Twelve years ago, claims based on exposure to asbestos UNR Industries had manufactured or sold were rolling in, with no end
*768
in sight and a correspondingly slim chance of satisfying all current and future claims. UNR commenced a reorganization in bankruptcy, the first asbestos manufacturer to do so. After some preliminary mаneuvering recounted at
Not everyone agrees. One group of creditors declined to approve the plan and has carried on a rear guard action since its confirmation. Although the plan of reorganization ensures full payment of all workers’ compensation awards, employees of UNR’s plant in Bloomington, Illinois, believe that they are entitled to more. Their additional claims have been grouped with those of UNR’s customers. Accordingly, the employees must apply to the Trust for payment of any claim in excess of workers’ compensation. Requests for reclassification have gotten the employees nowhere — although the district court has not foreclosed all possibility of relief. See
UNR urges us to join the district court in sweeping all pieces off the board. Three years after the confirmation of the plan of reorganization is simply too late to upset the applecart, it insists, making legal debate futile. (The plan was confirmed on June 1,1989, and was implemented on March 2,1990.) To the extent UNR and the district court believe that the case is moot in the sense that relief is
impossible,
so that there is no longer a case or controversy within the scope of Article III, they overstate matters. Even when it is no longer possible to restore the parties to the positions they used to occupy, the case remains live while “a court can fashion
some
form of meaningful relief’.
Church of Scientology v. United States,
— U.S. -, -,
*769 Far stronger is the contention that reliance on the plan оf reorganization makes it imprudent to revise things. Since the plan went into effect, more than 15 million shares of New UNR have been distributed to its creditors and pre-petition shareholders and are trading on public exchanges. Warrants for additional stock have been issued and are trading. (The Trust has received still more shares, but these have not been sold to outside investors.) Corporate acquisitions and divestitures (not to mention ordinary commercial transactions) have occurred; tax consequences (including a $90 million income tax benefit) have been realized; large insurance settlements have been disbursed; lawsuits have been dismissed. Undoing all of this is impossible. Undoing part of it — the identification of persons entitled to make claims on the assets in the Trust — is possible but has ramifications for the rest of the plan. Reducing the claims to be made on the Trust would imply a reallocation of some stock to UNR’s other creditоrs. If persons for whom the consequences of exposure to asbestos was not manifest as of 1990 cannot make claims against the Trust, can they press them against New UNR? If the answer is yes, then the allocation of insurance proceeds must be changed — and there will be a sudden revaluation of the shаres of New UNR, which current holders purchased on the assumption that all asbestos payments would be borne by the Trust.
In common with other courts of appeals, we have recognized that a plan of reorganization, once implemented, should be disturbed only for compelling reasons. E.g.,
In re Chateaugay Corp.,
Our opinion in
Specialty Equipment
observes that failure to seek a stay pending appeal counsels against upsetting a plan of reorganization.
Have the employees demonstrated such a reason? They say that treating as “creditors” persons whose injuries from UNR’s products are not yet manifest violates not only the Bankruptcy Code but also the Constitution. The constitutional claim is mysterious. Injuries attributable to past acts are certain to occur; although the identity of the victims remains to be ascertained, the existence of the injury is real enough. Insurers would charge a pretty penny to underwrite a policy covering these injuries; they would not assume that probabilities equate to nonexistence. Cases such as
Duke Power Co. v. Carolina Environmental Study Group, Inc.,
As for the contention that the statute does not contemplate such a step: 11 U.S.C. § 101(5)(A) defines as a “claim” every “right to payment, whether or not such right is reduced to judgment, liquidated, unliquidat-ed, fixed, contingent, matured, unmatured, disputed, undisputed, legal, equitable, secured, or unsecured”. The definition is capacious, to say the least. Attaching labels such as “contingent” and “unmatured” and “disputed” to the interests of persons who will become sick in the future because of exposure to UNR’s asbestos therefore does not put those interests beyond the power of the bankruptcy court. The employees’ observation that the plans reorganizing Manville and Robins provided for payment of a higher percentage of current (and future) damages is altogether irrelevant to the definition of a “claim” under the Code and the propriety of the plan of reorganization.
*771
Bankruptcy separates the past and future of an enterprise, satisfying clаims attributable to yesterday’s activities out of existing assets and thereby enabling business operations that have positive value to carry on, unburdened by the sunk costs of blunders that are beyond recall.
Boston & Maine Corp. v. Chicago Pacific Corp.,
AFFIRMED.
