This сase presents a discrete issue for consideration: whether the Johns-Manville Corporation’s (“Johns-Manville”) Second Amended and Restated Plan of Reorganization (“the Plan”) allows fоr the award of post-judgment interest on a judgment for an asbestos-related personal injury. The appellant, citing federal and state statutes governing interest payments on civil judgments, arguеs that interest should accrue. The appellee responds that the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution and the plain language of the Plan prohibit the award of interest to the appellant.
The relevant facts of this case are straightforward. The plaintiff, Hugh Wilson, discovered in December 1987 that he was suffering from mesothelioma, a disease caused by exposure to asbestos. In May 1988 he filed a suit against his former employer, Johns-Manville, one of the world’s largest users of asbestos. Mr. Wilson subsequently died and Marjorie Oeasek was named the independent executor of his estate.
Following protracted negotiations, which failed to result in a settlement agreement, the parties presented their case to a jury. Because the parties had stipulated to the issue of liability prior to the trial, the only issue before the jury was that of damages. On July 23, 1990, the jury returned an award of $4 million for the plaintiff. After several adjustments to that award, the district court entered judgment for the plaintiff in the amount of $3,629,191.20, and ordered that the award not accrue interest. It is from the district court’s ruling that interest not accrue on the award that the plaintiff/appellant appeals. We affirm.
Post-judgment interest is authorized by both Illinois and federal statutes. Neither, however, is controlling here. Although, as a general matter, the Illinois Code provides that “[ejvery judgment shall bear interest thereon ...,” Ill.Rev.Stat. ch.
Federal law also provides for the award of interest on civil judgments, mandating that “[ijnterest shall be allowed on any money judgment in a civil case recovered in a district court.” 28 U.S.C. § 1961. This prоvision applies to judgments entered by a bankruptcy court.
In re A.S.M., Inc.,
Johns-Manville filed a petition for reorgаnization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code in 1982. The company— the largest American producer and distributor of asbestos — sought reorganization in order to cope with its burgeoning liability tо persons injured by exposure to asbestos.
Kane v. Johns-Manville Corp.,
Because the number of potential claimants was unknown at the time of the reorganization, the reorganization plan established a Trust, the appellee in this case, from which existing and future claimants could seek compensation. However, it is now clear that the initial estimates of the number of claimants and amount of money sufficient to satisfy their claims werе grossly underestimated; the Trust has already received 50% more claims than the highest number estimated when the Plan was approved. By Spring 1990, the Trust’s ability to pay even its current obligations was exhaustеd.
In re Joint Litig.,
Individuals who are entitled to damages for asbestos-induced injury are defined as “Liquidated AH Claimants”, Class Four claimants under the reorganization Plan. See The Plan, § 2.4. The appellant does not contest that its claim is a Class Four claim. Section 3.4 of the Plan prohibits the payment of interest to Class Four claimants. A narrow exception to that interest ban is included in the Plan’s definition of Liquidated AH Claims, which states that such claims include:
those AH Claims which, prior to the Filing Date, were settled as to validity and amount ... (b) by the order of any court having jurisdiction with respect thereto to the extеnt that such order was a Final Order on the Filing Date or became a Final Order at any time following the filing date, whether or not prior to the Consummation Date.... (emphasis added).
The appеllant argues that the phrase emphasized above should be read to authorize the payment of interest on any judgment entered by a court at any time after the
The Third Circuit has addressed this issue, and concluded that the Plan’s interest ban applies strictly to all Class Four claimants.
Jones v. Keene Corp.,
The appellаnt offers an interpretation of the Plan’s interest restriction that, like that of the Joneses, would result in a rapid depletion of the Trust’s assets, thereby jeopardizing the possibility of any payment to any claimant. Two harmful results seem likely to follow from the appellant’s proffered interpretation. First, the ultimate purpose of the Plan — to provide a pool of money from which all existing and future claimants can obtain their money damages — would be frustrated. Given the Trust’s current lack of funds, known claimants are currently unable to obtain payment on their judgments. Were intеrest to accrue on any outstanding judgments, the Trust’s need for refunding would further outpace its ability to obtain cash. Second, the appellant’s interpretation would encourage plaintiffs in such cases to go to trial, because any award issued and entered by a court would be entitled to interest. The Plan prohibits the award of interest to claimants who settle their claims. This rеsult would frustrate the Trust Agreement’s preference to compensate claimants with, “settlement to be preferred over arbitration, arbitration to be preferred over resort the tort system, and fair and efficient resolution of claims to be preferred over all else.” Trust Agreement § 2.02.
The federal rules of civil procedure distinguish between issuance and entry of judgment in а manner that offers sound guidance in the interpretation of the disputed phrase. Rule 58 requires that a judgment be entered by a separate document at the termination of a case. Fed.R.Civ.P. 58. Thus, there is a differentiation between the issuance of an order discussing and disposing of all the issues in a given case and the entry of judgment terminating the case.
Stamatakis Indus. v. J. Walter Thompson,
The interpretation posited by the appellant would surely swallow the Plan’s general restriction against the award of interest on damage awаrds for asbestos-related injuries. Such a reading would also frustrate the intent of the Trust — to provide for the efficient resolution of claims and to ensure that funds are available to satisfy all those claims. Based on the purpose of the bankruptcy reorganization plan, as well as the mandate of the Trust, its plain language, and its current fiscal status, the district court’s ruling prohibiting accrual of
