regarding the amount of the PDVSA claim consistent with the parties’ agreement.
The Texas District Court entered judgment avoiding the foreclosure sale, re-
In December 2013, Trigeant, Ltd. filed a chapter 11 petition with this Court. In its schedules of assets and liabilities in that prior case, Trigeant, Ltd. listed a debt owed to PDVSA in the amount of $55.8 million, thereafter amended to $52.8 million. An officer of Trigeant, Ltd. later confirmed this amount under oath in a deposition. It is nоt disputed that this figure included interest at the rate of 18% per annum after entry of the Confirmation Judgment.
The first bankruptcy of Trigeant, Ltd. was dismissed on April 9, 2014, with prejudice to the filing of another petition in bankruptcy until after issuance of the mandate in the pénding appeal before the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. After dismissal of the first Trigeant, Ltd. bankruptcy, BTB and PDVSA reached a settlement that involved dismissal of the Fifth Circuit appeаl and the potential transfer of the secured claims of PDVSA to BTB. This settlement has two important impacts in the present case. First, the settlement effectively confirmed in Trigeant, Ltd. title to the oil refinery. Second, the settlement empowered BTB to use the claims owned by PDVSA, secured by liens on the oil refinery, in BTB’s efforts to regain title to the oil refinery through foreclosure or through credit bid in a second bankruptсy of Trigeant, Ltd.
On August 25, 2014, Trigeant, Ltd. filed a second bankruptcy, the present case, joined by the other Debtors. In this case, Trigeant, Ltd. scheduled PDVSA with a claim in the amount of $55.3 million, which again appears to include interest at the rate of 18% per annum after the Confirmation Judgment. This time the PDVSA claim was listed as disputed.
The Debtors filed a joint plan of reorganization providing for the sale of the oil refinery for a stated price of $100 million. The agreements entered into by the Debtors and the Consenting Owners in connection with the proposed sale severely limit the Debtors’ ability to negotiate with alternative purchasers and include disincentives for the Consenting Owners to support an alternative transaction without regard to the value of the competing bid.
BTB objected to the sale process proposed by the Debtors from the inception of this case. In December, 2014, the Court terminated the Debtors’ exclusive right to propose a plan of reorganization, thereby permitting BTB to file its own competing plan. The plan filed by BTB proposes a
ARGUMENTS PRESENTED
The Objectors assert that PDVSA erred in calculating its claim because federal law requires a specific, lower, rate of interest applicable to the period after entry of the Confirmation Judgment. 28 U.S.C. § 1961 provides that judgments in the federal courts carry a mandatory interest rate “equal to the weekly average 1-year constant maturity Treasury yield, as published by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, for the calendar week preceding” the entry of judgment. For the Confirmation Judgment, the applicable interest rate would be 0.39%. If this rate is applied to the period after entry of the Confirmation Judgment, PDVSA would have a claim of about $40 million rather than about $55 million.
In response, PDVSA argues that both the Final Award and thе Confirmation Judgment require payment of interest at the rate of 18% per annum until the award is paid, and the award has not been paid. PDVSA also argues that the Objectors’ waived their right to challenge the 18% interest rate in prior litigation or, alternatively, should be precluded from challenging that interest rate under the doctrine of judicial estoppel in light of positions taken by the Objectors in prior litigation. PDVSA alsо argues that the Objectors’ attempt to reserve the right to bring additional objections to its claim is improper, that the present Objection should be overruled, and that PDVSA’s claim should be allowed on a final basis.
ANALYSIS
A judgment of a United States District Court confirming an arbitral award is like any other judgment entered by the federal trial court. 9 U.S.C. § 13; Parsons & Whittemore Alabama Mach. & Servs. Corp. v. Yargin Construction Co.,
With limited enumerated exceptions not applicable here, federal statute provides for a uniform interest rate applicable to federal judgments. 28 U.S.C. § 1961. The Objectors argue that this ends the analysis, that section 1961 governs in all cases in spite of a contrary ágreement of the parties, in spite of a contrary ruling of an arbitration panel, and in spite of what a District Court may award consistent with the parties’ agreement and the arbitration award. For this proposition the Objectors point to the 11th Circuit’s decision in Parsons & Whittemore,
Case law permitting the parties to contract around section 1961 is fairly uniform in its approach. The parties’ agreement must include “language clearly, unambiguously, and unequivocally stating the parties’ intent to bypass § 1961.” Tricon,
In determining whether the parties have agreed as to, or an arbitration panel has awarded, interest at a particular rate after entry of a confirmation judgment, the intent that the merger doctrine not apply must be obvious from the language of the agreement and the award. Generalized language — such as the phrase “until paid” — is routinely held not sufficient to overcome the general rule that section 1961 applies. See, e.g., Tricon,
Wfiiile it is legally possible for the PDVSA claim to have the benefit of a post-judgment interest rate other than that provided by section 1961, there is no evidence here to support such a claim. Insofar as the evidence shows, the governing contracts did not explicitly provide for post-judgment interest. While the parties apparently litigated the issue of the interеst rate applicable to the arbitral award, they did not specifically address what rate might apply after a confirmation judgment. The Final Award does not plainly award interest at any specified rate after entry of a confirmation judgment; indeed, it makes
PDVSA argues that the Objectors waived the right to question PDVSAs right tо 18% post-judgment interest because they failed to challenge the Confirmation Judgment. Yet the Confirmation Judgment did not award post-judgment interest at that rate and there was thus nothing to waive. Even so, other than Trigeant, Ltd. the Objectors were not parties to the action, could not have pursued an appeal, and could not have waived anything.
PDVSA also argues that judicial, estoppel prohibits the Objectоrs from challenging PDVSAs right to 18% post-judgment interest, citing Parker v. Wendy’s Intern., Inc.,
For the allegedly inconsistent positions taken under oath, PDVSA points to documents filed and statements made in the first bankruptcy of Trigeant, Ltd., indicating claim amounts for the PDVSA claim that apparently included interest at 18% after the Confirmation Judgment. PDVSA also points to the stipulation of Trigeant, Ltd. in the Texas litigation as to the amount of the PDVSA claim. PDVSA argues that the present Objection is merely part of the protracted war between the principal of BTB and the Objectors, a feud well documented in various rulings of this Court.
The statements made by Trigeant, Ltd. with regard to the PDVSA claim, in the Texas litigation and in this Court, do not merit application of judicial estoppel against Trigeant, Ltd. Trigeant, Ltd.’s stipulation as to the amount of the PDVSA claim in the Texas litigation had no impact on that litigation. From the evidence before the Court, there is no reason to believe that Trigeant, Ltd.’s presentation of the PDVSA сlaim in its first bankruptcy, in amounts that apparently included interest at 18% after entry of the Confirmation Judgment, and Trigeant, Ltd.’s position in the current Objection, are “calculated to make a mockery of the judicial system” in the manner contemplated by the case law. See Parker,
In its Response, PDVSA argues that it is entitled to accrual of interest on its claim under 11 U.S.C. § 506(b). Yet the Objection dоes not challenge the PDVSA claim on this ground. Because this issue
Lastly, PDVSA challenges the Objectors’ stated reservation of the right to raise other objections to the PDVSA claim. PDVSA argues that the present Objection should be treated as the sole objection for purposes of 11 U.S.C. § 502 and, after ruling on the present objection, the Court should allоw the PDVSA claim on a final basis. In light of the fast moving nature of this case, and the fact that the present Objection has a significant potential impact on the upcoming confirmation hearing, it is not unreasonable for the Objectors to have pursued this Objection independent of any others. On the other hand, because additional objections to the claim of PDVSA may result in further delay of the confirmation hеaring, to the potential detriment of other parties in interest, the Court will set a deadline for additional objections to the claim of PDVSA in this case. If any objections are filed prior to that deadline, the Court will set a non-evidentiary hearing on an expedited basis to consider whether an evidentiary hearing is required and, if so, to consider whether confirmation must be delayed.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated аbove, it is ORDERED AND ADJUDGED as follows:
1. The Joint Objection [ECF No. 168] is SUSTAINED.
2. No later than January 23, 2015, PDVSA shall file amended proofs of claim including a calculation of interest after November 5, 2009 at the rate of 0.39% per. annum.
3. Any party in interest that wishes to file an objection to the claim(s) of PDVSA Petróleo, S.A., as amended pursuant to paragraph 2 of this Order, shall file such objection, and serve the same on counsel for PDVSA Petróleo, S.A., no later than January 30, 2015. If no objеction is timely filed, the claim(s) of PDVSA Petróleo, S.A., as amended pursuant to paragraph 2 of this Order, shall be allowed as provided in such amended proofs of claim pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 502, and PDVSA Petróleo, S.A. may file a brief request for the Court to enter a confirmatory order to that effect. If an objection is timely filed, the Court will set the same for hearing.
ORDERED.
Notes
. The claim was filed as claim no. 8 in the case of Trigeant, Ltd. and clаim no. 6 in the case of Trigeant Holdings, Ltd.
. No party filed a complete copy of the General Conditions. The Court’s findings with regard to the content of the contracts are based on undisputed facts.
. Even if the Texas District Court had been called on to calculate the solvency of Trigeant, Ltd., that court found that the refinery was worth not more than $40 million and the total of all secured claims greatly exceeded that value. Thus, even ignoring the interest rate issue presented here, Trigeant, Ltd. would have been found insolvent at the relevant time.
