OPINION DENYING DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS COUNT I
Thе Court here concludes that because the operating agreement of a limited liability company imposes no obligations on its members, it is not an executory contract. Consequently when a member who is not the manager files a Chapter 7 case, his trustee acquires all of the member’s rights and interests pursuant to Bankruptcy Code 1 §§ 541(a) and (c)(1), and the limitations of §§ 365(c) and (e) do not аpply.
Procedural Background
Plaintiff Louis A. Movitz (“Trustee”) is the Chapter 7 Trustee for the estate of Debtor Gregory L. Ehmann (“Debtor”). The Trustee has sued Defendant Fiesta Investments, LLC (“Defendant” or “Fiesta”), an Arizona limited liability company of which the Debtor was a member when his bankruptcy case was filed. The Trustee’s suit seeks a declaration that the Trustee has the status of a member in Fiesta, a determination that the assets оf Fiesta are being wasted, misapplied or diverted for improper purposes, and an order for dissolution and liquidation of Fiesta or the appointment of a receiver for Fiesta.
Background Facts
The Trustee’s complaint identifies Fiesta as an Arizona limited liability company that was formed in approximately 1998 by the Debtor’s parents, Anthony and Alice Ehmann. At the time it was formed, it had two assets, a 17% interest in City Leasing Co. Ltd. and 25% interest in Desert Farms LLC. Shortly after this bankruptcy case was filed, however, City Leasing was liquidated and as a result of that liquidation Fiesta received cash distributions in the amount of approximately $837,000 in the summer of 2000. Fiesta is still receiving regular quarterly distributions of cash from its other asset, Desert Farms.
The Trustee’s complaint stems from the fact that although no formal distributions have been declared or paid to members, and certainly not to the Debtor, substantial amounts of cash havе flowed out of Fiesta to or for the benefit of other members, including $374,500 in loans to members or to corporations owned or controlled by members, a $42,500 payment to one member, and $124,000 paid to another member to redeem his interest. In response to the Trustee’s demand for information and distributions, the managing member of Fiesta, the Debtor’s father, responded that he had created “Fiesta a few years ago to remove assets from our estate for estate tax purposes, and to accumulate investments for the benefit of our children after our deaths .... [W]e see no reason to accede to the wishes of any member or assignee of any member which runs contrary to our original goals.” Yet the outflow of over half a million dollars does not seem tо be consistent with the original goal “to accumulate investments for the benefit of our children after our deaths.”
The Parties’ Arguments
While the parties disagree on several relevant legal principles, a dispute that is absolutely central to the motion to dismiss is whether the Trustee’s rights are governed by Bankruptcy Code § 541(c)(1) or by § 365(e)(2). In a very general sense, the latter provision, if applicable, permits the enforcement of state and contract law restrictions on the Trustee’s rights and powers, whereas the former provision, if applicable, would render such restrictions and conditions unenforceable as against the Trustee. Because § 541 applies generally to all property and rights that the Trustee acquires, whereas § 365 applies more specifically to executory contract rights, the answer to this question hinges on whether the Trustee is asserting a property right or an executory contract right.
The Trustee’s complaint does not expressly seek to exercise any rights under an executory contract, nor does it identify the Fiesta Operating Agreement as being an executory contract, but merely attaches it as an exhibit. Indeed, as Fiesta notes, the deadline for the Trustee to have assumed or rejected an executory contract
In response, the Trustee argues that he is not a mere assignee of the Debtor’s membership interest, but rather acquired all of the Debtor’s right, title and interest pursuant to § 541(a). He argues, further, that the Trustee took the Debtor’s rights free of certain conditions and restrictions that would otherwise devalue the asset in the hands of any other assignee, pursuant to § 541(c)(1).
In reply, Fiesta relies on § 365(e) to maintain that the state and contract law restrictions are enforceable against the Trustee notwithstanding § 541(c)(1). Nowhere, however, does Fiesta ever establish, much less even attempt to demonstrate, that the Trustee’s complaint seeks to enforce rights under an executory contract. To the contrary, Fiesta simply assumes or flatly asserts that the Trustee’s rights hinge entirely on an executory contract: “In the case at bar, there is no dispute that if the Operating Agreement is considered as a partnership agreement it is an executory contract.” Fiesta Reply at 6. And yet the very case that Fiesta cites after making that assertion itself concluded that a partnership relationship may include both an executory contract and a nonexecutory property interest in the profits and surplus.
Cutler v. Cutler (In re Cutler),
If a partnership relation entails both executory contract rights and nonexecuto-ry property rights, then it would seem to necessitate a threshold determination of which kind of rights are at issue for the particular kind of relief a Trustee seeks with respect to a partnership or LLC. Before reaching that issue, however, it may be fruitful first to examine whether the Fiesta Operating Agreement even includes any executory contract rights.
Legal Analysis
Although the Bankruptcy Code contains no definition of an executory contract, the Ninth Circuit has adopted the “Countryman Test”: “[A] contract is exec-
While Fiesta undoubtedly owes many obligations to its members pursuant to the Operating Agreement, for the contract to be executory there would also have to be some material obligation owing to the company by the member. Moreover, such member’s obligation must be so material that if the member did not perform it, Fiesta would owe no further obligations to that member.
As noted above, in its briefing on the motion to dismiss Fiestа has not attempted to demonstrate that the Operating Agreement is in fact an executory contract, much less to demonstrate exactly what material obligation is owed to the company by its members. Moreover, the founding member’s statement of the purposes for which the company was formed suggests that it is very likely there are no such obligations. The purpose was twofold: to remove assets from the parents’ estates for estate tax purposes, and to accumulate investments for the benefit of their children after their deaths. One would certainly not expect the children-members to have any obligations with respect to satisfaction of that first goal, which was a unilateral act by the parents, and it is highly unlikely the children-members undertook any obligаtions with respect to the second goal, any more than would an ordinary prospective heir.
This suspicion is borne out by a close reading of the Operating Agreement itself. It imposes many obligations on the managers, but as noted above the manager is the Debtor’s father, not the Debtor. Article Y is entitled “Rights and Obligations of Members,” but in fact it identifies only rights and no obligations. It (1) limits members’ liability for company debts, (2) grants members the right to obtain a list of other members, grants members the right to approve by majority vote the sale, exchange or other disposition of all or substantially all of the company’s assets, (4) grants the members rights to inspect and copy any documents, (5) grants members the same priority as to return of capital contributions or to profits and losses, and (6) grants the permissible transferee of a member’s interests the right to require the company to adjust the basis of the company’s property and the capital account of the affected member. In short, the Article of the Operating Agreement that is partially titled “Obligations of Members” reveals that members have no obligations to the company.
In the entire Agreement, the only provision where members, who are not managers, agree to do anything is Article 7.4, which provides in part that “Each member agrees not to voluntarily withdraw from the company as a member ....” It is now questionable in the Ninth Circuit whether such an agreement merely to refrain from acting is sufficient, standing alone, to create an executory contract.
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But we need not go that far to resolve this issue, be
As demonstrated by the excellent analysis in Smith, 6 it is facile to assume that all partnership agreements are executory contracts. Closer analysis reveals that if there are no material obligations that must be performed by the members of a limited liability company or the limited partners in a limited partnership, then the contract is not executory and is not governed by Code § 365. 7 This case is therefore unlike others that have expressly found “an obligation to contribute capital” and other “continuing fiduciary obligations among the partners that make this [Partnership] Agreement an executory contract.” 8
In the absence of any obligation on the part of the member, it is difficult to see
Moreover, not only do there not appear to be any obligations imposed upon members by the Fiesta Operating Agreement, but there are certainly none with respect to either receipt of a distribution or proper management of the company by its managers. Members do not have to do anything to be entitled to proper management of the company by the managers. The Trustee’s complaint does not involve the Debtor’s lone arguable obligation not to voluntarily withdraw.
Because there are no obligations imposed on members that bear on the rights the Trustee seeks to assert here, thе Trustee’s rights are not controlled by the law of executory contracts and Bankruptcy Code § 365. Consequently the Trustee’s rights are controlled by the more general provision governing property of the estate, which is Bankruptcy Code § 541.
Code § 541(c)(1) expressly provides that an interest of the debtor becomes property of the estate notwithstanding any agreement or apрlicable law that would otherwise restrict or condition transfer of such interest by the debtor. All of the limitations in the Operating Agreement, and all of the provisions of Arizona law on which Fiesta relies, constitute conditions and restrictions upon the member’s transfer of his interest. Code § 541(c)(1) renders those restrictions inapplicable. This necessarily implies the Trustee has all of the rights and powеrs with respect to Fiesta that the Debtor held as of the commencement of the case.
It therefore appears that the Trustee may be able to prove a set of facts that would entitle the Trustee to some remedy. The appropriate remedy might include a declaration of the Trustee’s rights, redemption of the Debtor’s interest,
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appointment of a receiver to operate the partnership in accordance with its purposes and the members’ rights,
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or dissolution, wind up and liquidation. Conse
Notes
. Unless otherwise indicated, all chapter, section, and rule references are to the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. §§ 101-1330, and to the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure, Rules 1001-9036.
. The bankruptcy case was filed as a voluntary Chapter 7 on May 26, 2000. Bankruptcy Code § 365(d)(1) provides that in a Chapter 7 case, an. executory contract is deemed rejected unless assumed or rejected by the Trustee within 60 days after the filing of the case.
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Unsecured Creditors’ Comm. v. Southmark Corp. (In re Robert L. Helms Constr. and Dev. Co., Inc.),
. In the case where the Ninth Circuit first expressly adopted the Countryman test, it held that such an agreement to refrain from acting may be sufficient to make a contract еxecutory: "Because of the exclusive nature of the license which Fénix received, Select-A-Seat was under a continuing obligation not to sell its software packages to other parties. Violation of this obligation would be a materi
. Helms, supra note 3, at 705.
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Samson v. Prokopf (In re Smith),
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See, e.g., In re Garrison-Ashburn, L.C.,
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Calvin v. Siegal (In re Siegal),
. As noted above, Fiesta has already redeemed one member’s interest for $124,000. That suggests that it has the power to do so, that redemption of a member’s interest is not contrary to Fiesta's interests or purposes, and that $124,000 might be an appropriate value for the Debtor’s interest. Because the schedulеs filed in this case reflect priority and unsecured debts of less than $70,000, such a remedy might entirely satisfy the Trustee while simultaneously avoiding any disruption of the partnership or any conflict with the purposes for which it was created.
. Although § 105(b) provides that "a court may not appoint a receiver in a case under this title,” the precise language of that provision and case law make сlear that it applies only to the administrative bankruptcy "case,” not to an adversary proceeding. A "case” is what is commenced by the filing of a petition, e.g., § 301, whereas a “proceeding” is commenced by a summons and complaint, Bankruptcy Rules 7001 & 7004. The provision was added simply because the Code "has ample provision for the appointment of a trustee when needed.” S.Rep. No. 989, 95th Cong.2d Sess. 29 (1978), U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1978, 5787, 5815. Consequently § 105(b) "does not prohibit the appointment of a receiver in a related adversary proceeding if otherwise authorized and appropriate.” 2 Lawrence P. King, Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 105.06, at 105-84.7 (15th
