In re: LAS VEGAS MONORAIL COMPANY
Case No. BK-S-10-10464-BAM
UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT DISTRICT OF NEVADA
April 26, 2010
Hon.
Chapter 11. Date: February 17, 2010. Time: 1:30 p.m.
OPINION ON CASH COLLATERAL MOTIONS
Table of Contents
- I. INTRODUCTION ...........................................................2
- II. FACTS ..................................................................2
-
A. Background .........................................................3 - B. Industrial Revenue Bond Financing ......................................3
- C. LVMC‘s Indebtedness Under the Financing Agreement .......................4
- D. Cash Flow Under the Indenture .........................................5
- III. THE LEGAL POSITION OF THE PARTIES .........................................7
- A. The General Rules Regarding Cash Collateral ..............................7
- 1. Adequate Protection .............................................8
- 2. Identification of “Cash Collateral“: The Two Components .............8
- 3. Burdens of Establishing What is Cash Collateral and of Providing Adequate Protection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
- B. Security Interests and Liens in Favor of the Bondholders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
- 1. Statutory Lien . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
- 2. Consensual Security Interests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
- a. Role of Contract Law . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
- b. Role of Article 9 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
- 3. Interpreting the Financing Agreement Under Nevada Law . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
- a. Contract Rights Under Franchise Agreement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
- b. Deposit Accounts and Funds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
- c. Net Project Revenues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
- C. The Identification and Extent of the Trustee‘s Interests in Cash Collateral . . . . . . . 25
- IV. ADEQUATE PROTECTION OF THE TRUSTEE‘S INTERESTS IN CASH COLLATERAL . . . . . . . . 27
- A. Adequate Protection of Cash and Deposit Accounts Held as of the Petition Date . . 27
- B. Adequate Protection of Postpetition Cash Flows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
- 1. What Law Determines the Content of “Proceeds” as Used in Section 552(b)? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
Hon. Bruce A. Markell
United States Bankruptcy Judge
- 2. Are Ongoing Revenues Proceeds of the Trustee‘s Prepetition Security Interest? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
- a. Net Project Revenues as Proceeds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
- b. Deposit Account Proceeds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
- 3. Are There Equitable Considerations that Section 552(b) Would Allow the Court to Consider That Would Restrict the Trustee‘s Security Interests in Proceeds? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
- V. SUMMARY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
- VI. CONCLUSION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
I. INTRODUCTION
Las Vegas Monorail Company (“LVMC“), the debtor in possession in this case, filed its chapter 11 case on January 13, 2010. Almost immediately, its secured creditor sought adequate protection for its cash collateral; in response, LVMC made an offer of adequate protection that was rejected. This opinion resolves the dispute.
II. FACTS
After filing, both LVMC and its secured creditor moved for orders regarding cash collateral. Under
At the February 17, 2010 hearing, the court admitted into evidence various declarations
A. Background1
LVMC owns and operates a 3.9 mile long monorail which connects nine hotels along and near the Las Vegas “Strip.” LVMC‘s ridership has never met projections; it is not overly convenient (it does not connect to the local airport or to the Las Vegas downtown area), and many of its potential patrons use other transportation services.
This is not to say, however, that LVMC cannot cover its operating expenses; to the contrary, its revenues exceed its operating expenses, leaving more than $5 million in annual profits before debt service. LVMC‘s operating expenses consist mainly of obligations under an operating agreement with Bombardier Transit Corporation (“Bombardier“), which operates and services LVMC‘s trains. Under this agreement, LVMC pays Bombardier, on average, approximately $900,000 per month.
This positive cash flow, however, is barely enough to cover 10% of LVMC‘s scheduled debt service. The vast majority of LVMC‘s debt service arises from a type of financing variously called conduit financing or industrial revenue bond financing or special revenue financing. This type of financing is a common way to finance municipal infrastructures. It allows local government to build and operate beneficial projects with private money and without local government having to increase tax burdens.
B. Industrial Revenue Bond Financing
Conduit financing addresses an essential tension — while local government can issue debt which bears tax-free interest, and thus is sought after by tax-conscious investors, it rarely wants its taxpayers to bear the full risk of construction and operation. In conduit or industrial revenue bond financing such as is present here, a local government issues bonds to the general public under an indenture (the way most public debt is issued). The local government then lends the bond proceeds to a private party willing to build or operate the project. This loan is usually secured by the project or by its revenues. The key aspect of this type of financing, at least for local government, is its nonrecourse nature; the local government‘s obligation to repay the bonds is limited to the collateral pledged. And that collateral generally consists of all the government‘s rights under the loan agreement with the private party.2
All of these transactions happen simultaneously. At the conclusion of the transaction, tax conscious investors have bonds,
C. LVMC‘s Indebtedness Under the Financing Agreement
In this case, the industrial revenue bond financing took the following form. In 2000, the Director (“Director“) of the Nevada Department of Business and Industry (“Department“) sponsored the issuance of approximately $650 million of municipal bonds (“Bonds“).3 Specifically, the Bonds were issued under an indenture (“Indenture“) between Wells Fargo Bank (“Trustee“)4 and the Director. As outlined above, the Director simultaneously lent the bond proceeds to LVMC pursuant to a separate financing agreement between LVMC and the Director (the “Financing Agreement“). Under the Financing Agreement, LVMC agreed to repay the loan, and supported this promise with, among other things, a grant of a security interest in LVMC‘s “Net Project Revenues” (but not in any of its tracks or trains).5
A key component of the transaction, known to all, was that the State of Nevada would not be liable on the Bonds. Indeed, the Director and other public officials assured the public that no tax revenues would be used to acquire or operate the monorail.6 Structurally, this promise was honored by making the Bonds nonrecourse as to the State of Nevada. This was explicit in the offering; the only recourse for bondholders was the collateral the Director assigned to the Trustee, and the insurance mentioned below.
As a result, those buying the Bonds did so knowing that the primary source of repayment on the Bonds was the Financing Agreement — and the security interests it contained — which the Director had assigned
D. Cash Flow Under the Indenture
Most of LVMC‘s revenue arises from the sale of tickets to riders. During 2009, ticket receipts averaged approximately $74,000 per day. Patrons buy tickets to ride the monorail at one of LVMC‘s 42 Ticket Vending Machines (“TVM“). These allow customers to pay in cash or coin, or with a debit or credit card. Brink‘s U.S. (“Brink‘s“) collects all receipts from the TVMs. After collection, Brink‘s is responsible for counting the TVM cash receipts and depositing them with the Trustee.
Once delivered to the Trustee, the deposits are processed and applied according to the Indenture. Under that document, the Trustee established a “Collection Fund” as a separate account at Wells Fargo Bank. Every day for almost last three years,8 the Trustee has swept all Collection Fund money into another account established under the Indenture called the “Revenue Fund.” The Trustee contends that it holds all funds in the Revenue Fund in trust for the benefit of the holders of the Bonds.9
Sometime in October 2009, however, LVMC began diverting daily receipts away from the Trustee. Acting on LVMC‘s instructions, Brink‘s began depositing TVM cash receipts into a deposit account maintained by LVMC at Bank of America. This was soon discovered — in large part because LVMC told the Trustee when asked. The Trustee was understandably angered, because such a diversion was a breach of the Indenture‘s provisions on cash flow, and it frustrated the Trustee‘s performance of its duties under the Indenture. Much was made at the evidentiary hearings about who knew what was happening, and when, with respect to the diversion. Yet the Trustee took no legal action in state court.
The end result of all this maneuvering was that, on the petition date, the Bank of America account contained approximately $971,000. The Trustee held another $225,000 in its accounts under the Indenture. Brink‘s held $65,000 in coin and $162,000 in cash, some of which was on its way to be deposited, and some of which was held by Brink‘s as a reserve to stock TVMs.10
III. THE LEGAL POSITION OF THE PARTIES
A. The General Rules Regarding Cash Collateral
The Trustee has not consented to LVMC‘s use of cash collateral.12 To authorize use over the dissent of the secured party, the Code directs “the court, with or without a hearing, [to] prohibit or condition such use, sale, or lease as is necessary to provide adequate protection of such interest.”
1. Adequate Protection
Adequate protection, in turn, is a concept that
LVMC is an operating business that needs to use the cash proceeds of its operations to continue to produce income. The Trustee, however, contends that this operating cash is subject to its security interests and liens, and demands adequate protection for such use. These opposing positions are not new. As noted by the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel of the Ninth Circuit, “‘[t]here is an inherent tension between a debtor‘s need to use its cash to continue operating and a secured creditor‘s right to preserve its security interest in the debtor‘s cash proceeds.‘” Security Leasing Partners, LP v. ProAlert, LLC (In re ProAlert, LLC), 314 B.R. 436, 441 (B.A.P. 9th Cir. 2004) (quoting Stephen A. Stripp, Balancing the Interests in Orders Authorizing the Use of Cash Collateral in Chapter 11, 21 SETON HALL L.REV. 562, 565-66 (1991)).
The general purpose of adequate protection is to ensure that the secured creditor ultimately receives what it would have received had not bankruptcy intervened. “‘Although stripped of the right to immediate possession of its property, the creditor receives assurances that the value it could have received through foreclosure will not decline.‘” In re ProAlert, 314 B.R. at 441-42 (quoting 3 JAMES F. QUEENAN,
2. Identification of “Cash Collateral“: The Two Components
Providing these assurances, however, requires determination as to what property is actually cash collateral. There are two components to cash collateral. The first component identifies the type of property.
But there are more types of property which qualify. Cash collateral also “includes the proceeds, products, offspring, rents, or profits of property . . . as provided in section 552(b) of this title . . . .”13
[I]f the debtor and an entity entered into a security agreement before the commencement of the case and if the security interest created by such security agreement extends to property of the debtor acquired before the commencement of the case and to proceeds, products, offspring, or profits of such property, then such security interest extends to such proceeds, products, offspring, or profits acquired by the estate after the commencement of the case to the extent provided by such security agreement and by applicable nonbankruptcy law . . . .
The second component of cash collateral is that it must be property “in which the estate and an entity other than the estate have an interest.”
3. Burdens of Establishing What is Cash Collateral and of Providing Adequate Protection
In sorting out these two components for each type of property, the Bankruptcy Code assigns various burdens.
This section, particularly paragraph (2), requires the Trustee to establish the existence and the extent of its interest in the property it claims as cash collateral. See Textron Fin. Corp. v. Rebel Rents, Inc. (In re Rebel Rents, Inc.), 307 B.R. 171, 183 (Bankr. C.D. Cal. 2004); Kondik v. Ebner (In re Standard Foundry Prods., Inc.), 206 B.R. 475, 478 (Bankr. N.D. Ill. 1997). The Ninth Circuit has held that a party seeking to establish the “extent” of its interest in property under
First, as a preliminary matter, the party must prove that it holds a perfected security interest in post-petition revenues to which its liens still rightly attach. (Citations omitted). Second, a party must prove the amount of money to which its liens attach.
Chequers Inv. Assocs. v. Hotel Sierra Vista Ltd. P‘ship (In re Hotel Sierra Vista Ltd. P‘ship), 112 F.3d 429, 434 (9th Cir. 1997). Cf. In re Rebel Rents, 307 B.R. at 183 (holding that revenues related to postpetition receivables from equipment leases were not cash collateral because proceeds, under pre-2001 definition, did not extend to such receivables); In re GOCO Realty Fund I, 151 B.R. 241, 252 (Bankr. N.D. Cal. 1993) (holding that creditor did not have a perfected security interest in rental proceeds transferred to an attorney as a retainer); In re 1726 Wash., D.C. Partners, 120 B.R. 1, 2 (Bankr. D.D.C. 1990) (holding that post-petition rents were not cash collateral where the mortgagee‘s security interest in rents was unperfected).
B. Security Interests and Liens in Favor of the Bondholders
Against this background, the Trustee takes a starkly maximalist view of its rights. It believes that “all of the [LVMC‘s] money, wherever held, is the cash collateral of” the Trustee. LVMC, not surprisingly, disputes this, as well as almost everything else the Trustee says. The Trustee‘s position is not without problems; if adopted, it would require LVMC to give the Trustee adequate protection for every dollar LVMC spends postpetition. This would lead to an almost impossible adequate protection burden — if LVMC has to give dollar-for-dollar adequate protection payments to the Trustee, it would have to have a profit margin of at least 100% just to break even. Neither it nor any other bankruptcy debtor could meet that requirement; debtors with 100% profit margins rarely need bankruptcy protection.
Presumably in partial recognition of this problem, the Trustee asked for adequate protection in the form of replacement liens on LVMC‘s cash flow, and of new liens on LVMC‘s previously unencumbered physical assets. It also wants strict adherence to the provisions of the Indenture related to LVMC‘s collection and deposit of its revenues.
As the Trustee has the burden of establishing the existence and extent of its security interest,
1. Statutory Lien
The Trustee focuses first on its claimed statutory lien under
The principal of, the interest on and any prior redemption premiums due in connection with the bonds issued pursuant to
NRS 349.400 to349.670 , inclusive, are payable from, secured by a pledge of, and constitute a lien on the revenues out of which the bonds have been made payable. . . . 19
The interpretive question here is whether the “revenues out of which the bonds have been made payable” refers to revenues
Given the statute‘s focus on items the Director may use as sources of repayment, the best interpretation of the statute is that it refers only to the proceeds or revenues that originate with the Director; that is, from the Financing Agreement. That is the only source of repayment that the Director could offer the bondholders. The Department does not operate the monorail, and thus the direct receipts of that operation — such as might be represented by TVM collections — could not be property that it, as issuer and nominal obligor on the Bonds, could control directly. To push the argument further would be to extend the statutory lien to the money in the pockets of the monorail‘s patrons.
Moreover, the limited interpretation is the only interpretation that does not make the phrase “out of which the bonds have been made payable” surplusage. Had the Nevada Legislature intended that all revenues would be collateral, they could have omitted this phrase. But by adding it, they indicated that the Director had discretion in structuring the transaction so that certain revenues would not be earmarked for bond payment.20
With respect to the monorail‘s financing, the Director exercised that discretion by limiting the security interest granted, as will be seen below. The Director did not take a blanket security interest in all revenues, wherever and whenever found. Rather, through measured provisions in the Financing Agreement, LVMC granted a security interest in only a subset of its revenue.
As a result, the language added by the legislature made the statutory lien granted derivative upon other agreements. Put another way, the statutory lien attaches only to money that would be payable under or encumbered by the Financing Agreement. Therefore, before the court can consider the scope of the statutory lien, it must consider what consensual security interests LVMC‘s granted in favor of the Director and, by assignment, in favor of the bondholders.
2. Consensual Security Interests
The Financing Agreement is a consensual contract that creates property rights in the form of security interests to secure repayment of the loan from the Director. See, e.g.,
Interpretation of the Financing Agreement between LVMC and the Director is critical; that agreement was the only security agreement LVMC signed; there is no privity of contract between LVMC and the Trustee, and hence there is no direct grant of a security interest from LVMC to the Trustee either. The Trustee‘s only rights against LVMC‘s property are as an assignee of the Director, and thus the Trustee must look to the Financing Agreement for any recourse.
a. Role of Contract Law
To determine the validity and extent of the security interests and liens the Trustee claims, and to determine if LVMC‘s use of cash constitutes diminution of cash collateral, the court must first determine the extent of the security interests and lien by examining the documents the parties signed when the bonds were issued. These include the Indenture, the Financing Agreement and LVMC‘s Franchise Agreement with Clark County under which LVMC obtained local governmental permission to operate the monorail (the “Franchise Agreement“). Each of these are contracts subject to interpretation under Nevada law.23 See UnitedHealth Group Inc. v. Wilmington Trust Co., 548 F.3d 1124, 1128 (8th Cir. 2008) (an indenture is construed under principles of contract interpretation); Pride Hyundai, Inc. v. Chrysler Fin. Co., L.L.C., 369 F.3d 603, 612 (1st Cir. 2004) (construing a financing agreement using contract interpretation principles).
In Nevada, “when the facts are not in dispute, contract interpretation is a question of law.”24 Federal Ins. Co. v. American Hardware Mut. Ins. Co., 184 P.3d 390, 392 (Nev. 2008). Although the court has grave doubts about the general quality of many of the deal documents in this matter, it must construe these contracts, as it would any other contract, to give meaning to the plain language of the contract. State ex rel. Masto v. Second Judicial Dist. Court ex rel. County of Washoe, 199 P.3d 828, 832 (Nev. 2009) (“in interpreting a contract, [a court applying Nevada law must] construe a contract that is clear on its face from the written language, and it should be enforced as written.“).
Part of this task is to ensure that the contract is interpreted as a whole without giving undue weight to any particular clause beyond that which a reasonable third-party would when reading the provision. As stated by the Nevada Supreme Court, “[a] court should not interpret a contract so as to make meaningless its provisions.” Phillips v. Mercer, 94 Nev. 279, 282, 579 P.2d 174, 176 (1978). See also Anvui, LLC v. G.L. Dragon, LLC, 123 Nev. 212, 215, 163 P.3d 405, 407 (2007); Mohr Park Manor, Inc. v. Mohr, 83 Nev. 107, 424 P.2d 101 (1967).
b. Role of Article 9
Although there are some generally accepted interpretive conventions under Article 9, “[a] security agreement is to be interpreted the same as any other contract.” 8A LARY LAWRENCE, LAWRENCE‘S ANDERSON ON THE UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE § 9-203:51 (3d. ed. 2009). See also BARKLEY CLARK & BARBARA CLARK, THE LAW OF SECURED TRANSACTIONS UNDER THE UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE ¶ 2.02[3][b] (rev. ed. 2009).25 As a result, interpretation of the Financing Agreement is not substantively different from interpreting any other contract under Nevada law.
3. Interpreting the Financing Agreement Under Nevada Law
Although the rules are somewhat straightforward, discovering the meaning of the words used to grant the security interest is not. The grant of security in the Financing Agreement is not a model of clarity. Section 3.1(b) of the Financing Agreement reads as follows:
As security for the payment of any and all amounts due hereunder, the Borrower [LVMC] hereby grants, assigns and pledges to the Director a security interest in all of the Borrower‘s right, title and interest in, to and under the following (hereafter, the “Collateral“):
(i) contract rights of the Borrower under the Purchase Agreement, the Design-Build Agreement, the Operation and Maintenance Agreement, the Management Agreement, and the Franchise Agreement and any amendment or successor agreement thereto,
(ii) the Net Project Revenues, and
(iii) all amounts held in any funds or accounts created under the Senior and Subordinate Indentures or this Agreement (except the Rebate Fund and the Indemnification Account of the Contingency Fund),
whether now owned by the Borrower or hereinafter acquired and whether now existing or hereinafter coming into existence
and all money, deposits, funds and balances, whether or not evidenced by any certificates of deposit, passbooks or other documents and all revenues, income, interest, dividends, issues and profits added to earned or accrued on any deposit of the Net Project Revenues; and all present and future claims, demands, causes and choses in action in respect of any or all of the foregoing and all payments on or under and all proceeds of every kind and nature whatsoever in respect of any or all of the foregoing, including all proceeds of the conversion, voluntary or involuntary, into cash or other liquid property, all cash proceeds, accounts, accounts receivable, notes, drafts, acceptances, chattel paper, checks, deposit accounts, insurance proceeds, rights to payment of any and every kind and other forms of obligations and receivables, instruments and other property which at any time constitute all or part of or are included in the proceeds of any of the foregoing.26
Although long and somewhat convoluted, this grant essentially covers three types of collateral: (i) contract rights in the Franchise Agreement; (ii) all funds on deposit with the Trustee; and (iii) “Net Project Revenues.”
a. Contract Rights Under Franchise Agreement
The Trustee believes that this grant of a security interest in the “contract rights” of LVMC “under the . . . Franchise Agreement” renders all money derived from the operation of the monorail as “proceeds” of the Franchise Agreement. Its argument turns on the statutory definition of “proceeds,” which
(64) “Proceeds“, except as used in
Section 9-609(b) , means the following property:(A) whatever is acquired upon the sale, lease, license, exchange, or other disposition of collateral;
(B) whatever is collected on, or distributed on account of, collateral;
(C) rights arising out of collateral;
(D) to the extent of the value of collateral, claims arising out of the loss, nonconformity, or interference with the use of, defects or infringement of rights in, or damage to, the collateral; or
(E) to the extent of the value of collateral and to the extent payable to the debtor or the secured party, insurance payable by reason of the loss or nonconformity of, defects or infringement of rights in, or damage to, the collateral.
According to the Trustee, since LVMC could not run the monorail or collect fares without the Franchise Agreement, all fares must be “collected on, or distributed on account of” the Franchise Agreement,
The Trustee analogizes the site licenses in Value-Added to the Franchise Agreement here, and contends that the Fifth Circuit‘s implicit holding that those site licenses were the sole source of the funds means that the grant of “contract rights . . . under” the Franchise Agreement includes LVMC‘s gross revenues.
This analogy is not complete or persuasive. The site licenses in Value-Added were direct rights under a contract that had matured and were liquidated — accounts in the parlance of Article 9. But these types of rights are quite different than what the Trustee seems to want to argue; the Trustee‘s argument seems to assume that “contract rights . . . under” the Franchise Agreement include intangible rights of permission. And that‘s where the analogy breaks down. Fully earned receivables as in Value-Added are not the same as a general grant of the right to operate.
Value-Added might help the Trustee if Clark County owed money to LVMC under the Franchise Agreement‘s terms; that is, if there were any contract provisions under the Franchise Agreement that, if followed, would result in money flowing to LVMC. But the Trustee has not shown the existence of any such terms or provisions. So the analogy fails.
But even if “contract rights . . . under” the Franchise Agreement were connected in some way to the revenues LVMC takes in from the monorail‘s operations, Value-Added would still be of dubious value in finding that the connection equated to “proceeds” under Article 9. As stated in Value-Added:
The funds collected from the prisoners were the product of the use of the equipment. Use is not a disposition of the collateral within the meaning of the definition of “proceeds“. If fruits and products from the use of collateral were treated as proceeds, every creditor with a security interest in equipment would have a security interest in all items produced from the equipment as well as the revenues earned by the equipment. The revenues earned from the inmate‘s use of the equipment were the proceeds of the Site Leases.
Properly applied, Value-Added would seem to hold that the fares for the use of LVMC‘s trains and track, to which the Trustee has no claim, “were the product of the use of the equipment,” id., and not the proceeds of the intangible rights to run the business in the first place. The Trustee has thus not met its burden of establishing the extent of its interest in any of LVMC‘s cash from operations as proceeds of its security interest in contract rights.
In addition, the Trustee‘s position diminishes to the vanishing point when the terms of the Financing Agreement are read in context; the placement of the
Policy reasons also support LVMC‘s position. If the Trustee were correct, its interpretation would make every single dollar that LVMC generates proceeds, thus rendering the remaining grants of security interests in
All of this leads to the conclusion that LVMC‘s grant of a security interest in the contract rights of the Franchise Agreement must be a security interest in a subset of the more general rights that flow from LVMC‘s franchise to operate the monorail. Put differently, the Debtor granted a security interest in certain rights — “contract rights” — contained within the Franchise Agreement, but not in all the entitlements and privileges represented by that agreement.30 State
ex rel. Masto, 199 P.3d at 832 (“In interpreting a contract, [a court applying Nevada law must] construe a contract that is clear on its face from the written language, and it should be enforced as written.“).31
b. Deposit Accounts and Funds
Section 3.1(b) also grants a security interest in “all amounts held in any funds or accounts created under the Senior and Subordinate Indentures or this [Financing] Agreement (except the Rebate Fund and the Indemnification Account of the Contingency Fund).” Read literally, this grant means that all funds delivered to the Trustee and kept by it in its deposit accounts (except for the few excluded accounts) are immediately subject to a perfected security interest.32
Although deposit accounts as original or initial collateral were outside the scope of Article 9 when the parties signed the Financing Agreement, Nevada‘s version of Revised Article 9 – which brought deposit account collateral as original collateral into Article 9 when it became effective in 2001 – picks up and validates this security interest nonetheless. Wiersma v. O.H. Kruse Grain and Milling (In re Wiersma), 324 B.R. 92, 107 (B.A.P. 9th Cir. 2005), rev‘d on jurisdictional grounds, 483 F.3d 933 (9th Cir. 2007).33 And for present purposes, even if it did not, the Trustee‘s setoff rights as to the accounts would have accomplished the same thing, as setoff rights are treated as secured claims in bankruptcy. See
c. Net Project Revenues
LVMC also granted a lien to the Director in “Net Project Revenues.” Financing Agreement § 3.1(b)(ii). This grant mirrors one aspect of the typical security interest taken in project financing – the lender gets an interest in the stream of revenue that its loan helped create.34 But that interest is typically in gross revenues, and that is not the case here. As will be seen, “Net Project Revenues” are just that: the net amount left after certain operating expenses are deducted from gross revenues.
Taking a security interest in net revenues is a definitional nightmare. Does the security interest attach to revenues only after payment of operating expenses? Is this a form of delayed attachment under
Well-drafted security agreements generally resolve these questions; here, the security agreement – the Financing Agreement – confuses more than it clarifies. To understand what was granted, one has to go through a maze of cross-references. The starting point is the language of the Financing Agreement. Section 3.1(b)(ii) states that: “As security for the payment of any and all amounts due hereunder, the Borrower hereby grants, assigns and pledges to the Director a security interest in all of the Borrower‘s right, title and interest in, to and under . . . (ii) the Net Project Revenues.” Net Project Revenues is a defined term, but Section 1.1 of the Financing Agreement directs the reader to the Indenture for its definition.
Section 1.01 of the Indenture contains a long list of alphabetized definitions. On page 17, “Net Project Revenues” are stated to mean “Project Revenues less Operation and Maintenance Costs.” These two additional definitions are also defined in Section 1.01. “Project Revenues” are defined as “all gross income and revenue received or receivable by [LVMC] from the ownership, operation or use of the Project . . . .”35 Section 1.01 of the Indenture defines “Operation and Maintenance Costs,” the key definition for this analysis as:
[A]ny and all amounts due under the Operation and Maintenance Agreement and the Management Agreement and any reasonable and necessary costs paid or incurred by [LVMC] for maintaining and operating the Project, including all reasonable expenses of management and repair and other expenses necessary to maintain and preserve the Project in good repair and working order . . . all administrative costs of [LVMC] that are charged directly or apportioned to the
operation of the Project, such as salaries and wages of employees, legal and accounting fees, insurance, overhead, taxes (if any), fees . . .36
The upshot of this excursion through the dark corners of the Indenture is that LVMC‘s grant of a security interest in the Financing Agreement was a grant of a security interest in whatever was left over after paying Bombardier and other operating and maintenance expenses. This conclusion follows the cash flow under the Indenture; in lieu of obtaining a security interest in gross revenues, the Trustee and the Director opted instead to have their security interest follow the Indenture‘s cash flow covenants. If there was no default, the security interest did not attach until after payment of Operation and Maintenance Costs, and the testimony was that such payments occurred approximately every thirty days. This conclusion tracks the equation set forth in the Indenture‘s definition of “Net Project Revenues.” An objective reading of the Financing Agreement thus demonstrates that the referent of the grant of the security interest – Net Project Revenues – cannot and does not come into existence until after the subtraction – that is, until after the payment – of Operation and Maintenance Costs from gross revenues.
If there is a default, however, the Indenture channels the flow of funds to the Trustee, whose possession effects both attachment and perfection of a security interest in the revenues it receives and maintains. The Trustee, however, took the property interest in the funds subject to an obligation to pay Operation and Maintenance Costs before paying any principal or interest on the Bonds. Indenture, § 7.03(2) (after a default, Trustee directed to pay first expenses necessary to protect the interests of the Bondholders and Trustee‘s fees, and then to pay Operation and Maintenance Costs, all before any payment of principal or interest on the Bonds). See also Financing Agreement § 4.1(b) (“in the event of default, “all payments permitted or required to be paid from the Collection Fund for Operation and Maintenance shall be paid by the Trustee from the Revenue Fund upon written direction of the Borrower . . . .“).
No one apparently seriously believed LVMC would upset this arrangement, breach its contract, and not deposit all revenues with the Trustee after default. This belief seems odd in hindsight.37
C. The Identification and Extent of the Trustee‘s Interests in Cash Collateral
To veterans of Article 9, all this may seem more than passing strange. The Indenture creates a world in which operating expenses have priority over a secured creditor‘s debt payments, a world upside down from the normal loan structure. An adroit and hardnosed bank lawyer would have insisted on a security interest in all revenues whenever acquired that would attach as soon as the debtor acquired the revenues, with no guaranties of payment to any other creditor. And he or she would have insisted on procedures within its control to maintain perfection at all times.
But the Indenture cannot be read to mean what the bondholders wish they could have or should have negotiated; this court can read it only as it is written.38 And that means that no security interest attaches in any of LVMC‘s revenues until the earlier of: (i) possession or control of the revenues by the Trustee; or (ii) after payment of Operation and Maintenance Costs, with a balance remaining.39 Until
As a practical matter, however, the only cash collateral as of the petition date would be the amounts then on deposit with the Trustee, or an amount approximating $225,000. As the Trustee has the burden of establishing the extent of its interest,
IV. ADEQUATE PROTECTION OF THE TRUSTEE‘S INTERESTS IN CASH COLLATERAL
As the Trustee has established that it has some cash collateral interests to protect, the question then turns to what actions and procedures should be taken to adequately protect those interests. At the conclusion of the hearing, the court requested, and the parties provided, proposed orders regarding their respective positions on adequate protection. Both sides agreed, in one form or another, to follow the Indenture with respect to the collection, deposit, and processing of revenues from LVMC‘s operations. Both sides agreed that, to the extent necessary, LVMC would grant a replacement lien in LVMC‘s postpetition “Net Project Revenues.” The point of departure was that the Trustee demanded liens on all of LVMC‘s unencumbered property, including its tracks and its trains. LVMC offered no liens on items not previously encumbered.
A. Adequate Protection of Cash and Deposit Accounts Held as of the Petition Date
The Trustee, as indicated above, has not been able to carry its burden on whether cash and funds on deposit with it or with Bank of America represent Net Project Revenues. Nonetheless, because of the Trustee‘s interest in deposit accounts,
Moreover, LVMC‘s use of the cash it generates in its operations is itself a form of adequate protection. This is because LVMC‘s continued investment in, and operation of, the monorail will increase, or at least maintain, the collateral‘s value. A shuttered monorail will not generate any revenue, but every additional rider on the monorail will generate additional cash for distribution to the noteholders, after LVMC pays reasonable expenses. The Trustee has offered no evidence that monorail ridership is decreasing, as it would have needed to obtain additional adequate protection of its prepetition interests. This follows from the Supreme Court‘s decision in United Sav. Ass‘n of Texas v. Timbers of Inwood Forest Assocs., Ltd., 484 U.S. 365 (1988). In that case, the Court held that when collateral was not diminishing in value, the mere passage of time did not warrant adequate protection. See id. at 382; In re Integrated Health Services, Inc., 260 B.R. 71, 74 (Bankr. D. Del. 2001) (denying adequate protection or stay relief because the creditor failed to provide sufficient evidence showing that the value of the collateral was declining); In re Elmira Litho, Inc., 174 B.R. 892, 902 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 1994); In re Continental Airlines, Inc., 134 B.R. 536, 544 (Bankr. D. Del. 1991) (citing Timbers for the proposition that: “An undersecured creditor is only entitled to adequate protection payments if its collateral is declining in value.“). Rather, the Debtor‘s expenditures keep the monorail running and preserve the Trustee‘s expectation in net revenues as their primary collateral.
In a similar manner, other courts have found that a debtor‘s use of cash collateral to maintain properties from which rents are being generated is a sufficient form of adequate protection. See Federal Nat‘l Mortg. Ass‘n v. Dacon Bolingbrook Assocs. Ltd. P‘ship. 153 B.R. 204, 214 (N.D. Ill. 1993) (“[T]he required adequate protection of Rents is satisfied to the extent the Debtor reinvests the rents in the operation and maintenance of the property because the value of the secured creditor‘s interest in its collateral will thereby be increased.“); In re 499 W. Warren Street Assocs., Ltd. P‘ship, 142 B.R. 53, 58 (Bankr. N.D.N.Y. 1992) (allowing the use of cash collateral to maintain property); McCombs Prop. VI, Ltd. v. First Texas Sav. Ass‘n (In re McCombs Prop. VI, Ltd.), 88 B.R. 261, 267 (Bankr. C. D. Cal. 1988) (holding that rents could be spent to make repairs or renovations that would increase rent flow even without equity cushion); In re Stein, 19 B.R. 458, 460 (Bankr. E.D. Pa. 1982).
B. Adequate Protection of Postpetition Cash Flows
These procedures will also help to adequately protect the Trustee‘s interest, if any, in postpetition cash flows, including any Net Project Revenues. Under
Here, several questions arise. First, what law determines the content of “proceeds” in
1. What Law Determines the Content of “Proceeds” as Used in Section 552(b)?
It is generally assumed that when the Bankruptcy Code, or any other federal statute for that matter, uses terms borrowed from nonbankruptcy law, the intent is that those terms retain the meaning given to them by nonbankruptcy law, at least to the extent that there is no overriding federal policy. As the Supreme Court has stated when analyzing whether to incorporate state law understandings into federally defined terms:
Our cases indicate that a court should endeavor to fill the interstices of federal remedial schemes with uniform federal rules only when the scheme in question evidences a distinct need for nationwide legal standards, see, e.g. Clearfield Trust Co. v. United States, 318 U.S. 363, 366-367, 63 S.Ct. 573, 574-575, 87 L.Ed. 838 (1943), or when express provisions in analogous statutory schemes embody congressional policy choices readily applicable to the matter at hand. See, e.g., Boyle v. United Technologies Corp., 487 U.S. 500, 511-512, 108 S.Ct. 2510, 2518-2519, 101 L.Ed.2d 442 (1988); DelCostello v. Teamsters, 462 U.S. 151, 169-172, 103 S.Ct. 2281, 2293-2295, 76 L.Ed.2d 476 (1983). Otherwise, we have indicated that federal courts should “incorporat[e] [state law] as the federal rule of decision,” unless “application of [the particular] state law [in question] would frustrate specific objectives of the federal programs.” United States v. Kimbell Foods, Inc., 440 U.S. 715, 728, 99 S.Ct. 1448, 1458, 59 L.Ed.2d 711 (1979).
Kamen v. Kemper Fin. Servs., Inc., 500 U.S. 90, 98 (1991); Dzikowski v. N. Trust Bank of Fla. (In re Prudential of Fla. Leasing, Inc.), 478 F.3d 1291, 1298 (11th Cir. 2007) (issue of whether understanding of “single satisfaction” under Florida law informs interpretation of § 550(d)); Americredit Fin. Servs., Inc. v. Penrod (In re Penrod), 392 B.R. 835, 843 (B.A.P. 9th Cir. 2008) (discussing incorporation of “purchase money security interest” from UCC into
[t]he presumption that state law should be incorporated into federal common law is particularly strong in areas in which private parties have entered legal relationships
with the expectation that their rights and obligations would be governed by state-law standards. See [Kimbell Foods, 440 U.S.] at 728-729, 739-740, 99 S.Ct., at 1458-1459, 1464-1465 (commercial law) . . . .
As a result, unless there are good reasons to depart from it, the UCC satisfies these requirements; it is, for the most part, a unifying code governing commercial transactions across and among the states that have adopted it. We thus start with the presumption that “proceeds” in
While the court adopts that rule, it still does not answer a central question here: what version of Article 9 applies? At the time the Indenture was signed, the pre-2001 version of Article 9 was in effect. This might matter, since it is beyond doubt that the drafters of Revised Article 9 intended to expand the scope of “proceeds.” State law has answered this question; even though the parties signed the Financing Agreement before the effective date of Revised Article 9, Revised Article 9 applies to its interpretation and enforcement, and not pre-2001 law.
Whether this should be the federal rule, however, depends on whether, in Kamen‘s words, the revised definition of proceeds would “frustrate specific objectives of the federal programs.” Here, although one could construct a case in which the change in definition frustrated the rehabilitative goals of title 11, this is not such a case. The differences in scope are not such that they would disturb normal commercial expectations; indeed, a case can be made that the state law sets or at least shapes such expectations. As a result, this court will follow the revised definition of proceeds contained in Revised Article 9.
2. Are Ongoing Revenues Proceeds of the Trustee‘s Prepetition Security Interest?
As indicated above, the Trustee has an automatically attached and perfected interest in most proceeds under Article 9 of the UCC. But are LVMC‘s postpetition revenues “proceeds” of the Trustee‘s prepetition collateral? As quoted above, the extent of proceeds is quite broad. But the two sources of original collateral that the Trustee has – Net Project Revenues and deposit accounts – lead to different results with respect to proceeds.
a. Net Project Revenues as Proceeds
From the discussion above, the security interest in Net Project Revenues is somewhat ephemeral for purposes of cash collateral. Being the balance left over after all operating and maintenance costs are paid, Net Project Revenues are thus kept by the Trustee and applied as the Indenture instructs. This is key – no Net Project Revenues cycle back into LVMC‘s operations, or are used to fund its activities. Future revenues cannot be said to be “acquired upon the sale, lease, exchange or other disposition of the collateral,”
To see this point more clearly, imagine that LVMC‘s total revenues exactly equaled its Operation and Maintenance Costs. There would be no Net Project Revenues, and hence no collateral, even though LVMC could continue to operate. Thus, future Net Project Revenues are not proceeds of prior Net Project Revenues, and no adequate protection need be given.
LVMC has, however, offered to protect any potential interest in Net Project Revenues
b. Deposit Account Proceeds
If the Indenture is followed, then another proceeds argument arises. Postpetition, LVMC will deposit all funds into accounts maintained at the Trustee. Under the UCC, the Trustee‘s interest in such funds, as stated earlier, would simultaneously attach and perfect upon such deposit. See
While this replacement lien may cover funds that are on deposit with the Trustee, it does not address the proceeds interest the Trustee may obtain in whatever LVMC receives upon expenditure of such funds.42 This proceeds interest arises because LVMC will pay all of its bills and expenses from deposit accounts maintained at the Trustee. Since these expenses, especially payments on the contract with Bombardier, contribute to LVMC‘s revenues, such revenues could be proceeds – actually, proceeds of proceeds – which maintain their character as cash collateral deserving of protection. In this scenario, payments to Bombardier would satisfy LVMC‘s obligation to it under the operating agreement. With payment, Bombardier would then have no excuse not to perform its obligations under the operating agreement, which in turn lead to LVMC‘s revenues. The best link between this performance and LVMC‘s gross revenues would be
3. Are There Equitable Considerations that Section 552(b) Would Allow the Court to Consider That Would Restrict the Trustee‘s Security Interests in Proceeds?
The last clause of
In such cases, courts have often adopted methods of allocation of contributions between
Here, however, LVMC has sought to incorporate the gist of this provision by providing enhanced reporting and disbursement procedures. The Trustee has mirrored this request in its demand. This confluence of procedures indicates agreement on adequate protection of any interest the Trustee may have in LVMC‘s cash flow, and thus the court does not have to allocate any interest the Trustee‘s may have in proceeds interest across LVMC‘s revenues.
V. SUMMARY
The Trustee has met its burden with respect to establishing the extent of its security interest in the $225,000 in accounts maintained at the Trustee as of the filing. It has also shown that it has a proceeds interest stemming from its original security interest in LVMC‘s deposit accounts maintained by the Trustee. It has not established a security interest in the $971,000 in the Bank of America account, nor has it established a security interest in the $65,000 in coin and the $162,000 in cash held by Brink‘s.44
As the Financing Agreement limited the Trustee‘s ongoing interest to Net Project Revenues, that is all to which the statutory lien found in
Adherence to the procedures and obligations for handling and applying cash contained in the Indenture will protect the Trustee‘s legitimate and proven interests in its collateral. The court will thus separately enter an order requiring LVMC to
VI. CONCLUSION
The Trustee is the assignee of a security interest in bank accounts held by the Trustee, Net Project Revenues, and contract rights under the Franchise Agreement. Undoubtedly, and with hindsight, this combination of interests falls short of what the Trustee asserted, and probably short of what it might have thought it received. But application of contract interpretation principles designed e to give the parties’ words their most reasonable meaning demonstrates that the Trustee‘s interests are not particularly robust. Nevertheless, the parties basically agree that adherence to the procedures embodied in the Indenture, and replacement liens, will preserve the Trustee‘s position at filing throughout this case. And that is the goal of adequate protection.
This opinion shall constitute the court‘s findings of facts and conclusions of law in accordance with
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Notes
So what subset of rights might this grant of a security interest in “contract rights” represent? One possibility would be the rights to receive payment for a sale of the monorail‘s business– or at least that portion of any payment allocable to the Franchise Agreement. In this regard, “contract rights” under the Franchise Agreement may resemble similar rights in broadcast licenses granted by the Federal Communication Commission (“FCC“) to operate radio and television stations. The FCC has ruled that “a broadcast license, as distinguished from the station‘s plant or physical assets, is not an owned asset or vested property interest so as to be subject to a mortgage, lien, pledge, attachment, seizure, or similar property right.” In re Merkley, 94 F.C.C.2d 829, (1983). Despite this FCC ruling, courts have found that lenders can perfect a valid security interest (as a general intangible) in any remuneration that a broadcast licensee is entitled to as a result of the transfer of its FCC license. See In re Ridgely Commc‘ns, Inc., 139 B.R. 374, 376 (Bankr. D. Md. 1992).
Under Revised Article 9, deposit accounts may be taken as original collateral in non-consumer transactions.
Revised Article 9 applies even when, as here, the security interest was created before the revision took effect.
See, e.g., Model Term Sheet, supra note 2, at 1-4.
There were some small but important exclusions. The Construction Fund, Contingency Fund and Rebate Fund, among others, were excluded. “Project” is defined to essentially mean the current 3.9 mile reach of LVMC‘s monorail.
Indenture, § 1.01, p. 17. The “Operation and Maintenance Agreement” refers to the operating agreement with Bombardier. Id.
Ignoring basic traits of others has long been a puzzling feature of human existence. The ancient fable of the Scorpion and the Frog is apt. A Scorpion needed to cross a river, and asked a Frog to assist it. The Frog demurred, claiming that the Scorpion would sting and kill it. The Scorpion countered that any sting would doom it as well as the Frog. So the Frog agreed, and the Scorpion climbed aboard the Frog‘s back, and they began to cross the river. Half way across, the Scorpion stung the Frog. As the Frog slipped into unconsciousness, and as the Scorpion was drowning, the Frog asked why the Scorpion had stung him. “I can‘t help it,” replied the Scorpion. “It‘s just my nature.”
It is in the nature of most debtors to take whatever means are necessary to ensure their financial survival, even to the point of breaching their contracts. Indeed, part of the purpose of taking security is the judgment that the debtor‘s unsecured obligation to repay is insufficiently reliable; as a consequence, there is little force to the argument that the Trustee relied on the unsecured promise of LVMC to transfer its revenues to the Trustee. In retrospect, the Trustee should have respected this elemental nature and provided for different controls, or (and maybe it did this) priced the Bonds to account for this known risk.
Although not always. The Trustee argues that, under the Indenture, deposit of funds with it means that the funds are placed in the Revenue Fund, “in which LVMC does not hold an ownership interest.” If the Trustee is arguing that LVMC loses all interest in such funds when they are deposited, it is mistaken. While Sections 5.01 to 5.03 of the Indenture are consistent with this argument, Article 9 is not. It applies to “a transaction, regardless of its form, that creates a security interest in personal property or fixtures by contract.”
To show perfection of its security interests, the Trustee resorts to equitable arguments to establish by operation of law what it failed to obtain by contract and practice. These theories are, however, contrary to the general notion that Article 9 generally supplanted such theories in favor of one simple system. See In re Schwalb, 347 B.R. 726, 738 (Bankr. D. Nev. 2006). Moreover, theses theories are not applicable on the facts.
Constructive trust theories are unavailable because the lender-borrower relationship is not a confidential one under controlling Nevada law, see Yerington Ford, Inc. v. General Motors Acceptance Corp., 359 F. Supp. 2d 1075, 1089-91 (D. Nev. 2004) (finding no fiduciary or confidential relationship generally in debtor-creditor relations), aff‘d in part, rev‘d in part on other grounds, Giles v. Gen. Motors Acceptance Corp., 494 F.3d 865, 882 (9th Cir. 2007), and Nevada law requires such a confidential relationship to establish a constructive trust. See Waldman v. Maini, 195 P.3d 850, 857 (Nev. 2008) (quoting Locken v. Locken, 98 Nev. 369, 372, 650 P.2d 803, 804-05 (1982) (in turn citing Schmidt v. Merriweather, 82 Nev. 372, 375, 418 P.2d 991, 993 (1966)))).
Estoppel is also not available. The Trustee could not show the required detrimental reliance on any act or assertion of LVMC, and the Trustee‘s did not take prompt action once it learned of the diversion. See NGA #2 LLC v. Rains, 113 Nev. 1151, 1160-61, 946 P.2d 163, 169 (Nev. 1997); Cheqer, Inc. v. Painters and Decorators Joint Comm., Inc., 98 Nev. 609, 614, 655 P.2d 996, 998-99 (Nev. 1982).
Finally, the Trustee is not entitled to an equitable lien. A critical component of an equitable lien, if permissible at all given Article 9, is that “the creditor has done all it reasonably can do to perfect its lien, but nevertheless is thwarted by the uncooperativeness of the debtor.” Rushton v. Dean Evans Chrysler-Plymouth (In re Solar Energy Sales and Services), 4 B.R. 364, 369 (Bankr. D. Utah 1980). See also Peters v. WFS Financial, Inc. (In re Glandon), 338 B.R. 103, 107-108 (Bankr. D. Colo. 2006); In re O.P.M. Leasing Services, Inc., 23 B.R. 104, 119 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 1982). Here, however, the Trustee made a conscious choice to leave to LVMC the task of collecting and transferring it revenues, thus taking the risk of diversion and breach. It also took no affirmative action for at least two months after it learned of the diversion. It has thus has not done all it could have reasonably have done. See note 37 supra.
If the cash at Bank of America were cash collateral, the Trustee‘s interests would likely be unperfected as there was no evidence of any control agreement with Bank of America. See
These expenses likely will include the Trustee‘s attorney‘s fees and costs, as the Indenture contemplates that such fees and costs are within the definition of Operation and Maintenance Costs. Indenture, p. 17. Although this arguably raises an issue under
The recipient of such funds, such as Bombardier, takes such funds free of the Trustee‘s security interest, absent any showing of collusion.
The same argument would apply to the extent that the revenues are proceeds of the Trustee‘s interest in the Franchise Agreement.
This finding is for purposes of the cash collateral motions only. Any attempt by an estate representative to obtain a final order with respect to the extent of the Trustee‘s liens and security interests would require an adversary proceeding. See
As the credit card receivables are accounts which were not cash collateral as of the date of LVMC‘s filing, they need not be protected as cash collateral, see Philip Morris Capital Corp. v. Bering Trader, Inc. (In re Bering Trader, Inc.), 944 F.2d 500, 501 (9th Cir. 1991). In addition, although likely paid at least in part, there was no evidence showing payment offered at the hearing.
The Trustee requested that the court enter an order now granting it protection under
