KENNEDY, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which COOK and WHITE, JJ., joined. COOK, J. (pp. 840-42), delivered a separate concurring opinion in which WHITE, J., joined.
OPINION
National Union Fire Insurance Company (“National Union”) appeals the district court’s affirmance of the bankruptcy court’s decision disallowing National Union’s petition for administrative expenses. National Union provided the estate with workers’ compensation insurance, and asks that the estate’s contractual obligation to reimburse it for certain anticipated payments be granted administrative expense priority. Both the bankruptcy court and the district court rejected this argument, finding that the claim was not “actual” and did not benefit the estate. Because this case is controlled by our decision in
In re HNRC Dissolution Co.,
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
LTV Steel Company, Inc. and its subsidiaries filed voluntary petitions for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on December 29, 2000. LTV’s subsidiaries include VP Buildings, Inc., United Panel, Inc., Vareo Pruden International, Inc., VP-Graham, Inc., and LTV-Walbridge, Inc., collectively the “VP debtors.”
The parties agree that National Union provided the LTV entities, including VP debtors, with workers’ compensation insurance during calendar year 2001. This insurance, mandated by state law, guarantees that injured workers will be compensated in a timely manner regardless of the financial health of the employer. When an injury occurs in a covered year (such as 2001), National Union’s insurance coverage is implicated. However, the actual payments to an injured employee are often required for years, or even decades, after the covered year.
Employees were injured in 2001, imposing an obligation on National Union to pay out future benefits. National Union asked that the reimbursement of this obligation for payments that are not due until after the closure of the bankruptcy estate be given administrative priority status. Because the injured employees’ claims are ongoing in nature, there is uncertainty as to the amount that National Union will ultimately pay. The parties agreed to arbitrate the amount of National Union’s claim. The arbitration panel concluded that National Union’s reimbursement claim for all LTV entities is valued at $2,494,498 for 2001. The arbitration award did not allocate liability to the various subsidiaries. Teresita Miranda, a manager with American International Companies, submitted an unsigned declaration that asserts, based on her review of the records, $993,769 is the amount that is attributable to the VP Debtors. The VP Debtors dispute this figure. The “Confidential source data” supporting Miranda’s conclusion has not been provided to the court.
The bankruptcy plan to liquidate the VP Debtors’ assets and dissolve the estates was confirmed by order of the bankruptcy court on December 17, 2003. The bankruptcy court denied National Union’s claim for administrative expense priority on December 21, 2007. The court concluded that the expense was not “actual” because National Union had not yet paid the benefits for the years after the closure of the bankruptcy estate. Moreover, the bankruptcy court found that reimbursement of the payments would not benefit the estate. National Union appealed, elected to have the case heard by the district court rather than the BAP, and the district court affirmed the bankruptcy court on September 29, 2008. National Union filed a timely notice of appeal.
II. DISCUSSION
“We review the bankruptcy court’s decision directly, according no deference to the district court. The bankruptcy court’s findings of fact are reviewed for clear error, and questions of law are reviewed de novo.”
Phar-Mor, Inc. v. McKesson Corp.,
The bankruptcy code provides that administrative expenses, “the actual, necessary costs and expenses of preserving the estate,” 11 U.S.C. § 503(b)(1)(A),
The parties agree that the provision of insurance benefitted the estate, and that the transaction was entered into post-petition. However, the parties dispute whether the claim is “actual” under the meaning of the Bankruptcy Code and whether National Union’s claim for reimbursement benefitted the estate.
We do not decide this case without precedent. In a published opinion, we recently adopted the reasoning of a district court that rejected the claimant’s arguments:
To that effect, the narrow application of § 503(b)(1)(A) is rather unambiguous on its face: the claimed expense must have been an “actual” cost that is “necessary” to the “preservation” of the estate. See In re Patch Graphics,58 B.R. at 745 (citing In re Club Dev. & Mgmt. Corp.,27 B.R. 610 , 612 (9th Cir.BAP1982)) (“An administrative expense may not be allowed absent a finding that the expense is necessary for preserving the estate.”). It is in this regard that Zurich’s claim fails as a simple matter of statutory interpretation on both fronts: the claimed expenses are not “actual” (i.e., not yet realized) and the payment thereof, when the obligations are realized, cannot act to preserve an estate that no longer exists. At the moment Zurich’s Claim was filed on the bar date for administrative expense claims, the ultimate loss projection for the deductible obligations was entirely speculative by nature and prospective by definition. Nevertheless, despite LCC’s subtle mention otherwise, there can be no question that Zurich will be forced to “advance” a substantial portion, if not all, of the deductible obligations in question. A key consideration, however, is the reality that Zurich is only contractually obligated to pay the deductibles, and subsequently seek reimbursement, once the claims actually “arise.” Zurich contends that “arise” in this context should be viewed from a more macro perspective, effectively arguing that, even though the legal obligation to pay the expenses will not accrue until sometime in the future, the underlying event giving rise to the future claim (e.g., an employee’s initial injury) necessarily occurred during the bankruptcy administration. In other words, Zurich asserts that the accrual of the claims should essentially relate back to the underlying insurance coverage as part and parcel of the relevant insurancepolicies, which include the premium obligations that were assigned administrative priority and satisfied accordingly. But Zurich does not, and cannot, provide any direct authority to support the contention that expenses necessarily realized post-confirmation can legally be characterized as “actual” under the Code.
In re HNRC Dissolution Co.,
National Union argues that HNRC is distinguishable on several factual grounds, but none of the offered differences are material. First, National Union observes that the claimant in HNRC had only estimated the future indebtedness through a “report prepared by actuaries.” See id. at 211. In contrast, National Union has, through arbitration, reduced its future indebtedness to all LTV entities to a specific figure by which all parties are bound. With some of the uncertainty of naked actuarial estimation reduced by reason of arbitration to which each side is bound, National Union posits, the claim is more “actual” here than in HNRC. The arbitration process may have tested the parties’ actuarial estimates, but it did not change the nature of the claim to an “actual” total due by the debtors during the pendency of the bankruptcy estate. Under the terms of National Union’s contract, the need for reimbursement only arises when payments are made. Until the payments are due, they are “not yet realized.” See id. at 225. And under the reasoning of HNRC, it is only then that the claim becomes “actual.”
Next, National Union argues that its claim can be paid under the provisions of the debtor’s plan here because the plan creates a priority claims trust account from which administrative claims that are “not allowed as of the Effective Date” of the plan may be paid. However, it does not argue or point to any evidence that this was not the case in HNRC or how this transforms the claim to actual.
National Union further contends that the contractual language requiring reimbursement is different. In this case, the language of VP’s contract provides that the payment obligation includes future deductible loss reimbursements that are not yet due. In HNRC, the insurance contract also required reimbursement of certain deductible amounts as they were incurred. 2 We can discern no meaningful distinction between the language of the two contracts.
The claimant also argues that
HNRC
was wrongly decided and conflicts with the Supreme Court’s decision in
Reading Co. v. Brown,
We are bound by HNRC to conclude that National Union’s request for reimbursement is not an “actual” expense within the meaning of the bankruptcy code. In light of this conclusion, we do not address whether the reimbursement benefitted the estate or otherwise qualified for administrative expense priority.
III. CONCLUSION
Because the arguments raised by appellant are foreclosed by our decision in HNRC, we AFFIRM.
Constrained by the rule announced in HNRC, I concur in the majority opinion. I write separately to question HNRCs holding and to urge en banc review of the application of that rule to the present case.
HNRC holds that post-confirmation claims for deductible reimbursements by an insurance company fail to qualify as actual and necessary expenses that benefit the estate, and thus cannot attain administrative expense priority as a matter of law. The HNRC panel 1 focused on whether the claim itself — a cost — provided an actual and necessary benefit to the estate. But framed this way, there can be just one answer — a cost incurred by a business (let alone a bankrupt one) by definition provides no benefits and, arguably, does not become actual or necessary until the debt- or receives the bill, which may not occur until after plan confirmation. Only by analyzing the cost’s purpose — assessing the services provided in exchange — can courts determine whether the expense meets § 503(b)’s requirements.
In our case, no party disputes that the debtor’s survival as an operating entity required the insurance National Union provided. But under HNRCs holding, by scheduling prospective payments (some of which arise after plan confirmation), the debtor receives a windfall, avoiding the entire post-confirmation portion of the obligation. The HNRC court accepted this result on grounds that such post-confirmation payments (unlike the pre-confirmation payments made on the same contract covering the same service) cannot qualify as actual, necessary, or a benefit to the estate by virtue of their post-confirmation nature. But the timing of the payments should not affect the analysis of whether the cost of the service can satisfy the criteria necessary to qualify for administrative priority.
Although
HNRC
noted a lack of authority “supporting] the contention that expenses necessarily realized post-confirmation can legally be characterized as ‘actual’ under the Code,”
The
HNRC
court likewise erred in rejecting the insurer’s claim as neither “necessary to preserve the estate,” nor for the “benefit of the estate.” The panel held that “[t]he bottom line remains that [the insured] is not contractually obligated to pay any of the deductible obligations in question until claims are filed, which will necessarily occur post-confirmation.”
The Supreme Court held in
Reading Co. v. Brown,
This court consistently holds that when an estate derives a benefit from goods, services, or its own actions (breaching a contract, for example), the associated cost qualifies as an administrative expense, even when the cost remains unknown at plan confirmation.
See In re Eagle-Picher Indus., Inc.,
Notes
. Appellee brings to our attention that the Supreme Court denied certiorari in the
HNRC
case. We note this fact but afford it no weight because the denial of certiorari provides no guidance to this court, except to leave in place
HNRC
as binding law in this circuit. See
Hughes Tool Co. v. Trans World Airlines, Inc.,
. The appellant submits these documents along with a motion for the court to take judicial notice. The motion was unopposed. We can take judicial notice of the factual record that provides the basis for a court’s judgment.
See Rodic
v.
Thistledown Racing Club, Inc.,
. The panel published an adopt-and-affirm opinion.
See In re HNRC Dissolution Co.,
